Allegra Fulton is a Canadian actress,[1] best known for Frida K, a one-woman stage show in which she portrayed artist Frida Kahlo.[2]
The daughter of filmmaker David Fulton and writer Gloria Montero, she began her acting career in childhood with an appearance on the children's television series Butternut Square.[1] In the early 1980s she regularly performed in stage roles in Toronto, including productions of Slow Dance on the Killing Ground,[3] Michi's Blood,[4] and South of Heaven.[5]
In 1991 she received a Dora Mavor Moore Award nomination for Outstanding Performance, Small Theatre for her performance in Nocturnal Emissions at Buddies in Bad Times.[6]
In the 1990s she began appearing in film and television roles, most notably the Genie Award-winning short film The Hangman's Bride opposite Shawn Doyle, whom she subsequently married.[7]
Frida K, written by Montero, was first staged at the 1994 Toronto Fringe Festival,[8] before being remounted by Tarragon Theatre in 1995.[9] In 1996 she won the Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female in a Play, Small Theatre,[10] before taking the play on an extended national and international tour.[11] She returned to Toronto in 1998 in the English-language premiere of Michel Tremblay's Marcel Pursued by the Hounds for Tarragon.[12]
She has continued to act in stage, film, television and animated voice roles. She received a Gemini Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Guest Role Dramatic Series at the 16th Gemini Awards in 2001 for a guest appearance on Blue Murder,[13] and received her third Dora nomination in 2020 for Between Riverside and Crazy.[14]