Adkins worked backstage on every production of the Ottawa Drama League (later the Ottawa Little Theatre) after 1920.[4][5] Over many years, he worked as electrician, carpenter, scene shifter,[4] scene painter,[2] lighting operator, set designer,[6][7][8] set builder,[9] and, from 1927, stage manager.[2][3][4][10] During World War II, Adkins arranged and stage managed shows for troops.[2][11] Adkins continued as stage manager of the Ottawa Little Theatre after the war, travelling with it to the Dominion Drama Festival and other regional performances.[12][13] He also supervised visiting stage managers when Ottawa hosted drama festivals,[11] and managed the stage and lighting for the outdoor theatre at a summer drama school for children.[14] Adkins was still stage manager at the time that the Ottawa Little Theatre burnt down in 1970,[15] and when it reopened after rebuilding in 1972, with improved stage facilities.[16] He retired from the theatre in 1979,[3] and died in Ottawa on 28 March 1982.[3]
Awards
Adkins received a 1960 Canadian Drama Award, in recognition of outstanding contributions to Canadian theatre.[17][18][19][20] In 1973, the first year it was awarded, he was invested with the Member of the Order of Canada,[21][22] "for his 50 years' service to the amateur theatre movement in Ottawa and to the Dominion Drama Festival".[1] In 2013, during their 100th season celebrations, the Ottawa Little Theatre named him as a Cornerstone Inductee, an honor instituted for volunteers who made an extraordinary contribution to the development of the theatre.[23]
^Daley, Frank (7 January 1967). "Ottawa Little Theatre". The Ottawa Journal. p. 34. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
^Devlin, Edward "Ted" (1998). "3. "The Stanley Cup was a Centrepiece on our Dining-Room Table"". In Finnigan, Joan (ed.). Tallying the Tales of the Old-timers. GeneralStore PublishingHouse. p. 33. ISBN9781896182957. Retrieved 13 February 2019. Above all there was Bill Adkins, the English-born stage manager and set-builder, who put it all together and made it happen on stage.