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March 2003
As the American forces are invading Iraq, a contemporary anti-war version of Richard III is produced by Manitoba Theatre Centre. The artistic concept for the production had its genesis in a series of workshops staged at Infinithéâtre. Nine of Infinithéâtre’s actors and the American movie star William Hurt travel to Winnipeg for the show. The production is a mega commercial and artistic success.

June/July 2002 
Jacob Richmond’s Small Returns and Trevor Ferguson’s Long, Long, Short, Long are mounted at the Monument National. Mr. Ferguson’s play is subsequently nominated as "Best New Québec Text" at the 2002 Soirée des Masques.

September 2001
Infinithéâtre is Québec and Canada's first representative to the Cairo International Festival of Experimental Theatre with its bilingual production of Beckett’s Endgame/Fin de partie.

January 2001 
Byron Ayanoglu’s play Food/Bouffe, staged at the Lion d’Or, is a sold out featured event of the 2001 Montréal Highlights Festival.
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2000 
In co-production with the Francophone theatre company OMNIBUS, Michael Mackenzie’s bilingual play Farce is mounted as an official Heritage Canada Millennium event at Espace Libre.

October 1999 
Infinithéâtre transforms the immense, abandoned Darling Foundry in Old Montréal into a performance venue and presents a unique bilingual version of Samuel Beckett’s Endgame/Fin de partie. Despite little heating and below zero temperatures, the production was a major critical and box office success and the run had to be extended.

1997/98 
To showcase the depth and quality of Montréal’s small English theatre companies Infinithéâtre stages three festivals of new plays. November to Remember (1997), May To Play (1998), and the Infinite Festival (1998).

1997 
Guy Sprung is named Artistic Director, changes the name of the company to Infinithéâtre and broadens the mandate.

1995 
Sliding In All Directions, a mosaic written by four separate playwrights and directed by Guy Sprung wins the Masque (the all-Québec Theatre Awards) for best English production of the year.
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1988 
Founded by Marianne Ackerman and Claire Shapiro as Theatre 1774. Highlights in the early years include Ms Ackerman’s plays, Woman By A Window and L’Affaire Tartuffe.

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