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J. Kelly Nestruck is the television critic for The Globe and Mail.

Previously, he was the newspaper’s theatre critic from 2008 to 2024 - a period that saw the premieres of Kim’s Convenience and Come From Away and the entire performing arts scene shuttered by governments due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During that time, Nestruck was a four-time winner of the Nathan Cohen Award for Excellence in Critical Writing and spent a stint in Berlin as guest critic for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.

In 2018, Nestruck broke one of Canada’s major #MeToo stories - reporting on four actresses who launched civil suits against a founder of a Toronto theatre company.

Before joining the Globe, Nestruck worked in arts and entertainment journalism at The Guardian (in London, UK) and at the National Post. He grew up shuttling back and forth between Montreal and Winnipeg - both great cities for arts and culture.

Why did you become a journalist?

When I was in elementary school a group of journalists from the Montreal Gazette came into our class and helped my grade 4/5 split class publish our own newspaper called The Willingdon World. I reported on the book fair and reviewed a book as well. That was the start I suppose.

21

Years in Journalism

16

Years at The Globe and Mail

Education

Bachelor of Arts, History and English, McGill University

Master of Arts, Theatre, Drama and Performance Studies, University of Toronto

Honours & Awards

Four-time winner of the Nathan Cohen Award for Excellence in Critical Writing

Arthur F. Burns Fellow, 2013

National News Awards nomination, 2013

Languages spoken

English, French

Podcasts

J. Kelly Nestruck abides by The Globe and Mail Editorial Code of Conduct

Latest articles

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