Difference between revisions of "John Herbert"

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[[File:johnherbert.png|200px|thumb|left|John Herbert]]
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==Country==
 
==Country==
  
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Writer
 
Writer
  
==Notable Achievements==
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==Description==
  
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Playwright, notably 'Fortune and Men's Eyes' (1964), which was an off-Broadway and international success based on an autobiographical account of a prison drama.  Winner, the DOMINION DRAMA FESTIVAL's Massey Award in 1968, which Brundage refused, and the Chalmers Outstanding Play Award in 1975.  A film version was made in 1971.  Dancer, director, artistic director of several theatres.  Founded and ran 3 pioneering alternate theatres in Toronto, including the Garret (1965-70).  Formal name is John Herbert Brundage, but wrote under his pen name John Herbert.
  
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==See Also==
  
==Description==
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* [[Notable LGBTQ Playwrights]]
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* [[Notable LGBTQ Artistic Directors in the Arts and Entertainment World]]
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==Further Reading/Research==
  
Playwright, notably 'Fortune and Men's Eyes'. Dancer, director, artistic director of several theatres.
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* http://www.playbill.com/news/article/60986-John-Herbert-Toronto-Playwright-Who-Wrote-of-Gay-Prison-Life-Dead-at-74
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* http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/john-herbert/
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* http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5okzdZA-OM

Latest revision as of 21:56, 5 November 2021

John Herbert

Country

Canada

Birth - Death

1926 - 2001

Occupation

Writer

Description

Playwright, notably 'Fortune and Men's Eyes' (1964), which was an off-Broadway and international success based on an autobiographical account of a prison drama. Winner, the DOMINION DRAMA FESTIVAL's Massey Award in 1968, which Brundage refused, and the Chalmers Outstanding Play Award in 1975. A film version was made in 1971. Dancer, director, artistic director of several theatres. Founded and ran 3 pioneering alternate theatres in Toronto, including the Garret (1965-70). Formal name is John Herbert Brundage, but wrote under his pen name John Herbert.

See Also

Further Reading/Research