David Fennario
David William Fennario, born David Wiper (26 April 1947) is a Canadian playwright best known for Balconville (1979), his bilingual dramatization of life in working-class Montreal, for which he won the Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award. A committed socialist, Fennario was a candidate for the Union des forces progressistes in 2003 and for Québec solidaire in 2007. He has been the subject of two National Film Board of Canada documentaries, David Fennario's Banana Boots and Fennario: His World On Stage.[1]
His pen name, "Fennario," given to him by a former girlfriend, is from a Bob Dylan song, "Pretty Peggy-O."
Works
- Without a Parachute (1972) (journals)
- On the Job (1976) (play)
- Nothing to Lose (1977) (play)
- Balconville (1979) (play)
- Joe Beef (1984) (play; based on the life and times of Joe Beef)
- Doctor Thomas Neill Cream (1988) (play)
- The Murder of Susan Parr (1989) (play)
- The Death of René Lévesque (1991) (play)
- Gargoyles (1997) (play)
- Banana Boots (1998) (play)
- Condoville (2005) (play)
- Bolsheviki (2010) (play)
- Motherhouse (2014) (play)
References
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External links
- 2005 Montreal Mirror profile
- Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia article
- Literary Encyclopedia article
- Watch David Fennario's Banana Boots at NFB.ca
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- 1947 births
- 20th-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights
- 21st-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights
- Writers from Montreal
- Living people
- People from Verdun, Quebec
- Anglophone Quebec people
- Canadian socialists
- Québec solidaire candidates in Quebec provincial elections
- Union des forces progressistes (Canada) politicians
- Canadian dramatists and playwrights in French
- Canadian male dramatists and playwrights
- Canadian writer stubs
- People from Quebec stubs