Difference between revisions of "Ian Ferguson"
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Ian was born in Johannesburg in 1937. He went to school and university in Natal and in the 1970s he was Senior Lecturer and later Professor, in English at the [[University of South Africa]]. | Ian was born in Johannesburg in 1937. He went to school and university in Natal and in the 1970s he was Senior Lecturer and later Professor, in English at the [[University of South Africa]]. | ||
− | In 19*, | + | In 19*, after the death of his long-time partner of [[Robert Mohr]], he moved to Canada. . |
In addition to play scripts he has published poetry and theatre criticism. | In addition to play scripts he has published poetry and theatre criticism. | ||
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''[[The Soldier’s Tale]]'' | ''[[The Soldier’s Tale]]'' | ||
− | ''[[Second Edition]]'' | + | ''[[Second Edition]]'' (produced by the [[Don Hughes Organisation]]) |
''[[When Regiments Are Gone]]'' | ''[[When Regiments Are Gone]]'' |
Latest revision as of 17:01, 15 October 2023
Ian Ferguson. (1937-) Academic, playwright, poet and critic.
Contents
Biography
Ian was born in Johannesburg in 1937. He went to school and university in Natal and in the 1970s he was Senior Lecturer and later Professor, in English at the University of South Africa.
In 19*, after the death of his long-time partner of Robert Mohr, he moved to Canada. .
In addition to play scripts he has published poetry and theatre criticism.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
Wrote criticism and articles on South African theatre and supervised a number of theses on the subject. One of the founders of the short-lived journal Teater/Theatre SA, later a board member of the South African Theatre Journal. He was the literary advisor for PACT in Pretoria for a number of years, during which time he translated, adapted and wrote a number of plays.
Plays
Falstaff (an adaptation from Shakespeare, 1976)
Second Edition (produced by the Don Hughes Organisation)
Firestorm (a documentary drama)
Charlie (a documentary drama)
His script Confetti Too was presented in the USA (early 1980s) and he wrote a one-woman show for Maggie Soboil, Memorable Lioness which was to be produced in New York in mid-1984.
Musicals
He also wrote two musicals:
Translations
He translated Die Skreeu by Hennie Aucamp, entitled The Scream.
Awards, etc
Sources
Falstaff theatre programme, 1984.
Biographical notes in Contemporary South African Plays, 1977.
Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography
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