Difference between revisions of "Ian Fraser"
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− | FRASER, Ian | + | '''FRASER, Ian''' (1962- ). Poet, playwright, stand-up comedian and satirist. Born in Durban, he never finished school and had a harrowing experience in the National Defence Force which sparked his career as poet and playwright. In 1986 he began to perform his angry poetry at a Johannesburg jazz club. Then he moved on to writing offensively rude comic and satiric sketches. Since then he has written and performed a number of shows which include ''[[Bring Me Gandhi]]'' ([[Black Sun]] in August 1987), ''[[Story of an African Vampire]]'' ([[The Civic]] in February 1995) ** **.*** His work has toured widely, to the festivals and main urban centres. |
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+ | == Plays == | ||
+ | Plays include: ''[[Bring Me Gandhi]]''; ''[[Lenny Bruce Live]]''; ''[[Like the Pyramid on the Camel Packet]]''; ''[[Charles Manson]]'' (staged by [[PACT]]); ''[[Butterfly Jam]]'' (staged by [[PACT]]); ''[[Heart like a Stomach]]'' (staged by [[PACT]]); ''[[Dogs of the Blue Gods]]'' (Amstel Playwright of the Year Award); ''[[Blitzbreeker and the Chicken from Hell]]'' (shortlisted for Amstel Playwright of the Year Award); ''[[The Sugar Plum Fairy]]'' (staged at the [[Market Theatre]]); ''[[The Gospel According to the Mafia]]'' (staged at the [[Market Theatre]]); ''[[The Accidental Antichrist]]'' (staged at the [[Market Theatre]]); ''[[Story of an African Chicken]]''; | ||
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+ | Plays written in the USA: ''[[Cat and God]]''; ''[[Like Craigslist on a Friday Night]]''; ''[[Putting the Fun Back into School Shootings]]''; ''[[A Dead Soldier in the Family]]''; ''[[The Family Beef]]''; ''[[For the Love of an Infinite Number of Monkeys]]''; ''[[The Rocket's Red Glare]]''; ''[[Die, the Beloved Country]]''; ''[[The Zombies]]''. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Fraser_%28playwright%29] | ||
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+ | Nominee 1991 Fraser, Ian for `Gods of the Blue Dogs' (Dawie Malan Award for best South African Play); | ||
== Sources == | == Sources == | ||
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Fraser_(playwright) | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Fraser_(playwright) | ||
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+ | Various entries in the [[NELM]] catalogue. | ||
== For more information == | == For more information == |
Latest revision as of 12:50, 9 November 2017
FRASER, Ian (1962- ). Poet, playwright, stand-up comedian and satirist. Born in Durban, he never finished school and had a harrowing experience in the National Defence Force which sparked his career as poet and playwright. In 1986 he began to perform his angry poetry at a Johannesburg jazz club. Then he moved on to writing offensively rude comic and satiric sketches. Since then he has written and performed a number of shows which include Bring Me Gandhi (Black Sun in August 1987), Story of an African Vampire (The Civic in February 1995) ** **.*** His work has toured widely, to the festivals and main urban centres.
Plays
Plays include: Bring Me Gandhi; Lenny Bruce Live; Like the Pyramid on the Camel Packet; Charles Manson (staged by PACT); Butterfly Jam (staged by PACT); Heart like a Stomach (staged by PACT); Dogs of the Blue Gods (Amstel Playwright of the Year Award); Blitzbreeker and the Chicken from Hell (shortlisted for Amstel Playwright of the Year Award); The Sugar Plum Fairy (staged at the Market Theatre); The Gospel According to the Mafia (staged at the Market Theatre); The Accidental Antichrist (staged at the Market Theatre); Story of an African Chicken;
Plays written in the USA: Cat and God; Like Craigslist on a Friday Night; Putting the Fun Back into School Shootings; A Dead Soldier in the Family; The Family Beef; For the Love of an Infinite Number of Monkeys; The Rocket's Red Glare; Die, the Beloved Country; The Zombies. [1]
Nominee 1991 Fraser, Ian for `Gods of the Blue Dogs' (Dawie Malan Award for best South African Play);
Sources
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Fraser_(playwright)
Various entries in the NELM catalogue.
For more information
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Fraser_(playwright)
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