George Boyd (playwright)
George Elroy Boyd is a Canadian playwright and a former co-host of the CBC Morning News.
Biography
One of a family of nine, of seventh-generation Empire Loyalist stock, Boyd was born and raised in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He has written for the stage, radio, television and motion pictures.
In 1988, with his debut play, Shine Boy, Boyd became the first indigenous African-Nova Scotian to have a play professionally produced at Neptune Theatre, Nova Scotia's premiere main stage. Since then, his plays have taken him from Lahore, Pakistan, Toronto, Winnipeg, Montreal and New York, USA, among other locales.
A recipient of numerous awards from his native Nova Scotia, in 2000, his play Consecrated Ground was nominated for a Governor General's Award for drama.
Wade in the Water, produced by the Black Theatre Workshop of Montreal in 2004, and Centaur Theatre in 2005, garnered Boyd a nomination for the Montreal English Critics Circle Award (MECCA).
More recently his play Gideon's Blues was the subject of an hour-long TV drama called The Gospel According to the Blues, directed and adapted for television by Thom Fitzgerald for Emotion Pictures.
Boyd currently resides in Montreal. His 2009 play, Le Code Noir, about the life of 18th-century composer Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, was produced by Black Theatre Workshop of Montreal, at the Segal Centre for the Performing Arts.
Boyd is at work on several new works. One, tentatively entitled The Days Of Douglass, regards the final days in the life of Frederick Douglass.[1]
Bibliography
- Two by George! Consecrated Ground and Gideon's Blues (1996)
- Consecrated Ground (1999)
- Gideon's Blues (2