Geoffrey Ursell (March 14, 1943 – February 21, 2021)[1] was a Canadian writer, who won the Books in Canada First Novel Award in 1985 for his novel Perdue, or How the West Was Lost.[2]
Geoffrey Ursell | |
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Born | (1943-03-14)March 14, 1943 Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan |
Died | February 21, 2021(2021-02-21) (aged 77) Saskatoon, Saskatchewan |
Occupation | playwright, novelist, poet |
Nationality | Canadian |
Years active | 1970s-2021 |
Notable works | Perdue, or How the West Was Lost, Saskatoon Pie |
Spouse | Barbara Sapergia |
Predominantly known as a playwright, Ursell's stage and musical plays have included The Running of the Deer (1981), Saskatoon Pie (1982),[3] The Willowbunch Giant (1983), The Secret Life of Railroaders (1986),[4] The Rum Runners of Rainbow Ravine (1990), The Park (1994), Deer Bring the Sun (1998),[5] Gold on Ice (2003),[6] Winning the Prairie Gamble (2005),[7] The Walnut Tree (2010)[8] and Dead Midnight (2011).[9] He has also adapted The Rum Runners of Rainbow Ravine as a CBC Radio drama, and wrote the teleplay Distant Battles for CBC Television.[1]
With his wife Barbara Sapergia and colleagues Bob Currie and Gary Hyland, Ursell was a cofounder of Coteau Books in the 1970s.[1] In 1987, Ursell and Sapergia pitched a series to CBC Television called Midnight in Moose Jaw, a sitcom-variety hybrid set in a Prohibition-era speakeasy which would centre around live performances by real comedians and musicians,[10] with Jenny Jones and Colin James as the guest performers in the pilot.[10] The series was not picked up by the CBC.
His other published books have included the poetry collections Trap Lines (1982), The Look-Out Tower (1989) and Jumbo Gumbo: Songs, Poems, and Stories for Children (1990),[1] and the short story collection Way Out West (1990).[11]
He has served as president of the Saskatchewan Writers' Guild and the Saskatchewan Playwrights' Centre, has been writer-in-residence for the Saskatoon Public Library[12] and the Winnipeg Public Library, was an editor of the literary magazine Grain,[13] and has taught literature and creative writing at the University of Regina.[1]
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