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David Pownall FRSL (born 19 May 1938[1]) is a British playwright and prolific radio dramatist performed internationally, and novelist translated into several languages.


Life and career


David Pownall was born in Liverpool. He graduated from Keele University in 1960.[citation needed]

He worked as a personnel officer with the Ford Motor Company, Dagenham, Essex, from 1960-63.[citation needed] In 1963, Pownall moved to Zambia to take up a post as the personnel manager at Anglo American PLC and lived and worked there until 1969; he had several early plays produced there.[citation needed]

Returning to England to write full-time, he became the resident writer of the Century Theatre touring group, from 1970-72. He was resident writer of the Duke's Playhouse, Lancaster, from 1972–75, and had several plays produced by them.[citation needed] His plays reflected the local environment, as well as meditations on the plays of Shakespeare.

He helped found the Paines Plough Theatre, first based in Coventry, where he was resident writer from 1975-80.[citation needed] In 1977, his play Richard III, Part Two, first produced by Paines Plough, was taken to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.

Being deeply interested in music, he wrote several plays related to the challenges of composers, both in terms of personal creativity, and, in Master Class (1983), working within the oppressive political environment of the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin.

Pownall has written plays for radio, as well as material for performance by children and college students. The Sutton Elms web site lists with dates 75 plays broadcast by BBC radio between 1972 and 2018.[2]

As a novelist, Pownall's early work, such as The Raining Tree War (1974) and its sequel African Horse (1975) were comic novels in the mode of Evelyn Waugh. Then came historical fantasies such as White Cutter (1988), The Catalogue of Men (1999) and The Ruling Passion (2008).[3]

David Pownall's wife is a photographer; the couple have a son.[4]


Legacy and honours



Selected works


Date is year produced:[5]


References


  1. Film Reference — biography
  2. "David Pownall Radio Plays". www.suttonelms.org.uk.
  3. Fowler, Christopher. The Book of Forgotten Authors (2017), pp. 268-70
  4. "David Pownall" Archived 5 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Official Website
  5. "David Pownall" Archived 14 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine, The Playwrights Database, Doollee.
  6. The Official David Pownall Home Page, Radio list.

Bibliography







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