- George Ryga
George Ryga (
July 27 ,1932 –November 18 ,1987 ) was a Canadian playwright and novelist.Ryga was born in Deep Creek,
Alberta to poor Ukrainian immigrant parents. Unable to continue his schooling past grade six, he worked at a variety of jobs, including radio copywriter. Ryga continued to study, taking correspondence courses, and winning a scholarship to the Banff School of Fine Arts. In 1955, he travelled to Europe, where he attended the World Assembly for Peace inHelsinki and worked for theBBC . The following year he returned to Canada. While living inEdmonton , he published his first book, "Song of My Hands" (1956), a collection of poems.Ryga's first play, "Indian", was performed on television in 1961. He achieved national exposure with "The Ecstasy of Rita Joe" in 1967. The work, considered by many to be the most important English-language play by a Canadian playwright, is the story of a young native woman arriving in the city who finds that she has no place with either her own people or the white man. It was performed in Vancouver, at the
National Arts Centre in Ottawa and inWashington . In 1971, the work was performed as aballet by theRoyal Winnipeg Ballet .Other plays by Ryga include:
* "Captives of the Faceless Drummer" - 1971
* "Sunrise on Sarah - 1972
* "Portrait of Angelica" - 1973
* "Ploughmen of the Glacier" - 1977
* "In the Shadow of the Vulture" - 1985
* "Paracelsus" - 1986
* "Summerland" - 1992He made a significant contribution to popular music when he wrote lyrics for a series of songs composed by the members of the Vancouver-based band
The Collectors for the soundtrack of his 1969 play "Grass and Wild Strawberries". "Early Morning", the single release from the resulting " Grass & Wild Strawberries" album, became a minor local hit, and the showstopping album track "Seventeenth Summer" was re-recorded by the band after it underwent a membership change and changed its name to Chilliwack. The distinctive track, strongly influenced byFirst Nations musical forms, became a signature tune in live shows by Chilliwack for many years afterward.He died in Summerland,
British Columbia in 1987. His home has been turned into the George Ryga Center, an arts and culture centre.A biography, "The Ecstasy of Resistance", by James Hoffman, was published in 1995.
Bibliography
* "Song of My Hands" - 1956
* "Hungry Hills" - 1963
* "Ballad of a Stone-Picker" - 1966
* "The Ecstasy of Rita Joe" - 1970
* "The Ecstasy of Rita Joe and Other Plays" - 1971
* "Sunrise on Sarah" - 1973
* Night Desk - 1976
* "Ploughman of the Glacier" - 1977
* "Seven Hours to Sundown" - 1977
* "Beyond the Crimson Morning" - 1979
* "Two Plays: Paracelsus and Prometheus Bound" - 1982
* "A Portrait of Angelica & A Letter to My Son" - 1984
* "In the Shadow of the Vulture" - 1985
* "The Athabasca Ryga" - 1990
* "Summerland" - 1992
* "George Ryga: The Other Plays" - 2004 (edited by James Hoffman)
* "George Ryga: The Prairie Novels" - 2004 (edited by James Hoffman)References
*cite website|title=Ryga, George|website=UABC Bookworld|date=30 June 2006|url=http://www.abcbookworld.com/?state=view_author&author_id=1321
External links
* [http://www.ryga.org The George Ryga Center]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.