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Asiedu Yirenkyi

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Asiedu Yirenkyi (born 8 December 1942) is a Ghanaian playwright and author of Kivuli and Other Plays. He was born Emmanuel Yirenchi at Akropong-Akuapem in the Eastern Region of Ghana. He is of the same parentage as the late Ghanaian actor and film maker Rev. Kofi Yirenkyi.

In the early 1960s Asiedu Yirenkyi became involved in the Ghana Drama Studio founded by Efua Sutherland, joining the Drama Studio Players. His formal education in Theatre began with a Diploma in Drama from the University of Ghana, Legon. In 1968, when Yirenkyi gained admission into the Yale School of Drama he made history by becoming the first Ghanaian to receive a grant to study Drama in the USA.[1] He graduated in 1971 with the prestigious John Golden Award in Playwriting. He lectured in Ghana and Nigeria.[2]

Like writer Ama Ata Aidoo, also involved in the Ghana Drama Studio, Yirenkyi later served as a minister in the Provisional National Defence Council of Jerry Rawlings:[3] he was Secretary for Culture and Tourism until 1984, when he resigned. It was under his political leadership in 1983 that the first elaborate work on Ghana's Cultural Policy was carried out.[4] Yirenkyi later became head of Ghana's National Folklore Board and also served as a World Bank consultant on the National Theatre of Ghana.

Works

  • Kivuli and other plays, 1980
  • Dasebre: a play on African rituals and games, 1990
  • Two Plays: Dasebre and The Red Ants, 2003

References

  1. ^ "Contributors", Yale/Theatre, volume 2, number 2, Summer 1969.
  2. ^ Killam, Douglas; Rowe, Ruth, eds. (2000), "Yirenkyi, Asiedu", The Companion to African Literatures, Oxford: J. Currey, p. 310.
  3. ^ Etherton, Michael (1995), "Ghana", in Banham, Martin (ed.), The Cambridge Guide to Theatre, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 425–6.
  4. ^ "The Cultural Policy of Ghana", National Commission on Culture, 2004.