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Eugene Benson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eugene Benson
Born1928 (age 95–96)
Northern Ireland
OccupationWriter, editor, librettist
NationalityCanadian
Period20th century
Genrenon-fiction
Spouse
Renate Niklaus
(m. 1968)
Children2

Eugene Benson (born 1928) is a Canadian professor of English and a prolific writer, novelist, playwright and librettist.

Early life

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Born in Northern Ireland, Benson obtained a bachelor's degree from the National University of Ireland, a master's degree from the University of Western Ontario and his PhD from the University of Toronto.[1]

Career

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Benson is the librettist of six operatic works: Heloise and Abelard (1973, performed by the Canadian Opera Company, music by Charles Wilson); Everyman (1974, performed by the Stratford Festival, music by Charles Wilson); Psycho Red (1978, presented by The Guelph Spring Festival, music by Charles Wilson); Ernest, the Importance of Being (2008, performed by Toronto Operetta Theatre, music by Victor Davies); The Auction: A Folk Opera (2012, premiered by Westben Arts Festival Theatre, music by John Burge); A Tale of Two Cities (2016, premiered by Opera in Concert, Toronto, music by Victor Davies). Everyman and Psycho Red were broadcast by the CBC (Canadian Broadcast Corporation).[1]

Benson wrote two novels, The Bulls of Ronda (1976) and the political satire Power Game (1980). He has written four plays broadcast on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and, with his wife, Renate Benson, has translated plays from Quebec French. In 2003, he and Bill Fraser adapted Powergame as a TV movie, North of America. His plays include The Ram (1967, broadcast by McGill Radio), Joan of Arc’s Violin (broadcast by CBC in 1970 and published and staged in 1972), The Gunner’s Rope, (broadcast by CBC in 1970 and published and staged in 1972), and The Doctors’ Wife (broadcast by the CBC in 1973). With his wife, Renate Benson, Eugene has translated a number of French Canadian plays. He edited the periodical Canadian Drama. He has written four plays broadcast on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and, with his wife, Renate Benson, has translated plays from Quebec French. He edited the periodical Canadian Drama. In 2003 he and Bill Fraser adapted his political satire Powergame (1980) into the TV movie North of America.

Benson's scholarly publications include J.M. Synge (1982), English-Canadian Theatre (1987), The Oxford Companion to Canadian Theatre (1987), The Routledge Encyclopedia of Post-Colonial Literatures in English (1994, 2nd ed. 2005) — the last three co-edited with L.W. Conolly — and The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature (1997, second edition, with William Toye). He edited the anthology Encounter: Canadian Drama in Four Media (1973) and the scholarly journal Canadian Drama/L’Art dramatique canadien (1980–90).[2]

Benson was president, administrative director and Budget Officer of the Guelph Spring Festival for many years, and is a former Chair of the Writers' Union of Canada (1983–84). He was Founding co-president, with Margaret Atwood, of the Canadian Centre of International PEN (1984–85), and served as its vice-president (1985–90).[3] He was President of PEN Canada in 1984.[3]

In 2019, he published a memoir, The Symmetry of the Tyger, an account of his involvement in Canadian culture.

Personal life

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He married Renate Niklaus, a languages and literature professor at University of Guelph, in 1968. Together they have two sons: Ormonde, a lawyer, and Shaun, an actor.[1] Renate Benson is the author of German Expressionist Drama (1984) and other books.

He is also the great uncle of Robb Armstrong, artist of the comic Jump Start.[4]

Works

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Works edited

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  • The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature, co-edited with William Toye (1983, 2nd ed. 2006)[2]
  • The Oxford Companion to Canadian Theatre, co-edited with L.W Connolly (1989)
  • Encyclopedia of Post-Colonial Literatures in English, co-edited with L.W. Connolly (1994, reissued 2005)

Works written

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  • Encounter: Canadian Drama in Four Media (1973)
  • Bulls of Ronda, a novel (1976)
  • J.M. Synge, a biography (1980)
  • Power Game: The Making of a Prime Minister, a novel (1980)
  • English Canadian Theatre , co-written with L.W. Connolly (1987)

Libretti for operas

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Eugene Benson fonds". University of Guelph. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Toye, William; Benson, Eugene, eds. (1997). Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature (2 ed.). Toronto: Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ a b "Eugene Benson". The Writers' Union of Canada. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  4. ^ Amatangelo, Amy. "'Welcome Home, Franklin' tells the backstory of the first Black 'Peanuts' character". Los Angeles times. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  5. ^ "Charles Wilson". Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-02-10. Retrieved 2010-03-24.