Allan Stratton

Allan Stratton (born 1951) is a Canadian playwright and novelist.

Born in Stratford, Ontario, Stratton began his professional arts career began while he was still in high school, when James Reaney published his play The Rusting Heart in the literary magazine Alphabet. It was broadcast on CBC Radio in 1970. The focus of his early work, however, was acting. While working on an Honours degree in English at Victoria University in the University of Toronto (1973), he performed with the Stratford Festival and the Huron Country Playhouse. After completing his M.A. at The Graduate Centre for the Study of Drama, University of Toronto (1974), he appeared with regional theatres across the country, originating a range of roles in new works by playwrights such as James Reaney, Rex Deverell and Sharon Pollock.

Throughout this period, Stratton continued to write, and in 1977 his first professional stage play, 72 Under the 0, was produced by Christopher Newtonat the Vancouver Playhouse. A few years later, he turned to writing fulltime, thanks to the success of Nurse Jane Goes to Hawaii, a play that has had over three hundred productions internationally. Rexy!, a satire about Mackenzie King, was premiered in the winter of 1981. It was performed across Canada, and won the Chalmers Award, the Canadian Authors’ Association Award, and the Dora Mavor Moore Award, all for Best New Play.

In 1982, he moved to New York, where he was a member of the Playwright/Director Unit of Lee Strasberg's Actor's Studio, chaired by Arthur Penn. While there, Christopher Newton commissioned Stratton to write an adaptation of the classic Labiche farce Célimare for the Shaw Festival Mainstage. The production went on to tour to the National Arts Centre, and was the first Shaw production aired on CBC television. Papers, another of his plays with an international publication and production record, followed soon after. It premiered at the Tarragon Theatre, and won a Chalmers Award for Outstanding New Play, as well as being nominated for the 1986 Governor General's Award for English language drama the Dora Mavor Moore Award.

Stratton returned to Canada in the late 1980s, and moved to Montreal, where he wrote the comedy-of-bad-manners Bag Babies, which opened at Theatre Passe Muraille in 1990. It was nominated for the City of Toronto Book Award and produced across Canada, as well as in the United States, Edinburgh and London. A few years later, he was commissioned to adapt Dracula for the Skylight Theatre. A female van Helsing, a comic look at Victorian mores, and a recreation of the novel's sweep distinguish this adaptation which was nominated for the Dora Mavor Moore Award for Best New Play, Large Theatre Division, 1995.

Other plays include The 101 Miracles of Hope Chance, which premiered at the Manitoba Theatre Centre; Joggers, which premiered at Toronto Free Theatre (now Canadianstage); A Flush of Tories, which premiered at Prairie Theatre Exchange, and aired as a drama special on CBC television; and the radio play When Father Passed Away.

In the mid 1990s, Stratton headed the Drama Department at the Etobicoke School of the Arts, where he taught senior directing, acting and playwriting. His students won many awards, including three consecutive Best New Play Awards at the Sears Drama Festival provincial championships. However, classroom and administrative duties restricted his creative time and consequently he returned to fulltime writing.

For the past few years, his focus has been fiction. The results of this work include two novels released in fall 2000: The Phoenix Lottery, a social satire about art, commerce and untidy family relationships, published by the Riverbank Press; and Leslie’s Journal, a young adult novel about sexual abuse in adolescent dating relationships, published in Canada and in the United States by Annick Press.

The Phoenix Lottery was nominated for the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour, the Canadian National Institute for the Blind’s Talking Book of the Year Award, and the TORGI Award; it received a Stephen Leacock Award of Merit. Leslie’s Journal was selected for the American Library Association’s “Best Books for Young Adults, 2002”, “Popular Paperbacks for Young Adults, 2003” and “Best Reading List, 2003”. Other citations include The Canadian Bookseller’s “The Best of Canadian Young Adult: Gems of 2000”, the Young Adult Learning Services Association (A.L.A.)’s “Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers 2001”, the McNally Robinson Booksellers’ “Our Choice 2001”, and the Canadian Children’s Book Centre’s “Best Books for Young Adults”.

Stratton's 2004 novel Chanda's Secrets, a young adult/adult crossover, is set against the HIV/AIDS pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa. The novel has received critical praise internationally and is being published and distributed around the world to countries, including the United States, Great Britain, South Africa, India, Germany, France, Japan, China, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Hong Kong, Slovenia and the African francophonie. It is has won the American Library Association's Michael L. Printz Honor Book for Excellence in Young Adult Literature, the African Studies Association's Children's Africana Book Award for Best Book for the Older Reader, and a host of other best book awards and citations.

Stratton is currently married to his life partner, Daniel.

Aside from his novels and plays, Stratton has written for international events, including the evenings for Stephen Sondheim, Robert Rauschenberg and Guy Laliberté at the Harbourfront Centre World Leaders’ Festival, Toronto.

Contents

Prizes and honours

Bibliography

Novels

Plays

External links