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Canadian literary award
The Carol Bolt Award is an annual Canadian
literary award . Presented by the
Playwrights Guild of Canada , the award is bestowed for a theatrical play premiere by a PGC member, judged to be the year's best. The award is named in memory of Canadian playwright,
Carol Bolt .
Winners
2002 -
Kent Stetson , The Harps of God
[1]
2003 -
Daniel Goldfarb , Adam Baum and the Jew Movie
[2]
2004 -
Florence Gibson , Home Is My Road
[3]
2005 -
Mieko Ouchi , The Red Priest (Eight Ways To Say Goodbye)
2006 -
John Mighton , Half Life
2007 -
Stephen Massicotte , The Oxford Roof Climber's Rebellion
2008 -
Colleen Murphy , The December Man
2009 -
Vern Thiessen , Vimy
2010 -
Michael Nathanson , Talk
[4]
2011 -
Anusree Roy , Brothel #9
[5]
2012 -
Don Hannah , The Cave Painter
2013 -
David Yee , carried away on the crest of a wave
2014 -
Colleen Murphy ,
Pig Girl
2015 -
Jordan Tannahill , Concord Floral
2016 -
Lisa Codrington , Up the Garden Path
[6]
2017 -
Kate Hennig , The Virgin Trial
[7]
2018 -
Matthew MacKenzie , Bears
[8]
2019 -
Amy Rutherford , Mortified
[9]
2020 -
Keith Barker , This Is How We Got Here
[10]
2021 - No Award was presented this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic
References
^ "Fine judge of talent".
The Guardian , March 4, 2005.
^ "'Jewtopia' and 'Modern Orthodox': Treading the Line". Backstage , January 12, 2005.
^
"Relocated playwright enjoying Thornhill" .
YorkRegion.com , May 7, 2013.
^ "A less-than-relaxing weekend at the 'cottage'".
Winnipeg Free Press , March 31, 2011.
^ "'That just feels like such a gift'".
The Globe and Mail , November 8, 2011.
^
"News (National): Tom Hendry Award Recipients Announced – Playwrights Guild of Canada" . Theatre Alberta , November 1, 2016.
^
"Winners Announced for Playwrights Guild of Canada's 2017 Tom Hendry Awards" . Broadway World . October 30, 2017.
^
"MacKenzie, Matthew" . Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia . January 29, 2019.
^
"News (National): Playwrights Guild of Canada Announces the Winners of the 2019 Tom Hendry Awards" . Theatre Alberta. October 29, 2019. Retrieved July 16, 2020 .
^
J. Kelly Nestruck ,
"The top 10 theatrical works of 2020, a year when stages went dark and performing arts pivoted" .
The Globe and Mail , December 8, 2020.
External links