词条 | Sean Reycraft |
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| name = | image = Sean Reycraft at the CFC in L.A. - Honouring John Fawcett and Graeme Manson (16946955721).jpg | alt = Sean Reycraft at a CFC event in L.A. | caption = Sean Reycraft at a CFC event in L.A. | birth_date = | birth_place = | death_date = | death_place = | nationality = Canada | other_names = | known_for = | occupation = television producer and playwright }}Sean Reycraft is a Canadian screenwriter, television producer and playwright.[1] He is most noted for his theatrical play Pop Song, which won the Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award in the Youth Theatre division in 2001,[2] and as the screenwriter of Laurie Lynd's 2007 film Breakfast with Scot.[3] The son of former Ontario MPP Doug Reycraft,[4] he was born and raised in Glencoe.[1] He was an actor in the early 1990s before premiering his first play, Einstein Dreams at Buddies in Bad Times in 1996.[5] His later plays included Reconstruction,[6] The End of Dancing,[7] Roundabout,[8] Strange Things Happen,[9] and One Good Marriage.[1] He studied film and television writing at the Canadian Film Centre,[4] and has since been a writer and producer on television series such as Braceface, The Eleventh Hour, The Next Generation, Instant Star, Slings & Arrows, The Best Years, 90210, Being Erica, The Vampire Diaries, Switched at Birth, Finding Carter and Killjoys. He is out as gay.[1] References1. ^1 2 3 [https://nowtoronto.com/stage/reycrafts-craft/ "Reycraft's craft"]. Now, January 22, 2004. 2. ^"Chalmers winners for the last time ; Rich theatre awards will be replaced with grants system". Toronto Star, May 15, 2001. 3. ^"Gay 'thoughtful comedy' stars fictional Leafs player". Winnipeg Free Press, November 25, 2006. 4. ^1 "Prime Time: Citizen writer Tony Atherton follows a group of students taking a crash course on writing for TV". Ottawa Citizen, May 27, 1999. 5. ^"Experimenting with Rhubarb: Unpredictable fest of short works opens with six new shows". Toronto Star, February 1, 1996. 6. ^"Parental anguish, guilt hit the mark". Toronto Star, August 18, 1996. 7. ^"What happens when the Shaw meets gay theatre?: The result is a Winter Fling". National Post, December 11, 1999. 8. ^"Staged misbehavin' ; Xtreme lineup won't shy away from dangerous questions". Toronto Star, February 28, 2002. 9. ^"Salons & Soirees". Toronto Star, April 10, 2003. External links
19 : 20th-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights|21st-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights|Canadian male dramatists and playwrights|Canadian screenwriters|Canadian television writers|Canadian television producers|LGBT writers from Canada|LGBT dramatists and playwrights|LGBT screenwriters|LGBT producers|Gay writers|Writers from Ontario|People from Middlesex County, Ontario|Living people|Canadian Film Centre alumni|20th-century Canadian male writers|21st-century Canadian male writers|Male television writers|Year of birth missing (living people) |
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