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Although strongly connected to Leeds in the imagination
of many of his readers, Tony Harrison has lived in Newcastle
for over thirty years.
Tony Harrison is Britain's leading film and theatre
poet. He has written for the National Theatre in London,
the New York Metropolitan Opera and for the BBC and
Channel 4 television. He was born in Leeds, England
in 1937 and was educated at Leeds Grammar School and
Leeds University, where he read Classics and took a
diploma in Linguistics.
He became the first Northern Arts Literary Fellow
(1967-8), a post that he held again in 1976-7, and he
was resident dramatist at the National Theatre (1977-8).
His work there included adaptations of Molière's
The Misanthrope
and Racine's Phaedra Britannica.
His first collection of poems,
The Loiners (1970), was awarded the Geoffrey
Faber Memorial Prize in 1972, and his acclaimed version
of Aeschylus's The Oresteia
(1981) won him the first European Poetry Translation
Prize in 1983. The Gaze
of the Gorgon (1992) won the Whitbread Award
for Poetry.
His adaptation of the English Medieval Mystery Plays
cycle was first performed at the National Theatre in
1985. Many of his plays have been staged away from conventional
auditoria: The Trackers
of Oxyrhyncus was premièred at the ancient
stadium at Delphi in 1988;
Poetry or Bust was first performed at Salts Mill,
Saltaire in Yorkshire in 1993; The
Kaisers of Carnuntum premiered at the ancient
Roman amphitheatre at Carnuntum in Austria; and The
Labours of Herakles was performed on the site
of the new theatre at Delphi in Greece in 1995. His
translation of Victor Hugo's The
Prince's Play was performed at the National Theatre
in 1996.
His films using verse narrative include
V, about vandalism, broadcast by Channel 4 television
in 1987 and winner of a Royal Television Society Award;
Black Daisies for the
Bride, winner of the Prix Italia in 1994; and
The Blasphemers' Banquet, screened by the BBC
in 1989, an attack on censorship inspired by the Salman
Rushdie affair. He co-directed A
Maybe Day in Kazakhstan for Channel 4 in 1994
and directed, wrote and narrated
The Shadow of Hiroshima and Other Film/Poems,
screened by Channel 4 in 1995 on the 50th anniversary
of the dropping of the first atom bomb. The published
text won the Heinemann Award in 1996. He wrote and directed
his first feature film Prometheus
in 1998.
In 1995 he was commissioned by The
Guardian newspaper to visit Bosnia and write
poems about the war. His most recent collection of poetry
is Laureate's Block and
Other Occasional Poems (2000).
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