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United States to host William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting contest

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  • United States to host William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting contest

    United States to host William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting contest
    30.01.2010 19:24 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Los Angeles-based Armenian Dramatic Arts
    Alliance launches William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting contest. The
    initiative was made possible by a grant from the William Saroyan
    Foundation.

    The grand prize is $10,000, with publicity and other prizes awarded to
    the top three finalists.

    William Saroyan: a XX century Armenian-American dramatist and author,
    descendent of Armenian Genocide survivors. The setting of many of his
    stories and plays is the center of Armenian-American life in
    California in his native Fresno.

    As a writer, Saroyan made his breakthrough in Story magazine with The
    Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze (1934), the title taken from
    the nineteenth century song of the same title. He published essays and
    memoirs, in which he depicted the people he had met on travels in the
    Soviet Union and Europe, such as the playwright George Bernard Shaw,
    the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius, and Charlie Chaplin. In 1952,
    Saroyan published The Bicycle Rider in Beverly Hills, the first of
    several volumes of memoirs.

    Saroyan's stories celebrated optimism in the midst of the trials and
    tribulations of the Depression. Several of Saroyan's works were drawn
    from his own experiences, although his approach to autobiographical
    fact contained a fair bit of poetic license. Saroyan is probably best
    remembered for his play The Time of Your Life (1939), set in a
    waterfront saloon in San Francisco. It won a Pulitzer Prize, which
    Saroyan refused on the grounds that commerce should not judge the
    arts; he did accept the New York Drama Critics' Circle award. The play
    was adapted into a 1948 film starring James Cagney. In the novellas
    The Assyrian and other stories (1950) and in The Laughing Matter
    (1953) Saroyan mixed allegorical elements within a realistic novel.
    Many of his later plays, such as The Paris Comedy (1960), The London
    Comedy (1960), and Settled Out of Court (1969), premiered in Europe.
    Manuscripts of a number of unperformed plays are now at Stanford
    University with his other papers.
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