Lance Woolaver

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Lance Gerard Woolaver
Photo of Lance Woolaver
BornDigby County, Nova Scotia
OccupationWriter
LanguageEnglish
Alma materAcadia, Dalhousie, The Sorbonne
GenresHistory, Children's Books
SubjectsMaud Lewis, Portia White, Evelyn Richardson
Notable works
  • The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewis
  • Maud Lewis - World Without Shadows
  • Maud Lewis The Heart on the Door
SpouseMartha (Spencer)
Children
  • Shirley
  • Lance
Website
lancewoolaver.ca -->

Lance Gerard Woolaver (born 1948) is a Canadian author, poet, playwright, lyricist, and director.[1] His best-known works include books, film and biographical plays about Canadian folk artist Maud Lewis, including Maud Lewis The Heart on the Door, and Maud Lewis - World Without Shadows. His plays include one about international singer Portia White, who was born in Nova Scotia: Portia White - First You Dream.[2]

Biography

Early life

Woolaver was born in Digby County, Nova Scotia, in 1948.[2] He attended Acadia and Dalhousie universities in Nova Scotia, and the Sorbonne in Paris.[3]

As a child, Woolaver had seen Maud and Everett Lewis, and their tiny painted house. He noticed tourists stopping to buy paintings, but kept his distance from these local characters. However, he was later inspired to pitch an article on Maud Lewis to Chatelaine magazine.[4] The article was accepted on the condition that Woolaver co-write it with a female author. He wrote with his mother, and the resulting article, "The Joyful Art of Maud Lewis," published in December 1975, was purchased for $700, a sum he considered "a fortune" at the time. This enabled and encouraged him to devote time to writing.[4][5] He later wrote a book and two plays about Maud Lewis.

Woolaver published earlier stories in the 1970s in Canadian literary magazines, including the Wascana Review[6] (which ceased publication in 2012) and The Fiddlehead.[7]

Marriage and family

Woolaver lives in Halifax with his wife, Martha (Spencer) of Saskatoon. They married in 1967, and have two children, and two grandchildren. Woolaver enjoys flyfishing in the Canadian Rockies, and on the Margaree River in Cape Breton Island.[2]

Literary career

Woolaver wrote the book The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewis (1996), with photographs by Bob Brooks. It was awarded the Dartmouth Book Award and the Atlantic Booksellers Award. It was adapted as a film of the same name (with screenplay by Woolaver) that aired on Canadian VisionTV in 1998. The film was directed by Peter d'Entremont and produced by Triad Film Productions and the National Film Board of Canada.[8]

Woolaver's play Maud Lewis - World Without Shadows has been produced by professional and community theatres, including

Neptune Theatre (Halifax), King’s Theatre of Annapolis Royal and Ship’s Company Theatre of Parrsboro in Nova Scotia, and the Blyth Festival of Ontario. It was also adapted and produced as a CBC Radio
national broadcast.

His play The Poor Farm, was produced at the Chester Playhouse under the direction of Christopher Heide of

Acadian heritage in the same production.[citation needed
] It dealt with the politics of poverty and the system of provincial poor farms.

Woolaver's collection of Christmas songs, The Noel Cantata, was recently produced in Norway.[citation needed]

His young adult novel The Outlaw League (1991) was adapted for film, and he wrote the screenplay. Based in his hometown, it was shot in Restigouche, New Brunswick. It was produced in Montreal as La Gang des Hors la Loi; it won the Vancouver Reel to Real Film Festival in 2015.[2]

His play Portia White - First You Dream, about Portia White, a Nova Scotia native and Canada's first black singer to win international acclaim, has been produced by several theaters, including the Victoria Playhouse in Petrolia, Ontario.[9]

His newest novel, The Halflife of Evil, will be published by Spencer Books in June 2018. It is about Maud Lewis, the provincial Poor Farm, and the policies of imprisonment of the poor.

Maud Lewis

Woolaver is best known for his works on the life and art of Maud Lewis.[4] He wrote a picture book of Maud’s life, The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewis (1996), with photographs of Maud and her works by Bob Brooks. It has been in continuous print since being published. The cover image of Maud Lewis in the sunny corner of her tiny house has been recognized as a classic portrait, said to rank with the work of Yousuf Karsh.[4]

Maud Lewis - World Without Shadows, his play about Maud Lewis and her husband Everett Lewis, has been produced across Canada and broadcast by CBC radio. It tells of Maud’s struggle against

juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, and triumph as an artist, despite poverty. Canadian actor Nicola Lipman played Maud to great acclaim in the 1990s Ship’s Company Theatre and Neptune Theatre productions.[4]

His play The Return of Her Child deals with issues related to the adoption of Maud Lewis's daughter Catherine by Mamie Crosby.

Woolaver's recent full biography, Maud Lewis The Heart on the Door (2016), features another Brooks' portrait of the artist, taken in 1965, in which Lewis appears frightened and fearful. This is appropriate to the darker tone of this work, as Woolaver explores many issues in her life. His account contrasts also with the portrayal of Lewis in the independent feature drama film, Maudie.[4]

The Outlaw League / La Gang des Hors la Loi

The Outlaw League (1991) is a

young adult novel, which Woolaver set in his home town of Digby, Nova Scotia. It explores the role of baseball in bringing the people of the village together. Woolaver refers to childhood friends in his book, and to former Digby baseball teams, including the Digby Ravens, the Bear River Blue Sox, and the Freeport Schooners.[10]

The novel was adapted as a 2014 film, La Gang des Hors la Loi, produced by Rock Demers of Productions La Fete, from a script by André Melançon, Jean Beaudry, and Woolaver.[10]

Honours and awards

  • 2003, Maud Lewis - World Without Shadows won the Merritt Award as Nova Scotia’s outstanding play.

Books

Woolaver wrote the following:[2]

Plays

His plays include the following:[2]

  • Brindley Town : a two-hander in three acts (2000), Gaspereau Press, Wolfville, NS
  • The Poor Farm
  • Lord Strange
  • Maud Lewis - World Without Shadows (1996)
  • Portia White - First You Dream
  • Evelyn Richardson - The Keeping of Lights
  • Kenny Paul

Children's books

His children's books include the following:[2]

  • Duck, Duck and Duck
  • The Humble Mumbles
  • Christmas with the Rural Mail
  • From Ben Loman to the Sea
  • with Anna Gamble, Change of Tide '
  • with Lee Tanner, Mr. Christmas
  • with Lee Tanner, Darwin

Libretto

The Heart on the Door[2]

Songs

Noel Cantata, with Notteroy Church, Norway [2]

Scripts

His film screenplays and radio scripts include the following:[2][3]

  • The Poor Farms, Radio Documentary (with Ron Foley MacDonald)
  • The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewis (1998)
  • Maud Lewis - The Heart on the Door
  • The Outlaw League (produced as La Gang des Hors-la-Loi)
  • The Noggins

References

  1. .
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ a b c d e f Bennett, Paul W. (June 2, 2017). "Finding a Muse in Maud Lewis". The Chronicle Herald. p. D1-D3.
  5. ^ Ericsson, Sara (April 24, 2017). "'She lived a dark life:' Lance Woolaver on myths, realities of Maud Lewis". Digby Courier. Retrieved July 2, 2017.
  6. ^ Woolaver, Lance (Spring 1973). Dillow, H. C. (ed.). "Woolaver Story". The Wascana Review. Saskatchewan: University of Saskatchewan. pp. 35–38.
  7. ^ Woolaver, Lance (Fall 1973). Gibbs, Robert (ed.). "Woolaver Story". The Fiddlehead. Fredericton, New Brunswick: University of New Brunswick. pp. 64–72.
  8. ^ The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewis, Triad Film Productions
  9. ^ "Portia". Victoria Playhouse - Petrolia. Victoria Playhouse. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  10. ^
    OCLC 22812322
    .

External links