Skip to main content

This version of the website was created in 2025. See the Site Information Page for contact information, data downloads, and other details.

DEVERELL, REX (b. 1941)

Rex Deverell is a Canadian dramatist noted for his children's plays, his full-length plays, and his time as a writer in residence at the Globe Theatre, Regina, from 1975 to 1990. He was born July 17, 1941, in Toronto, raised in Orillia, Ontario, and received a bachelor's from McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, in 1963, a bachelor of divinity from Mc- Master in 1966, and a master of sacred theology from Union Theological Seminary in New York in 1967. He began writing plays in 1966 and has been a prolific writer ever since, with more than twenty children's plays, fifteen fulllength plays, and half a dozen plays commissioned by various groups. He has participated in five collective productions and has been an active playwright for CBC radio.

At the Globe Theatre he began as a children's playwright and wrote roughly one children's play a year. His first full-length play, Boiler Room Suite (1977), became his best known and most produced. He wrote a number of Saskatchewan-specific documentaries like Medicare! (1980), on the introduction of socialized medicine to Canada and the subsequent doctors strike, as well as Number 1 Hard (1978) and Black Powder: Estevan 1931 (1981). He has also written musicals, including Mandarin Oranges (1985/1990), and plays that explore religion, including Righteousness (1983), about Saint Augustine.

Plays produced in a single year, 1985, give a good cross section of Deverell's work. That year was the centenary of the North-West Rebellion, and Deverell composed both a fivehour radio drama for the cbc, The Riel Commission, and a play for the Globe, Beyond Batoche. He also wrote a musical, a children's play, and another radio drama and worked on a collective show in 1985.

Donald C. Kerr University of Saskatchewan

Wallace, Robert, and Cynthia Zimmerman, eds. The Works: Conversations with English Canadian Playwrights. Toronto: Coach House Press, 1982: 127–41.

XML: egp.lt.015.xml