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Writer Receives Grant For William Hutt Biography

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  • Writer Receives Grant For William Hutt Biography

    WRITER RECEIVES GRANT FOR WILLIAM HUTT BIOGRAPHY

    The Mississauga News
    March 22, 2012 Thursday
    Ontario, Canada

    by Joseph Chin, [email protected]

    A widely-published Mississauga writer has received a pair of grants
    from the Ontario Arts Council. Keith Garebian is the author of
    18 books - and counting. He was one of only 21 writers, from 178
    applicants, to receive the $12,000 Works in Progress Grant, awarded
    by a seven-member jury.

    He also received a separate $1,500 grant. He'll use the funds to write
    a biography of William Hutt, who made his mark as one of the world's
    greatest classical actors while performing in Canada, primarily at
    the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. Hutt died in 2007 at age 87. "The
    significance of the grants is twofold for me," said the Lakeview
    resident. "This is the second Works in Progress Grant that I have won
    and it is for biography, whereas the first one three years ago was for
    a poetry manuscript that became Children of Ararat ." Garebian, 68,
    has signed a contract with the prestigious Oxford University Press
    to publish a hardcover edition of the Hutt book early in 2013. Born
    in India to an Armenian father and an Anglo-Indian mother, Garebian
    holds a doctorate in Canadian and Commonwealth Literature from Queen's
    University. In addition to books, Garebian's reviews and articles
    have appeared in more than 100 newspapers, journals, magazines
    and anthologies. In 2000, he became the first critic-at-large to be
    appointed by a public library, when he was contracted to write theatre
    and book reviews for three years on the Mississauga Library System's
    website. Trained as a teacher, he taught in Quebec and Ontario before
    turning to writing full-time about 12 years ago. Garebian joined the
    exodus of Quebeckers to other parts of the country following the 1980
    sovereignty referendum. He has been living in Mississauga since 1983.

    "I'm one of those car people ... I didn't like the politics and the
    economy wasn't doing well," he said. Garebian is a two-time winner
    of the Mississauga Arts Award for literary arts.

    Writing Hutt's biography is a happy convergence of Garebian's two
    loves: writing and theatre. He considers Hutt among the top 10 actors
    in the world. "He always cast a spell on the audience with his strong
    stage presence and natural voice," he said.

    Although Hutt appeared on stage in London and New York, Garebian
    points out he joined Stratford during its inaugural season in 1953
    and trod its boards until 2005. "He's the perfect example of a leading
    Canadian actor who believed he could have a career in his own country
    - and that's exactly what he accomplished," said Garebian. This will
    be Garebian's second book about Hutt, whom he met and befriended in
    1984. William Hutt: A Theatre Portrait was published four years later.

    In 1995, he edited William Hutt: Masks and Faces - a collection of
    tributes by prominent writers to mark Hutt's 75th birthday.

    "A lot of people who read the first biography asked me to write his
    complete life story. Plus, there's a wealth of information available
    for exploration since then to 2007 - the year of his death," said
    the author, when asked why he's undertaking another biography. The
    560-page hardcover book will be published next March or April.

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