Larry Fineberg
{{Short description|Canadian playwright (born 1945)}}
Larry Fineberg (born 1945 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian playwright. He is most noted for his 1976 play Eve, an adaptation of Constance Beresford-Howe's novel The Book of Eve which won the Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award."Playwrights share award for best play". The Globe and Mail, February 1, 1977.
Originally from the Côte-Saint-Luc borough of Montreal, Fineberg briefly attended McGill University"Fineberg attacks obsession with past". The Globe and Mail, November 15, 1977. before transferring to Emerson College in Boston.[http://www.canadiantheatre.com/dict.pl?term=Fineberg%2C%20Larry "Fineberg, Larry"]. Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia, July 13, 2010. While there, he was a producer of several theatre productions, including Fiddler on the Roof and Cabaret, and worked as an assistant director to Frank Loesser. He returned to Canada in 1972, and his first play Stonehenge Trilogy was staged by Toronto's Factory Theatre that year.
His other plays have included Death (1972), Hope (1972), All the Ghosts (1973), Lady Celeste's Tea (1974), Waterfall (1974), Human Remains (1975), Fresh Disasters (1976), Life on Mars (1979), Montreal (1981), Devotion (1985), Failure of Nerve (1991), Doctor's Liver (1992), The Final Solution (1992) and The Clairvoyant (2000),"Strong cast molds new play". Toronto Star, March 9, 2000. as well as an adaptation of Medea which was staged at the Stratford Festival in 1978."Electric Medea holds the stage". The Globe and Mail, July 3, 1978.
Fineberg was a writer-in-residence at Stratford and Buddies in Bad Times, and a founding member of the Playwrights Guild of Canada.
Many of Fineberg's plays addressed gay themes. Fineberg identified himself as bisexual.David Booth and Kathleen Gallagher, How Theatre Educates: Convergences and Counterpoints with Artists, Scholars and Advocates. University of Toronto Press, 2003. {{ISBN|9780802085566}}. p. 184.
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Category:Anglophone Quebec people
Category:Canadian male dramatists and playwrights
Category:Canadian LGBTQ dramatists and playwrights
Category:Bisexual male writers
Category:Writers from Montreal
Category:Jewish Canadian writers
Category:Emerson College alumni
Category:People from Côte Saint-Luc
Category:20th-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights
Category:20th-century Canadian male writers
Category:Canadian bisexual men
Category:Canadian bisexual writers
Category:Bisexual dramatists and playwrights
Category:20th-century Canadian LGBTQ people
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