Helen Weinzweig Explained

Helen Weinzweig
Birth Name:Perla Chuma Tenenbaum
Birth Date:May 21, 1915
Birth Place:Zurich, Switzerland
Death Date:February 11, 2010
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Occupation:novelist, short stories
Period:1960s-1980s
Nationality:Canadian
Notableworks:Basic Black with Pearls, A View from the Roof
Spouse:John Weinzweig

Helen Weinzweig (1915–2010), née Tenenbaum, was a Canadian writer.[1] The author of two novels and a short story collection, her novel Basic Black with Pearls won the Toronto Book Award in 1981, and her short story collection A View from the Roof was a shortlisted nominee for the Governor General's Award for English-language fiction in 1989.

Born in Switzerland in 1915 to parents hailing from near Radom, Poland, she emigrated to Canada at age nine with her mother, and married composer John Weinzweig on July 12, 1940.[2] She published her first short story, "Surprise!", in Canadian Forum in 1967, and her debut novel Passing Ceremony was published in 1973. She came to be regarded as one of Canada's first important feminist writers. Her style was marked by experimental forms with some aspects of metafiction; in her short story "Journey to Porquis", a writer on a train trip realizes that all of his fellow passengers are characters in his novel.

In the early 1980s, with the encouragement of director and producer Rina Fraticelli, the theatre artist Pol Pelletier adapted Weinzweig's short story My Mother’s Luck for the English language stage. Pelletier incarnated the Mother in productions in Montréal (at the Théâtre expérimental des femmes[3]), Toronto, Ottawa, and Hamilton.[4] Several of Weinzweig's short stories in A View from the Roof were later adapted for stage and CBC Radio broadcast by playwright Dave Carley.[5]

Weinzweig died in 2010, aged 94.

Works

Archive

Helen Weinzweig papers, Coll. 1945–2003 at the library, University of Toronto

Notes and References

  1. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/books-and-media/helen-weinzweig-toronto-author-of-surreal-fiction-dead-at-age-94/article1208661/ "Helen Weinzweig, Toronto author of surreal fiction, dead at age 94"
  2. Book: A Self-Made Composer. John Beckwith . Brian Cherney. Weinzweig Essays on His life and Music . 9.
  3. Web site: 3e Festival de Créations de femmes . October 8, 2024 . Espace GO.
  4. Lushington . Kate . 1985 . The Possibility and the Habit . Fuse . Summer 1985 . 62–63.
  5. https://www.playwrightsguild.ca/news/helen-weinzweig-1915-2010 "Helen Weinzweig (1915 - 2010)"