Ian Valz
Ian Valz | |
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Birth name | Ian Michael Valz |
Born |
August 28, 1957 Georgetown, Guyana |
Died |
April 28, 2010 St. Maarten |
Country |
Guyana Sint Maarten |
Sir Ian Michael Valz (August 28, 1957 in Georgetown – April 28, 2010 in St. Maarten) was a Guyanese playwright, award-winning filmmaker, and actor. On April 28, 2010 he died of cancer at St. Maarten Medical Center.
Life and career
Valz was born on Hadfield Street, Georgetown where he attended St. Mary's Primary and St. Stanislaus College. He was an integral part of the development of Guyanese theater in the eighties and was well known for his many contributions to dramatic production. From his early radio serial drama, House of Pressure to popular stage shows such as Two's a Crowd and Masquerade. Masquerade (House of Nehesi Publishers, 1988) was nominated for the Guyana Prize for Literature in 1992.
He also penned plays such as House of Pressure (also a radio serial) 1981; Room to Let, A Passage to the Sun, Virgin In Black, Rhythm of the Palms which became the movie, The Panman: Rhythm of the Palms, The Peacock Dance which was made into a television movie in 2004, Separate Status, Breaking All The Rules, Antillean House, Breakfast@Oranje, Borderline, Chiware's Revenge and The Plantation.
Valz was knighted in the order of Oranje Nassau by her majesty, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands in 2006. A graduate of St Stanislaus College, Georgetown, Guyana, he also did theater studies at the Theater Guild. He held a Public Health Diploma, from the University Of Guyana. In Guyana he served as Sports and Cultural Director, from 1982 to 1984. He began residing in St. Maarten from 1984 where he became the Drama Director of the Cultural Center of St. Maarten from 1985 to 1995. His next post was Artistic Director of the St. Maarten Independent Theater Foundation, from 1994 until his death.
Valz produced numerous plays but it was the television movie version of his 1999 The Peacock Dance and the 2004 film The Panman: Rhythm of the Palms which secured Valz's position as one of the Region's leading playwrights. All told, he directed over 60 plays and acted in more than 30.
Plays
Television
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