Eugene Benson


Eugene Benson is a professor of English and a prolific writer, novelist, playwright and librettist.

Early life

Born in Northern Ireland, Benson obtained a bachelor's degree from the National University of Ireland a master's degree from the University of Western Ontario and his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto.

Career

Benson is the librettist of five operatic works: Heloise and Abelard ; Everyman ; Psycho Red, music by Charles Wilson. The latter two operas were broadcast by the CBC. His operetta Earnest, the Importance of Being, music by Victor Davies, was premiered in 2008 by Toronto Operetta Theatre. The Auction: A Folk Opera was premiered by Westben Arts Festival Theatre in 2012.
Benson's scholarly publications include J.M. Synge ; English-Canadian Theatre, The Oxford Companion to Canadian Theatre ; The Routledge Encyclopedia of Post-Colonial Literatures in English — the latter three books with L.W. Conolly — and The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature. He edited the anthology Encounter: Canadian Drama in Four Media and the scholarly journal Canadian Drama/L’Art dramatique canadien.
Administrative Director and Budget Officer of the Guelph Spring Festival for many years, Benson is a former Chair of The Writers Union of Canada, and was Founding co-President of the Canadian Centre, International PEN, and Vice-President.
As an activist advancing the cause of writers, Benson served as president of PEN Canada in 1984 and, in 1983, as chairman of the Writers' Union of Canada, a position also once held by noted authors Margaret Atwood, Pierre Berton, June Callwood, Timothy Findley, Graeme Gibson, Susan Musgrave, and Paul Quarrington.
He has written four plays broadcast on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and translations of Quebec plays with his wife Renate Benson. He edited the periodical Canadian Drama. In 2003, Benson and Bill Fraser adapted Benson’s 1980 political satire Powergame into the made-for-TV movie North of America.

Personal life

He married Renate Niklaus, a retired languages and literature professor at University of Guelph, in 1968. Together they have two sons: Ormonde, a lawyer, and Shaun, an actor. Shaun has starred in the Canadian television series "The Associates", the soap opera "General Hospital" and the movie. Renate is author of German Expressionist Drama.
Benson twice served as president of the Guelph Spring Festival, an annual music fair.

Works