Josée Yvon


Josée Yvon was a Quebec poet, playwright and screenwriter. Her work relates largely to marginalised groups in society.

Biography

Josée Yvon was born, lived and died in Montreal in a popular neighborhood on Ontario Street.
In 1971, she obtained a bachelor's degree in theater studies from Université du Québec à Montréal. She then began a master's degree on Bertolt Brecht at Schauspielhaus of Düsseldorf,, but did not complete her studies.
She started her professional career as a director, with the Théâtre sans fil and the Grand Circus Ordinaire, an occasional screenwriter for Radio-Québec, a waitress and a translator. Also, she taught literature at Rosemont College, Bois-de-Boulogne College and Cégep Édouard-Montpetit.
Josée participated regularly in meetings where she read her texts like at the Solstice of Poetry in 1976, the Night of St. John in 1978 and the Night of Poetry of 1980. She was also a literary critic and collaborates notably at Mainmise, Hobo-Quebec, La Barre du jour, Cul-Q, Witches, Beatitude, Sisters, Ironie Point, Stars Screwers, and many others.
The publishing of her first book, Filles-commandos bandées, in 1976. made her one of the major authors in the Quebec poetry movement of the 1980s, marked by the beat generation, that developed around Red Herbs. And that's where she met Denis Vanier, her companion for the next eighteen years.
Her work was highly influenced by the American lesbian and revolutionary literature. The description of marginality has a major role in it: homosexuals, drug addicts, prostitutes, transsexuals, or transvestites are recurrent characters.
She died in June 1994 after a long struggle with AIDS, almost blind, leaving Manon la nuit, an unfinished manuscript on blindness.
Josée Yvon's archival fonds is kept in the Montreal archives center of Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec.

Art works

Filmography