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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Entertainment -> 
Tributes paid to ‘hero’ playwright Parv Bancil
    2017-04-06  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    TRIBUTES have been paid to playwright Parv Bancil, whose tackling of issues affecting young British-Asians brought him both acclaim and controversy.

    Bancil died in London over the weekend, aged 50.

    BBC DJ Bobby Friction said Bancil had been his “hero and role model,” while actor Nitin Ganatra remembered him as “one of the original BritAsian storytellers.”

    Broadcaster Anita Anand, actress Nina Wadia and director Gurinder Chadha also posted tribute messages on Twitter.

    Bancil was formerly married to actress Shivani Ghai, who played Ayesha Rana in “EastEnders.”

    Born in Tanzania in 1967, he lived in west London from the age of 2 and began writing plays in 1986.

    In 1991 he won a BBC Radio 4 Young Playwright award for “Nadir,” about a young second-generation Asian man fresh out of prison.

    He went on to write “Papa Was a Bus Conductor,” a comedy satire about a dysfunctional family that was an early flowering of the British Asian comedy boom that spawned Goodness Gracious Me.

    In 1997 he wrote “Crazyhorse” for the Paines Plough theater company, about a young man who becomes estranged from his father and embroiled in petty crime.

    Its director Vicky Featherstone, now artistic director at the Royal Court in London, said she was “so so sad” to hear of his death.

    After taking a year out to study filmmaking, Bancil began writing screenplays. He also became known as a cultural commentator.

    In 2008 he asked “what have multicultural arts policies done for us?” in a piece for The Guardian.

    (SD-Agencies)

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