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William Whitehead (Canadian writer)

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Language
  
English

Role
  
Canadian writer

Nationality
  
Canadian

Partner
  
Timothy Findley


Period
  
1960s-2010s

Movies
  
Dieppe 1942

Name
  
William Whitehead

William Whitehead (Canadian writer) statictheglobeandmailca9bbartsbooksandmedia

Occupation
  
radio and television documentary writer, memoirist

Notable works
  
Dieppe 1942, The National Dream: Building the Impossible Railway, Words to Live By

Education
  
University of Saskatchewan

Books
  
Words to Live By, The Story of the Sentinels of the Republic, Dieppe, 1942: Echoes of Disaster

Nominations
  
Genie Award for Outstanding Non-Dramatic Script

People also search for
  
Timothy Findley

William Frederick (Bill) Whitehead (born 1931) is a Canadian writer, actor and filmmaker, best known as a writer of radio and television documentaries and as the former partner of the late Canadian writer Timothy Findley.

William Whitehead (Canadian writer) William Whitehead Author of Words to Live By

He studied biology and theatre arts at the University of Saskatchewan, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1953 and a Master of Arts degree in 1955. He moved to Ontario in 1957 to become an actor and producer. He is an award-winning writer of radio and television documentaries, including many episodes of the CBC Television series The Nature of Things and the CBC Radio series Ideas. He also co-wrote several works with Findley, including the television documentaries Dieppe 1942 and The National Dream: Building the Impossible Railway.

In March 2004, approximately two years after Findley's death, Whitehead donated a collection of Findley's theatre memorabilia to the University of Guelph.

In September 2012, his memoir Words to Live By was published by Cormorant Books. The book was a shortlisted nominee for the Stephen Leacock Award in 2013.

In 2014 he served on the jury of the Dayne Ogilvie Prize for LGBT writers, selecting Tamai Kobayashi as that year's winner.

References

William Whitehead (Canadian writer) Wikipedia