Eric Merton Roach (3 November 1915 – 18 April 1974) was a Tobagonian poet and playwright.[1][2] He published some early writing under the pseudonym Merton Maloney.
Life
Roach grew up in Mount Pleasant, Tobago:
My village, Mount Pleasant, was a sprawling bushy compound of crude wattle or clapboard cabins with thatched or tin roofs, shabby like ourselves. In later years it seemed to me that in my boyhood we were clinging to life by the skin of our teeth and did not realise our hardship because we knew nothing else.[3]
Between 1949 and 1955, his poetry was frequently broadcast on the BBC programme Caribbean Voices.[1]
In 1960s, Roach began to gain an international reputation. However, he became overwhelmed and depressed, and committed suicide in 1974, drinking insecticide before swimming in the ocean.[1]
Work
Plays
- Belle Fanto: A Medium-length Play in 3 Acts, 1967
- Letter from Leonora, 1968
- A Calabash of Blood (a Full-length Play in 3 acts), 1971
- New Dancers in the Dooryard (undated)[4]
Poems
- The Flowering Rock: Collected Poems 1938–1974, Peepal Tree Press, 1992
Plays: performance history
Belle Fanto
Trinidad and Tobago Secondary Schools Drama Festival[5]
- 1971: St. George's College (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Slade Hopkinson.
- 1973: Palo Seco Government Secondary (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by B.T. Harry.
- 1982: Cowen Hamilton Secondary (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Victor Edwards.
- 1988: San Fernando West Senior Comprehensive (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Garvin McClean.
- 1989: Signal Hill Senior Comprehensive School (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Cherryll Uzoruo.
- 1992: Aranguez Junior Secondary School (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Susan Crichlow.
- 1993: Signal Hill Senior Comprehensive School (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Cherryll Uzoruo.
- 1997: St. George's College (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Rawle Carrington.
- 1999: Tranquillity Government Secondary (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Karen Griffith.
- 2002: Cowen Hamilton Secondary School (Trinidad and Tobago) directed by Iezora Edwards.
Theatre companies The following theatre companies performed Belle Fanto:
- San Fernando Theatre Workshop, directed by James Lee Wah
- Trinidad Theatre Workshop, directed by Derek Walcott
- The Tobago Drama Guild, directed by Peter Wheeler Thabiti
A Calabash of Blood
- 2019: The University of the West Indies, Department of Creative and Festival Arts, directed by Neriah Alfred
- 2021: The Tobago Drama Guild, directed by Peter Wheeler Thabiti
- 2023: The Tobago Drama Guild, directed by Peter Wheeler Thabiti
References
- ^ a b c "Eric Roach". Peepal Tree Press. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
- ^ Breiner, Laurence (10 November 2006). "Laureate of nowhere". Caribbean Review of Books. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
- ^ Eric Roach, "Growing up in Tobago", in Michael Anthony and Andrew Carr, eds., David Frost Introduces Trinidad and Tobago, London: Andre Deutsch, 1975, pp. 147–58.
- ^ Jean Sue Wing papers. The Alma Jordan Library, The University of the West Indies. SC 7, Box 1, Folder 5.
- ^ Edwards, Victor (2007). A history of the Secondary Schools Drama Association and its role as an institution for the development of drama in Trinidad and Tobago (MPhil thesis). St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago: The University of the West Indies.
Further reading
- Laurence A. Breiner, Black Yeats: Eric Roach and the Politics of Caribbean Poetry, Peepal Tree Press, 2008
External links
- Al Creighton, Glorifying African survivals, 22 August 2010
- Andre Bagoo, "I am the Archipelago": Eric Roach and Black Identity, 28 February 2015
- Eric Roach and the Flowering Rock Archived 25 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- Eric Roach manuscripts at the University of the West Indies