Bryden MacDonald

Bryden MacDonald (born October 30, 1960, in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia)[1] is a Canadian playwright.

[2] His other plays include The Weekend Healer (1994), Divinity Bash / nine lives (1998) and The Extasy of Bedridden Riding Hood (2004).

He was nominated again for the Governor General's Award for English drama for Odd Ducks (2015),[3][4] He has also helmed musical tributes to Leonard Cohen (Sincerely, A Friend, 1991), Carole Pope and Rough Trade (Shaking the Foundations, 1999) and Joni Mitchell (When All the Slaves Are Free, 2003).

[1] MacDonald is also a theatre director, most noted for his productions of Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Joe Orton's What the Butler Saw and Judith Thompson's Perfect Pie.

[3] He has taught at the National Theatre School of Canada, and served as playwright in residence at the Stratford Festival.