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Village Squire, 1978-07, Page 28PROFILE Peter Colley's writing his own success story Many people dream about being a writer. There's something magic in the word. But few are those who have the courage to try it, fewer still who have the skills and very few, in Canada at least, who can make a living doing it. Londoner Peter Colley then will be the envy of many a would-be writer. Playwrights who can call themselves successful, not only in terms of critical comment but in the hard economic realities of life are a rare breed indeed in Canada. Yet for the past four or five years Peter Colley has devoted himself almost full time to writing and he still looks hale and hearty despite it. Lean he is, but hardly emaciated from starvation. He's currently very busy having just had one play open at the Blyth Summer Festival and with another celebrating the centenary of the University of Western Ontario due to go into rehearsal in September. Not bad for a man who came to Canada to teach geography. Peter is originally from England with a background in the theatre. His grandpar- ents were impresarios in the music hall business buying and selling theatres but generally owning about three. One of the theatres was a very old one and Peter has the only copy in existence of a script of a play performed there in 1777. Later, when the music halls waned, the grandparents turned the theatres into cinemas. Though there is a direct link between his past and his present, the theatrical side of his family wasn't really a great influence, he says. His parents were military, not theatrical people and they had a greater influence than his grandparents. Still, he was appearing in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas from a young age, in the back row of the chorus he jokes because he couldn't sing. He appeared in about one a year, until he was 18. He lived in an old fashioned British boarding house filled with all kinds of fantastic characters. In fact he says, he's written a play about it but he's never shown it to a soul. While at the boarding house he travelled regularly to London to see shows and visited the Oxford Playhouse. He was fascinated with sports and devoted much of his time to that during his teenage years but when he got to university sports were no longer where the action was. The best parties, he was told, PG. 26. VILLAGE SQUIRE/JULY 1978. Playwright Peter Colley. were with the theatre crowd. Why the women ran around naked at those parties. That's why, he jokes, he decided to audition for a play. He got the part. He later discovered that the parties weren't filled with naked ladies but they were certainly more interesting than rugby parties so he continued to act. While in university he got involved in comedy revues and began writing comedy sketches for the revues. Eventually. he says, he wrote a complete revue although it was little more than pornography he says now. In a "fit of artistic integrity" he decided to write a real play and the result was "The Saga of Regin" which was "a fatuous tale about spirits". The play was produced by a small professional theatre in England and opened in the fall and closed in December. By January, he was in Canada. Now, it wasn't that he was thrown out of England because of the play, it was that he decided he wanted to come to Canada ostensibly to study for his masters degree at the University of Western Ontario and pay his way by teaching geography. What he really intended all the time, he says now, was to write but the only way he could get landed immigrant status was as a teacher because there was a shortage at the time. For the first two years nearly everything he did in theatre was as an actor, which took away from his being able to concentrate on writing. He did 12 shows in his first year in addition to teaching which left little time to sit down with his pen (he writes his scripts in longhand). His first play in Canada was really a long sketch, -he says, which was performed at the Minitheatre of Theatre London under the aegis of Heinar Pillar, the theatre's artistic director at the time. There was no real director for the show as Peter who also A CHRISTMAS COUNTRY FAIR DISPLAY AND SALE OF LOCAL ARTS, CRAFTS & COUNTRY BAKING Wednesday, October 18 and Saturday. October 21, 1978. Saltford Valley Hall '/4 mile N. of Goderich in Colborne Township Special Features: Mona Mulhern, artist of Goderich; Alfred Dale, quadraplegic artist of Seaforth; Robert Stoddart, silversmith of Goderich, Joan Pope, Goderich-- "Gollywog" dools, Neil McKee, Benmiller--bird feeders. Stiickland AUTOMOBILES ..11111111 JEEP TOYOTA AMERICAN MOTORS STRICKLAND AUTOMOBILES Goderich (519) 524-8841 524-8411 524-9381