Edla Van Steen

Edla Van Steen (born July 12, 1936) is a Brazilian journalist, actor and writer.[1]

The daughter of a Belgian father and a mother of German descent,[1] she was born in Florianópolis, Santa Catarina[2] and was educated in a Catholic boarding school. She began work as a radio broadcaster and then became a journalist in Curitiba.[3] In 1958, she starred in a film Garganta do Diabo (The Devil's Throat), winning several awards for her performance.[1]

She published a book of short stories Cio (In Heat) in 1965; technically it was her second collection of short stories - an earlier manuscript was lost before it could be published. She founded the art gallery Galeria Multipla and served as its director. Her novel Memórias do Medo (Memories of fear) was published in 1974; in 1981, it was adapted for television. In 1977, she published her next collection of stories Antes do amanhecer (Before the dawn). The following year, she organized an anthology O Conto da Mulher Brasileira (The Story of the Brazilian Women); she also organized a week in honour of Brazilian writers, sponsored by the São Paulo Ministry of Culture.[1]

Her play O último encontro (The last encounter) received the Prêmio Molière and the Prêmio Mambembe for best play as well as a prize awarded by the São Paulo association of art critics. She wrote a second play Bolo de nozes (Nut cake) in 1990. She has also translated works by playwrights such as Jean-Claude Brisville, Henrik Ibsen and Manfred Karge for the theatre.[1]

Van Steen married professor Sábato Magaldi.[1]

Selected works[1][3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Van Steen, Edla (2013). "Foreword". Village of the Ghost Bells: A Novel. ISBN 0292753608.
  2. Jackson, K. David (2006). Oxford Anthology of the Brazilian Short Story. p. 496. ISBN 0199724342.
  3. 1 2 Fister, Barbara (1995). Third World Women's Literatures: A Dictionary and Guide to Materials in English. p. 293. ISBN 0313289883.
  4. 1 2 George, David (2002). Flash and Crash Days: Brazilian Theater in the Post-Dictatorship Period. pp. 92–95. ISBN 1135576475.

External links

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