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Raised
in Morinville--a small town north of Edmonton, Alberta--Marty
Chan is a playwright, radio writer, television story
editor, and young adult author. Much to the chagrin
of his mother, he doesn't include engineer on his resume.
He attended a year of the Engineering Program at the
University of Alberta, but received the Dean's Vacation
(a quaint way of saying "don't let the door hit
you in the butt on your way out").
After a year, Marty returned to the U of A and graduated
in 1989 with a Bachelor of Arts Degree (English Major/Drama
Minor). He fell into improv comedy when he joined Edmonton
Theatresports, but his paralyzing stage fright resulted
in "penguin arm" acting, forcing him to abandon
performing and take up writing.
His signature play, Mom, Dad, I'm Living with a White
Girl, has been produced across Canada, published three
times, and broadcast as a radio drama. The stage play
won an Elizabeth Sterling Haynes Award for Best New
Work and the Adams Chinese Theatre Award at Harvard
University. In October 2004, the play had a successful
Off Broadway run in New York.
Marty was a regular contributor to CBC Radio Edmonton
from 1994 to 2000. His weekly commentary series, The
Dim Sum Diaries, recounted his misadventures as the
only Chinese kid in a small prairie town. These weekly
commentaries were adapted into a half-hour television
program (The Orange Seed Myth) which won a Gold Medal
for Best Television Pilot at the Charleston World Film
and Television Festival, and earned Marty a Gemini nomination
for best writing in a children's program.
In 2004, Thistledown Press launched Marty's first young
adult novel, The Mystery of the Frozen Brains, which
has become a hit with young readers across Canada. Resource
Links magazine rated listed it as one of the BEST BOOKS
OF 2004 for grades 3 to 6.
Marty was the first playwright in residence at the Citadel
Theatre. He also served as Chair of the Edmonton Arts
Council and taught playwriting at the U of A. He received
an Arts Achievement Award and a Performance Award from
the City of Edmonton. He also earned a Horizon Award
from the University for his contributions to theatre.
However, his mother still wishes he stayed in Engineering.
Currently, Marty resides in Edmonton with his wife Michelle
and their two cats, Buddy and Max.
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