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Muhammed Abdur-Rahman Slade Hopkinson

Abdhur Rahman Slade Hopkinson
Born 1934
New Amsterdam, Guyana
Died 1993
Occupation Poet, Writer, Teacher
Nationality Guyanan
Genre Poetry and Short Stories
Notable works Snowscape With Signature
Children Nalo Hopkinson
Keita Hopkinson

Slade Hopkinson (born 1934) was a writer who was born into a middle-class family in New Amsterdam, Guyana.

His father was a barrister-at-law, and his mother a nurse. A few years after the death of his father, his mother took Slade and his sister to live in Barbados where he attended Harrison College. In 1952, he went to the University College of the West Indies on a scholarship, coinciding with Derek Walcott and Mervyn Morris as students. Slade Hopkinson was active in university theatre. He directed Oedipus and King Lear. He obtained his BA in 1953 and a Dip. Ed. in 1956.

He worked in Jamaica as a teacher, weekly newspaper editor, and a government information officer. He married (Freda) and had two children, Nalo (now making her name as a novelist - Brown Girl in the Ring and Midnight Robber) and Keita (an accomplished Classical Realist painter, and jazz impresario - founder of TorontoJazzBuzz)[1].". In 1962 the family went to live in Trinidad and Slade Hopkinson joined Derek Walcott's Trinidad Theatre Workshop and was a celebrated Corporal Lestrade in Dream on Monkey Mountain. He studied at the Yale Drama School on a Rockefeller scholarship between 1965 and 1966, taught at the University of Guyana (1966–68), then returned to the TTW. However, by 1970 there was a falling out with Walcott and he founded the Caribbean Theatre Guild in 1970.

His writing career began in 1954 with the publication of The Four and Other Poems; the plays, The Blood of a Family (1957), Fall of a Chief (1965), The Onliest Fisherman (1967), and Spawning of Eel (1968), rewritten as Sala and The Long Vacation. In 1976 the Government of Guyana published two companion collections of poetry, The Madwoman of Papine, which contained mainly his secular poems ranging over his Caribbean experiences, and The Friend, which contained his religious and philosophical poems, written in the process of discovering the teachings of the Sufis.


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