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    • American Samoan screenwriter, playwright and Polynesian historian

      • John Alexander Kneubuhl (July 2, 1920 – February 20, 1992) was an American Samoan screenwriter, playwright and Polynesian historian. He wrote for American television series such as The Fugitive, Gunsmoke, The Wild Wild West, Star Trek, The Invaders and Hawaii Five-O.
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  1. John Alexander Kneubuhl (July 2, 1920 – February 20, 1992) was an American Samoan screenwriter, playwright and Polynesian historian. He wrote for American television series such as The Fugitive, Gunsmoke, The Wild Wild West, Star Trek, The Invaders and Hawaii Five-O.

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  3. John Kneubuhl, -1992 Samoan Natives. Of mixed Samoan/American ancestry, Kneubuhl was an acclaimed Pacific Island playwright who died in 1992. He grew up in Samoa, was educated at Yale, wrote plays for the Honolulu Community Theater, and then spent many years living in Hollywood working as a television writer.

  4. John Kneubuhl is best remembered as a playwright, “the spiritual father of Pacific Island theatre,” as Christopher Balme has called him (2007: 194), a forerunner who called for “Pacific plays by Pacific playwrights” as early as 1947 (Kneubuhl, 1947a).

  5. www.playmarket.org.nz › playwrights › john-kneubuhlJohn Kneubuhl - Playmarket

    The son of a Samoan mother and an American father, Kneubuhl's multicultural heritage produced a distinctive artistic vision that formed the basis of his most powerful dramatic work. Born and raised in Samoa, Kneubuhl attended school in Honolulu and studied under Thornton Wilder at Yale.

  6. Sep 30, 2022 · Meet John Kneubuhl. This Learning Lab collection about John Kneubuhl is in a series of 30 collections based on the book, We Are Here: 30 Inspiring Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders who Have Shaped the United States.

  7. Think of a Garden, the first play of the trilogy and the last written before the playwright's death in 1992, has been called the most Samoan of Kneubuhl's plays–a candid look at the writer's bicultural upbringing that artfully weaves together family memory, history, and mysticism.

  8. This paper considers the American Samoan playwright John Kneubuhl’s work in the context of oral history. Kneubuhl, who died in Pago Pago in 1992 at the age of 72, has been recognized as “the spiritual father of Pacific Island theatre” (Balme 194), a legendary figure in part because of his reluctance to see any of his creative works ...

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