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CHARLES DEEMER is a teacher and writer, primarily a scriptwriter through most of his career. Since the 1980s he has been a pioneer in the new environmental theater form called "hyper drama," which are plays performed in real spaces with a branching narrative and simultaneous scenes generated by scripts written in hypertext. His seminal essays on the subject, What Is Hypertext? and The New Hyper drama, have been widely circulated and translated.
In 1994 Deemer created one of the first websites for screenwriters and playwrights, which he maintained until 2001. In 1995 scenes from his hyper drama "The Bride of Edgefield" were performed live on the Internet at the University of Hawaii's ATHEMOO, each actor at an individual computer; this was one of the first theatrical events in cyberspace. In the summer of 1996, Deemer was "playwright-in-electronic-residence" at the theater company Prisma in Santiago, Chile, developing the one-act hyper drama, The Last Song of Violeta Parra. Deemer's most ambitious hyper drama is his expansion of Chekhov's The Seagull into The Seagull Hyper drama.
Although primarily a playwright through most of his writing career, Deemer began as a short story writer. Recently he has returned to fiction as his major focus, especially in the short novel form. He also has begun collaborating with composer John D. Nugent as a librettist, their first project being the opera Dark Mission.
Deemer was raised in Virginia, Texas and Southern California. After starting college at the California Institute of Technology, he received his BA at UCLA (Phi Beta Kappa, Honors English) and his MFA in Playwriting at the University of Oregon.
Deemer has had over forty plays produced, dozens of short stories and essays published, and six screenplays optioned. His play Famililly won the 1997 "Crossing Borders" international new play competition. The public television version of his play Christmas at the Juniper Tavern won a regional ACE award. Three of his short stories were selected to the "Roll of Honor" in Best American Short Stories.
Deemer is the former editor of Sweet Reason: a journal of ideas, history and culture and the former managing editor of Oregon Business magazine.
Deemer has received two Oregon Arts Commission fellowships, one for fiction and one for drama. He won the Oregon Arts Foundation theater award and has been both a distinguished-writer-in-residence and a distinguished-scholar-in-residence at the Catlin Gabel School. Several of his plays have been supported by grants from the Oregon Council for the Humanities. Deemer has taught writing workshops at Fishtrap, the Pacific NW Writers Conference, Moonfish, and elsewhere.
He is the author of an electronic screenwriting tutorial written in hypertext, Screenwright: the craft of screenwriting. His work has been collected in Seven Come Eleven: Stories and Plays, 1969-1999, Seven Plays, Five Screenplays, and Selected Stories. He is the author of three novels, The Deadly Doowop, Emmett's Gift and Love At Ground Zero.
Presently Deemer teaches screenwriting at Portland State University and, via the Internet, for Writers on the Net.
Charles Deemer lives in Portland, Oregon, with his wife, Harriet. He can be reached at cdeemer@yahoo.com
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