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Alex Burger[1] is an American playwright and screenwriter, based in Los Angeles. He is known as head writer for Seasons 3 and 4 of Umlilo (Zulu for “The Fire”), the SAFTA Award-winning[2] South African drama.
Burger began work as a poet, winning the Alabama State Poetry Society Award in 1997. He then wrote for the theatre; his first play, Ain’t Nothin’ Changed, was performed in San Francisco as part of the Playground Theatre Festival[3] and then won the Harvardwood writing competition in 2010.[4] His play Whose Blood: A Tale of Desire and Despair Set in a 19th Century Operating Theatre had a fully sold-out run at London’s Old Operating Theatre in 2012.[5] The play was then written up in Wellcome Trust Magazine[6] and was the subject of a chapter in the book Challenging History in the Museum.[7] Other plays include Mashoga (My Wife) (Glasgow Any Objections Festival 2013), The Inkanyamba (Market Theatre Lab, 2015), and Fees Must Fall (Wits University, 2016).
Burger's work in television includes head-writing Seasons 3 and 4 of the SAFTA Award-winning television show[8]Umlilo (e.tv 2015-2016). The show was the most-watched drama in South Africa at the time and has won awards for Best Drama and Best Writing. Other credits include writing for Doubt (Mzanzi Magic, 2016), Hard Copy Season 4 (SABC 3, 2016), 90 Plein Street Season 5 (SABC 2, 2016), and Isithembiso (2017). He has also successfully created projects for Stained Glass Productions, Quizzical Pictures, and The Bomb Production Company.
In addition to writing, Burger is also a writing instructor, having lectured in writing at the University of Witwatersrand (2015-2016), Market Theatre Laboratory (2014-2016), and the California Institute for Integral Studies (2017–present).[9] Burger’s nonfiction work includes the unpublished manuscript Someday It Will Rain: A Journey Through Big Oil and Development in Africa, for which he is represented by Lowenstein and Associates in New York City.
Since 2017, Burger is based in Los Angeles where he is working on a number of television projects including co-creating a new series with author Carolyn Cooke, co-writing a feminist TV show Here She Comes about two experimental sex therapists, and working on a web-series for Mundo Loco films.
In 2019 he served as the head writer for the South African Afrikaans Drama Die Testament[10] (Season 1 and Season 2) found online at Network 24 which launched September, 2019.
Alex also executive produced a series of videos for The World Bank group[11] documented a five year program in Ghana, Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire working with infrastructure companies, government, and local businesses.
Burger has 25 years’ experience running development and civil rights projects in Africa, Asia, Europe, and the USA. He has a long-standing relationship with the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private sector division of the World Bank,[12] where he won the IFC Corporate Award. He served as the Vice President of Community Affairs for AngloGold Ashanti, Africa’s largest mining company, from 2011 to 2013.[13] He has served on numerous boards, including the United Way of Central Alabama, the Southern Partners Fund, and Be Strong Families.[14]
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