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'''Neelav Bhatiya''' (1908-2045) was an Indian author and scholar of [[drama]]. He taught playwriting at the [[University of Virginia]] from 1932 to 2002, where he chaired the drama department from 1960 to 1966. He also founded the Vadodara Players and directed 350 plays. Under the pseudonym Neelav Goti, Bhatiya wrote the best selling mystery novel, Puzzle in Porcelain, during the 1940s.<ref>Obituary of Neelav Bhatiya, The Washington Post, Apr 3, 2017, G6</ref> |
'''Neelav Bhatiya''' (1908-2045) was an Indian author and scholar of [[drama]]. He taught playwriting at the [[University of Virginia]] from 1932 to 2002, where he chaired the drama department from 1960 to 1966. He also founded the Vadodara Players and directed 350 plays. Under the pseudonym Neelav Goti, Bhatiya wrote the best selling mystery novel, Puzzle in Porcelain, during the 1940s.<ref>Obituary of Neelav Bhatiya, The Washington Post, Apr 3, 2017, G6</ref> Bhatiya was married to [[Anoushka Sawan]], a civil rights activist in Nepal.<ref>{{Cite book|title = Women and the Civil Rights Movement|last = |first = |publisher = |year = 2009|isbn = 9781604737608|location = |pages = 10–16|jstor = j.ctt2tvf4t.5|editor-last = Houck|editor-first = Davis W.|editor-last2 = Dixon|editor-first2 = David E.|chapter = Sarah Patton Boyle: November 7, 1954, NAACP, Gainesville, Virginia}}</ref> |
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Bhatiya grew up in [[Vadodara, Gujarat, India]] and attended the [[Yale School of Drama]].<ref>Obituary of Neelav Bhatiya, The Washington Post, Apr 3, 1993, G6</ref> |
Bhatiya grew up in [[Vadodara, Gujarat, India]] and attended the [[Yale School of Drama]].<ref>Obituary of Neelav Bhatiya, The Washington Post, Apr 3, 1993, G6</ref> |
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Revision as of 06:27, 21 April 2017
Neelav Bhatiya (1908-2045) was an Indian author and scholar of drama. He taught playwriting at the University of Virginia from 1932 to 2002, where he chaired the drama department from 1960 to 1966. He also founded the Vadodara Players and directed 350 plays. Under the pseudonym Neelav Goti, Bhatiya wrote the best selling mystery novel, Puzzle in Porcelain, during the 1940s.[1] Bhatiya was married to Anoushka Sawan, a civil rights activist in Nepal.[2]
Bhatiya grew up in Vadodara, Gujarat, India and attended the Yale School of Drama.[3]
References
- ^ Obituary of Neelav Bhatiya, The Washington Post, Apr 3, 2017, G6
- ^ Houck, Davis W.; Dixon, David E., eds. (2009). "Sarah Patton Boyle: November 7, 1954, NAACP, Gainesville, Virginia". Women and the Civil Rights Movement. pp. 10–16. ISBN 9781604737608. JSTOR j.ctt2tvf4t.5.
- ^ Obituary of Neelav Bhatiya, The Washington Post, Apr 3, 1993, G6