My brother, the King

Award-winning Winnipeg-born-and-raised playwright, screenwriter and songwriter knew everyone had a story and he was skilled at telling them

Advertisement

Advertise with us

He was kind of a big deal.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/06/2021 (1845 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

He was kind of a big deal.

David King was an actor, playwright, screenwriter and songwriter. He was born in Winnipeg, and began his journey here as an artist before spending most of his life on the West Coast.

In the interest of full disclosure, he was also my older brother. He died Jan. 22 at the age of 71. Cancer.

David King (lower right) with the band Sounds of Silence.
David King (lower right) with the band Sounds of Silence.

David was the second eldest in a family of five kids, spending the first years of his life crammed into a tiny three-bedroom house on Marjorie Street in St. James. His father was musician Jimmy King, a towering figure — literally and figuratively — in the Winnipeg music scene at the time. (His mother, Fay did not tower, but her support for her son was an unshakable structure nonetheless.)

His dad’s influence was felt. Being a musician had cool cachet, especially in the aftermath of the early-’60s British Invasion. By the time David was in high school, he joined a band, playing drums for a group called first Marjorie’s Children, then the paradoxically monikered Sounds of Silence.

The band thing didn’t really take, but he never entirely gave up playing the drums and the guitar, even as he embarked on a career in theatre.

His intentions became known in the mid-’60s, after the family had moved to a house on Winchester Street. An early exercise in street theatre involved staging a shooting in the front yard. The reviews were, in their way, positive: some of the neighbours had been convinced of the reality of the scene and the police were called. Explanations were made. Somehow, David’s starter’s pistol wasn’t even confiscated.

Meanwhile, his acting circle grew, first with Actors Showcase and eventually with the formidable troupe Confidential Exchange.

Family photo
King (left) doing the master-pupil thing with brother Randall (right) in a Vancouver park.
Family photo King (left) doing the master-pupil thing with brother Randall (right) in a Vancouver park.

These were formative years. His passion for playwrighting would grow from comedy sketches. (“Clutch for the Pinnacle” was his parody of the high school quiz show Reach for the Top.)

The family moved one more time, to Assiniboine Crescent, where David got a room to himself overlooking Woodhaven Park, where he tapped out work on a typewriter and smoked too many Craven Menthols.

His approach to comedy encompassed an early coterie of friends, such as Wayne Nicklas, Harry Nelken, David Gillies and Jay Brazeau. It was a sign of David’s personal charm and loyalty that his friends all tended to be lifelong.

Soon, he was writing full-length plays, such as Visions of Lowest Fort Garry, and getting them performed on local stages. A screenplay for a 1976 short film titled For Gentlemen Only won David a Canadian Film Award. By the late ’70s, his talent for comedy saw him headline a made-in-Winnipeg comedy-variety TV show The Eddie De Vega Show, in which he starred as lounge-lizard host Eddie. (I still hear him sing this absurd, aggressively swinging opening number from one episode: “I just blew into town. Got my best dress on.”)

In 1979, David pulled up stakes from Winnipeg and moved to British Columbia, where he continued to act and write. He worked in a Vancouver-shot, nationally broadcast variety program titled What’s a Nice Show Like You Doing in a Place Like This? It was so named because it was shot in a Vancouver strip club, the Penthouse. (Side note: this show represented the first time I was paid for writing. Yes, I sold the jokes to my brother, so… nepotism. In my defence, they were solid jokes.)

David King in a CBC promo pic for The Eddie De Vega Show from 1978.
David King in a CBC promo pic for The Eddie De Vega Show from 1978.

Since that year, his plays received more than 25 premiere productions on Canadian stages, including the Manitoba Theatre Centre, the Vancouver Playhouse, Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre and the National Arts Centre. His plays Life Skills (which played at the MTC Warehouse in 1989, in which he performed opposite his friend and legendary actress Nicola Cavendish) and Garage Sale both won Jessie Richardson Theatre awards for best original play in 1984 and 1986, respectively.

In 1987, he met and married Nancy Hall, also a former Winnipegger, and they had two children, Jimmy and Hilary. David embraced the role of father, and he was good at it. (He emulated his own dad’s penchant for nicknaming his kids’ friends.) He split his time between writing and acting and raising the kids at home. He wrote a screenplay titled Harmony Cats for a film released in 1992, which scored him a nomination for another Canadian Screen Award. That same year, his play Contents Under Pressure debuted at the Winnipeg Fringe Festival, performed by his friends Wayne Nicklas and Harry Nelken, winning a Best of Fringe award.

By the time his kids were pursuing their own lives and careers, David “retired” to Gibsons on B.C.’s Sunshine Coast in 2007. But creative juices could not be turned off: once ensconced, he wrote 10 new plays, and recorded many songs in a catalogue of 50 original tunes. One song, my personal favourite, was Stevenson Field, about the time the Beatles touched down at the Winnipeg airport and spurred a rush of fans, mostly from St. James, rushing to get a glimpse of the Fab Four.

“Everyone has a story,” David sang, “through which all other stories flow.”

His last year coincided with COVID-19, but he was not alone when he died at his home in Grantham’s Landing, alongside his devoted companion Mary Burns. Jimmy and Hilary were there with him, along with his much-loved niece Rachael, our sister Gini and Gini’s husband John Penman — a quality entourage.

Rachel King-Johnson photo
David King’s works have been performed at the MTC, Vancouver Playhouse, Vancouver Arts Club Theatre and National Arts Centre.
Rachel King-Johnson photo David King’s works have been performed at the MTC, Vancouver Playhouse, Vancouver Arts Club Theatre and National Arts Centre.

For his friends and the rest of his family, it hurt that we couldn’t be there. It is a consolation for those of us who knew and loved him, our stories are richer for having David’s story flow through ours.

Touchstone Theatre has announced a David King Prize to help mid-career playwrights in the creation of new work. If you’d like to commemorate David, donations to the prize can be made through the company’s website touchstonetheatre.com. Please specify “David King Prize” in the dedication.

randall.king@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @FreepKing

Randall King photo
David King in the attic at Assiniboine Crescent, in front of an Eddie De Vega prop.
Randall King photo David King in the attic at Assiniboine Crescent, in front of an Eddie De Vega prop.
Randall King

Randall King
Reporter

In a way, Randall King was born into the entertainment beat.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Picking 10 best Manitoba books of last decade no easy feat

Ben MacPhee-Sigurdson 13 minute read Preview

Picking 10 best Manitoba books of last decade no easy feat

Ben MacPhee-Sigurdson 13 minute read Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020

Is it a fool’s errand to try and put together a list of the 10 best, or most important, or most impactful, Manitoba books of the decade? By what measuring stick can these 10 titles be sized up — awards received? Critical acclaim? Widespread recognition or sales figures? Cultural impact? Staying power?

With a new decade upon us, here are 10 books by Manitoba authors that have helped shine a light on the local literary community, that have told stories about people in our community and around the world and that demonstrate Manitoba continues to be a hot spot for profound fiction and non-fiction in this talent-rich country. These 10 titles are sure to still resonate with readers a decade from now.

After Light

By Catherine Hunter (2015)

Read
Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020

Despite rumours, there's nothing nefarious going down at Black Market Provisions

David Sanderson 8 minute read Preview

Despite rumours, there's nothing nefarious going down at Black Market Provisions

David Sanderson 8 minute read Thursday, Apr. 4, 2019

Don’t believe everything you read on the Internet.

Last August, eight months before old-fashioned general store Black Market Provisions held its grand opening on March 21, a pair of black-and-white signs reading “something tasty coming soon” went up in the windows at 550 Osborne St., the former home of Pollock’s Hardware. A few weeks later, couple Angela Farkas and Alana Fiks, owners of Pop Cart, Winnipeg’s first gourmet frozen-treat pushcart, heard through the grapevine their pending, bricks-and-mortar venture was already a hot topic of conversation on Reddit. More to the point, due to its sinister-sounding tag, people who lived nearby were wondering what sort of nefarious goods the new owners were intending to peddle, exactly.

“There were all these rumours floating around that we would be a cannabis bakery, and that the reason we were taking so long to open after acquiring the space last summer was because we were waiting for the (marijuana) laws to change,” says Farkas, standing behind the counter of their brightly painted space, stocked with an array of locally produced gift items and foodstuffs including, of course, their own line of popsicles and ice cream. “The day we opened, all kinds of people popped in saying they’d heard or read we were going to be an edibles shop, and were so relieved to find out that wasn’t the case, at all.”

 

Read
Thursday, Apr. 4, 2019

Muslims prepare for second pandemic Ramadan

Brenda Suderman 5 minute read Preview

Muslims prepare for second pandemic Ramadan

Brenda Suderman 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 12, 2021

After marking a pared-down Ramadan last year, Richmond West resident Asra Waleed plans to enjoy the small things during the upcoming Muslim holy month, including special meals with her family and attending mosque for community prayer when there’s room for her.

“The biggest thing in Islam is to always be thankful and grateful, whatever the situation is,” said Waleed, an English language instructor at University of Winnipeg.

“These values carry forward in relationship to the pandemic.”

Ramadan begins at sundown Tuesday, and continues for 30 days until May 12. During that time, adult Muslims fast from food or drink during daylight hours, pray five times a day, read and recite the Qur’an and donate to charity.

Read
Monday, Apr. 12, 2021

‘Easy decision for me:’ longtime city councillor Chambers not seeking re-election

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

‘Easy decision for me:’ longtime city councillor Chambers not seeking re-election

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Updated: 5:48 PM CDT

Coun. Markus Chambers has announced will not run for a third term on city council, instead stepping away to spend more time with his family.

On Tuesday, Chambers told reporters he won’t seek re-election in the St. Norbert-Seine River ward.

“This has actually been an easy decision for me. My family is growing. My son has announced that my wife and I will be grandparents in December. And other priorities … have emerged that require my undivided attention,” he said.

The councillor said health concerns played a key role in his decision, as his wife has battled cancer for two years.

Read
Updated: 5:48 PM CDT

Quebec, Ontario chart own ways to COVID normalcy

Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Quebec, Ontario chart own ways to COVID normalcy

Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2020

TORONTO - The country's two largest provinces, with about 80 per cent of Canada's known cases of COVID-19, were taking different approaches to returning to normalcy amid federal projections on Tuesday that thousands more people would likely contract COVID-19 and hundreds more could die in the coming week.

Quebec, which has been hardest hit, reported 83 new fatal cases for a total of 1,682. However, Premier Francois Legault said although deaths were rising in long-term care homes, they were largely stable elsewhere.

As a result, Legault said stores outside the Montreal region could start reopening on Monday and in the city a week later. Primary schools and daycares are also to reopen starting May 11.

Ontario, on the other hand, has given no dates or schedule for lifting COVID restrictions, other than that schools will stay closed until at least the end of May. Premier Doug Ford has been adamant reopening depends on getting the virus spread under firm control.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2020

Settlement reached in priest sex-abuse lawsuit

Erik Pindera 2 minute read 1:42 PM CDT

A man who launched a lawsuit in 2023 over sexual abuse claims has reached a settlement with the Archdiocese of St. Boniface, the Red River Valley School Division and the estate of a now-dead Catholic priest.

The Winnipeg man, now in his mid-40s, alleged he was abused by two priests — including Rene Touchette, who was convicted of sex crimes in the 1990s, and Léo Couture, who died before the lawsuit was filed. He says the abuse happened while he was a student around 1990-91 at the now-closed St. Jean Baptiste Elementary, which was in the Red River Valley division.

The abuse was alleged to have occurred while he was 10-11-years-old and a member of the local Catholic church, overseen by the archdiocese, in St. Jean Baptiste, a francophone community about 75 kilometres south of Winnipeg.

“The parties have reached a settlement,” reads part of a letter from lawyer Jordan Dobrucki, whose firm represented the man, that was filed in court.