GUY BEAULNE, C.M., S.T.C., metteur en scène, critique et directeur de théâtre, est actuellement conseiller technique auprès du ministère des Affaires culturelles du Québec.

HOWARD FINK teaches English and Radio Drama at Concordia University. His history of North American radio drama will shortly appear in an anthology on radio drama to be published by Longmans. His interests are in modern literature and drama and the theory of genres.

LOUISE H. FORSYTH enseigne le français à l'université Western Ontario depuis 1965. A partir de juillet 1980 elle est directrice du départment des études françaises. Ses domaines de recherche sont la civilisation et la littérature québécoises. Elle s'intéresse surtout à l'histoire du théâtre et à l'écriture au féminin. Elle a fait des communications et publié des articles dans les deux domaines.

TERRY GOLDIE teaches English at Memorial University of Newfoundland. His areas of specialty include Commonwealth literature and Canadian political drama. He has recently published a study of the folkloric background of Robertson Davies' Deptford trilogy.

MICHAEL KLEMENTOWICZ has taught French at the University of Western Ontario, Nipissing College and Trois-Pistoles Summer School. He is presently completing a doctoral dissertation on the Quebec dramatist and poet Michel Garneau at the University of Western Ontario.

ROBERT G. LAWRENCE is Professor of English at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. He has published four editions of Elizabethan-Jacobean plays and articles on Canadian fiction and drama. He is co-editor of Studies in Robertson Davies' Deptford Trilogy (1980), and he is currently working on a book about English theatre companies in Canada.

MARY JANE MILLER, whose article on Les Canadiens appeared in the first issue of this journal, is Associate Professor and former Chairman of the Department of Drama and Film at Brock University. She is engaged in research on contemporary theatre and vintage Canadian television drama.

MALCOLM PAGE is Associate Professor of English at Simon Fraser University. He has published articles on modern British and Canadian theatre.

RENATE USMIANI of Mount St. Vincent University is the author of Gratien Gélinas (1976) and of a forthcoming critical study of Michel Tremblay. Currently on sabbatical leave, she is working on a project on the Alternative Theatre Movement in Canada.