Brynllyn David Griffiths is an award-winning poet and writer, who has worked in Britain and Australia. His poems are often concerned with the ocean and the history of Wales.
Biography
Bryn Griffiths was born in Swansea, South Wales, but he lived much of his early life in the coastal countryside of West Wales before returning to St Thomas, near the Swansea waterfront. His poems are often concerned with the ocean and the history and landscapes of Wales, particularly the lower Swansea Valley, devastated by the Industrial Revolution, as exemplified in his first collection of verse, The Mask of Pity. He went to sea at 17, "shipping out" as a merchant seaman for ten years from the Port of Swansea. Afterwards he studied at Coleg Harlech in North Wales, before making a career in London as journalist, broadcaster and television scriptwriter. During his years in London during the 1960s he founded the Welsh Writers' Guild, with Dedwydd Jones, John Tripp, Robert Morgan, Sally Roberts and many other Welsh poets and writers. The Guild was a cornerstone of the Anglo-Welsh literary renaissance, which led to the foundation of the re-created Welsh academi. Throughout the 1970s Bryn gave poetry readings and lectures in the United Kingdom, North America and Australia, before founding the first Arts and Working Life project for workers in Western Australia. In 1985 he was appointed writer-in-residence to the Australian Merchant Navy and later went back to sea and served for many years as a working mariner before returning to Britain and to South Wales. He remains today a life member of the Maritime Union of Australia and writes poetry, memoirs and maritime history.
Donations
Bryn donated a store of his letters and other papers to Swansea University for researchers studying modern Wales, especially its English-language literature. The papers include correspondence with eminent figures in the cultural and political life of post-war Wales. The collection shines a light on Wales in the 1960s and 1970s, an important period in literature and politics, with the renaissance of Anglo-Welsh literature and the emergence of Welsh nationalism as a political force.
Awards
Bryn received the Community Cultural Development Board's 2004 Ros Bower Memorial Award for his career commitment to the principle of giving all Australians the right to access the arts.
The Undertaker, a play for radio commissioned by BBC in 1967
The Dream of Arthur, a play for radio commissioned by BBC Wales in 1970
Cambrian Carnival, a series of short plays and sketches written for the Cambrian Theatre Company whilst resident dramatist during 1972.
King Arthur's Egg, a play for children written whilst resident writer/dramatist with the C.A.T.S. association of Western Australia in 1975.
Radio Broadcasts
Broadcast readings of poetry on radio for the BBC Third Programme and BBC Wales on numerous occasions during the 1960s, including a reading from first poetry collection, The Mask of Pity, with actors Kenneth Griffith and Norman Wynn reciting selected works and the author providing linking narrative.
Three one-hour radio broadcasts of poetry, with additional narration, for the Australian Broadcasting Commission from Melbourne in 1968.
Elegy for Aberfan, a poem commissioned by TWW and read by the author on TWW and ITN networks on the first anniversary of the Aberfan disaster in October 1967.
Elegy for Aberfan, broadcast on national television in Australia by the author during his lecture/recital tour of the country in 1968.
Elegy for Aberfan, broadcast by BBCTV Wales in the programme In Memory of Aberfan on the 10th anniversary of the disaster.
Recordings
First recording of The Stones Remember with poet Bryan Walters in 1973.