Jason Sherman is a multi-award winning playwright and screenwriter based in Toronto. Among his plays are The Retreat; Patience; It’s All True; Remnants; The Message and Three in the Back, Two in the Head, which won the Governor General’s Award for Drama. (He has received four other Governor General's nominations.) He has written adaptations of The Brothers Karamazov for the Stratford Festival, and The Cherry Orchard (After the Orchard) for at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Among his other works are The League of Nathans and Reading Hebron which, together with the work-in-progress United Nathans, form a trilogy about contemporary Judaism. For radio, Jason created the war serial Afghanada, which ran for over 100 hundred episodes on CBC, as well as National Affairs and PMO. For...
Jason Sherman is a multi-award winning playwright and screenwriter based in Toronto. Among his plays are The Retreat; Patience; It’s All True; Remnants; The Message and Three in the Back, Two in the Head, which won the Governor General’s Award for Drama. (He has received four other Governor General's nominations.) He has written adaptations of The Brothers Karamazov for the Stratford Festival, and The Cherry Orchard (After the Orchard) for at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Among his other works are The League of Nathans and Reading Hebron which, together with the work-in-progress United Nathans, form a trilogy about contemporary Judaism. For radio, Jason created the war serial Afghanada, which ran for over 100 hundred episodes on CBC, as well as National Affairs and PMO. For television, he has written an adaptation of the political satire The Best Laid Plans, which earned him a Canadian Screen Awards nomination; We Were Children, a docudrama about the residential school system in Canada, which won a Banff Rocky Award and was nominated for a Canadian Screen Award; and Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures, an eight-part series for TMN. Jason has won three Canadian Screenwriting Awards and been nominated seven other times. He most recently wrote and directed a feature documentary called My Tree, which follows his search for the tree that was planted in his name in Israel 40 years earlier. It had its world premiere at the Hot Docs International Documentary Film Festival in Toronto in 2021 and was nominated for two Canadian Screen Awards, including Best Feature Documentary.