Alex Burger
Alex Burger is a playwright and screenwriter. He is known for head-writing Seasons 3 and 4 of , the SAFTA Award-winning South African drama. He is now based in Los Angeles, working on a number of feature and television projects.
Early life and education
Alex grew up in Wenham, Massachusetts, on the north shore of Boston. When he was a child, Alex and his family were a part of a 60-person magic troupe, performing in over 1,200 performances of Le Grand David and his Own Spectacular Magic Company.Alex attended Deep Springs College in California and then Harvard College, where he graduated magna cum laude in The Comparative Study of Religion. He earned an MBA at in Singapore & France.
In his 20s Alex worked with Mother Teresa in Calcutta, India, and then went on to do civil rights work in Alabama for seven years, where he wrote numerous publications. He was awarded the “Spirit of Dr. King Award” for his work on racial justice.
Writing career
Alex began work as a poet, winning the Award in 1997. He then wrote for the theatre; his first play, , was performed in San Francisco as part of the Festival and then won the Harvardwood writing competition in 2010. His play Whose Blood: A Tale of Desire and Despair Set in a 19th Century Operating Theatre had a fully sold-out run at London’s Old Operating theatre. The play was then written up in Wellcome Trust Magazine and was the subject of a chapter in the book Challenging History in the Museum. Other plays include Mashoga , The Inkanyamba, and Fees Must Fall.Alex's work in television includes head-writing Seasons 3 and 4 of the Award-winning Television Show . The show was the most-watched drama in South Africa at the time and has won awards for Best Drama and Best Writing. Other credits include writing for , Season 4, Season 5, and Isithembiso. He has also successfully created projects for, , and .
In addition to writing, Alex is also a seasoned instructor, having lectured in writing at the University of Witwatersrand, Market Theatre Laboratory, and the California Institute for Integral Studies. Alex’s nonfiction work includes the unpublished manuscript Someday It Will Rain: A Journey Through Big Oil and Development in Africa'', for which he is represented by in New York City.
Since 2017, Alex has been based in Los Angeles where he is working on a number of Television projects including co-creating a new series with celebrated author , co-writing a feminist TV show about two experimental sex therapists, and working on a short for .
He recently served as the head writer for the first of its kind South Africa Afrikaans Drama/ to be watched exclusively online at which launched September, 2019.
Activist career
Alex has 25 years’ experience running development and civil rights projects in Africa, Asia, Europe, and the USA. He has a long-standing relationship working with the International Finance Corporation, the private sector division of the World Bank where he won the IFC Corporate Award. He served as the Vice-President of Community Affairs for AngloGold Ashanti from 2011 to 2013, Africa’s largest mining company. He has served on numerous boards, including the United Way of Central Alabama, the Southern Partners Fund, and Be Strong Families.Filmography
Television Series
Head Writer
Storyline
Story
Storyline
Story Consultant
Plays
Writer
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
2010 | Ain’t Nothin’ Changed | Writer | Was performed in San Francisco as part of the Playground Theatre |
2011 | Whose Blood: A Tale of Desire and Despair Set in a 19th Century Operating Theatre | Writer | Played to a fully sold-out run at London’s Old Operating theatre |
2013 | Mashoga | Writer | Glasgow Any Objections Festival 2013 |
2015 | The Inkanyamba | Writer | Market Theater Lab |
2016 | Fees Must Fall | Writer | The University of the Witwatersrand |
Writing Awards and Recognition
- Member of the Theatre’s Invitation Writer’s Group, 2011
- 1st Place Playwriting Competition, 2010
- Harvard Alumni A.R.T. Grant to support the development of the play Whose Blood, 2010
- 1st Prize Short Fiction Competition Award sponsored by the Times Literary Supplement, 2009
- 1st Prize Competition, 1997