Samuel (Barclay) Beckett (1906-1989)
Irish novelist and
playwright, one of the great names of Absurd Theatre with Eugéne Ionesco,
although recent study regards Beckett as postmodernist. His plays are concerned
with human suffering and survival, and his characters are struggling with
meaninglessness and the world of the Nothing. Beckett was awarded the Nobel
Prize for Literature in 1969.
In his writings for the theater Beckett showed influence
of burlesque, vaudeville, the music hall, commedia dell'arte, and the
silent-film style of such figures as Keaton and Chaplin.
"We all are born mad. Some remain so." (from Waiting
for Godot, 1952)
Samuel Beckett was born in Dublin into a prosperous
Protestant family. His father, William Beckett Jr., was a surveyor. Beckett's
mother, Mary Roe, had worked as a nurse before marriage. He was educated at the
Portora Royal
School and Trinity
College, Dublin, where he took a B.A. degree in 1927,
having specialized in French and Italian. Beckett worked as a teacher in Belfast and lecturer in English at the École Normale
Supérieure in Paris.
During this time he became a friend of James Joyce
, taking dictation and copying down parts of what would eventually become Finnegans
Wake (1939). He also translated a fragment of the book into French under
Joyce's supervision.
In 1931 Beckett returned to
Dublin and
received his M.A. in 1931. He taught French at Trinity College
until 1932, when he resigned to devote his time entirely to writing. After his
father died, Beckett received an annuity that enabled him to settle in London, where he
underwent psychoanalysis (1935-36).
As a poet Beckett made his
debut in 1930 with WHOROSCOPE, a ninety-eight-line poem accompanied by
seventeen footnotes. In this dramatic monologue, the protagonist, Rene
Descartes, waits for his morning omelet of well-aged eggs, while meditating on
the obscurity of theological mysteries, the passage of time, and the approach
of death. It was followed with a collection of essays, PROUST (1931), and novel
MORE PRICKS THAN KICKS (1934). From 1933 to 1936 he lived in London. In 1938 he was hospitalized from a
stab would he had received from a pimp to whom he had refused to give money.
Around this time he met Suzanne Dechevaux-Dumesnil, a piano student, whom he
married in 1961. When Beckett won the Nobel Prize, Suzanne commented:
"This is a catastrophe." Beckett refused to attend the Nobel
ceremony.
Beckett's career as a novelist
really began in 1938 with MURPHY, which depicted the protagonist's inner
struggle between his desires for his prostitute-mistress and for total escape
into the darkness of mind. The conflict is resolved when he is atomized by a
gas explosion.
When World War II broke
out, Beckett was in Ireland,
but he hastened to Paris
and joined a Resistance network. Sought by the Nazis, he fled with
Dechevaux-Dumesnil to Southern France, where they remained in hiding in the village of Roussillon two and half years. Beckett
worked as country laborer and wrote WATT, his second novel, which was published
in 1953 and was the last of his novels written originally in English. It
portrayed the futile search of Watt (What) for understanding in the household
Mr. Knott (Not), who continually changes shapes.
After the war Beckett
worked briefly with the Irish Red Cross in St. Lo in Normandy. Between 1946 and 1949 he produced
the major prose narrative trilogy, MOLLOY, MALONE MEURT, and L'INNOMMABLE,
which appeared in the early 1950s. The novels were written in French and
subsequently translated into English with substantial changes. Beckett said
that when he wrote in French it was easier to write "without style" -
he did not try to be elegant. With the change of language Beckett escaped from
everything with which he was familiar. These books reflected Beckett's bitter
realization that there is no escape from illusions and from the Cartesian
compulsion to think, to try to solve insoluble mysteries. Beckett was obsessed
by a desire to create what he called "a literature of the unword." He
waged a lifelong war on words, trying to yield the silence that underlines
them.
WINNIE: Win! (Pause.) Oh this is a happy day, this will have been
another happy day! (Pause.) After all. (Pause.) So far.
(from Happy
Days, 1961)
EN ATTENDANT GODOT (Waiting
for Godot), written in 1949 and published in English in 1954, brought
Beckett international fame and established him as one of the leading names of
the theater of the absurd. Beckett more or less admitted in a New York Post
interview by Jerry Tallmer that the dialogue was based on conversations between
Suzanne Deschevaux-Dumesnil and himself in Roussillon.
The tragi-comedy in two acts, opened at the Théâtre de Babylone on January 5,
1953, and made history. Two tramps, Vladimir
and Estragon, who call each other Gogo and Didi, meet near a bare tree on a
country road. They wait for the promised arrival of Godot, whose name could
refer to 'God' or also the French name for Charlie Chaplin, 'Charlot'. To fill
the boredom they try to recall their past, tell jokes, eat, and speculate about
Godot. Pozzo, a bourgeois tyrant, and Lucky, his servant, appear briefly. Pozzo
about Lucky: "He can't think without his hat." Godot sends word that
he will not come that day but will surely come the next. In Act II Vladimir and
and Estragon still wait, and Godot sends a promising message. The two men try
to hang themselves and then declare their intention of leaving, but they have
no energy to move. In Beckett's philosophical show, there is no meaning without
being. The very existence of Vladimir
and Estragon is in doubt. Without Godot, their world do not have purpose, but
suicide is not the solution to their existential dilemma.
VLADIMIR: We have to come
back tomorrow.
ESTRAGO;
What for?
VLADIMIR: To wait for
Godot.
ESTRAGON:
Ah! (Silence.) He didn't come?
VLADIMIR: No.
After Waiting for Godot Beckett
wrote FIN DE PARTIE (1957, Endgame) and a series of stage plays and brief
pieces for the radio. Endgame developed further one of Beckett's central
themes, men in mutual dependence (Hamm
and Clov occupy a room with Nagg and Nell who are in dustbins). "One day
you'll be blind, like me", says Hamm.
"You'll be sitting there, a speck in the void, in the dark, for ever, like
me." In KRAPP'S LAST TAPE (1959) Beckett returned to his native language.
The play depicted an old man sitting alone in his room. At night he listens to
tape recordings from various periods of his past.
In several works Beckett
used dark humor to establish distance to his grim subjects. In his last
full-length novel, COMMENT C'EST (1961, How It Is) the protagonist crawls
across the mud dragging a sack of canned food behind him. He overtakes another
crawler who he tortures into speech and is left alone waiting to be overtaken
himself by another crawler who will torture him in turn.
In the 1960s Beckett wrote
for radio, theater, and television. During this decade, Billie Whitelaw became
one of the most noted interpreter of Beckett's works. Her performances include Play,
Not I, and Footfalls. She also acted in such films as Frency
(written by Anthony Shaffer, dir. by Alfred Hitchcock, 1972), The Omen
(1976), The Water Babies (1979), Maurice (based on E. M. Forster's
posthumously published novel, dir. by James Ivory, 1987), and The Krays
(1990). Alan Schneider staged most of the American premiers of Beckett's plays.
Schneider also directed the short Beckett movie Film, starring Buster
Keaton.
In the 1970s appeared MIRLITONNADES
(1978), a collection of short poems, COMPANY (1979) and ALL STRANGE AWAY
(1979), which was performed in 1984
in New York.
CATASTROPHE (1984) was written for Vaclav Havel
and was about the interrogation of a dissident. In 1988, Waiting for Godot,
was produced at Lincoln
Center. Steve Martin,
Robin Williams, and Bill Irwin played in the central roles.
Beckett lived on the rue
St. Jacques. At the neighborhood cafe he met his friends, drank espresso, and
smoke thin cigarettes. He also had a country house outside Paris. Beckett maintained his usual silence
even when his eightienth birthday was celebrated in Paris
and New York.
At the age of seventy-six he said: "With diminished concentration, loss of memory, obscured
intelligence... the more chance there is for saying something closest to what
one really is. Even though everything seems inexpressible, there remains the
need to express. A child need to make a sand castle even though it makes no
sense. In old age, with only a few grains of sand, one has the greatest
possibility." (from Playwrights at Work, ed. by George Plimpton, 2000)
Beckett's wife died in
1989. The author had moved just previously to a small nursing home, after
falling in his apartment. Beckett lived in a barely furnished room, receiving
visitors, writing until the end. From his television he watched tennis and
soccer. His last book printed in his lifetime was STIRRING STILL (1989).
Beckett died, following respiratory problems, in a hospital on December 22,
1989. It it rumored that Beckett gave much of the Nobel prize money to needy
artists.
For further reading: Samuel Beckett: The Comic Gamut by Ruby Cohn
(1962); Samuel Beckett by R. Hayman (1968); Samuel Beckett by J.
Friedman (1970); Beckett by A. Alvarez (1973); Samuel Beckett: A
Critical Study by Hugh Kenner (1974); Samuel Beckett: A Biography by
Deirdre Bair (1978); Samuel Beckett by Linda Ben-Zvi (1986); The
Beckett Actor: Jack Macgowran, Beginning to End by Jordan R. Young (1988); Waiting
for Godot and Endgame - Samuel Beckett, ed. by Steven Connor (1992); Beckett's
Dying Words by Christopher Ricks (1993); The Beckett Country by Eoin
O'Brien (1994); Beyond Minimalism by Enoch Brater (1995); Beckett
Writing Beckett by H. Porter Abbott (1996); Conversations With and About
Beckett, ed. by Mel Gussow (1996); Damned to Fame by James Knowlson
(1996); Samuel Beckett by Anthony Cronin (1997); Beckett and the
Mythology of Psychoanalysis by Phil Baker (1998) - For further
information: Samuel Beckett; Little Blue Light - See also: Alfred Jarry -Television
adaptations: Beckett on film (2000), prod. by RTE and Gate theatre,
directors include Conor PcPherson, Neil Jordan, David Mamet, Atom Egoyan,
Richard Eyre, Karel Reisz, Anthony Minghella et al.
Selected works:
- OUR EXAGMINATION ROUND HIS FACTIFICATION
FOR INCAMINATION OF WORK IN PROGRESS, 1929
- WHOHOSCOPE, 1930
- PROUST, 1931
- MORE PRICKS THAN KICKS,
1934
- ECHO'S BONES, 1935
- MURPHY, 1938
- MOLLOY, 1951 - Molloy (suom. Raili
Phan-Chan-The, 1968)
- MALONE MEURT, 1951 - Malone Dies (translated
by the author) - Malone kuolee (suom. Caj Westerberg, 2007)
- L'INNOMMABLE, 1953 - The Unnamable
(translated by the author)
- EN ATTENDANT GODOT, 1952 - Waiting for
Godot (translated by the author) - Godota odotellessa / Huomenna hän tulee
(suom. Aili Palmén, 1964; Antti Halonen ja Kristiina Lyytinen,
1990)
- WATT, 1953 - Watt (suom. Caj Westerberg,
2006)
- NOUVELLES ET TEXTES POUR RIEN, 1955
- FIN DE PARTIE, 1957 -
Endgame (translated by the author) - Leikin loppu (suom. Aili Palmén,
1963)
- THE UNNAMEABLE, 1958
- FROM AN ABANDONED WORK,
1958
- BRAM VAN VELDE, 1958
- ACTE SANS PAROLES, 1958
- KRAPP'S LAST TAPE, 1959 - Viimeinen
ääninauha (suom. Seppo Virtanen, 1967)
- ALL THAT FALL, 1959 - Kaikkien kaatuvien
tie (suom. Ville Repo, 1957)
- HAPPY DAYS, 1961 - Voi miten ihana päivä
(suom. Juha Mannerkorpi, 1967)
- COMMENT C'EST, 1961 - How It Is
(translated by the author) - Millaista on (suom. Juha Mannerkorpi,
1962)
- WORDS AND MUSIC, 1962
- ACTE SANS PAROLES II, 1963
- CASCANDO, 1963
- PLAY, 1964
- IMAGINATION MORTE IMAGINEZ,
1965
- ASSEZ, 1966
- BING, 1966
- FILM, 1967
- COME AND GO, 1967 - Va et vient
(translated by the author)
- NO KNIFE, 1967
- EH JOE, 1967
- L'ISSUE, 1968
- SANS, 1968
- BREATH, 1970
- PREMIER AMOUR, 1970 - Ensi rakkaus (suom. Ulla-Kaarina
Jokinen, Seppo Polameri, 1970)
- SÉJOUR, 1970
- LE DÉPEUPLER, 1971
- BREATH AND OTHER SHORT PLAYS, 1972
- ABANDONNE, 1972
- THE NORTH, 1972
- NOR I, 1973
- STILL, 1974
- MERCIER ET CAMIER, 1974 - Mercier ja Camier
(suom. Tarja Roinila, 2003)
- ALL STRANGE AWAY, 1976
- GHOST TRIO, 1976
- THAT TIME, 1976
- ROUGH FOR THEATRE I, 1976
- ROUGH FOR RADIO I, 1976
- ROUGH FOR RADIO II, 1976
- FOR TO WEND YET AGAIN AND OTHER FIZZLES,
1976
- FOUR NOVELLAS, 1977
- ... BUT THE CLOUDS..., 1977
- MIRLITONNADES, 1978
- COMPANY, 1979
- ALL STRANGE AWAY, 1979
- NOHOW ON, 1981
- ROCKABY, 1982
- OHIO IMPROMPTU, 1982
- A PIECE OF MONOLOGUE, 1982
- MAL VU MAL DIT, 1982 - ILL SEEN ILL SAID -
Huonosti nähty, huonosti sanottu (suom. Anni Sumari, 2002)
- WORSTWARD HO, 1983
- WHAT WHERE, 1983
- NACHT UND TRÄUME, 1983
- THE COLLECTER SHORTER PLAYS OF SAMUEL
BECKETT, 1984
- QUAD, 1984
- CATASTROPHE, 1984
- COMPLETE DRAMATIC WORKS,
1986
- HOMMAGE À JACK B. YEATS, 1988
- TELEPLAYS, 1988
- LE MONDE ET LE PANTALON, 1989
- STIRRING STILL, 1989
- DREAM OF FAIR TO MIDDLING WOMEN, 1992
- SAMUEL BECKETT: THE COMPLETE SHORT PROSE,
1929-1989, 1995
- NOHOW ON: THREE NOVELS,
1996
©2003
http://kirjasto.sci.fi/beckett.htm
More biographies: [Next]
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]

Página creada y actualizada por grupo
"mmm".
Para cualquier cambio, sugerencia,etc. contactar
con: asco@uv.es
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
Universitat de València Press
Creada: 25/10/2008 Última Actualización: 27/11/2008