Samuel Beckett Biography
Samuel Barclay Beckett (possibly April 13, 1906 - December 22, 1989) was an absurdist Irish
playwright, novelist and poet. Although Beckett insisted he was born on Good
Friday, April 13 1906, his birth certificate puts the date a month later.
He studied French, Italian and English at
In 1930, he returned to
He remained in
Although Samuel Beckett rarely spoke about his war time
activities, during the two years he stayed in
Beckett's best known novels are the series of three
novels written in French (often referred to, against Beckett's explicit wishes,
as "the Trilogy"): "Molloy" (1947; published in French in
1951; in English, partly translated by Patrick Bowles, in 1953), "Malone
Dies" (1947-48; published in French 1951; in English, translated by the
author, in 1956) and "The Unnamable" (1949-50; published in French
1953; in English, by the author, in 1957). The Unnamable opens in the following
manner, which might be said to be typical of Beckett's mature style:
"Where now? Who now? When now? Unquestioning. I, say
I. Unbelieving. Questions, hypotheses, call them that. Keep going, going on,
call that going, call that on."
Beckett is most famous for the play Waiting for Godot
(published 1952, English translation published 1955), which opened to mainly
bad reviews but slowly became very popular and is still often performed today.
Like most of his works after 1947, the play was first written in French (under
the title En attendant Godot). Beckett is thus considered one of the great
French "absurdist" playwrights of the twentieth century, along with
Ionesco and Jean Genet. He translated his works into the English language
himself, with the exception of some sections of Molloy (see above).
Another well-known play from the same period is Endgame.
Beckett's theatre is stark, fundamentally minimalist, and
deeply pessimistic about human nature and the human situation. After his last
full length novel, How It Is, his work explores his themes in increasingly
cryptic and attenuated style.
Beckett was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in
1969.
Elected Saoi of Aosdána, 1984.
He died on December 22, 1989 and was interred in the
Cimetière du Montparnasse,
List of works
Dramatic works
Eleutheria (1940s, first published 1995)
Waiting for Godot (first published 1952)
Endgame (published 1957)
Happy Days (published 1960)
All That Fall (radio play, 1956)
Act Without Words I (1956)
Act Without Words II (1956)
Krapp's Last Tape (1958)
Rough for Theatre I (late 1950s)
Rough for Theatre II (late 1950s)
Embers (1959)
Rough for Radio I (radio play, never broadcast, 1961,
rewritten as Cascando)
Rough for Radio II (radio play, early 1960s)
Words and Music (radio play, 1961)
Cascando (radio play, 1962)
Play (1963)
Film (film, 1963)
The Old Tune (radio play, adaptation of Robert Pinget's
Come and Go (1965)
Eh Joe (television play, 1965)
Breath (1969)
Not I (1972)
That Time (1975)
Footfalls (1975)
Ghost Trio (television play, 1975)
... but the clouds ... (television play, 1976)
A Piece of Monologue (1980)
Rockaby (1981)
Ohio Impromptu (1981)
Quad (1982)
Catastrophe (1982)
Nacht und Träume (television play, 1982)
What Where (1983)
Samuel Beckett Resources
A comprehensive grouping of on-line essays, reviews,
analyses and various other material related to the life and works of Samuel
Beckett.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation
License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article Samuel Beckett.
2004 Biography Base
© http://www.biographybase.com/biography/Beckett_Samuel.html
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