Biography:
Christopher Isherwood (1904-1986) was a British-born American writer
who worked in many genres, including fiction, drama, film, travel, and
autobiography. He was especially esteemed for his stories about Berlin in the early
1930s.
The son of a career military officer,
Christopher Isherwood was born in High Lane, Cheshire, England, on August 26,
1904. He
attended the Repton
School from 1919 to 1922 and
Cambridge University from 1924 to 1925. His
university year was significant because it was at Cambridge that he met Wystan
Hugh Auden, with whom he later collaborated on
several literary projects, and because it was there that he became a
practicing
homosexual, an orientation which played an important role in his
personal and
artistic life.
Leaving the university
without
a degree, Isherwood worked for a year as the
secretary to French violinist Andre Mangeot
and as a
private tutor in London.
In his spare hours he worked on his first novel, which was published as All the Conspirators in 1928.
Scenes
of
a Crumbling Germany
In 1929 he went to Germany
to visit Auden, who was living there, and was
attracted to life in the crumbling Weimar
Republic, and
particularly to the sexual freedom that existed. As he so succinctly put
it in
his 1976 book Christopher and His Kind 1929-1939,
"Berlin meant Boys."
He was not long in establishing a liaison with Berthold
"Bubi" Szczesny,
a bisexual ex-boxer, which lasted until Szczesny was
forced to leave the country. Among the young men he met subsequently was one
from the working class section of Berlin;
he took a room with this boy's family for a time and so became familiar with
day-to-day living among the urban proletariat.
At first his stay in Germany was financed through an
allowance provided by his only wealthy relative, his uncle Henry Isherwood. His uncle was also homosexual and seemed
happy
to assist his nephew in the quest for companions. Eventually, however, Uncle
Henry stopped his remittances, and Isherwood
paid his
way by tutoring in English; in this way he met Berliners from the upper
classes.
All this provided background for his most
successful
work, The Last of Mr. Norris (1935), Sally
Bowles (1937), and Goodbye to Berlin (1939), all collected under the title The
Berlin
Stories in 1945.
In
these novellas and short stories he presented an in-depth portrait of
life in Germany's
capital as the republican center collapsed, the
Communists tried desperately to stem the rightist tide, and the Nazis
came to
power.
He began in "A Berlin Diary (Autumn 1930)" with
an almost offhand observation about Fráulein Hippi, a student whom the narrator is tutoring in
English:
"Like everyone else in Berlin,
she refers continually to the political situation, but only briefly, with a
conventional melancholy…. It is quite unreal to her." In "Sally
Bowles," he mentioned the closing of two major banks and noted: "One
alarmist headline stood out boldly, barred with blood-red ink:
'Everything Collapses'."
In "The Nowaks,"
about a working class family, he described their neighborhood
in this way: "The entrance to the Wassertorstrasse
was … a bit of old Berlin,
daubed with hammers and sickles and Nazi crosses and plastered with tattered
bills…." The political pressures are seen increasing in "The Landauers," about a well-to-do Jewish family:
"One night in October 1930, about a month after the Elections, there was a
big row on the Leipzigerstrasse. Gangs of Nazi
toughs
turned out to demonstrate against the Jews. They … smashed the windows
of all
the Jewish shops." Finally, in "A Berlin Diary (Winter
1932-33)," the narrator observes: "Schleicher
has resigned. Hitler has formed a cabinet…. Nobody thinks it can last
until the
spring."
The Berlin
stories were picked up by playwright John van Druten,
who was struck by a sentence in "A Berlin Diary (Autumn 1930)":
"I am a camera, with its shutter open, quite passive, recording not
thinking." He wrote the play I Am a Camera, centering on Sally Bowles, of whom Alan Wilde wrote:
"Sally's charm is her naíveté, … her total capacity for self-deception and
self-contradiction, … her ability to accommodate herself to each new
situation…." I Am a Camera in turn became the musical
Cabaret (1967), with book by Joe Masteroff
and lyrics by Fred Ebb, which was produced both on stage and in
film.
Isherwood of course became fluent in
German and got acquainted, as did Auden, with the
expressionist drama of such important figures as Ernst Toller,
Georg Kaiser, and Bertolt Brecht. This led the two British artists to
collaborate on
three expressionist plays: The Dog Beneath
the Skin (1935), The Ascent of F6 (1937), and A Melodrama in Three Acts: On the Frontier (1938), of
which
the first two are generally considered the more
successful.
Move
to
the United
States
Isherwood and Auden
travelled to China
in 1938 and in 1939 worked together on Journey to a
War.
In that same year, the year World War II began, both came to America, a move which made them
anathema to many Britons. Indeed, even three years
later in Put Out More Flags novelist Evelyn Waugh,
christening them Parsnip and Pimpernell,
commented,
"What I don't see is how these two can claim to be contemporary
if they run away from the biggest event in contemporary
history."
During World War II Isherwood
wrote scripts for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Warner Brothers, and 20th Century
Fox
film studios; worked for a year in a refugee center
in Haverford, Pennsylvania; and became a resident
student
of the Vedanta Society of Southern California and co-editor of the group's
magazine Vedanta and the West.
He became increasingly involved in the Vedantist religion, editing the volumes Vedanta
for the Western World in 1945 and Vedanta for
Modern Man
in 1951 and writing An Approach to Vedanta in 1963, Ramakrishna and His Disciples in 1965, and Essentials
of Vedanta in 1969. He explained its basic tenets in the 1963 work as
follows: "We have two selves—an apparent, outer self and an invisible,
inner self. The apparent self claims to be an individual and as such, other
than all other individuals…. The real self is unchanging and
immortal."
Isherwood did not confine himself
solely
to religious writings, however. He authored such novels as Prater Violet (1945), The
World in the Evening (1954), A Single Man
(1964), and A Meeting by the River (1967), which he dramatized in
1972.
He also wrote the travel book The Condor and the Cows
(1949), autobiographical volumes, and the collection of stories,
articles, and
poems titled Exhumations (1966). Additionally, he
taught
at Los Angeles State
University, the University
of California at Santa
Barbara, and the University
of California at Los Angeles and wrote film
scripts.
Isherwood's status in modern literature
was best summarized by G. K. Hall: "Christopher Isherwood
has always been a problem for the critics. An obviously talented writer,
he has
refused to exploit his artistry for either commercial success or literary
status…. Isherwood was adjudged a 'promising
writer'—a designation that he has not been able to outrun even to this
day. It
is still a clicheé of Isherwood
criticism to say that he never fulfilled his early promise….In any case,
five
decades of Isherwood criticism present a
history of
sharply divided opinion."
Isherwood, who became an American
citizen in 1946, lived and worked in southern California until his death from cancer
January 4, 1986.
Further Reading
Much personal information is in his
autobiographical Christopher and His Kind (1976). In G. K. Hall's Christopher Isherwood: A Reference Guide (1979) the reader will find a
comprehensive listing of all works by and about the
subject.
Additional
Sources
Finney, Brian, Christopher
Isherwood: a critical biography, New York: Oxford
University Press, 1979.
Fryer, Jonathan, Isherwood,
Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1978, 1977.
Fryer, Jonathan, Isherwood:
a biography of Christopher Isherwood,
London: New English
Library, 1977.
Isherwood, Christopher, Christopher and his kind, 1929-1939, London:
Eyre Methuen, 1977; New
York:
Farrar, Straus Giroux, 1976.
Isherwood, Christopher, My guru and his disciple, New York, N.Y.:
Penguin Books, 1981.
King, Francis Henry, Christopher Isherwood, Harlow Eng.: Published for the British
Council by Longman Group, 1976.
Lehmann, John, Christopher Isherwood: a
personal memoir, New
York:
H. Holt, 1988, 1987. □
Christopher Isherwood
Copyright © 1998
http://www.novelguide.com/a/discover/ewb_08/ewb_08_03231.html
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
© Cristina Díaz Díaz
crisdia5@alumni.uv.es
Universitat de València Press