Samuel Beckett was
born near Dublin, Ireland, on Good Friday, April 13, 1906. Raised in a
middle class, Protestant home, the son of a quantity surveyor and a nurse,
he was sent off at the age of 14 to attend the same school which Oscar
Wilde had attended. Looking back on his childhood, he once remarked, "I
had little talent for happiness."
Beckett was consistent in
his loneliness. The unhappy boy soon grew into an unhappy young man, often
so depressed that he stayed in bed until mid afternoon. He was difficult
to engage in any lengthy conversation--it took hours and lots of drinks
to warm him up--but the women could not resist him. The lonely young poet,
however, would not allow anyone to penetrate his solitude. He once remarked,
after rejecting advances from James Joyce's daughter, that he was dead
and had no feelings that were human.
In 1928, Samuel Beckett
moved to Paris, and the city quickly won his heart. Shortly after he arrived,
a mutual friend introduced him to James Joyce, and Beckett quickly became
an apostle of the older writer. At the age of 23, he wrote an essay in
defense of Joyce's magnum opus against the public's lazy demand for easy
comprehensibility. A year later, he won his first literary prize--10 pounds
for a poem entitled "Whoroscope" which dealt with the philosopher Descartes
meditating on the subject of time and the transiency of life. After writing
a study of Proust, however, the young man came to the conclusion that habit
and routine were the "cancer of time", so he gave up his post at Trinity
College and set out on a nomadic journey.
Beckett made his way
through Ireland, France, England, and Germany, all the while writing poems
and stories and doing odd jobs to get by. In the course of his journies,
he no doubt came into contact with many tramps and wanderers, and these
aquaintances would later translate into some of his finest characters.
Whenever he happened to pass through Paris, he would call on Joyce, and
they would have long visits. It was rumored that they mostly sit in silence,
both suffused with sadness.
Beckett finally settled
down in Paris in 1937. Shortly thereafter, he was stabbed in the street
by a man who had approached him asking for money. He had to be taken to
the hospital with a perforated lung. After his recovery, he went to visit
his assailant in prison. When he asked the other man why he had attacked
him, he replied "Je ne sais pas, Monsieur", a phrase hauntingly reminiscent
of some of the writer's later works.
During World War II, Beckett
stayed in Paris--even after it had become occupied by the Germans. He joined
the underground movement and fought for the resistance until 1942 when
several members of his group were arrested and he was forced to flee with
his French-born wife to the unoccupied zone. In 1945, after it had been
liberated from the Germans, he returned to Paris and began his most prolific
period as a writer. In the five years that followed, he wrote Eleutheria,
Waiting for Godot, Endgame, the novels Malloy, Malone Dies,
the Unnamable, and Mercier et Camier, two
books of short stories, and a book of criticism.
Samuel Beckett's first play,
Eleutheria, mirrors his own search for freedom, revolving around
a young man's efforts to cut himself loose from his family and social obligations.
His first real triumph, however, came on January 5, 1953, when Waiting
for Godot premiered at the Théâtre de Babylone. In spite
of some expectations to the contrary, the strange little play in which
"nothing happens" became an instant success, running for four hundred performances
at the Théâtre de Babylone and enjoying the critical praise
of dramatists as diverse as Tennessee Williams, Jean Anouilh, Thornton
Wilder, and William Saroyan who remarked, "It will make it easier for me
and everyone else to write freely in the theatre." Perhaps the most famous
production of Waiting for Godot, however, took place in 1957 when
a company of actors from the San Francisco Actor's Workshop presented it
at the San Quentin penitentiary for an audience of over fourteen hundred
convicts. The production was a great success. The prisoners understood
as well as Vladimir and Estragon that life means waiting, killing time
and clinging to the hope that relief may be just around the corner. If
not today, then perhaps tomorrow.
Beckett secured his position
as a master dramatist on April 3, 1957 when his second masterpiece, Endgame,
premiered (in French) at the Royal Court Theatre in London. Although
English was his native language, all of Samuel Beckett's major works were
originally written in French--a curious phenomenon since Beckett's mother
tongue was the accepted international language of the twentieth century.
But he chose to write his masterpieces in French because he wanted the
discipline and economy of expression that an acquired language would force
upon on him.
Beckett's dramatic works
do not rely on the traditional elements of drama. He trades in plot, characterization,
and final solution, which had hitherto been the hallmarks of drama, for
a series of concrete stage images. Language is useless, for he creates
a mythical universe peopled by lonely creatures who struggle vainly to
express the unexpressable. His characters exist in a terrible dreamlike
vacuum, overcome by an overwhelming sense of bewilderment and grief, grotesquely
attempting some form of communication, then crawling on, endlessly.
Samuel Beckett was the first
of the absurdists to win international fame. His works have been translated
into over twenty languages. In 1969 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for
Literature. He continued to write until his death in 1989, but the task
grew more and more difficult with each work until, in the end, he said
that each word seemed to him "an unnecessary stain on silence and nothingness."
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