Eugène Ionesco
The Romanian-born Eugène
Ionesco, born in Nov. 26, 1912 [d. 1994], is one of the foremost
playwrights of the Theater of the Absurd. The son of a Romanian father
and a French mother, he spent most of his childhood in France, but in his
early teenage years returned to Romania, where he qualified as a teacher
of French and married in 1936. He returned to France in 1938 to complete
his doctoral thesis. Caught by the outbreak of war in 1939, he settled
there, earning his living as a proofreader for publishers.
Ionesco came to playwriting
almost by chance. Having decided to learn English, he was struck by the
emptiness of the cliches of daily conversation that appeared in his phrase
book. Out of such nonsensical sentences he constructed his first play,
The Bald Soprano (1950; Eng. trans., 1958), which satirizes the deadliness
and idiocy of the daily life of a bourgeois society frozen in meaningless
formalities. Greatly surprised by the success of the play, Ionesco embarked
on a career as a writer of what he called antiplays, which characteristically
combine a dream or nightmare atmosphere with grotesque, bizarre, and whimsical
humor. In his work the tragic and farcical are fused. In The Lesson (1951;
Eng. trans., 1958), a teacher gains domination over his pupil through his
superior use of language and finally kills her. In The Chairs (1952; Eng.
trans., 1958), an old couple attempt to pass on their total life experience
to humanity by inviting to a gathering a vast crowd of guests who never
arrive but whose nonpresence is symbolized by a proliferation of empty
chairs. Having convinced themselves that the crowd is assembled, the old
people kill themselves, leaving the revelation of their message to an orator
they have engaged who, as an added irony, turns out to be a feebleminded
deaf-mute.
The image, typical of Ionesco,
shows his frustrations as a dramatist who is trying to convey his life
experience to a crowd of vacant chairs through the mediation of actors
who do not understand his message. Similar images of despair concerning
the isolation of the individual in the universe and the inevitability of
death dominate Ionesco's work. His break-through into the English-speaking
theater came with Rhinoceros (1959; Eng. trans., 1960), in which totalitarianism
is depicted as a disease that turns human beings into savage rhinoceroses.
The hero of this play, Berenger, a simple sort of Everyman, who is also
a self-image of Ionesco, reappears in The Killer (1958; Eng. trans., 1960),
Exit the King (1962; Eng. trans., 1963), A Stroll in the Air (1963; Eng.
trans., 1965), and Hunger and Thirst (1964; Eng. trans., 1966).
Elected a member of the
Academie Francaise in 1970, Ionesco has also published theoretical writings,
Notes and Counternotes (1962; Eng. trans., 1964); Fragments of a Journal
(1966; Eng. trans., 1968); and a novel, Le Solitaire (1973), on which his
1971 film La Vase (with Ionesco playing the lead) was based. Journeys Among
the Dead (1980; Eng. trans., 1984) is a later play.
Martin Esslin
Text Copyright © 1993 Grolier Incorporated