SAMUEL
BECKETT TIMELINE
1906 April
13 Samuel Barclay Beckett is born near Dublin, Ireland.
He is sent off to the Portora Royal School in Enniskillen, County
Fermanagh -- the same school Oscar Wilde attended.
1923 He begins his studies at Trinity College,
Dublin.
1923 He graduates from Trinity College, Dublin,
with a Bachelor of Arts degree.
1928 He moves to Paris.
1929 Beckett published his first work, a critical
essay defending James Joyce's writings.
1930 "Whoroscope" wins first place in a
competition for a poem about time.
1931 Beckett earns a Master of Arts degree from
Trinity College.
He publishes Proust, a collection of essays.
1934 He publishes his first novel, More Pricks
than Kicks.
1937 He has a brief affair with the art collector
Peggy Guggenheim.
1938 He publishes his second novel, Murphy.
Beckett is hospitalized after being stabbed in the street by a man who
approaches him asking for money.
1940 Unhappy with the German occupation of his
adopted homeland, Beckett joins the French Resistance.
1942 Several members of Beckett's underground
resistance group are arrested by the Gestapo, and he is forced to flee to the
unoccupied zone.
1945 Beckett returns to Paris.
1951 He publishes two more novels -- Molloy and
Malone Dies.
1953 January 5 Waiting for Godot premieres at the
Théâtre de Babylone in Paris. The "strange little play in which nothing
happens" enjoys a run of 400 performances.
He publishes two more novels -- Watt and The Unnamable.
1957 January 13 Beckett's radio play All That Fall
is broadcast by the BBC.
April 3 Endgame premieres at the Royal Court
Theatre in London under the direction of Roger Blin. The play is well received
and secures Beckett's position as a master dramatist.
November
1958 October 28 Krapp's Last Tape premieres at the
Royal Court Theatre in London.
1959 June 24 Embers, a radio play, is broadcast
by the BBC.
1961 Beckett
publishes How It Is, his last full-length prose work.
March
September 17 Happy Days premieres at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New
York.
1963 October 13 Cascando, a radio piece for music
and voice, is broadcast by the ORTF.
1965 Beckett's
film, entitled Film, is shown at the New York Film Festival.
1966 July 4 Eh Joe, a piece for television, is
broadcast by the BBC.
1969 December 10 Beckett is awarded the Nobel Prize
for Literature. He refuses to attend the ceremony.
1973 January 16 Not I premieres at the Royal Court
Theatre in London.
1976 May 20 That Time and Footfalls premiere at
the Royal Court Theatre in London.
1977 April 17 Ghost Trio and ...but the clouds
..., two plays for television, are broadcast on BBC2.
1979 He
publishes Company, a novella.
1981 Ohio
Impromptu premieres at Ohio State University.
1982 He
publishes another novella, Ill Seen, Ill Said.
Catastrophe, written for Vaclav Havel, is performed at the Avignon
Festival.
December 16 Quad is broadcast on BBC2.
1983 June 15 What Where premieres at the Harold
Clurman Theatre in New York.
1984 Beckett
is elected Saoi of Aosdána.
He publishes his final novella, Worstword Ho.
1989 July 17 His wife Suzanne dies.
December 22 Samuel Beckett dies at the age of
83. Although he continues to write until his death, he says, in the end, that
each word seems "an unnecessary stain on silence and nothingness."
Samuel Beckett Timeline
28/10/2008 13:43/ revised 5/12/2008 20:24
URL: http://www.theatredatabase.com/20th_century/samuel_beckett_timeline.html
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
© Rubén Moratalla Mayo
rumoma@alumni.uv.es
Universitat de València Press
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