Beckett: The friend: Beckett :
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Samuel Beckett (1906-1989)
"It's a beautiful day, isn't it?"
"Yes, it makes one glad to be alive."
"Aw now, I wouldn't go that far."
(At Nobel Prize Awarding Ceremony)
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Samuel Beckett was born near Dublin, Ireland, on April 13,
1906 into a Protestant, middle class home. His father was a quantity surveyor
and his mother worked as a nurse. At the age of 14, he was sent to the same
school that Oscar Wilde attended.
Beckett is known to have commented, "I had little
talent for happiness." This was evidenced by his frequent bouts of
depression, even as a young man. He often stayed in bed until late in the
afternoon and hated long conversations. As a young poet, he apparently rejected
the advances of James Joyce's daughter and then commented that he did not have
feelings that were human. This sense of depression would show up in much of his
writing, especially in Waiting for Godot where it is a struggle to get through
life.
Samuel Beckett moved to Paris in 1926 and met James Joyce.
He soon respected the older writer so much that at the age of 23, he wrote an
essay defending Joyce's magnum opus to the public. In 1927, one year later, he
won his first literary prize for his poem entitled "Whoroscope." The
essay was about the philosopher Descartes meditating on the subject of time and
about the transience of life. Beckett then completed a study of Proust that
eventually led him to believe that habit was the "cancer of time." At
this point Beckett left his post at Trinity College and travelled.
Beckett journeyed through Ireland, France, England, and Germany
and continued to write poems and stories. It is likely that he met up with many
of the tramps and vagabonds who later emerged in his writing, such as the two
tramps Estragon and Vladimir in Waiting for Godot. On his travels through Paris
Beckett would always visit with Joyce for long periods.
Beckett permanently made Paris his home in 1937. Shortly
after moving there, he was stabbed in the street by a man who had begged him
for money. He had to recover from a perforated lung in the hospital. Beckett then
went to visit his assailant, who remained in prison. When Beckett demanded to
know why the man had attacked him, he replied "Je ne sais pas,
Monsieur." This attitude about life comes across in several of the
author's later writings.
During World War II, Beckett joined the underground
movement in Paris to resist the Germans. He remained in the resistance until
1942 when several members of his group were arrested. Beckett was forced to
flee with his French-born wife to the unoccupied zone. He only returned in 1945
after Paris was liberated from the Germans. He soon reached the pinnacle of his
writing career, producing Waiting for Godot, Eleutheria, 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 was Eleutheria, it involved a
young man's efforts to cut himself loose from his family and social
obligations. This has often been compared to Beckett's own search for freedom.
Beckett's great success came on January 5, 1953, when Waiting for Godot
premiered at the Theatre de Babylone. Although critics labelled the play
"the strange little play in which 'nothing happens,'" it gradually
became a success as reports of it spread through word of mouth. It eventually
ran for four hundred performances at the Theatre de Babylone and was heralded
with critical praise from dramatists such as Tennessee Williams, Jean Anouilh,
Thornton Wilder, and William Saroyan. Saroyan even remarked that, "It will
make it easier for me and everyone else to write freely in the theatre."
An interesting production of Waiting for Godot took place when some actors from
the San Francisco Actor's Workshop performed the play at the San Quentin
penitentiary for over fourteen hundred convicts in 1957. The prisoners
immediately identified with both Vladimir and Estragon about the pains of
waiting for life to end, and the struggle of the daily existence. The
production was perhaps the most
successful
ever. Beckett's second masterpiece Endgame premiered on April 3, 1957 at the
Royal Court Theatre in London.
All of Beckett's major works were written in French. He
believed that French forced him to be more disciplined and to use the language
more wisely. However, Waiting for Godot was eventually translated into the
English by Beckett himself.
Samuel Beckett also became one of the first
Absurdist playwrights to win international fame. His works have been translated
into over twenty languages. In 1969 he received the Nobel Prize for Literature,
one of the few times this century that almost everyone agreed the recipient
deserved it. He continued to write until his death in 1989, but towards the end
he remarked that each word seemed to him "an unnecessary stain on silence
and nothingness."
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