Samuel Barclay Beckett (13 April 1906 – 22 December 1989) was an Irish avant-garde novelist, playwright, theatre director, and poet, who lived
in Paris for most of his adult life and wrote
in both English and French. He is widely regarded as among the most influential
writers of the 20th century.
Beckett's
work offers a bleak, tragicomic outlook on human existence, often
coupled with black comedy and gallows
humor, and became increasingly minimalist in his later career. He is considered
one of the last modernist writers, and one of the key figures in
what Martin Esslin called the "Theatre of the Absurd".
Beckett
was awarded the 1969 Nobel Prize
in Literature "for his
writing, which—in new forms for the novel and drama—in the destitution of
modern man acquires its elevation." He was elected Saoi of Aosdána in 1984.
The Becketts were members of
the Anglican Church of Ireland.
The family home, Cooldrinagh in the Dublin suburb of Foxrock, was a large house and garden
complete with tennis court built in 1903 by Samuel's father, William. The house
and garden, together with the surrounding countryside where he often went
walking with his father, the nearby Leopardstown
Racecourse, the Foxrock railway station and Harcourt Street station at the city
terminus of the line, all feature in his prose and plays.
Samuel
Beckett was born on Good Friday, 13 April 1906 to William Frank Beckett, a quantity surveyor and descendant of the Huguenots, and
Maria Jones Roe, a nurse, when both were 35. They
had married in 1901. Beckett had one older brother, Frank Edward Beckett (born
1902). At the age of five, Beckett attended a local playschool, where he
started to learn music, and then moved to Earlsfort House School in the city
centre near Harcourt Street. In 1919, Beckett went to Portora Royal School in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh (which Oscar Wilde had also attended). A natural athlete,
Beckett excelled at cricket as a left-handed batsman and a left-arm medium-pace
bowler. Later, he was to play for Dublin
University and played two first-class games against Northamptonshire. As a result, he became the only Nobel
laureate to have played first class cricket.
The 1960s was a period of change for Beckett, both on a personal
level and as a writer. In 1961, he married Suzanne in a secret civil ceremony
in England (its secrecy due to reasons relating to French inheritance law). The
success of his plays led to invitations to attend rehearsals and productions
around the world, leading eventually to a new career as a theatre director. In
1956, he had his first commission from the BBC Third Programme for a radio play, All That Fall. He continued writing sporadically for radio and extended his
scope to include cinema and television. He began to write in English again,
although he also wrote in French until the end of his life.
Beckett bought some land in 1953 near a hamlet around forty
miles northeast of Paris and built a cottage for himself with the help of some
locals. One of the locals that helped him build the cottage was a
Bulgarian-born farmer named Boris Rousimoff, who Beckett befriended. Rousimoff’s
son was André the Giant and when Beckett found
out that Rousimoff was having trouble getting his son to school due to his
size, Beckett offered to drive André to school in his truck—a vehicle that
could fit André. When André recounted the drives with Beckett, he revealed they
rarely talked about anything other than cricket.
From the late 1950s until his death, Beckett had a relationship
with Barbara Bray, a widow who worked as a script editor for
the BBC. Knowlson wrote of them: "She was small
and attractive, but, above all, keenly intelligent and well-read. Beckett seems
to have been immediately attracted by her and she to him. Their encounter was
highly significant for them both, for it represented the beginning of a
relationship that was to last, in parallel with that with Suzanne, for the rest
of his life." Barbara Bray died in Edinburgh on 25 February 2010.
In October 1969 while on holiday in Tunis with Suzanne, Beckett heard that he had won
the Nobel Prize for
Literature. Anticipating that
her intensely private husband would be saddled with fame from that moment on,
Suzanne called the award a "catastrophe". In true ascetic fashion, he gave away all of
the prize money. While Beckett did not devote much time to interviews, he
sometimes met the artists, scholars, and admirers who sought him out in the
anonymous lobby of the Hotel PLM St. Jacques in Paris near his Montparnasse
home. Although Beckett was an intensely private man,
a review of the second volume of his letters by Roy Foster in the 15 December
2011 issue of The New Republic reveals Beckett to be not only unexpectedly
amiable but frequently prepared to talk about his work and the process behind
it.
Suzanne died on 17 July 1989. Confined to a nursing home and
suffering from emphysema and possibly Parkinson's disease, Beckett died on 22 December. The two were
interred together in the Cimetière du Montparnasse in Paris and share a simple granite gravestone that follows
Beckett's directive that it should be "any colour, so long as it's
grey."
Beckett's career as a writer can be roughly divided into three periods:
his early works, up until the end of World War II in 1945; his middle period,
stretching from 1945 until the early 1960s, during which period he wrote what
are probably his best-known works; and his late period, from the early 1960s
until Beckett's death in 1989, during which his works tended to become shorter
and his style more minimalist.
Beckett's earliest works are generally considered to have been
strongly influenced by the work of his friend James Joyce. They are erudite and
seem to display the author's learning merely for its own sake, resulting in
several obscure passages. The opening phrases of the short-story collection More Pricks than Kicks (1934) affords a representative sample of this
style:
It was morning and Belacqua was stuck in the
first of the canti in the moon. He was so bogged that he could move neither
backward nor forward. Blissful Beatrice was there, Dante also, and she
explained the spots on the moon to him. She shewed him in the first place where
he was at fault, then she put up her own explanation. She had it from God,
therefore he could rely on its being accurate in every particular.
The passage makes reference to Dante's Commedia,
which can serve to confuse readers not familiar with that work. It also
anticipates aspects of Beckett's later work: the physical inactivity of the
character Belacqua; the character's immersion in his own head and thoughts; the
somewhat irreverent comedy of the final sentence.
Similar elements are present in Beckett's first published novel, Murphy (1938), which also explores the themes of insanity and chess
(both of which would be recurrent elements in Beckett's later works). The
novel's opening sentence hints at the somewhat pessimistic undertones and black humour that animate many of Beckett's works:
"The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new". Watt, written while Beckett was in hiding in Roussillon during World
War II, is similar in terms of themes but less exuberant in its style. It
explores human movement as if it were a mathematical permutation, presaging Beckett's later preoccupation—in
both his novels and dramatic works—with precise movement.
Beckett's 1930 essay Proust was strongly influenced by Schopenhauer's pessimism and laudatory descriptions of saintly asceticism.
At this time Beckett began to write creatively in the French language. In the
late 1930s, he wrote a number of short poems in that language and their
sparseness—in contrast to the density of his English poems of roughly the same
period, collected in Echo's Bones and Other
Precipitates (1935)—seems to show
that Beckett, albeit through the medium of another language, was in process of
simplifying his style, a change also evidenced in Watt.
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