Harold Pinter,
CH,
CBE (10 October 1930 – 24
December 2008), was an
English
playwright,
screenwriter, actor,
director,
political activist and poet. He was among
the most influential British playwrights of modern times. In 2005
he was awarded the
Nobel
Prize for Literature.
After publishing poetry and acting in school plays as a teenager in
London, Pinter began his professional theatrical career in 1951,
touring throughout Ireland. From 1952, he acted in
repertory companies throughout England for about a
dozen years, using the stage name
David Baron in
the late 1950s. Beginning with his first play,
The Room (1957), Pinter's writing
career spanned over 50 years and produced 29 original stage plays,
27 screenplays, many dramatic sketches, radio and TV plays, poetry,
one novel, short fiction, essays, speeches, and letters. His
best-known plays include
The Birthday Party (1957),
The Caretaker (1959),
The Homecoming (1964), and
Betrayal (1978), each of
which he adapted to film. His screenplay adaptations of others'
works include
The
Servant (1963),
The
Go-Between (1970),
The French Lieutenant's
Woman (1981),
The
Trial (1993), and
Sleuth (2007). He directed almost 50
stage, television, and film productions and acted extensively in
radio, stage, television, and film productions of his own and
others' works.
Despite frail health after being diagnosed
with oesophageal cancer in
December 2001, Pinter continued to act on stage and screen, last
performing the title role in a critically-acclaimed stage
production of Samuel Beckett's
one-act monologue Krapp's Last Tape, for
the 50th anniversary season of the Royal Court Theatre
, in October 2006.
Pinter's dramas often involve strong conflicts among ambivalent
characters who struggle for verbal and territorial dominance and
for their own versions of the past. Stylistically, these works are
marked by theatrical pauses and silences, comedic timing, irony,
and menace. Thematically ambiguous, they raise complex issues of
individual identity oppressed by social forces, language, and
vicissitudes of memory. In 1981, Pinter stated that he was not
inclined to write plays explicitly about political subjects; yet in
the mid-1980s he began writing overtly
political plays, reflecting his own
heightening political interests and changes in his personal life.
This "new direction" in his work and his
left-wing political activism stimulated
additional critical debate about Pinter's politics. Pinter, his
work, and his politics have been the subject of voluminous critical
commentary.
Pinter received numerous awards. In addition to the Nobel Prize, he
received the
Tony Award for
Best Play in 1967 for
The Homecoming. He was given
BAFTA
awards, the French
Légion
d'honneur and 20
honorary
degrees. Festivals and symposia have been devoted to him and
his work.
In awarding the Nobel Prize, the Swedish Academy
noted, "That he occupies a position as a modern
classic is illustrated by his name entering the language as an
adjective used to describe a particular atmosphere and environment
in drama: 'Pinteresque'".
He died from
liver
cancer on 24 December 2008.
He was buried the following week at Kensal Green
Cemetery
in North West
London.
Biography
Early life and education
Pinter was
born on 10 October 1930, in Hackney
, East London, England
, to Jewish, lower-middle class, native-English parents of
Eastern-European ancestry. His
father, Jack Pinter (1902–1997), was a ladies' tailor, and his
mother, Frances (née Moskowitz; 1904–1992), was an admired
homemaker and cook. Pinter believed an aunt's erroneous view that
the family was
Sephardic and had fled
the
Spanish Inquisition; thus,
in publishing his early poems, Pinter used the pseudonym
Pinta and at other times used variations such as
da Pinto.
Later research
revealed this legend to be apocryphal and documented that three of
Pinter's grandparents came from Poland
and the
fourth from Odessa
, so the
family was Ashkenazic.
He was
evacuated
from the family home in London--"a solid, red-brick, three-storey
villa just off the noisy, bustling, traffic-ridden thoroughfare of
the Lower
Clapton
Road" to Cornwall
and Reading
in 1940 and 1941. The "life-and-death
intensity of daily experience" before and during
the Blitz left Pinter with profound memories "of
loneliness, bewilderment, separation and loss: themes that are in
all his works".
Although
he was an only child, Pinter discovered his social potential as a
student at Hackney
Downs School
, a London grammar
school, between 1944 and 1948. "Partly through the
school and partly through the social life of Hackney Boys' Club ...
he formed an almost sacerdotal belief in the power of male
friendship. The friends he made in those days—most particularly
Henry Woolf, Michael (Mick) Goldstein
and Morris (Moishe) Wernick—have always been a vital part of the
emotional texture of his life". A major influence on Pinter was his
inspirational English teacher, mentor, and friend Joseph Brearley,
who directed him in school plays and with whom he took long walks
throughout Hackney, talking about literature. According to Pinter's
biographer
Michael
Billington, under Brearley's instruction, "Pinter shone at
English, wrote for the school magazine and discovered a gift for
acting." He played
Romeo and
Macbeth, in 1947 and 1948, in productions
directed by Brearley.
At the age of 12, Pinter began writing poetry, and in Spring 1947,
his poetry was first published in the
Hackney Downs School
Magazine. In the early 1950s, he continued to write poetry and
short prose pieces. In 1950, his poetry was first published outside
the school magazine in
Poetry
London, some of it under the pseudonym "Harold Pinta".
Pinter enjoyed running and broke the Hackney Downs School sprinting
record.
Sport and friendship
Pinter was an avid
cricket enthusiast most
of his life, taking his cricket bat with him when he was evacuated
as a pre-teenager during the Blitz. In 1971 he told
Mel Gussow: "one of my main obsessions in life is
the game of cricket—I play and watch and read about it all the
time". Being Chairman of the Gaieties Cricket Club and a lifetime
support[er] of
Yorkshire
Cricket Club, Pinter devoted an entire section of his official
website to the sport ("Gaieties Cricket Club"). One wall of his
study was dominated by a large portrait of himself as a young man
playing cricket. "The painted Mr. Pinter, poised to swing his bat,
has a wicked glint in his eye; testosterone all but flies off the
canvas". Pinter approved of the "urban and exacting idea of cricket
as a bold theatre of aggression". After his death, several of his
Hackney Downs School contemporaries recalled his achievements and
prowess in sports, especially cricket and running. The
BBC Radio 4 memorial tribute to Pinter included
an essay on Pinter and cricket.
Other main loves and interests that Pinter mentioned to
interviewers are family, love and sex, drinking, writing, and
reading. According to Billington, "If the notion of male loyalty,
competitive rivalry and fear of betrayal forms a constant thread in
Pinter's work from
The
Dwarfs onwards, its origins can be found in his teenage
Hackney years. Pinter adores women, enjoys flirting with them,
worships their resilience and strength. But, in his early work
especially, they are often seen as disruptive influences on some
pure,
Platonic ideal of male
friendship: one of the most crucial of all Pinter's lost
Edens".
Early theatrical training and stage experience
Harold Pinter, alias David Baron
Beginning in late 1948, Pinter attended the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
for two terms, but hating the school, he missed most of his
classes, feigned a nervous breakdown, and dropped out in 1949. In
1948 he was also "called up for
National Service", registered as a
conscientious objector, was brought
to trial twice, and was ultimately fined by the magistrate for
refusing to serve.
He had a small part in the Christmas pantomime Dick Whittington and His
Cat at the Chesterfield
Hippodrome in 1949 to 1950. From January to
July 1951, he attended the
Central School of Speech and
Drama.
From 1951 to 1952, he toured Ireland with the Anew McMaster
repertory company, playing over a dozen roles.
In 1952 he began
acting in regional English repertory productions; from 1953 to
1954, he worked for the Donald Wolfit
Company, King's Theatre, Hammersmith
, performing eight roles. From 1954 until
1959, Pinter acted under the stage name David Baron. In all, Pinter
played nearly twenty-five roles under that name. To supplement his
income from acting, Pinter worked as a waiter, a postman, a bouncer
and snow-clearer, meanwhile "harbouring ambitions as a poet and
writer". In October 1989, Pinter recalled: "I was in English rep as
an actor for about 12 years. My favourite roles were undoubtedly
the sinister ones. They're something to get your teeth into".
During that period, he also performed occasional roles in his own
and others' works (for radio, TV, and film), as he did later as
well.
Marriage and family life
From 1956 until 1980, Pinter was married to
Vivien Merchant, an actress whom he met on
tour, probably best known for her performance in the 1966 film
Alfie. Their son, Daniel,
was born in 1958. Through the early 1970s, Merchant appeared in
many of Pinter's works, most notably
The Homecoming on stage (1965) and
screen (1973), but the marriage was turbulent and began
disintegrating in the mid-1960s. For seven years, from 1962 to
1969, Pinter was engaged in a clandestine affair with BBC-TV
presenter and journalist
Joan
Bakewell, which inspired his 1978 play
Betrayal. Initially the play was
thought to be a response to consequences of his 1975 affair with
historian
Antonia Fraser, the wife of
Hugh Fraser, and Pinter's
"marital crack-up". Billington showed, however, that the play was
inspired by Pinter's earlier affair with Bakewell.
Though
the Pinters had both met Antonia Fraser first in 1969, when
Merchant and Fraser worked together on a National
Gallery
programme about Mary
Queen of Scots, it was not until January 1975 that Pinter
became romantically involved with her. The affair lasted
only six weeks. After Merchant returned from acting in
Death of a Salesman at the
Hong Kong Arts Festival, where she
had become ill and had to return home for convalescence, Pinter
felt that he could not tell her about "his state of emotional
turmoil, though he did confide in
Peggy
Ashcroft, to whom he was very close at the time, as well as to
Peter Hall and [artist] Guy
Vaesen". Pinter confessed the affair to his wife in late March
1975. After that, "Life in Hanover Terrace gradually became
impossible", and Pinter moved out of their house on 28 April 1975,
five days after Hall's première of
No Man's Land. First, Pinter
stayed in an apartment owned by
Sam
Spiegel, and next he moved in with his friend
Donald Pleasence and his family, where he
was joined by his son Daniel, as Pinter found that "Vivien couldn't
cope with bringing up Daniel alone". Merchant made the break-up
public, granting interviews to the papers, and on 27 July 1975, she
filed for divorce, resulting in further interest in the press. "For
all concerned, it was a traumatic summer: one of separation,
confrontation, pursuit and flight. What kept the story alive were
Vivien's indiscretions.... Everyone else, to their credit,
maintained a stoical silence".
After
spending two years acting and directing while living in borrowed
and rented quarters, in August 1977, Pinter and Antonia Fraser
moved into the Frasers' family home in Holland Park
, where he wrote Betrayal. After the Frasers'
divorce had become final in 1977 and the Pinters' in 1980, Pinter
married Fraser in late October 1980. Because of a two-week delay in
Merchant's signing the divorce papers, however, the reception had
to precede the actual ceremony, originally scheduled to occur on 10
October 1980, his 50th birthday. Unable to overcome her bitterness
and grief at the loss of her husband, Vivien Merchant died of acute
alcoholism in the first week of October 1982 at the age of 53.
Pinter "did everything possible to support" her until her death and
regretted that he ultimately became estranged from their son,
Daniel, after their separation, Pinter's remarriage, and Merchant's
death.
A reclusive gifted musician and writer, Daniel stopped using the
surname Pinter in the summer of 1975, when he was living with
Pinter and Antonia Fraser, adopting instead Brand, the maiden name
of his maternal grandmother. Pinter later claimed that this was
"largely pragmatic move on Daniel's part designed to keep the
press, who had been relentlessly hounding him also, at bay". Fraser
recalled that Daniel "was very nice to me at a time when it would
have been only too easy for him to have turned on me ... simply
because he had been the sole focus of his father's love and now
manifestly wasn't." Still unreconciled at the time of his father's
death, Daniel Brand did not attend Pinter's funeral.
Billington observes that "The break-up with Vivien and the new life
with Antonia was to have a profound effect on Pinter's personality
and his work", while Fraser denies that she had any direct input
into his plays. She stated that "other people [such as
Peggy Ashcroft, among others] had a shaping
influence on his politics" and attributed changes in his writing
and political views to a change from "an unhappy, complicated
personal life ... to a happy, uncomplicated personal life," so that
"a side of Harold which had always been there was somehow released.
I think you can see that in his work after
No Man's Land [1975], which was a
very bleak play".
Pinter was content in his second marriage and enjoyed family life
with his six adult stepchildren and 17 step-grandchildren. Even
after battling cancer for several years, he considered himself "a
very lucky man in every respect."
The New York Times noted in a 2007
interview that Pinter's "latest work, a slim pamphlet called 'Six
Poems for A.,' comprises poems written over 32 years, with 'A'
being Lady Antonia. The first of the poems was written in Paris,
where she and Pinter traveled soon after they met. More than three
decades later the two were rarely apart, and Mr. Pinter turned
soft, even cozy, when he talked about his wife". In the interview,
Pinter "acknowledged that his plays—full of infidelity, cruelty,
inhumanity, the lot—seem at odds with his domestic contentment.
'How can you write a happy play?' he said. 'Drama is about conflict
and degrees of perturbation, disarray. I've never been able to
write a happy play, but I've been able to enjoy a happy
life' ." After his death, Fraser told
The Guardian:
"He was a great, and it was a privilege to live with him for over
33 years. He will never be forgotten".
Civic activities and political activism
In 1948–49, when he was 18, Pinter opposed the politics of the
Cold War, leading to his decision to become
a
conscientious objector and
to refuse to comply with
National Service in the
British military. But he was not a
pacifist. He told interviewers that, if he had been
old enough at the time, he would have fought against the
Nazis in
World War II. He
seemed to express ambivalence about politicians in his 1966
Paris Review interview
conducted by
Lawrence M. Bensky.
Yet, he had actually been an early member of
the Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament in the United Kingdom
and also had supported the British Anti-Apartheid Movement (1959–1994),
participating in British artists' refusal to permit professional
productions of their work in South Africa in 1963 and in subsequent
related campaigns. In "A Play and Its Politics", a 1985
interview, Pinter described his earlier plays retrospectively from
the perspective of the politics of power and the dynamics of
oppression.
In his last twenty-five years, Pinter increasingly focused his
essays, interviews and public appearances directly on political
issues. He was an officer in
International PEN, travelling with
American playwright
Arthur Miller to
Turkey in 1985 on a mission co-sponsored with a
Helsinki Watch committee to investigate and
protest against the torture of imprisoned writers. There he met
victims of political oppression and their families. Pinter's
experiences in Turkey and his knowledge of the Turkish suppression
of the
Kurdish language inspired
his 1988 play
Mountain
Language. He was also an active member of the Cuba
Solidarity Campaign, an organisation that "campaigns in the
UK
against the
U.S.
blockade of
Cuba
". In 2001 Pinter joined the International
Committee to Defend Slobodan Milošević (ICDSM), which appealed for
a fair trial for and the freedom of
Slobodan Milošević, signing a
related "Artists' Appeal for Milošević" in 2004.
He
strongly opposed the 1991 Gulf War, the
1999 NATO
bombing
campaign in Yugoslavia during the
Kosovo War, the United States' 2001
War in
Afghanistan, and the 2003
Invasion of Iraq. Among his provocative political
statements, Pinter called Prime Minister
Tony
Blair a "deluded idiot" and compared the administration of
President
George W. Bush to
Nazi
Germany. He stated that the U.S. "was charging towards world
domination while the American public and Britain's '
mass-murdering' prime minister sat back and
watched." He was very active in the
antiwar movement in the United Kingdom,
speaking at rallies held by the
Stop the War Coalition and frequently
criticising American aggression: "the
invasion of Iraq [was a] bandit act,
an act of blatant
state terrorism,
demonstrating absolute contempt for the conception of
international law."
The award of the Nobel Prize in Literature to Pinter and his sharp
political statements have elicited strong criticism and even, at
times, provoked ridicule and personal attacks.See, e.g., Hari,
Hitchens, and Pryce-Jones. For example, the historian Geoffrey
Alderman, author of the official history of Hackney Downs School,
wrote that "Whatever his merit as a writer, actor and director, on
an ethical plane Harold Pinter seems to me to have been intensely
flawed, and his moral compass deeply fractured."
David Edgar, writing in
The Guardian, defended Pinter
against what he termed Pinter's "being berated by the belligerati"
like
Johann Hari, who felt that he did
not "deserve" to win the Nobel Prize. Later he continued to
campaign against the Iraq War and on behalf of other political
causes that he supported. For example, he signed the mission
statement of
Jews for
Justice for Palestinians in 2005 and its full-page
advertisement, "What Is Israel Doing? A Call by Jews in Britain",
published in
The Times on 6 July
2006. and was a patron of the
Palestine Festival of
Literature.
Career
As actor
Pinter's acting career spanned over fifty years and, although he
often played
villains, included a wide range
of roles on stage and in radio, film, and television. In addition
to roles in radio and television adaptations of his own plays and
dramatic sketches, early in his screenwriting career he made
several cameo appearances in films based on his own screenplays;
for example, as a society man in
The Servant (1963) and as Mr. Bell
in
Accident (1967),
both directed by
Joseph Losey; and as a
bookshop customer in his later film
Turtle Diary (1985), starring
Michael Gambon,
Glenda Jackson, and
Ben Kingsley.
Pinter's notable film and television roles included the corrupt
lawyer Saul Abrahams, opposite
Peter
O'Toole, in
BBC TV's
Rogue Male (1976), a remake of
the 1941
film noir Man Hunt, released on DVD in 2002;
and a drunk Irish journalist in
Langrishe, Go Down (starring
Judi Dench and
Jeremy Irons) distributed on
BBC Two in 1978 and released in movie theatres in
2002. Pinter's later film roles included the criminal Sam Ross in
Mojo (1997), written and directed by
Jez Butterworth, based on Butterworth's
play of the same name; Sir
Thomas Bertram (his most substantial feature-film role) in
Mansfield Park
(1998), a character that Pinter described as "a very civilised man
... a man of great sensibility but in fact, he's upholding and
sustaining a totally brutal system [the slave trade] from which he
derives his money"; and Uncle Benny, opposite
Pierce Brosnan and
Geoffrey Rush, in
The Tailor of Panama (2001). In
television films, he played Mr.
Bearing, the father of
ovarian cancer
patient Vivian Bearing, played by
Emma
Thompson (and directed by
Mike
Nichols), in the
HBO film of the
Pulitzer Prize-winning play
Wit (2001); and the Director opposite
John Gielgud (Gielgud's last role) and
Rebecca Pidgeon in
Catastrophe, by
Samuel Beckett, directed by
David Mamet as part of
Beckett On Film
(2001).
As director
Pinter
began to direct more frequently during the 1970s, becoming an
associate director of the National Theatre
(NT) in 1973. He directed almost 50
productions of his own and others' plays for stage, film, and
television, including 10 productions of works by
Simon Gray: the stage and/or film premières of
Butley (stage, 1971; film, 1974),
Otherwise Engaged (1975),
The Rear Column (stage, 1978; TV, 1980),
Close of
Play (NT, 1979),
Quartermaine's Terms (1981),
Life Support (1997),
The Late Middle Classes
(1999), and
The Old Masters (2004).
Several of those
productions starred Alan Bates
(1934–2003), who originated the stage and screen roles of not only
Butley but also Mick in Pinter's first major commercial success,
The Caretaker (stage, 1960;
film, 1964); and in Pinter's double-bill produced at the Lyric
Hammersmith
in 1984, he played Nicolas in One for the Road
and the cab driver in Victoria Station. Among
over 35 plays that Pinter directed were
Next of Kin
(1974), by
John Hopkins;
Blithe Spirit (1976),
by
Noël Coward;
Circe and
Bravo (1986), by
Donald Freed;
Taking Sides (1995), by
Ronald Harwood; and
Twelve Angry Men (1996), by
Reginald Rose.
As playwright
Pinter is the author of 29 plays and 15 dramatic sketches and the
co-author of two works for stage and radio. Along with the 1967
Tony Award for Best Play
for
The Homecoming and several other American awards and
award nominations, he and his plays received many awards in the UK
and elsewhere throughout the world. His style has entered the
English language as an adjective, "
Pinteresque",
although Pinter himself disliked the term and found it
meaningless.
"Comedies of menace" (1957–1968)
- The Room and The Birthday Party (1957)
Pinter's
first play, The Room,
written and first performed in 1957, was a student production at
the University
of Bristol
, directed by his good friend, actor Henry Woolf, who also originated the role of Mr.
Kidd (which he reprised in 2001 and 2007). After Pinter
mentioned that he had an idea for a play, Woolf asked him to write
it so that he could direct it to fulfill a requirement for his
postgraduate work. Pinter wrote it in three days.
The production was "a
staggeringly confident debut which attracted the attention of a
young producer, Michael Codron, who decided to present Pinter's
next play, The Birthday
Party, at the Lyric Hammersmith
, in 1958".
Written in 1957 and produced in 1958, Pinter's second play,
The
Birthday Party, one of his best-known works, was initially
both a commercial and critical disaster, despite a rave review in
the
The Sunday Times by
its influential drama critic
Harold
Hobson, which appeared only after the production had closed and
could not be reprieved. Critical accounts often quote Hobson's
prophetic words: Hobson was generally credited by Pinter himself
and other critics as bolstering him and perhaps even rescuing his
career;
In a review published in 1958, borrowing from the subtitle of
The Lunatic View: A Comedy of Menace, a play by
David Campton, critic
Irving Wardle called Pinter's early plays
"
comedy of menace"—a label that
people have applied repeatedly to his work. Such plays begin with
an apparently innocent situation that becomes both threatening and
"
absurd" as Pinter's characters behave in
ways often perceived as inexplicable by his audiences and one
another. Pinter acknowledges the influence of
Samuel Beckett, particularly on his early
work; they became friends, sending each other drafts of their works
in progress for comments.
- The Hothouse (1958/1980), The Dumb Waiter
(1959), The Caretaker (1959), and other early plays
Pinter wrote
The Hothouse in
1958, which he shelved for over 20 years (See "Overtly political
sketches" below).
He next wrote The Dumb Waiter (1959), which premiered
in Germany and was then produced in a double
bill with The Room at the Hampstead Theatre Club
, in London, in 1960. It was not produced
very often thereafter until the 1980s, and it has been revived more
frequently since 2000, including the West End
Trafalgar
Studios
production in 2007. The first production
of The Caretaker, at the
Arts Theatre
Club
, in London, in 1960, established Pinter's
theatrical reputation. Large radio and television audiences
for his one-act play
A Night
Out, along with the popularity of his revue sketches,
propelled him to further critical attention.
In 1964, four years
after the success of The
Caretaker, through its long run at the Duchess
Theatre
, which garnered an Evening Standard Award, The
Birthday Party was revived both on television (with Pinter
himself in the role of Goldberg) and on stage (directed by Pinter
at the Aldwych
Theatre
) and was well-received.
By the
time Peter Hall's London production of The Homecoming
(1964) reached Broadway
in 1967, Pinter had become a celebrity playwright,
and the play garnered four Tony Awards,
among other awards During this period, Pinter also wrote the radio
play A Slight Ache, first
broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in 1959 and
then adapted to the stage and performed at the Arts Theatre Club
in 1961. A Night Out (1960) was
broadcast to a large audience on
Associated British
Corporation's television show
Armchair Theatre, after being
transmitted on BBC Radio 3, also in 1960. His play
Night
School was first televised in 1961 on
Associated Rediffusion.
The Collection premièred at the
Aldwych
Theatre
in 1962, and The
Dwarfs, adapted from Pinter's then unpublished novel of
the same title, was first broadcast on radio in 1960, then adapted
for the stage (also at the Arts Theatre Club) in a double bill with
The Lover, which was then
televised on Associated Rediffusion in 1963; and Tea Party, a play that Pinter
developed from his 1963 short story, first broadcast on BBC TV in 1965.
Working as both a screenwriter and as a playwright, Pinter composed
a script called
The
Compartment (1966), for a trilogy of films to be
contributed by
Samuel Beckett,
Eugene Ionesco, and Pinter, of which
only Beckett's film, entitled
Film, was actually produced. Then Pinter
turned his unfilmed script into a television play, which was
produced as
The
Basement, both on
BBC 2 and also on
stage in 1968.
"Memory plays" (1968–1982)
From the late 1960s through the early 1980s, Pinter wrote a series
of plays and sketches that explore complex ambiguities, elegiac
mysteries, comic vagaries, and other "quicksand"-like
characteristics of
memory and which critics
sometimes classify as Pinter's "memory plays". These include
Landscape (1968),
Silence (1969),
Night (1969),
Old Times (1971),
No Man's Land (1975),
The
Proust Screenplay (1977),
Betrayal (1978),
Family Voices (1981),
Victoria
Station (1982), and
A Kind of
Alaska (1982). Some of Pinter's later plays, including
Party Time (1991),
Moonlight (1993),
Ashes to Ashes (1996), and
Celebration (2000) draw
upon some features of his "memory"
dramaturgy in their focus on the past in the
present, but they have personal and political resonances and other
tonal differences from these earlier memory plays.
Overtly political plays and sketches (1980–2000)
After a three-year period of creative drought in the early 1980s
after his marriage to Antonia Fraser and the death of Vivien
Merchant, Pinter's plays tended to become shorter and more overtly
political, serving as critiques of
oppression,
torture, and
other abuses of
human rights, linked by
the apparent "invulnerability of power". Just before this hiatus,
in 1979, Pinter re-discovered his manuscript of
The Hothouse, which he had written in 1958
but had set aside.
He revised it and then directed its first
production himself at Hampstead Theatre
, in London, in 1980. Like his plays of the
1980s,
The Hothouse is about authoritarianism and the
abuses of power politics, but it is also highly comic, like his
earlier
comedies of menace. Pinter
played the major role of Roote in a revival at the
Minerva Theatre, Chichester, in
1995.
Pinter's brief dramatic sketch
Precisely (1983) is a
duologue between two bureaucrats exploring the absurd power
politics of mutual nuclear annihilation and
deterrence. His first overtly political
one-act play is
One for the Road
(1984). In 1985, Pinter stated that whereas his earlier plays
presented "metaphors" for power and powerlessness, the later ones
present literal "realities" of power and its abuse. Pinter's
"political theater dramatizes the interplay and conflict of the
opposing poles of involvement and disengagement".
Mountain Language (1988) concerned
the Turkish suppression of the
Kurdish
language.
The dramatic sketch The New World
Order (1991) provides "ten nerve wracking minutes" of two men
threatening to torture a third man who is blindfolded, gagged, and
bound in a chair; Pinter directed the British première at the
Royal Court
Theatre Upstairs
, where it opened on 9 July 1991, and the production
then transferred to Washington, D.C.
and was revived there in 1994. Pinter next wrote the
longer political satire Party
Time (1991), which premièred at the Almeida Theatre
, in London, in a double-bill with Mountain
Language. After Pinter adapted it as a television
screenplay in 1992, he directed it for broadcast.
Intertwining political and personal concerns, his next full-length
plays,
Moonlight (1993)
and
Ashes to Ashes
(1996) are set in domestic households and focus on dying and death;
Devlin and Rebecca in
Ashes to Ashes allude to unspecified
"atrocities", in their conversations, that relate to the
Holocaust. After experiencing the deaths of
first his mother (1992) and then his father (1997), again merging
the personal and the political, Pinter wrote the poems "Death"
(1997) and "The Disappeared" (1998).
Pinter's
last stage play, Celebration (2000), is a social
satire, set in an opulent restaurant, which
lampoons The
Ivy
, a gathering place for the theatre crowd near
Covent
Garden
in London's West End theatre
district, and its patrons who "have just come from
performances of either the ballet or the opera. Not that
they can remember a darn thing about what they saw, including the
titles. [These] gilded, foul-mouthed souls are just as myopic when
it comes to their own table mates (and for that matter, their
food), with conversations that usually connect only on the surface,
if there." The play may appear superficially to have fewer overtly
political resonances than some of the plays from the 1980s and
1990s. Its central male characters, however, brothers named Lambert
and Matt, are members of the elite (like the men "in charge" in
Party Time), who describe themselves as "peaceful strategy
consultants [because] we don't carry guns". At the next table,
Russell, a banker, describes himself as a "totally disordered
personality ... a psychopath", while Lambert "vows to be
reincarnated as '[a] more civilised, [a] gentler person, [a] nicer
person'". Extreme viciousness underlies these characters' smoother
exteriors.
Celebration evokes familiar
Pinteresque
political contexts: "The ritzy loudmouths in 'Celebration' ... and
the quieter working-class mumblers of 'The Room' ... have
everything in common beneath the surface". "Money remains in the
service of entrenched power, and the brothers in the play are
'strategy consultants' whose jobs involve force and violence.... It
is tempting but inaccurate to equate the comic power inversions of
the social behavior in
Celebration with lasting change in
larger political structures", according to Grimes, who finds the
play indicative of Pinter's pessimism about the possibility of
changing the status quo.
As the Waiter's often comically unbelievable reminiscences about
his grandfather demonstrate in
Celebration, Pinter's final
stage plays also extend some
expressionistic aspects of his earlier "memory
plays", while harkening back to his "comedies of menace", as
illustrated in the characters and in the Waiter's final speech: "My
grandfather introduced me to the mystery of life and I'm still in
the middle of it. I can't find the door to get out. My grandfather
got out of it. He got right out of it. He left it behind him and he
didn't look back. He got that absolutely right. And I'd like to
make one further interjection.
He stands still. Slow fade."
Around
the same time, Remembrance of Things
Past, Pinter's adaptation of his unpublished screenplay,
and the revival of The
Caretaker directed by Patrick
Marber and starring Michael
Gambon, Rupert Graves, and
Douglas Hodge, played simultaneously
in London's West
End
(both 2000–2001).
Like
Celebration, Pinter's next-to-last sketch,
Press
Conference (2002), "invokes both torture and the fragile,
circumscribed existence of dissent".
For its première in
the National
Theatre
's two-part production of Sketches, despite
undergoing chemotherapy at the time, Pinter played the ruthless
Minister willing to murder little children for the benefit of "The
State".
As screenwriter
Pinter was the author of 27 screenplays and film scripts for cinema
and television, many of which were filmed, or adapted as stage
plays. His fame as a screenwriter began with his three screenplays
written for films directed by
Joseph
Losey, leading to their close friendship:
The Servant (1963), based on the
novel by
Robin Maugham and starring
Dirk Bogarde and
James Fox;
Accident (1967), adapted from the
novel by
Nicholas Mosley and
starring Bogarde, Pinter's first wife
Vivien Merchant,
Jacqueline Sassard,
Delphine Seyrig, and
Michael York; and
The Go-Between (1970), based on
the novel by
L. P. Hartley and
starring
Alan Bates and
Julie Christie. Films based on Pinter's
adaptations of his own stage plays are
The Caretaker (1963),
directed by
Clive Donner;
The Birthday Party (1968),
staged by
William Friedkin;
The Homecoming
(1973), directed by Peter Hall; and
Betrayal (1983), with
David Hugh Jones directing.
Pinter also wrote many screenplays based on novels, including
The Pumpkin Eater (1964),
adapted from the novel by
Penelope
Mortimer, directed by
Jack Clayton
and starring
Anne Bancroft,
Peter Finch,
James
Mason, and
Maggie Smith, among
others;
The Quiller
Memorandum (1966), from the 1965 spy novel
The Berlin
Memorandum, by
Elleston Trevor,
directed by
Michael
Anderson, starring
George Segal and
featuring
Senta Berger,
Alec Guinness, and
Max von Sydow;
The Last Tycoon (1976), from the
unfinished novel by
F. Scott Fitzgerald, staged by
Elia Kazan, and starring
Tony Curtis,
Robert De
Niro,
Robert Mitchum,
Jeanne Moreau,
Jack
Nicholson,
Donald Pleasence,
and
Theresa Russell;
The French Lieutenant's
Woman (1981), from the novel by
John Fowles, directed by
Karel Reisz, and starring
Jeremy Irons and
Meryl
Streep;
Turtle Diary
(1985), from the novel by
Russell
Hoban, starring
Michael Gambon,
Glenda Jackson, and
Ben Kingsley;
The Heat of the Day
(1988), a television film, from the 1949 novel by
Elizabeth Bowen;
The Comfort of
Strangers (1990), from the novel by
Ian McEwan, directed by
Paul Schrader and starring
Rupert Everett,
Helen
Mirren,
Natasha Richardson,
and
Christopher Walken; and
The Trial (1993),
from the novel by
Franz Kafka, directed
by
David Hugh Jones and starring
Kyle MacLachlan, with
cameo appearances by
Anthony Hopkins,
Alfred Molina and others.
His commissioned screenplay adaptations from others' works for the
films
The Handmaid's
Tale (1990),
The Remains of the Day
(1990), and
Lolita
remain unpublished and, in the case of the latter two films,
uncredited, though several scenes from or aspects of his scripts
were also used in these finished films. His screenplays
The
Proust Screenplay (1972),
Victory (1982), and
The
Dreaming Child (1997) and his unpublished screenplay
The
Tragedy of King Lear (2000) have not been filmed. A
section of Pinter's
Proust Screenplay was, however,
released as the 1984 film
Swann in Love
(
Un amour de Swann), directed by
Volker Schlöndorff and starring
Jeremy Irons and
Ornella Muti, and it was also adapted by
Michael Bakewell as a 2-hour radio
drama broadcast on
BBC Radio 3 in 1995.
Later
Pinter and director Di Trevis collaborated to adapted it for the
stage, as Remembrance of Things
Past, opening at the National Theatre
in 2000.
Pinter's screenwriting career culminated in his last filmed
screenplay adaptation of the 1970
Tony
Award-winning play
Sleuth, by
Anthony Shaffer, which was commissioned by
Jude Law, one of the film's producers. It
is the basis for the 2007 film
Sleuth, directed by
Kenneth Branagh and starring Law as Milo
Tindle (played by Caine in the
1972
film of Sleuth) and
Michael
Caine as Andrew Wyke (played by
Laurence Olivier in the earlier film).
Pinter's screenplays for both
The French Lieutenant's
Woman and
Betrayal were nominated for
Academy Awards in 1981 and 1983,
respectively.
2001–2008
From 16
to 31 July 2001, a Harold Pinter Festival celebrating his work,
curated by Michael
Colgan, artistic director of the Gate Theatre
, Dublin
, was held
as part of the annual Lincoln Center Festival at Lincoln
Center
in New York
City
. Pinter participated both as an actor, as
Nicolas in
One for the Road, and as a director of a double
bill pairing his last play,
Celebration, with his first
play,
The Room. As part of a two-week "Harold Pinter
Homage" at the World Leaders Festival of
Creative Genius, held from 24 September to 30 October 2001, at
Harbourfront Centre, in Toronto, Canada, Pinter presented a
dramatic reading of
Celebration (2000) and also
participated in a public interview as part of the
International Festival of
Authors.
In December 2001, Pinter was diagnosed with
oesophageal cancer, for which, in 2002,
he underwent an operation and
chemotherapy. During the course of his
treatment, he directed a production of his play
No Man's
Land, wrote and performed in a new sketch, "Press Conference",
for an otherwise retrospective production of his dramatic sketches
at the National Theatre.
From 2002, having become increasingly active
in political causes, From 9 to 25 January 2003, the Manitoba
Theatre Centre, in Manitoba
, Canada, held a nearly month-long
PinterFest, in which over a 130 performances of a dozen of
Pinter's plays were performed by a dozen different theatre
companies. Productions during the Festival included:
The
Hothouse,
Night School,
The Lover,
The
Dumb Waiter,
The Homecoming,
The Birthday
Party,
Monologue,
One for the Road,
The
Caretaker,
Ashes to Ashes,
Celebration, and
No Man's Land,.
Pinter continued to write and present politically-charged poetry,
essays, speeches and two new screenplay adaptations of others'
plays,
The Tragedy of King Lear (completed in 2000 but
unfilmed); and "Sleuth", based on Anthony Shaffer's 1970 play
Sleuth (written in 2005 and
revised for the 2007 film
Sleuth).
In 2005, Pinter stated that he would stop writing plays to dedicate
himself to his political
activism and
writing
poetry: "I think I've written 29
plays. I think it's enough for me.... My energies are going in
different directions—over the last few years I've made a number of
political speeches at various locations and ceremonies ... I'm
using a lot of energy more specifically about political states of
affairs, which I think are very, very worrying as things stand."
Some of this later poetry included "The 'Special Relationship'",
"Laughter", and "The Watcher".
From 2005, Pinter battled post-oesophageal cancer and other ill
health, including a rare skin disease called
pemphigus and "a form of
septicaemia that afflict[ed] his feet and made it
difficult for him to walk." Yet, he completed his screenplay for
the film of
Sleuth in 2005. His last dramatic work for
radio,
Voices (2005), a
collaboration with composer
James Clarke, adapting such selected
works by Pinter to music, premièred on
BBC
Radio 3 on his 75th birthday. 10 October 2005. Three days
later, it was announced that he had won the 2005 Nobel Prize in
Literature.
In an
interview of Pinter in 2006, conducted by critic Michael Billington
as part of the Cultural Programme of
the 2006 Winter Olympics in
Turin
, Italy, Pinter confirmed that he would continue to
write poetry but not plays. In response, the audience
shouted
No, urging him to keep writing.
Along with the
international symposium on Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics,
curated by Billington, the 2006 Europe Theatre Prize theatrical
events celebrating Pinter included new productions (in French) of
Precisely (1983), One for the Road (1984),
Mountain Language (1988), The New World Order
(1991), Party Time (1991), and Press Conference
(2002) (French versions by Jean Pavans); and Pinter Plays,
Poetry & Prose, an evening of dramatic readings by actors
Charles Dance, Michael Gambon, Jeremy Irons, and Penelope Wilton, directed by Alan Stanford, of the Gate Theatre
, Dublin
. In
June 2006, the
British Academy of
Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) hosted a celebration of
Pinter's films curated by his friend, playwright
David Hare. Hare introduced the
selection of film clips by saying: "To jump back into the world of
Pinter's movies ... is to remind yourself of a literate mainstream
cinema, focused as much as
Bergman's
is on the human face, in which tension is maintained by a carefully
crafted mix of image and dialogue."
After
returning to London from the Edinburgh International
Book Festival, in September 2006, Pinter began rehearsing for
his performance of the role of Krapp in Samuel Beckett's one-act monologue Krapp's
Last Tape, which he performed from a motorized wheelchair
in a limited run the next month at the Royal Court
Theatre
to sold-out audiences and "ecstatic" critical
reviews. The production ran only nine performances,
from 12 October, two days after Pinter's 76th birthday, to 24
October 2006, and was the most sought-after ticket in London during
the 50th-anniversary celebration season of the Royal Court
Theatre
. One performance was filmed, produced on
DVD, and shown on
BBC Four on 21 June
2007.
Also in
2006, Sheffield
Theatres
hosted Pinter: A
Celebration for a full month (11 October – 11 November
2006). It featured selected productions of Pinter's plays
(in order of presentation):
The Caretaker,
Voices,
No Man's Land,
Family Voices,
Tea Party,
The Room,
One for the Road,
and
The Dumb Waiter; films (most his screenplays; some in
which Pinter appears as an actor):
The Go-Between,
Accident,
The Birthday Party,
The French
Lieutenant's Woman,
Reunion,
Mojo,
The
Servant, and
The Pumpkin Eater; and other related
events, such as critical discussions, a Pinter quiz, a celebration
of cricket, the
BBC Two documentary film
Arena: Harold Pinter, a consideration of Pinter's pacifist
writing, and a screening of Pinter's passionate 45-minute Nobel
Prize lecture.
In 2007,
to coincide with the 50th anniversary of The Dumb Waiter,
Lee Evans and Jason Isaacs starred as Gus and Ben in a West
End revival at the Trafalgar Studios
, from 2 February through 24 March 2007.
Later in February 2007,
John
Crowley's film version of Pinter's play
Celebration
(2000) was shown on
More4 (
Channel 4, UK). The cast included
James Bolam,
Janie Dee,
Colin Firth,
James
Fox,
Michael Gambon,
Julia McKenzie,
Sophie Okonedo,
Stephen Rea and
Penelope Wilton. On 18 March 2007,
BBC Radio 3 broadcast a new radio production of
The Homecoming, directed by
Thea
Sharrock and produced by Martin J. Smith, with Pinter
performing the role of Max (for the first time; he had previously
played Lenny on stage in 1964), also starring
Michael Gambon,
Rupert Graves,
Samuel
West,
James Alexandrou, and
Gina McKee.
A revival of The
Hothouse, with a cast including Stephen Moore, Lia Williams, and Henry
Woolf, opened at the National Theatre, in London, on 11 July
2007, playing through 27 July, concurrently with a revival of
Betrayal at the Donmar Warehouse
, starring Toby
Stephens, Dervla Kirwan, and
Samuel West, directed by Roger Michell.
Revivals in 2008 included the 40th anniverary production of the
American première of
The Homecoming on Broadway starring
James Frain,
Ian
McShane,
Raúl Esparza,
Michael McKean, and
Eve Best, directed by
Daniel J. Sullivan, which opened on 16 December
2007 in a limited engagement through 13 April 2008.
From 8 to 24 May
2008, the Lyric
Hammersmith
celebrated the 50th anniversary of The Birthday
Party with a revival and related events, including a gala
performance and reception hosted by Harold Pinter on 19 May 2008,
exactly fifty years after its London première there.
The final
revival during Pinter's lifetime was a production of No Man's
Land, directed by Rupert Goold,
opening at the Gate Theatre, Dublin August 2008 and then
transferring to the Duke of York's Theatre
, London, where it played through 3 January
2009. On the Monday before Christmas 2008, during
the play's break, Pinter was admitted to Hammersmith
Hospital
, where he died on Christmas Eve from liver cancer
On 26 December 2008, when No Man's Land reopened at the
Duke of York's, the actors paid tribute to Pinter from the stage,
with Gambon reading Hirst's monologue about his "photograph album"
from Act Two that Pinter had asked him to read at his funeral,
ending with a standing ovation from the audience, many of whom were
in tears:
Posthumous events
Funeral
Pinter's
funeral was a private, half-hour secular ceremony conducted at the
graveside at Kensal Green Cemetery
, 31 December 2008. The eight readings had
been selected in advance by Pinter. Michael Gambon read the "photo
album" speech from
No Man's Land and three other readings,
including the poem "Death" (1997). Other readings honoured Pinter's
widow and his love of cricket. Many notable theatre people,
including
Tom Stoppard, attended, but
Pinter's estranged son, Daniel, did not. At the end of the
ceremony, Pinter's tearful widow, Antonia Fraser, stepped forward
to his grave and quoted
Horatio's speech after the death of
Prince Hamlet: "Now cracks a noble
heart. Goodnight, sweet prince, /And flights of angels sing thee to
thy rest!"
Memorial tributes
The night before Pinter's burial, theatre marquees on Broadway
dimmed their lights for a minute in tribute, and on the final night
of
No Man's Land at the Duke of York's Theatre on 3
January 2009, all of the
Ambassador Theatre Group in the
West End dimmed their lights for an hour to honour the playwright.
The
Sydney Festival, Dublin's Gate
Theatre, and the
Sydney Theatre
Company, whose co-artistic directors are Australian actress
Cate Blanchett and her husband,
Andrew Upton, on 1 February, gave a
free, hour-long tribute performance of readings from Pinter's
works. It was directed and introduced by Colgan and featured
Blanchett, fellow Australian actor Robert Menzies (grandson of
former Australian Prime Minister
Robert
Menzies), and others.
Diane Abbott, the Member of Parliament for
Hackney North & Stoke
Newington
proposed "an Early Day
Motion" in the House of Commons
to support residents' campaign to restore the
Clapton Cinematograph Theatre, established in Lower Clapton Road
in 1910, and to turn it into a memorial to Pinter
"to honour this Hackney boy turned literary great".
On 2 May
2009, a free public memorial tribute was held at The Graduate
Center
of The City
University of New York. It was part of the Fifth Annual
PEN World Voices Festival of
International Literature, taking place in New York City. Another
memorial celebration was held in the National Theatre, in London,
on the evening of 7 June 2009.
It consisted of excerpts and readings from
Pinter's writings by nearly three dozen of Britain's
most-accomplished actors, many of whom were his friends and
associates, including: Eileen Atkins,
David Bradley, actor-director
Harry Burton, Kenneth Cranham,
Janie Dee, Andy
de la Tour, Lindsay Duncan,
Colin Firth, Henry Goodman, Sheila Hancock, Douglas Hodge, Jeremy
Irons, Jude Law, Gina McKee, Roger
Lloyd Pack, Stephen Rea, Alan Rickman, Michael
Sheen, Indira Varma, Samuel West, Lia
Williams, Penelope Wilton,
Susan Wooldridge, and Henry Woolf; and a troupe of students from the
London Academy of Music and Dramatic
Art
. It was directed by Ian Rickson, who had
directed Pinter in Krapp's Last
Tape at the Royal Court Theatre
in October 2006.
On 16
June 2009, Antonia Fraser officially opened the Harold Pinter Room
& Studio at the Hackney Empire
, renaming the Hackney Empire Hospitality
Suite. Most of an issue of the Arts Tri-Quarterly
Areté was devoted to pieces
remembering Pinter, beginning with Pinter's 1987 unpublished love
poem dedicated "To Antonia" and his poem "Paris", written in 1975,
the year that he and Fraser began living together. These poems are
followed by brief memoirs by some of Pinter's associates and
friends, including
Patrick Marber,
Nina Raine, Nicholas Murray,
Tom Stoppard,
Peter
Nichols,
Susanna Gross, Marigold
Johnson, Francis Wyndham,
Nick Hern,
Richard Eyre, Sarah Johnson,
Ronald Harwood, David Hare, and
Nigel Williams. Michael Colgan, who
has previously curated four festivals of Pinter's work, including
the 2001 Harold Pinter Festival, at Lincoln Center in New York
City, has announced that he is preparing for another retrospective
of Pinter's work in Dublin, scheduled for 2010, to mark Pinter's
80th birthday.
At a
memorial cricket match is scheduled to be played on 27 September
2009 at Lord's
Cricket Ground
between the Gaieties Cricket Club and the Lord's
Taverners, followed by "a concert of words and music in the Long
Room in the Lords pavillion to celebrate Harold Pinter's love of
cricket," featuring such performers as Janie
Dee, Judi Dench, Michael Gambon, Bill
Nighy, Roger Lloyd Pack, and
Samuel West. The winner of a
public
auction of the 2005 portrait of
Pinter by Joe Hill–"a gift to Pinter from his team mates at
Gaieties Cricket Club as a mark of their esteem and gratitude for
Pinter's 40 years service to the club"–will be announced, with the
proceeds going to benefit youth causes supported by the
Taverners.
Honours
An Honorary Associate of the
National Secular Society, a Fellow
of the
Royal Society of
Literature, and an Honorary Fellow of the
Modern Language Association of
America (1970), Pinter was appointed
CBE in 1966 and became a
Companion of
Honour in 2002, having declined a knighthood in 1996. In 1995
and 1996 he accepted the
David Cohen
Prize, in recognition of a lifetime of literary achievement,
and the
Laurence Olivier Special
Award for lifetime achievement in the theatre, respectively. In
1997 he became a
BAFTA Fellow. He
received the World Leaders Award for "Creative Genius" as the
subject of a week-long "Homage" in Toronto, in October 2001. In
2004, he received the
Wilfred Owen
Award for Poetry for his "lifelong contribution to literature, 'and
specifically for his collection of poetry entitled
War,
published in 2003'". In March 2006 he was awarded the Europe
Theatre Prize in recognition of lifetime achievements pertaining to
drama and theatre.
In conjunction with that award, critic
Michael Billington coordinated an international conference on
Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics, including scholars and critics
from Europe and the Americas, held in Turin
, Italy,
from 10 to 14 March 2006.
In October 2008, the
Central School of Speech and
Drama announced that Pinter had agreed to become its
president and awarded him an
honorary fellowship in its
graduation ceremony. On his appointment Pinter commented: "I was a
student at Central in 1950–51. I enjoyed my time there very much
and I am delighted to become president of a remarkable
institution". But Pinter had to receive that honorary degree, his
20th, in absentia, due to ill health. His presidency of the School
was brief, as he died just two weeks after the graduation ceremony,
on 24 December 2008.
Nobel Prize and Nobel lecture
On 13
October 2005 the Swedish
Academy
announced that it had decided to award the Nobel Prize in Literature for that
year to Pinter, who "in his plays uncovers the precipice under
everyday prattle and forces entry into oppression's closed rooms",
instigating some public controversy and criticism relating both to
characteristics
of Pinter's work and to his politics. When interviewed
that day about his reaction to the announcement, Pinter joked: "I
was told today that one of the Sky channels said this morning that
'Harold Pinter is dead'. Then they changed their mind and said,
'No, he's won the Nobel prize.' So I've risen from the dead". The
Nobel Prize Awards Ceremony and related
events throughout Scandinavia took place in December 2005.
After the
Academy notified Pinter of his award, he had planned to travel to
Stockholm
to present his lecture in person. In
November, however, discovering an infection that would nearly kill
him, his doctor hospitalised him and barred such travel. His
publisher, Stephen Page of
Faber and
Faber accepted his Nobel Diploma and Nobel Medal at the Awards
Ceremony.
Video of Pinter's Nobel Lecture, "Art, Truth and Politics"
Though still hospitalised, Pinter videotaped his Nobel Lecture,
"Art, Truth and Politics", at a
Channel 4
studio. The lecture was projected on three large screens at the
Swedish Academy on the evening of 7 December 2005. It was
simultaneously transmitted on
More 4 in the
UK that evening. The 46-minute lecture was introduced on television
by Pinter's friend, David Hare. The text and streaming video
formats (without Hare's introduction) were later posted on the
Nobel Prize and Swedish Academy official websites. It has been
widely distributed by print and online media and has been the
source of much commentary and debate. The lecture provoked
extensive public controversy, with some commentators accusing
Pinter of "anti-Americanism". In the lecture, however, Pinter
emphasizes that he criticizes policies and practices of American
administrations (and those who voted for them), not all American
citizens, many of whom he recognizes as "demonstrably sickened,
shamed and angered by their government's actions".
As a result of his Nobel Prize and lecture, interest in Pinter's
life and work surged, leading to new revivals of his plays and new
editions of his works, such as
The Essential Pinter and
The Dwarfs, by
Grove Press, and
a three-volume box set including
The Birthday Party,
No Man's Land,
Mountain Language, and
Celebration entitled
Four Plays, by
Faber and Faber.
Légion d'honneur
On 18 January 2007 the French Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin presented Pinter
with France's highest civil honour, the
Légion d'honneur, at a ceremony at the
French embassy in London. De Villepin praised Pinter's poem
"American Football" (1991) stating: "'With its violence and its
cruelty, it is for me one of the most accurate images of war, one
of the most telling metaphors of the temptation of imperialism and
violence.'" In response, Pinter praised the French opposition to
the war in Iraq. M. de Villepin concluded: "The poet stands still
and observes what doesn't deserve other men's attention. Poetry
teaches us how to live and you, Harold Pinter, teach us how to
live." He said that Pinter received the award particularly "because
in seeking to capture all the facets of the human spirit,
[Pinter's] works respond to the aspirations of the French public,
and its taste for an understanding of man and of what is truly
universal." Lawrence Pollard observed that "the award for the great
playwright underlines how much Mr Pinter is admired in countries
like France as a model of the uncompromising radical
intellectual."
Scholarly response
Some scholars and critics challenge the validity of Pinter's
critiques of what he terms "the modes of thinking of those in
power" or dissent from his retrospective viewpoints on his own
work. In 1985, Pinter recalled that his early act of conscientious
objection resulted from being "terribly disturbed as a young man by
the Cold War. And McCarthyism.... A profound hypocrisy. 'They' the
monsters, 'we' the good. In 1948 the Russian suppression of Eastern
Europe was an obvious and brutal fact, but I felt very strongly
then and feel as strongly now that we have an obligation to subject
our own actions and attitudes to an equivalent critical and moral
scrutiny." Scholars agree that Pinter's dramatic rendering of power
relations results from this astute scrutiny.
Pinter's aversion to any censorship by "the authorities" is
epitomised in Petey's line at the end of
The Birthday
Party. As the broken-down and reconstituted Stanley is being
carted off by the figures of authority Goldberg and McCann, Petey
calls after him, "Stan, don't let them tell you what to do!" Pinter
told Gussow in 1988, "I've lived that line all my damn life. Never
more than now". The example of Pinter's stalwart opposition to what
he termed "the modes of thinking of those in power"—the "brick
wall" of the "minds" perpetuating the "status quo"—infused the
"vast political pessimism" that some academic critics may perceive
in his artistic work, its "drowning landscape" of harsh
contemporary realities, with some residual "hope for restoring the
dignity of man".
As Pinter's longtime friends
David Hugh
Jones and
Henry Woolf would remind
analytically-inclined scholars and dramatic critics, Pinter was a
"great comic writer": His dramatic conflicts present serious
implications for his characters and his audiences, leading to
sustained inquiry about "the point" of his work and multiple
"critical strategies" for developing interpretations and stylistic
analyses of it.
Pinter research archives
Pinter's
unpublished manuscripts and letters to and from him are held in the
Modern Literary Manuscripts division of the British
Library
. Smaller collections of Pinter manuscripts
are in the Harry Ransom Humanities Research
Center
, the University of Texas at Austin
; The Lilly Library
, Indiana University at
Bloomington
; the Mandeville Special Collections Library, Geisel
Library, at the University of California, San
Diego
; the British Film
Institute, in London; and the Margaret Herrick Library,
Pickford Center
for Motion Picture Study, the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences, Beverly Hills, California
.
See also
Notes
Works cited and further reading
- Baker, William. Harold Pinter, Writers' Lives Series,
London and New York: Continuum International
Publishing Group, 2008. ISBN 0826499708.
- Baker, William, and John C. Ross (compilers). Harold
Pinter: A Bibliographical History. London: The British
Library
and New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2005.
ISBN 1584561564
- Batty, Mark. About Pinter: The Playwright and the Work
(including chap. 9, "Views on Pinter: Friends and Collaborators",
pp. 155–221), London: Faber, 2005. ISBN 0571220053.
- Begley, Varun. Harold Pinter and the Twilight of
Modernism, Toronto: Univ. of Toronto Press, 2005. ISBN
0802038875.
- Bensky, Lawrence M. "The Art of Theatre No. 3: Harold Pinter", The Paris Review 10.39 (Fall 1966):
12–37. . Paris Review Foundation, Inc., 2004, accessed 2 October
2007.
- Billington, Michael.
"The Importance of Being Pinter: A New
Production by the Belarus Free Theatre Reinforces the Global
Resonance of the British Playwright's Political Works",
The Guardian, Guardian Media Group, 16 April 2007,
accessed 16 April 2007.
- Billington, Michael. "Krapp's Last Tape: 4 Stars Royal Court,
London". The Guardian, Guardian Media Group, 16
October 2006, accessed 6 January 2009.
- Billington, Michael. "Passionate Pinter's Devastating Assault On US
Foreign Policy", The Guardian, Guardian Media Group, 8
December 2005, accessed 2 October 2007.
- Billington, Michael. "We Are Catching Up With This Man's Creative Talent
At Last", The Guardian, Guardian Media Group, 1 March
2007, accessed 11 October 2007.
- Billington, Michael. Harold Pinter. London: Faber and Faber, 2007. ISBN 0571234769
(updated 2nd ed. of The Life and Work of Harold Pinter,
1996)
- Billington, Michael. "'I've written 29 damn plays. Isn't that enough?'" The Guardian, Guardian
Media Group, 17 March 2006, accessed 2 October 2007.
- Billington, Michael (compiler). "'They said you've a call from the Nobel
committee. I said, why?'", The Guardian, Guardian
Media Group, 14 October 2005, accessed 2 October 2007.
- "Biobibliographical Notes" and "Bibliography" for "Harold Pinter, Nobel Prize in Literature 2005",
nobelprize.org, The Swedish Academy
and The Nobel
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2009.
- Bond, Paul. "Harold Pinter's Artistic Achievement", World Socialist Web Site, 29
December 2005, accessed 2 October 2007.
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accessed 2 October 2007.
- Bull, Andy. "Playwright Harold Pinter's Last Interview Reveals
His Childhood Love of Cricket and Why It Is Better Than Sex",
The Guardian, Guardian Media Group, 27 December 2008,
accessed 7 March 2009.
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Library
Online Gallery: What's On, 8 September 2008,
accessed 14 March 2009.
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Alcoholism", The New York Times, 7 October 1982,
accessed 3 October 2007.
- Dorfman, Ariel. "The World That Harold Pinter Unlocked",
The Washington Post, 27
December 2008, p. A15.
- Dorfman, Ariel. "'You want to free the world from
oppression?'", The New
Statesman, 8 January 2009.
- Dougary, Ginny. "Lady Antonia Fraser's Life Less
Ordinary",Times Online,
News International, 5 July
2008.
- "Harold Pinter" obituary, The Economist, The Economist Group, 30 December
2008.
- Eden, Richard, and Tim Walker. "Mandrake: A Pinteresque Silence", Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph Media Group, Bookrags:
HighBeam Research, Cengage Learning (Gale), 27 August 2006,
accessed 16 March 2009.
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Poet's Corner", The Daily
Telegraph, Telegraph Media Group, 3 January 2009.
- Edgar, David. "Pinter's Weasels", The Guardian,
Guardian Media Group, 29 December 2008, accessed 23 March
2009.
- "Editorial: Harold Pinter: Breaking the Rules",
The Guardian, Guardian Media Group, 27 December 2008,
accessed 7 March 2009.
- "Harold Pinter Mourned by PEN", English Centre of
International PEN, 25 December
2008.
- Edwardes, Jane. "Time Out's Tribute to Harold Pinter",
Time Out, London, Time Out Group
Ltd., 31 December 2008, accessed 10 May 2009.
- Fenton, Anna, and Lucy Jackson. "Harold Pinter: A Look Back", The Journal, The
Edinburgh Journal Limited, 11 January 2009.
- Ferguson, Niall. "Personal View: Do the Sums, Then Compare US and
Communist Crimes from the Cold War", The Daily
Telegraph, Telegraph Media Group, 11 December 2005, accessed 9
May 2009.
- "'The foremost representative of British drama':
Excerpts from the Swedish Academy's Citation Awarding the 2005
Nobel Prize for Literature", The Guardian, Guardian
Media Group, 13 October 2005, accessed 23 March 2009.
- French Embassy in the United
Kingdom
. "Harold Pinter Awarded Légion d'Honneur",
France in the United Kingdom, French Embassy (UK), 17
January 2007.
- "French PM Honours Harold Pinter", BBC
News, 18 January 2007.
- Gillen, Francis and Steven H. Gale (Ed.) The Pinter Review, Tampa: Univ. of Tampa
Press, 1987– ) HaroldPinter.org, accessed 3 January
2009.
- Gillen, Francis and Steven H. Gale (Ed.) The Pinter Review:
Nobel Prize/Europe Theatre Prize Volume: 2005 – 2008, Tampa:
Univ. of Tampa Press, 2008. ISBN 1879852198.
- Grimes, Charles. Harold Pinter's Politics: A Silence Beyond
Echo, Madison & Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ.
Press, 2005. ISBN 0838640508.
- Gussow, Mel. "Critic's Notebook: On the London Stage, a Feast of
Revenge, Menace and Guilt", The New York Times, 31
July 1991, accessed 2 October 2007. (registration may be
required.)
- Gussow, Mel. Conversations with Pinter, London:
Nick Hern Books, 1994. ISBN
1854592017. Rpt. New York: Limelight, 2004. ISBN 0879101792.
- Gussow, Mel and Ben Brantley. "Harold Pinter, Playwright of the Pause, Dies at
78", The New York Times, 25 December 2008.
- Gussow, Mel. "Harold Pinter, Whose Silences Redefined Drama,
Dies at 78", The New York Times, 26 December 2008,
national ed., pp. A1 and A22–23.
- Hadley, Kathryn. "Forward to Freedom", History Today News,
History Today Magazine, 15 June 2009.
- Hari, Johann. "Johann Hari: Pinter Does Not Deserve the Nobel
Prize", The
Independent, Independent News & Media, 6
December 2005, accessed 2 October 2007.
- Hern, Nicholas, and Harold
Pinter. "A Play and Its Politics: A Conversation between Harold
Pinter and Nicholas Hern", February 1985, in Pinter, One for
the Road, pp. 5–23.
- Hitchens, Christopher.
"Opinion: The Sinister Mediocrity of Harold
Pinter", The Wall Street
Journal, 17 October 2005, p. A18, Dow Jones & Company, 17 October
2005, accessed 7 May 2009.
- Hobson, Harold. "The Screw Turns
Again", Sunday Times, News
International, 25 May 1958, p. 11.
- Hodgson, Martin. "British Jews Break Away from 'pro-Israeli' Board
of Deputies", The Independent, Independent News &
Media, 5 February 2007.
- Howard, Jennifer. "Nobel Prize in Literature Goes to Harold Pinter, British
Playwright Widely Studied in Academe", The Chronicle of Higher
Education, 13 October 2006, accessed 2 October 2007.
- "Harold Pinter Added to IFOA Lineup",
International Festival of Authors (IFOA), Toronto, 1 October 2001,
archived at The Internet Archive
: The Wayback Machine, accessed 4 October
2007.
- Jacobson, Howard. "Opinion: Howard Jacobson: Harold Pinter Didn't Get
My Joke, and I Didn't Get Him – Until It Was Too Late", The
Independent, Independent News & Media, 10 January 2009,
accessed 27 April 2009.
- Johnson, B. S. "Evacuees" (1968). The Pinter Review: Annual
Essays 1994, ed. Francis Gillen and Steven H. Gale, Tampa:
Univ. of Tampa Press, 1994, pp. 8-13.
- Jones, David. "Travels with Harold", Front & Center
Online, Roundabout Theatre Company newsletter, Fall 2003,
accessed 9 October 2007.
- Jones, Rebecca, and Harold Pinter. Interview, Today, BBC
Radio 4, 12 May 2008, accessed 7 April 2009.
- Koval, Ramona. "Harold Pinter, Nobel Prize-Winning Playwright and
Poet", interview conducted at Edinburgh Book Festival, 25 August
2006, Radio National, Australian
Broadcasting Corporation
, 25 September 2006.
- Lyall, Sarah. "Playwright Takes a Prize and a Jab at U.S.",
The New York Times, 8 December 2005 (correction appended
10 December 2005), accessed 2 October 2007.
- Marowitz, Charles. "Harold Pinter: 1930–2008", Swans magazine, 29 December 2008 – 1
January 2009.
- Mbeki, Thabo. "Letter from the President: Hail the Nobel Laureates -
Apostles of Human Curiosity!", ANC Today ("Online Voice
of the African National Congress"), 5.42 (21–27 October 2005),
African National Congress,
12 November 2007.
- [McDowell, Leslie.] Pinter at 75: The Anger Still Burns",
The Scotsman, 26 August 2006,
p. 5, The Scotsman Publications Limited (Johnston Press Plc), updated 27 August 2006,
accessed 6 January 2009.
- Merritt, Susan Hollis (compiler). "Harold Pinter", SusanHollisMerritt.org,
2009, accessed 18 April 2009.
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The Pinter Review: Collected Essays 2003 and 2004, ed.
Francis Gillen and Steven H. Gale, Tampa: Univ of Tampa Press,
2004, pp. 242–300.
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With a Special Supplement on the 2005 Nobel Prize in
Literature, October 2005 – May 2006, The Pinter Review:
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Francis Gillen and Steven H. Gale, Tampa: Univ of Tampa Press,
2008, pp. 261–343.
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2008, pp. 140–67.
- Merritt, Susan Hollis. Pinter in Play: Critical Strategies
and the Plays of Harold Pinter, 1990, Durham and London: Duke
Univ. Press, 1995. ISBN 0822316749.
- Merritt, Susan Hollis. "Talking about Pinter", Lincoln Center
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Steven H. Gale. Tampa: Univ of Tampa Press, 2002,
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23 March 2009. (Index of articles)
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(September–October 1958), pp. 28–33. Rpt. in The Encore
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British
Library
, 20 April 2009.
External links
- HaroldPinter.org – The Official
Website for the International Playwright Harold Pinter (home
and index page).
- "Harold Pinter" at Guardian.co.uk (Collecting the best of
The Guardian's coverage)
- Harold Pinter at the Internet Broadway Database.
- .
- "Harold Pinter", Granta, 25
December 2008 (collecting important links about Pinter).
- "Harold Pinter" in The Artists Network of
Refuse & Resist!
(collecting mostly political writings by and commentary about
Pinter)
- Brantley, Ben. "Harold Pinter" in "Times Topics", The New York Times (collecting news
articles, reviews, commentaries, and photographs published in the
newspaper)
- "Harold Pinter" on The Mark Shenton
Show, TheatreVoice,
recorded on 21 Feb. 2007 (critics Michael Billington and Alastair
Macaulay review Pinter's
People and The Dumb
Waiter; Director and actor Harry Burton talks about his
experiences with Pinter)
- "Harold Pinter - Interview, British
Library
Online Gallery: What's On, British Library, 8
September 2008, (Pinter discusses his memories of postwar British
theatre with Harry Burton)
- Harold Pinter memorial and photographs at
Findagrave.com.
- Harold Pinter portrait by artist Joe Hill,
joe-hill-art.com. (To be offered at auction, with proceeds
to be donated to charity on 27 September 2009)
- Harold
Pinter Society (publisher of The Pinter Review)
- Pinter Tribute: Essay: Pinter's Voices Five
episodes, one broadcast each day on BBC
Radio 3 from 16–20 February 2009: 1. Director Michael Colgan;
2. Critic Michael Billington; 3. Writer Lisa Appignanesi; 4. Film historian
Ian Christie; and 5. Actor and director
Harry Burton.
- "Reputations: Harold Pinter" on
TheatreVoice, recorded on 14 October 2005 (critical
assessments by Michael Billington, Dan Rebellato, Charles Spencer and Ian
Smith)
- "Tribute to Harold Pinter" flickr slideshow (2 May 2009), Beowulf
Sheehan/PEN American Center