Pinter harold biography of william hill
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He dropped out of RADA and read and wrote while he applied for acting jobs. In 1951 he went back to school, this time at the Central School of Speech and Drama. In 1947, Pinter was seen and reviewed in the News Chronicle. His first performance in the USA was in 1960 and his first Broadway performance was The Caretaker in October of 1961.
During that tour he discovered Samuel Beckett, another influential figure.
Pinter’s poems were first published in the August edition of Poetry London in 1950. In 1970 he was awarded the German Shakespeare Prize.
Drawing upon the full-range of his output, his letters, journalism, writings about him, Baker combines a biographical approach with close (re)readings of his work to create a fresh perspective on his life and art. Placing Pinter's life and work alongside each other, the study illuminates Pinter's vision of society, politics, gender, sex, violence and human relationships.
Drawing upon the full-range of his work, his letters, journalism, and writings about him, Baker combines a biographical approach with close (re)readings of his work to create a fresh perspective on his life and art. Pinter’s plays are typically characterized by implications of threat and strong feelings produced through colloquial language, apparent triviality, and long pauses.
Plays
- The Room (1957) short
- The Birthday Party (1957)
- The Dumb Waiter (1957)
- A Slight Ache (1958) short
- The Hothouse (1958)
- The Caretaker (1959) screenplay (1963)
- A Night Out (1959)
- Night School (1960)
- The Dwarfs (1960)
- The Collection (1961) short
- The Lover (1962) short
- Tea Party (1964)
- The Homecoming (1964)
- The Basement (1966) short
- Landscape (1967)
- Silence (1968) short
- Old Times (1970)
- Monologue (1972)
- No Man’s Land (1974)
- Betrayal (1978)
- Family Voices (1980)
- Other Places (1982)
- A Kind of Alaska (1982)
- Victoria Station (1982)
- One For The Road (1984)
- Mountain Languages (1988) short
- The New World Order (1991)
- Party Time (1991)
- Moonlight (1993)
- Ashes to Ashes (1996)
- Celebration (1999)
- Remembrance of Things Past (2000)
Return to Drama in the Twentieth Century
References
Contributors
Karen Bilotti
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Later that year, he debuted his career as a professional actor in Focus on Football Pools.He was accepted to and attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Later that year he was chosen by the National Service (akin to the American ‘draft’) but registered as a conscientious objector. This brief biography offers fresh insights into his life and work, concentrating on the themes, patterns, relationships, ideas and language common to his life and creative output.
His plays also transferred to radio, TV, and film in 1959, 1960, and 1963 respectively.
Biography
Harold Pinter was born on October 10th, 1930 in his parent’s house in Hackney, north London. The book offers students, academics and readers a rich depiction of Harold Pinter, the man and the writer.
About the Author
William Baker is Trustee Professor, Distinguished Research Professor, Department of English and University Libraries, at Northern Illinois University, USA.
He is the author/editor of numerous books and his co-authored Harold Pinter: A Bibliographical History and his The Letters of Wilkie Collins were honoured by Choice as the year's most outstanding books (2006 and 2000).
Harold Pinter
The book offers students, academics and readers a rich depiction of Harold Pinter, the man and the writer.
Harold Pinter
10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008
| Photo via Camden New Journal |
Pinter’s Dramatic Writing has, collectively, a strong coherence, a sense of continuity and evolution, and forms a body of work that invites constant re-evaluation.
1948 was a big year for Pinter. In 1980 he married his second wife, Lady Antonia Fraser. He died in 2008.
Common Themes
- Pinteresque: (as defined by the OED) of or relating to Harold Pinter; resembling or characteristic of his plays. He retires David Baron in September of 1960.