Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Berkeley: The Bancroft Library Accepts Gift Of William Saroyan Archi

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Berkeley: The Bancroft Library Accepts Gift Of William Saroyan Archi

    THE BANCROFT LIBRARY ACCEPTS GIFT OF WILLIAM SAROYAN ARCHIVES

    UC Berkeley
    http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2010/ 05/19_William_Saroyan.shtml
    May 19 2010
    CA

    BERKELEY -- The Bancroft Library at the University of California,
    Berkeley, has received a spectacular gift of hundreds of books,
    drawings, correspondence and other personal communications to and
    from one of America's best-known writers, the Armenian-American author
    and playwright William Saroyan.

    William Saroyan (Photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library)The rich
    collection includes approximately 48 cartons with 1,200 books and
    other archival materials assembled by his niece, Jacqueline Kazarian,
    of San Francisco, who also is the founder of the William Saroyan
    Literary Foundation International. A celebration of the gift is set
    for noon on Friday (May 21) at The Faculty Club on campus.

    "UC Berkeley is such an incredible place of learning and growing
    and intellectual exploration," said Kazarian, who earned degrees in
    communication and decorative arts at UC Berkeley in the early 1950s.

    "I know that my uncle wanted his library, manuscripts and galleys to
    go to Berkeley. Students will be inspired by the collection."

    Apart from this gift, The Bancroft Library already retains significant
    holdings of Saroyan's work that it collected over the course of his
    life and career, and it continues to add to that collection. Most
    of the latest materials come from Saroyan's home on San Francisco's
    15th Avenue that is now a Saroyan museum directed by Kazarian. Those
    materials were supplemented by Kazarian's extensive personal
    collection, as well as by items of Saroyan's that she acquired through
    a prominent Boston archivist and via a Saroyan friend.

    "Jacqueline Kazarian's new gift is the largest and most substantial
    augmentation to the Saroyan collections at Bancroft that we have ever
    received," said Peter Hanff, Bancroft's deputy director.

    Saroyan, born in Fresno, Calif., in 1908, drew extensively on
    his Armenian-American heritage and childhood experiences for his
    books, plays and short stories. Much of his writing was considered
    impressionistic and reflected a hearty optimism often hard to find
    during the gritty Great Depression. He died in 1981 at the age of 72,
    with his niece at his side.

    The author's classic manual typewriter, as displayed at his San
    Francisco home. (Photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library)When Story
    magazine editors Martha Foley and Whit Burnett printed Saroyan's "The
    Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze" in 1934, it was an immediate
    success, triggering Saroyan's fame and standing as one of his many
    literary achievements.

    "Uncle Bill's writing revolutionized the short story," said Kazarian,
    adding that she has always found his work "almost spiritual and
    fable-like."

    His five-act play, "The Time of Your Life," is the only American
    play to have won both the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award and
    the Pulitzer Prize. Saroyan's work as a screenwriter with Hollywood
    director Louis B. Mayer on the film "The Human Comedy" won an Academy
    Award in 1943, and Saroyan later wrote a widely acclaimed book with
    the same title.

    Kazarian's gift to The Bancroft Library includes multiple first
    editions of Saroyan's works, such as "The Daring Young Man on the
    Flying Trapeze," "My Name is Aram" (1940), "The Human Comedy" and
    "Obituaries" (1979), and many materials personally inscribed by the
    writer. Also among the new items according to Steven Black, the head
    of acquisitions for Bancroft, are letters, telegrams and notes written
    by Saroyan to relatives and others close to him, mostly during the
    1930s and 1940s.

    "He personalized a lot of what passed through his hands," Black said,
    noting that much of the material features marginalia reflecting
    Saroyan's thoughts and interests.

    Antiquarian book dealer Peter Howard of Berkeley, poring through
    Saroyan materials. (Photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library)There also
    is a copy of Henry Miller's "Aller Retour New York," an 80-page journal
    about a 1935 visit by Miller to New York City and his journey aboard
    a Dutch ship back to Europe. It is inscribed by Miller to Saroyan.

    And a Saroyan scrapbook in the collection contains press announcements
    about the Pulitzer Prize for his book, "The Time of Your Life." He
    scoffed at the award, contending that the arts should not be judged
    by commerce.

    The new Bancroft collection also contains a pre-publication proof of
    "Burnt Norton," the first poem of T.S. Eliot's "Four Quartets," which
    Black said the publisher may have given to Saroyan "when he crossed
    the pond" on a trip from his temporary home in France to England.

    There also is a wide range of magazines, including issues of Horizon
    and the Partisan Review, a leading publication of the Anglo-American
    intelligentsia during the 1930s and '40s, Black said.

    The first major deposit at The Bancroft Library of Saroyan's papers
    was recorded in October 1980, and the library agreed to organize the
    collection and give Saroyan a general description and an index. After
    Saroyan died in 1981, the Saroyan Foundation paid the library to
    continue assembling the papers for official archives, which the
    foundation ultimately decided to place at Stanford University. That
    happened in 1996.

    Kazarian's donation is in honor of Berkeley antiquarian book dealer
    Peter Howard, who has provided appraisal assistance to Bancroft on
    Saroyan materials and other collections for decades. While director
    of The Bancroft Library, the late James D. Hart also developed strong
    professional and personal ties to Saroyan over the years, according
    to Kazarian and Black.

    William Saroyan's niece, Jacqueline Kazarian, surveys materials in
    his home. (Photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library)"Now, the Saroyan
    family materials come to a place that Saroyan himself would have
    been happy to see accepting them," Black said, noting that Bancroft
    is proud to have so much of Saroyan's "intellectual remains" to be
    able to share with the public.

    Scheduled to speak about the acquisition at Friday's event are
    Jacqueline Kazarian; David Calonne, vice president of education for
    the Saroyan Literary Foundation International and a Saroyan scholar;
    San Francisco novelist Herbert Gold; theater director Val Hendrickson
    reading Saroyan's short story, "Common Prayer," and the credo to
    "The Time of Your Life"; and Charles Faulhaber, director of The
    Bancroft Library.

    UC Berkeley already is home to an Armenian Studies Program, which
    is focused on contemporary Armenian history, politics, language and
    culture. And Bancroft, a rich, special collections library containing
    historical and literary documents and other materials relating to
    California, the West, Mexico and Latin America, is known for its
    strong collections on California writers, including Jack London,
    Robinson Jeffers, Bret Harte, Frank Norris and others.

    More information about The Bancroft Library is online. Bancroft is
    celebrating its 150th anniversary this year.
Working...
X