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Nobel Prize For Literature Goes To Playwright Harold Pinter

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  • Nobel Prize For Literature Goes To Playwright Harold Pinter

    NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE GOES TO PLAYWRIGHT HAROLD PINTER
    By Anna Weinberg

    Book Standard, NY
    Oct 13 2005

    Just days after the celebration of his 75th birthday, British
    playwright Harold Pinter has been awarded the 102nd Nobel Prize for
    Literature. Past winners of the literature prize have included last
    year's controversial pick, Elfriede Jelinek, as well as Pablo Neruda,
    Albert Camus, Saul Bellow, Boris Pasternak and Jean-Paul Sartre,
    who declined to accept the award in 1964.

    Born in 1930, Pinter made his playwriting debut in 1957 with The
    Room, a short play that he wrote in four days about a blind woman
    whose room is invaded by a strange succession of characters. But he
    is better known for such works as The Caretaker, The Homecoming and
    The Birthday Party, the original production of which closed after
    just one week, thanks to thunderously bad reviews. "Pinter restored
    theatre to its basic elements," says the Swedish Academy, which every
    year selects one author to receive the $1.3 million prize. "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.' "

    As the son of a Jewish dressmaker growing up outside of London, Pinter
    has said that it was in part his experience with anti-Semitism that led
    to his becoming a playwright. But Pinter also lived through the London
    Blitz in WWII, though he was evacuated from his home. Upon returning
    to London, he played a variety of roles in his school theater, which
    led him to seek a career in acting. He was accepted into the Royal
    Academy of Dramatic Art in 1948, and in 1951 obtained a place in Anew
    McMaster's world-renowned repertory company. Though he had some small
    success with his early plays, it was not until 1959's The Caretaker
    that Pinter began to achieve fame. The Swedish Academy calls Pinter
    a dramatist "who in his plays uncovers the precipice under everyday
    prattle and forces entry into oppression's closed rooms."

    This year's announcement of the prize was delayed a week past the
    originally scheduled award date. Many have speculated that this was
    due to an internal scuffle over whether to award the prize to Turkish
    writer Orhan Pamuk, a popular 53-year-old writer who has recently
    come under fire from his government as a result of a controversial
    newspaper interview. In the interview, Pamuk asserted that Turkey was
    guilty of genocide against Armenians and Kurds in the 20th century,
    a charge that the country has vehemently denied. The author has been
    accused of insulting Turkey's national character, and is facing a
    trial this December. Though the Swedish Academy has officially denied
    the allegations of a Pamuk-related argument, this would not be the
    first time the secretive committee has split over politics. In 1989,
    two judges resigned from the Nobel selection process when the panel
    refused to honor author Salman Rushdie, then under a fatwa from the
    Ayatollah Khomeini.

    Pinter himself is no stranger to controversial politics. As a
    conscientious objector, Pinter was fined in 1949 for refusing to
    fulfill his mandatory national service. "I could have gone to prison-I
    took my toothbrush to the trials," Pinter wrote in Playwrights at
    Work. "But it so happened that the magistrate was slightly sympathetic,
    so I was fined instead, thirty pounds in all."

    More recently, Pinter has been a harsh critic of the war in Iraq. He
    published a volume of anti-war poetry in 2003, and joined a group
    calling for Prime Minister Tony Blair's impeachment in 2004.
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