Eugene Ionesco
Eugene Ionesco
Eugene Ionesco
(French-Romanian Playwright)
Research Paper
By:
Martha Hernandez
June 1st, 2012
Theater Arts 5
Prof. Anita Adcock
His fathers devotion for the supreme governmental power at that time, his negativity and
repugnant character were the main inspiration for his writing. His father would pursue
him to achieve a career as an engineer but he felt his calling career was in literature and
poetry.
Eventually, he attended University of Bucharest to study literature and where later
he received a degree in French. His first small but marvelous accomplishment was seen
in 1930, when he wrote an article in a magazine called Zodiac, where we can induce it
was his debut as a writer. The following year in 1931, he published a book of poetry
entitled Elegy of Miniscule Beings and just three years later he published a compilation
of essays called Nun(No). It was a book that caused scandal and critics because of the
criticism expressed in the essays. The year of 1936 was both joyful and devastating for
Ionesco. His mother passed away but in the same year he married his wife Rodica
Burileano. During his early-married years, he worked for a couple magazines and
newspaper companies as an article publisher. Due to the beginning of World War II,
Ionesco and his wife Rodica were forced to move out of France and go back to his native
country Romania. Their life in Romania was troublesome, being financially unstable;
they reconsidered going back to Paris. In 1944, they welcomed the birth of a girl whom
they named Marie-France. Just a year after his daughter was born, they finally moved
back to Paris, when it was freed from the Germans. But the struggles still did not come to
an end, due to the war, unemployment rates were high and the only job he was able to
find was as a proofreader for a publisher company. Money was scarce and lived a very
complicated financial situation. In 1948, his father passed away.
Ambitious to learn English at age 40, he started to motivate himself to learn the
language. His method of learning English was based of copying down and memorizing
full sentences, but his method failed to learn the language as a whole. As a result he
learned other things, things that were obvious in our daily life such as there are seven
days in a week but that inspired him to write his first big play. It was written in the same
year of his fathers death. It went under the name of La Cantatrice Chauve translated
in English as The Bald Soprano. Its first production at a theater was in 1950, produced
by Nicholas Bataille. At first the play was not a success until other writers brought it out
to the spotlight. The play contained within its lines a full structure of what is known as
Theater of the absurd. Despite of the struggles of his life in the past years, it appeared
that the beginning of the 1950s was set out to provoke a tremendous successful start as a
French playwright. Writing was not his only attribute; he also tried his talent as an actor
playing the role of Stepan Trofimovitch in Dostoevskis translated in English as The
Possesed. About a year later, another of his plays was staged named La Lecon (The
lesson). In 1951, Les Chaises (The chairs) and The Future is in Eggs were written.
In 1953, he wrote The New Tenant and a story called Oflamme. In this same year,
he debuted as an actor once again staring on his own play called Victimes du
Devoir(Victims of Duty) playing a detective. During an interview published in a book
about his life titled Eugene Ionesco written by Ronald Hayman, Ionesco expressed that
his experience as an actor was very unpleasant, because I had the impression of being
someone else, an actor needs to be able to forget himself and lend his own personality to
the imaginary character and I felt alienated.
prestigious awards and medals were awarded to this terrific French playwright for his
great work in theatre. Some of these awards include The Tours Festival Prize for Film,
Prix Italia, Society of Authors theatre prize, Austrian State Prize for European Literature,
Monte-Carlo International Prize of Contemporary Art, Molire prize, Jerusalem Prize,
Max Reinhardt-medal, T S. Eliot-Ingersoll-prize, La Flche medal, Mayenne medal, and
honorary doctorates from New York University and the universities of Louvain (France),
Warwick (England), and Tel Aviv (Israel). In 1970, to expand his achievements, Ionesco
was given membership at the Acadmie Franaise (French Academy), which is a very
prestigious academy that consists of only forty carefully selected members. Later in this
year, he also participated on his own film about his own story titled The Mire. To add
up more to his collection in 1973, he published Macbett and wrote What a Hell of a
Mess and in 1981 Journeys among the dead was written.
After so many years of successfully written over 28 plays, in 1989 his health was
starting to be severely affected. From the beginning of this date until his death, he took
the choice of leaving his writing and instead he opted for painting. His last years of life
were spent creating paintings and exhibiting them at art galleries. That took a course of
only 5 years until his physical body could no longer stay awake. He died at his home in
Paris, in 1994.
His legacy long remains. Even though most of his work was written in French,
that didnt stop his native country Romania from admiring him and considering him as
one of their most extraordinary writers. Not only is he honored in Europe, but many
countries around the world that adapt his plays and stage them for the public to remember
the great Eugene Ionesco. Without his master productions we wouldnt have an
introduction to the theatre of the absurd, regardless of his discomfort with the reference
name of such theatre. If Ionesco wouldve been still alive, we can all be sure that he
would repeat to us these exact same words I find the name theatre of the absurd which
has been glued on to us is absolutely meaningless. All theatre is absurd. Long live in our
memories, the great Eugene Ionesco.
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