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Beckett Festival to feature playwrights foremost interpreters 2:13 p.m., Sept. 15, 2003--An English actress and a French director who are among the worlds foremost interpreters of the works of Samuel Beckett will be featured at a three-day festival celebrating the Nobel Prize-winning author, scheduled Oct. 9-11, at the University of Delaware.
A lecture by the editors of Beckett's correspondence will specifically honor Sir Joseph's achievement as a collector, and three panel sessions featuring leading figures in Beckett scholarship and performance will explore how Beckett's innovative work has opened new perspectives on and approaches to the activities of literary interpretation, translation and performance. In addition, filmed performances of Beckett's works will be screened during the festival. For information about the films, click here.
Considered by many the most important and influential writer of the 20th century, Beckett (1906-89) was born in Dublin and educated at Trinity College. In the 1920s, he emerged as a writer of note in Paris, where he met James Joyce and became his literary assistant. In 1953, his play En attendant Godot (Waiting for Godot) opened first to puzzlement and then to acclaim in Paris. Productions in London and New York brought him international recognition and secured his reputation as a writer of significance. In 1969, he received the Nobel Prize in literature for his writing, which-in new forms for the novel and dramain the destitution of modern man acquires its elevation. The festival schedule includes: Thursday, Oct. 9
Friday, Oct. 10
Saturday, Oct. 11
Exhibition The UD Librarys Sir Joseph Gold Samuel Beckett Collection is featured in a special exhibition, Samuel Beckett: A Celebration, [make the title a hotlink to the exhibition story] on view now through Dec. 19 in Special Collections at the Universitys Morris Library. Gold, who donated his collection to UD before his death in 2000, was a noted legal scholar and retired general counsel and director of the legal department of the International Monetary Fund. Passionate about literature, he was a renowned collector of works by and about contemporary writers and poets, but his greatest enthusiasm was for Beckett. The Gold Collection of more than 3,000 items devoted to the Irish author includes first editions and bibliographically significant editions of books, play scripts, periodicals, theatrical ephemera and other material. Films Beckett on Film: 19 Films x 19 Directors and Rockaby will be screened on Oct. 9 and 10 in the Media Viewing Room on the lower level of the Morris Library. To see the film brochure, visit [www2.lib.udel.edu/new/beckett%20film%20brochure.htm]. Sponsors The Samuel Beckett Festival is sponsored by the Delaware Division of the Arts, the Delaware Humanities Forum, the University of Delaware Library Associates and UDs College of Arts and Science, departments of English, Foreign Languages and Literatures, and Theatre, the Faculty Senate Committee on Cultural Activities and Public Events, Center for International Programs, the Library and Embassy Suites Newark and South Wilmington Hotel. All events in the festival, except An Evening with Billie Whitelaw, are free and open to the public. Tickets for the Whitelaw performance are $15 for the general public, $10 for UD faculty, staff and seniors and $5 for UD students and are available at the Hartshorn Hall box office, located at the corner of Academy Street and East Park Place, telephone 831-2204. Box office hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Mondays through Fridays. Ticket fees may be waived on the basis of financial need, as per arrangements with the Delaware Humanities Forum. For information on waiving of ticket fees, call 302-831-2202. For details on all events, visit the web site at [www.English.udel.edu/beckett]. To learn how to subscribe to UDaily, click here. |
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