Pinter Splinter
After more controversy than usual, the Nobel committee gave the Literature Prize to Harold Pinter. While there is some talk he got it due to his anti-Iraq War stance--a form of childishness in award-giving which has already tarnished the Peace Prize--let's concentrate on his writing. (To his credit, Pinter admits his politics may have helped him.)
There's no question Pinter is one of the most famous living playwrights. And his style, all menace and pauses, was revolutionary. But he's always struck me as the emperor's new clothes. His plays feel like something is happening, but there's nothing there. (To be fair, I have only read his plays--I've never seen a production. Some playwrights act better than they read.)
I'm not saying he has no talent, I'm just saying it's a mediocre talent. Plays like The Birthday Party or The Caretaker are somewhat interesting because of the style, but add up to less than the sum of their parts. Worse are his later plays, like No Man's Land or Betrayal, where his style is trickier and more polished, but even emptier.
Compare Pinter to a true talent like Samuel Beckett. Not only was his style more revolutionary, but his work has greater depth and power. I think within a generation or two, Pinter will be considered a curiosity. The Nobel people have bet on the wrong horse.
2 Comments:
Pinter absolutely must be seen. On the page he is sterile and soulless, but well-performed his plays can be thought-provoking and disturbing without being arch or pretentious. A friend who performed in a quite good version of "The Birthday Party" in LA a few years back explained Pinter thusly: "It's like you're in a hotel room, and you hear something going on in the room next door and you want to investigate it, but all you can see of it is what you can see through the keyhole." I had the good fortune to see Pinter himself perform in his own play "The Hothouse", which he also directed, and it was quite thrilling. I agree that there are probably more deserving recipients of the Nobel for literature, but Pinter does deserve most of the accolades he receives.
Fair enough. I'm pretty good at reading plays--, in fact, many productions disappoint me because they don't compare to the theatre in my mind. Yet, Pinter's does seem to be the type of work that needs to be seen.
In the past week, I've heard many right-wingers complain about this award. It may be true Pinter got it because of his politics, but at least it's plausible, being a world-renowned playwright, they gave it to him for his work. (If you look at the list, they've made far worse mistakes.) Alas, it was clear many of these conservatives were only getting their information second-hand--that they'd hardly heard of Pinter before this, and thought it was so clear he was second-rate that it must have been for other reasons.
Meanwhile, I'm still waiting for Philip Roth to receive his due.
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