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		<title>Nobel Prize Winner Dies At 78</title>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Nobel Prize Winner Dies At 78</title>
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			<pubDate>Thu, 25 Dec 2008 18:09:51 GMT</pubDate>
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			<description><![CDATA[<p>Nobel winner Harold Pinter dies at 78<br /><br />Story Highlights Harold Pinter died on Christmas Eve, his wife tells British media Pinter, 78, had been suffering from cancer He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2005<br /><br />(CNN) -- Harold Pinter, the Nobel Prize-winning playwright and screenwriter whose absurdist and realistic works displayed a despair and defiance about the human condition, has died, according to British media reports. He was 78.<br /><br />Pinter&#x27;s wife, Lady Antonia Fraser, confirmed his death.<br /><br />Pinter, who had been suffering from cancer, died on Christmas Eve, according to the reports.<br /><br />Fraser told the Guardian newspaper: He was a great, and it was a privilege to live with him for over 33 years. He will never be forgotten.<br /><br />Pinter was known for such plays as The Birthday Party (1957), The Homecoming (1964), No Man&#x27;s Land (1974), Mountain Language (1988), and Celebration (2000). The works caught a linguistic rhythm -- the legendary Pinter pause -- and an air of social unease that resonated throughout the English-speaking world and in myriad translations.<br /><br />His movie credits, like his plays, span the decades and include The Quiller Memorandum (1965) and The French Lieutenant&#x27;s Woman (1981).<br /><br />Pinter also wrote the screenplay for his 1978 play Betrayal, the story of a doomed love affair told backward, which was made into a 1983 film with Ben Kingsley, Jeremy Irons and Patricia Hodge.<br /><br />He received the Nobel Prize in literature in 2005.<br /><br />Pinter&#x27;s later plays were more overtly political, with works such as One for the Road (1984) and The New World Order (1991) focusing on state torture.<br /><br />In commentaries, he became a blistering critic of the United States, writing in his Nobel lecture that the country quite simply doesn&#x27;t give a damn about the United Nations, international law or critical dissent, which it regards as impotent and irrelevant. It also has its own bleating little lamb tagging behind it on a lead, the pathetic and supine Great Britain.<br /><br />But Pinter could also be a man of great humor. In 2006, he recounted a story about a fall that had landed him in the hospital a year earlier.<br /><br />Two days later, I woke up to find that I&#x27;d been given the Nobel Prize in literature, he said. So life is really full of ups and downs, you see.<br /><br />Harold Pinter was born in London on October 10, 1930. He was the son of Jewish immigrants, his father a dressmaker, his mother a wonderful cook, he once recalled. In 1948 he was accepted into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, then as now one of Great Britain&#x27;s most renowned drama schools. But the RADA didn&#x27;t take; Pinter hated the school and dropped out after two terms.<br /><br />He became an actor and turned to playwriting with his first work, The Room, in 1957. Later that year he wrote The Birthday Party, a comedy of menace, in the words of one critic, that helped make Pinter&#x27;s reputation -- though, in an irony he could appreciate, after it closed in London due to scathing notices.<br /><br />Ensuing Pinter plays, including The Dumb Waiter (1957) and The Homecoming, made him Britain&#x27;s most famous playwright, as influential to late 20th-century British theater [as] Tennessee Williams is to mid-century American stages, CNN.com&#x27;s Porter Anderson wrote in 2006.<br /><br />What&#x27;s generally meant as a &#x27;Pinter play&#x27; in the purest sense usually revolves around one or more characters who are imposing on themselves a constricted, even deprived existence in order to hold off a presumed but uncertain threat, Anderson wrote.<br /><br />Pinter&#x27;s plays featured sparse dialogue, often spiced with paranoia or simple befuddlement. In The Birthday Party, a boardinghouse resident is accosted by two malevolent visitors who insist it&#x27;s his birthday; in The Homecoming -- which won the Tony Award for best play when it premiered on Broadway in 1967 -- a professor and his wife return to his working-class British family, where the wife becomes the center of attention.<br /><br />Pinter credited Samuel Beckett, among others, as an influence. (He starred in a production of Beckett&#x27;s Krapp&#x27;s Last Tape in 2006.) In turn, writers such as David Mamet and Sam Shepard followed Pinter&#x27;s elliptical lead.<br /><br />One way of looking at speech is to say it is a constant stratagem to cover nakedness, Pinter once said.<br /><br />He was married first to the actress Vivien Merchant. Following a 1980 divorce, Pinter married writer-historian Lady Antonia Fraser.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/26354">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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