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For more information on William Saroyan, visit Britannica.com.
| American Theater Guide: William Saroyan |
Saroyan, William (1908–81), playwright. The eccentric, spirited author was born in Fresno, California, where his Armenian parents were fruit farmers and where he worked at odd jobs before gaining fame as a short‐story writer. He came to playgoers' attention with My Heart's in the Highlands (1939) but became famous with his much lauded The Time of Your Life (1939), which won the Pulitzer Prize, although Saroyan noisily rejected it. His later works included Love's Old Sweet Song (1940); The Beautiful People (1941); Across the Board on Tomorrow Morning and Talking to You (1942); Hello, Out There (1942); Get Away Old Man (1943); and The Cave Dwellers (1957). Wolcott Gibbs called the writer “the most completely undisciplined talent in American letters,” and Brooks Atkinson, in a preface to Saroyan's published plays, noted, “When he writes out of general relish, usually in isolated scenes, [he] is at his best and made a definite contribution to the mood of these times, [but] when he permits himself to discuss ideas he can write some of the worst nonsense that ever clattered out of a typewriter.” Biography: A Daring Young Man, John Leggett, 2002.
| Biography: William Saroyan |
The skill of William Saroyan (1908-1981), American short-story writer, dramatist, and novelist, in evoking mood and atmosphere was noteworthy, and his imaginary world, peopled with common men, was warm and compelling.
William Saroyan was born in Fresno, California, on August 31, 1908, the son of Armenian immigrants. After his father's death in 1911, William spent four years in an orphanage. Selling newspapers at the age of eight, he attended public schools in Fresno until, as he said, "I had been kicked out of school so many times that I finally left for good when I was fifteen."
In 1928 Saroyan decided to become a writer, but it was 1934 before his short stories began appearing consistently in major magazines. His first book was The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze and Other Stories (1934). At this time he concentrated on short stories. Seven collections appeared, from Inhale and Exhale (1936) to My Name Is Aram (1940). The works centered on memories of San Francisco and Fresno and show his joy in living. My Name Is Aram was particularly lyrical.
From 1939 through 1943 Saroyan was among America's most active playwrights. In My Heart's in the Highlands (1939) he departed from the current dramatic practice, for he believed that "it is folly for emotionality to be prolonged as a means by which to achieve drama." Completely episodic, bonded by a tenuous mood deriving from free spirits, the play was distinctive. He created a similar piece in The Time of Your Life (1939). Awarded the Pulitzer Prize and the Drama Critics' Circle Award for this play, Saroyan rejected the former. Love's Old Sweet Song (1940) was less effective, but his firm grip was evident again in The Beautiful People (1941). Hello Out There (1942), atypical of Saroyan, was an effective realistic one-act play of human isolation. Another dark play, Get Away Old Man (1943), failed, but his film The Human Comedy (1943) won an Academy Award.
During World War II Saroyan served in the Army. In 1943 he married Carol Marcus. Divorced in 1949, they remarried in 1951 and were again divorced in 1952. Although he continued to write plays, his work was mainly novels, autobiographies, film and television scripts, short stories, and even songs. His most praised novels are The Human Comedy (1943), The Assyrian (1950), Tracy's Tiger (1951), The Laughing Matter (1953), and Mama I Love You (1956). He also wrote I Used To Believe I Had Forever, Now I'm Not So Sure (1968); Escape to the Moon (1970); and The Tooth and My Father (1974). He died on May 18, 1981 in Fresno, California.
Further Reading
Saroyan's autobiographies were The Bicycle Rider in Beverly Hills (1952), Here Comes: There Goes: You Know Who (1961), Not Dying (1963), and a more extensive one, Places Where I've Done Time (1972), in which he recalled 68 key places in his life. Carol Matthau, former spouse of Saroyan, wrote about him in her memoir, Among the Porcupines (Publishing Mills, 1992). See, also, Saroyan, Aram, William Saroyan (Harcourt, 1983). A major critical work on him was Howard R. Floan, William Saroyan (1966). A major bibliographical work was David Kherdian, A Bibliography of William Saroyan, 1934-1964 (1965). Useful insights were in John Mason Brown, Broadway in Review (1940); Brooks Atkinson, Broadway Scrapbook (1947); and George Jean Nathan, The Magic Mirror: Selected Writings on the Theatre (1960).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: William Saroyan |
Bibliography
See memoir by V. Samuelian (1985); biographies by L. Lee and B. Gifford (1984) and J. Leggett (2002); studies by D. S. Calonne (1983), E. H. Foster (1984), and N. Balakian (1998).
| Works: Works by William Saroyan |
| 1934 | The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze and Other Stories. Saroyan's first publication marks his initial success as a short story writer (in 1939 he would direct his energies toward playwriting and in 1943 toward novels). The title story, which wins the 1934 O. Henry Award, concerns an unemployed writer struggling to find work in the midst of the Depression. Born in Fresno, California, and raised in an orphanage, Saroyan left school at the age of twelve to work as a telegraph messenger. |
| 1936 | Inhale and Exhale. The writer's second story collection continues his conversational, unconventional narrative approach, mixing character sketches, incidents, and opinions on diverse topics. He also publishes Three Times Three, a collection that includes "The Man with the Heart in the Highlands," which he would adapt as his first successful play in 1939. |
| 1937 | Little Children. In this volume of short stories about children or childish adults, reviewers note a more subdued writer with his characteristic bluster diminished. |
| 1938 | Love, Here Is My Hat, and Other Short Romances and The Trouble with Tigers. Two story collections display the author's characteristic exuberance and eccentricity, qualities that one reviewer labels "auto-intoxication" and that writer James T. Farrell calls an "exhibitionist act" that has "worn as thin as an old vaudeville gag." |
| 1939 | Peace, It's Wonderful. The author's final important short story collection--his eighth since 1934--before turning his attention to drama and the novel. |
| 1939 | My Heart's in the Highlands. The success of Saroyan's odd-ball drama about a collection of eccentrics in Fresno, California, launches the short story writer's dramatic career. He also writes The Time of Your Life. Set in a San Francisco waterfront bar, Saroyan's most acclaimed play dramatizes the consequences when a wealthy drunk provides the means for the bar's denizens to indulge their fancies. The play is the first to win both the Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. Saroyan declines the Pulitzer, claiming that the businessmen who determine the award should not judge the arts. |
| 1941 | Three Plays. These plays include The Beautiful People, Sweeney in the Trees, and Across the Board on Tomorrow Morning. All show the playwright's characteristic blend of unconventionality and optimism. As Saroyan writes in his foreword, "The comedy, tragedy, absurdity and nobility of these plays come from people whom the writer regards as beautiful." The Beautiful People opens on Broadway in 1941, financed by the playwright when no other backers could be found. It proves to be his last popular stage success. |
| 1942 | Razzle-Dazzle. Short plays, ballets, and vaudeville acts are interspersed with introductory essays on their composition--all evidence of the playwright's eccentric vitality and his attempt to fashion a popular art form. |
| 1943 | The Human Comedy. Saroyan's first novel, set in a small California town and concerning family life, presents the consoling message of the power of love and brotherhood and strikes a responsive chord in wartime America. |
| 1946 | The Adventures of Wesley Jackson. In what has been described as the first antiwar novel of World War II, Saroyan chronicles the experiences of an army private. |
| 1951 | Rock Wagram. This is the first in a series of novels indirectly exploring Saroyan's failed marriage. It would be followed by The Laughing Matter (1953), Boys and Girls Together (1963), and One Day in the Afternoon (1964). Saroyan also publishes Tracy's Tiger, a short fable on love. |
| 1957 | The Cave Dwellers. Saroyan's last play to appear on Broadway is an allegorical fantasy about several refugees "from the obvious" who take shelter in an abandoned theater slated for demolition. Showing clearly the influence of postwar French drama, particularly the works of Samuel Beckett, the play prompts critic Harold Clurman to label it "sugared existentialism." |
| 1962 | Here Comes, There Goes, You Know. This is the first of a series of autobiographical reflections, to be followed by Not Dying (1963) and Short Drive, Sweet Chariot (1966). |
| 1963 | Boys and Girls Together. The first of two novels dealing with writers with marital problems. It would be followed by One Day in the Afternoon (1964). |
| Quotes By: William Saroyan |
Quotes:
"Doctors don't know everything really. They understand matter, not spirit. And you and I live in spirit."
"The greatest happiness you can have is knowing that you do not necessarily require happiness."
"Try as much as possible to be wholly alive, with all your might, and when you laugh, laugh like hell and when you get angry, get good and angry. Try to be alive. You will be dead soon enough."
"The basic truth of all things, as nearly as we may ever dream of determining and knowing this truth, is form, that which is, as it is. The way and shape of the thing no less than the thing itself."
"Good people are good because they've come to wisdom through failure. We get very little wisdom from success, you know."
"Every man in the world is better than someone else and not as good someone else."
See more famous quotes by
William Saroyan
| Wikipedia: William Saroyan |
| William Saroyan | |
|---|---|
William Saroyan, 1940 |
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| Born | 31 August 1908 Fresno, California, USA |
| Died | 18 May 1981 (aged 72) Fresno, California, USA |
| Pen name | Sirak Goryan |
| Occupation | Novelist, playwright, short story writer |
| Nationality | American |
| Writing period | 1934-1980 |
| Notable award(s) | Pulitzer Prize for Drama (1940) Academy Award for Best Writing, Original Story (1944) |
| Spouse(s) | Carol Grace (1951-1952, 1943-1949) |
William Saroyan (pronounced /səˈrɔɪən/; 31 August 1908 - 18 May 1981) was an Armenian-American dramatist and author. The setting of many of his stories and plays is the center of Armenian-American life in California in his native Fresno.
Contents |
Saroyan was born in Fresno, California to Armenian immigrants from Bitlis in Turkey. At the age of three, after his father's death, Saroyan was placed in the orphanage in Oakland, California, together with his brother and sister, an experience he later described in his writing. Five years later, the family reunited in Fresno, where his mother, Takoohi, secured work at a cannery. He continued his education on his own, supporting himself by taking odd jobs, such as working as an office manager for the San Francisco Telegraph Company.
Saroyan decided to become a writer after his mother showed him some of his father's writings. A few of his early short articles were published in Overland Monthly. His first stories appeared in the 1930s. Among these was "The Broken Wheel", written under the name Sirak Goryan and published in the Armenian journal Hairenik in 1933. Many of Saroyan's stories were based on his childhood experiences among the Armenian-American fruit growers of the San Joaquin Valley, or dealt with the rootlessness of the immigrant. The short story collection My Name is Aram (1940), an international bestseller, was about a young boy and the colorful characters of his immigrant family. It has been translated into many languages.
As a writer Saroyan made his breakthrough in Story magazine with The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze (1934), the title taken from the nineteenth century song of the same title. The protagonist is a young, starving writer who tries to survive in a Depression-ridden society:
| “ | Through the air on the flying trapeze, his mind hummed. Amusing it was, astoundingly funny. A trapeze to God, or to nothing, a flying trapeze to some sort of eternity; he prayed objectively for strength to make the flight with grace. | ” |
Saroyan served in the US Army during World War II. He was stationed in Astoria, Queens, spending much of his time at the Lombardy Hotel in Manhattan, far from Army personnel. In 1942, he was posted to London as part of a film unit. He narrowly avoided a court martial when his novel, The Adventures of Wesley Jackson, was seen as advocating pacifism.
Saroyan worked rapidly, hardly editing his text, and drinking and gambling away much of his earnings. From 1958 on, he mainly resided in a Paris apartment.
| “ | I am an estranged man, said the liar: estranged from myself, from my family, my fellow man, my country, my world, my time, and my culture. I am not estranged from God, although I am a disbeliever in everything about God excepting God indefinable, inside all and careless of all. (from Here Comes There Goes You Know Who, 1961) | ” |
Saroyan published essays and memoirs, in which he depicted the people he had met on travels in the Soviet Union and Europe, such as the playwright George Bernard Shaw, the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius, and Charlie Chaplin. In 1952, Saroyan published The Bicycle Rider in Beverly Hills, the first of several volumes of memoirs.
Saroyan's stories celebrated optimism in the midst of the trials and tribulations of the Depression. Several of Saroyan's works were drawn from his own experiences, although his approach to autobiographical fact contained a fair bit of poetic license.
His advice to a young writer was: "Try to learn to breathe deeply; really to taste food when you eat, and when you sleep really to sleep. Try as much as possible to be wholly alive with all your might, and when you laugh, laugh like hell." Saroyan endeavored to create a prose style full of zest for life and seemingly impressionistic, that came to be called "Saroyanesque".
In some respects, Saroyan's characters resemble the penniless writer in Knut Hamsun's 1890 novel Hunger, but lack the anger and nihilism of Hamsun's narrator. The story was republished in a collection whose royalties enabled Saroyan to travel to Europe and Armenia, where he learned to love the taste of Russian cigarettes, once observing, "you may tend to get cancer from the thing that makes you want to smoke so much, not from the smoking itself." (from Not Dying, 1963)
Saroyan's plays were drawn from deeply personal sources, and often disregarded the convention that conflict is essential to drama. My Heart's in the Highlands (1939), his first play, was a comedy about a young boy and his Armenian family. It was produced at the Guild Theatre in New York.
Saroyan is probably best remembered for his play The Time of Your Life (1939), set in a waterfront saloon in San Francisco. It won a Pulitzer Prize, which Saroyan refused on the grounds that commerce should not judge the arts; he did accept the New York Drama Critics' Circle award. The play was adapted into a 1948 film starring James Cagney.
Before the war, Saroyan worked on the screenplay of Golden Boy (1939), based on Clifford Odets's play, but he never had much success in Hollywood and after his disappointment with the Human Comedy film project, he never permitted any Hollywood screen adaptation of any of his novels regardless of his financial straits.
The Human Comedy (1943) is set in the fictional California town of Ithaca in the San Joaquin Valley (based on Saroyan's memories of Fresno, California), where young telegraph messenger Homer bears witness to the sorrows and joys of life during World War II.
| “ | "Mrs. Sandoval," Homer said swiftly, "your son is dead. Maybe it's a mistake. Maybe it wasn't your son. Maybe it was somebody else. The telegram says it was Juan Domingo. But maybe the telegram is wrong... (from The Human Comedy) | ” |
Saroyan was hired to write the screenplay for and direct the film for MGM. When Louis B. Mayer balked at its length, Saroyan would not compromise and was removed from the project. He then turned the script into a novel, publishing it just prior to the film's release. This novel is often credited as the source for the movie when in fact the reverse is true. The novel is the basis for a 1983 musical of the same name.
Interest in Saroyan's novels declined after the war, when he was criticized for sentimentality. Freedom, brotherly love, and universal benevolence were for him basic values, but his idealism was considered out of step with the times. He still wrote prolifically, so that one of his readers could ask "How could you write so much good stuff and still write such bad stuff?"
In the novellas The Assyrian and other stories (1950) and in The Laughing Matter (1953) Saroyan mixed allegorical elements within a realistic novel. The plays Sam Ego's House (1949) and The Slaughter of the Innocents (1958) were not as successful as his prewar plays. Many of Saroyan's later plays, such as The Paris Comedy (1960), The London Comedy (1960), and Settled Out of Court (1969), premiered in Europe. Manuscripts of a number of unperformed plays are now at Stanford University with his other papers.
When Ernest Hemingway learned that Saroyan had made fun of the controversial non-fiction work Death in the Afternoon, Hemingway responded: "We've seen them come and go. Good ones too. Better ones than you, Mr. Saroyan."
In the late 1960s and the 1970s, Saroyan earned more money and finally got out of debt.
In 1943, Saroyan was married to actress Carol Marcus (1924-2003) with whom he had two children, Aram and Lucy. Aram went on to become an author, and published a book about his father, and Lucy was an actress.[1] By the late 1940s, Saroyan's drinking and gambling took a toll on his marriage, and he filed for divorce upon returning from an extended European trip in 1949. They were remarried briefly in 1951 and divorced again in 1952 with Marcus later claiming in her autobiography, Among the Porcupines: A Memoir,[2][3] that Saroyan was abusive. Carol was subsequently married to actor Walter Matthau.
Saroyan died in Fresno, of prostate cancer at age 72. Half of his ashes were buried in California, and the remainder in Armenia.
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