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Samuel Beckett's view of existence seems so remorselessly, brilliantly bleak that one doesn't expect much in the way of human warmth from his correspondence. Yet the letters he and director Alan Schneider exchanged over the course of three decades are full of wit and fellow feeling. The focus, to be sure, is on Beckett's plays, five of which Schneider premiered in the United States between 1956 and 1983. But that happens to be the perfect conduit for the playwright's praise (often directed at his acolyte) and disgust (often directed at his audience, his critics, and himself). When the initial American production of Waiting for Godot bombs in Miami, for instance, Beckett cheers Schneider on even as he pummels the ticket holders: "It is probable our conversations confirmed you in your aversion to half-measures and frills, i.e. to precisely those things that 90% of theatre-goers want. Of course I know the Miami swells and their live models can hardly be described as theatre-goers and their reactions are no more significant than those of a Jersey herd and I presume their critics are worthy of them." No Author Better Served conveys Beckett's sense of humility, which never failed him, even after Godot made him famous: "Success and failure on the public level never mattered much to me, in fact I feel much more at home with the latter, having breathed deep of its vivifying air all my writing life up to the last couple of years." It's also a wonderful document of his complete, sometimes nutty, always inspiring devotion to his art. --James Marcus
No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and ... No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider. Ed. by MAURICE... Article from The Modern Language Review January 1, 2000 Waiting : The New Yorker First came No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider, published in 1998, nine years after the authors death, ... Letters - The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia Beckett v. Brustein. To the Editor: Robert Brustein's review of ''No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider'' (Jan. 31 ... Beckett before by Denis Donoghue - The New Criterion This would have entailed publishing only letters such as those that Beckett addressed to Alan Schneider ... Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel ... author. Eliot's fine Italian ... Beckett links Book review: No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider. Jim McCue in The New Statesman. FINTAN O 'TOOLE: Game Without End - The English Department at ... No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider edited by Maurice Harmon 512 pages, $35.00 (hardcover) No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and ... Samuel Beckett's view of existence seems so remorselessly, brilliantly bleak that one doesn't expect much in the way of human warmth from his correspondence. Yet the ... beckett samuel alan schneider - AbeBooks No Author Better Served: The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider by Beckett, Samuel, Schneider, Alan and a great selection of similar Used, New and ... I Can't Go On, Alan. I'll Go On. - The New York Times - Breaking ... NO AUTHOR BETTER SERVED The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider. Edited by Maurice Harmon. 486 pp. Cambridge, Mass.: Happy Days (play) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia His letters to Alan Schneider make particularly interesting reading ... they serve as . But more ... The plays of Samuel Beckett. Stage:
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