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Joshua
Cody and Paul Bozymowski's short film, presented with live music
at the Sospeso Xponential
concert on Tuesday, November 11, 2003, deals largely with Lorca's
poetry.
Born in Fuente Vaqueros,
Granada, Spain, June 5, 1898, and assassinated near Granada, August
19, 1936, García Lorca is Spain's most deeply appreciated and highly
revered poet and dramatist. His murder by the Nationalists at the
start of the Spanish civil war brought sudden international fame,
accompanied by an excess of political rhetoric which led a later generation
to question his merits; after the inevitable slump, his reputation
has recovered (largely with a shift in interest to the less obvious
works). He must now be bracketed with Machado as one of the two greatest
poets Spain has produced this century, and he is certainly Spain's
greatest dramatist since the Golden Age.
As a poet, his early reputation rested on the Romancero gitano (Madrid, 1928; tr. R. Humphries,
The Gypsy Ballads of García Lorca, Bloomington, 1953), the poems of Poema del Cante Jondo (Madrid, 1931), and
Llanto por Ignacio Sanchez Mejias (Madrid, 1935; tr. A. L. Lloyd, in Lament for the Death of a Bullfighter, and Other
Poems, London, 1937), all profoundly Andalusian, richly sombre in their mood and imagery, and disquieting in their projection of a part-primitive, part-private world of myth moved by dark and not precisely identifiable forces; but, beneath the flamenco trappings, there is a deeper—perhaps personal—anguish, as well as a superb rhythmical and linguistic sense (the
Llanto is one of the four best elegies in the Spanish language). Critical interest has since shifted to the tortured, ambiguous and deliberately dissonant surrealist poems of
Poeta en Nueva York (Mexico City, 1940; tr. B. Belitt, Poet in New
York, London, 1955), and to the arabesque casidas and gacelas of
Divein de Tamarit (NY, 1940). An early major anthology in English is Poems (tr. S. Spender & J. L. Gili, London, 1939).
As a dramatist, early romantic pieces with social implications such as Mariana Pineda (Madrid, 1928; tr. J. GrahamLuidn & R. L. O'Connell in
Collected Plays, London, 1976) and the comic invention of La zapatera prodigiosa (first performed 1930, amplified 1935, pub. Buenos Aires, 1938;
The Shoemaker's Prodigious Wife in Collected Plays) established him in the public eye, while his fostering of popular theatre gave him a left-wing reputation which contributed to his death (although his homosexuality also made him a target). His reputation as a playwright rests, however, mainly on the three 'folk tragedies',
Bodas de sangre (Madrid, 1935; Blood Wedding), Yerma (Buenos Aires, 1937) and
La casa de Bernarda Alba (Buenos Aires, 1940; The House of Bernarda
Alba: all three tr. J. Graham-Lujan & R. L. O'Connell, in III
Tragedies, NY, 1959, incorporated into Collected Plays), whose settings recall the
Romancero gitano, as do the unspecified dark forces (associated with earth, blood, sex, water, fertility/infertility, death, and the moon) which appear to manipulate the characters in
Bodas de sangre and Yerma. Both these plays are richly poetic, with an almost ritualized primitivism (Lorca was highly superstitious, and his dark forces were not mere dramatic ploys).
La casa de Bernarda Alba is starker: deliberately prosaic, more readily interpretable as social criticism (i.e. of the pressures of convention, the imprisoning effect of mourning customs, the frustration of female sexuality by the need to wait for an acceptable match), but it is so dominated by the title character—who tyrannizes her five daughters—that it emerges as the study of a unique individual rather than a typical woman. Each tragedy has one outstanding female role, those of
Yerma and Bernarda having been written for the great tragic actress Margarita
Xirgu.
Lorca's technical experimentation (which has affinities with innovators as dissimilar as
Pirandello and Brecht) was immensely versatile, and he had a superb sense for stage-effects to reinforce the web of his recurrent imagery. Robert Pring-Mill (Fellow of St. Catherine's College, Oxford),
from The Fontana Biographical Companion to Modern Thought, copyright © 1983 by Alan Bullock,
R. B. Woodings, and John Cumming.
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