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{{short description|British playwright (1930–2008)}}
]
{{redirect|Pinter|other people named Pinter|Pinter (surname)}}
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{{Use British English|date=July 2015}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2017}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Harold Pinter
| honorific_suffix = {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|CH|CBE}}
| image = Harold-pinter-atp.jpg
| caption = Pinter in 2005
| birth_date = {{birth date|1930|10|10|df=y}}
| birth_place = London, England
| death_date = {{death date and age|2008|12|24|1930|10|10|df=yes}}
| death_place = London, England
| spouse = {{Plainlist|
* {{marriage|] <br/>|1956|1980|end=divorced}}
* {{marriage|] <br/>|1980}}
}}
| children = 1
| occupation = Playwright, screenwriter, actor, theatre director, poet
| alma_mater = ]
| period = 1947–2008
| awards = {{Plainlist|
* ] (2002)
* ] (2005)
* ] (2007)
* ] (1995)
* ] (1996)
}}
| website = {{URL|http://www.haroldpinter.org}}
| portaldisp = y
| signature = Harold Pinter Signature.svg
| module = {{Listen |embed= yes |filename= Harold Pinter BBC Radio4 Front Row 26 Dec 2008 b00gy71c.flac |title= Harold Pinter's voice |type= speech |description= from the BBC programme '']'', 26 December 2008.<ref>{{Cite episode |title= Michael Caine |series= Front Row Interviews |series-link= Front Row (radio programme) |url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00gy71c |station= ] |date= 26 December 2008 |access-date= 18 January 2014 }}</ref> }}
}}


'''Harold Pinter''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|ɪ|n|t|ər}}; 10 October 1930&nbsp;– 24 December 2008) was a British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor. A ] winner, Pinter was one of the most influential modern British dramatists with a writing career that spanned more than 50 years. His best-known plays include '']'' (1957), '']'' (1964) and '']'' (1978), each of which he adapted for the screen. His screenplay adaptations of others' works include '']'' (1963), '']'' (1971), '']'' (1981), '']'' (1993) and '']'' (2007). He also directed or acted in radio, stage, television and film productions of his own and others' works.
:''"Pinter" redirects here. For other uses, see ].''


Pinter was born and raised in ], east London, and educated at ]. He was a sprinter and a keen cricket player, acting in school plays and writing ]. He attended the ] but did not complete the course. He was fined for refusing ] as a ]. Subsequently, he continued training at the ] and worked in repertory theatre in Ireland and England. In 1956 he married actress ] and had a son, Daniel, born in 1958. He left Merchant in 1975 and married author ] in 1980.
'''Harold Pinter''', ], ] (born ], ]) is a ] ], ], ], ], and ]. He has written works for ], ], ] and ]. The recipient of scores of awards and honorary degrees, he was awarded the ] in ].

Pinter's career as a playwright began with a production of '']'' in 1957. His second play, '']'', closed after eight performances but was enthusiastically reviewed by critic ]. His early works were described by critics as "]". Later plays such as '']'' (1975) and '']'' (1978) became known as "]s". He appeared as an actor in productions of his own work on radio and film, and directed nearly 50 productions for stage, theatre and screen. Pinter received over 50 awards, prizes and other honours, including the ] in 2005 and the French ] in 2007.

Despite frail health after being diagnosed with ] in December 2001, Pinter continued to act on stage and screen, last performing the title role of ]'s one-act monologue '']'', for the 50th anniversary season of the ], in October 2006. He died from ] on 24 December 2008.


==Biography== ==Biography==
Pinter was born in ] in ] to working-class ]ish parents of ] ancestry. Contrary to earlier speculations, "three of Pinter's grandparents hail from ] and one from ], making them ] rather than ] Jews."<ref>Billington, ''Life and Work'' 1-5: "A constant feature of the Pinter legend, repeated in all the books, is that the family were Sephardic Jews of Spanish or Portuguese origin and that the original family name was Pinto, da Pinto or da Pinta, but there seems no evidence for this whatsoever. Indeed Antonia Fraser, with a historian's passion for geneaology, sat down with Pinter's parents one afternoon after lunch in Holland Park and discovered the real story: three of Pinter's grandparents hail from ] and one from ], making them Ashkenazic rather than Sephardic Jews" (3). ("Pinter's paternal grandfather Nathan was born in Poland in 1870 and came to England alone in 1900 in the wave of ]. He later went back for his wife and family. . . . third child Jack, Harold Pinter's father, was born in the East End in 1902. . ." . Pinter's maternal grandfather emigrated to London from Odessa "via Paris" in 1900 and remarried "Polish-born Rose Franklin" following his first wife's death; Pinter's mother, Frances, their "eldest" child, was born in 1904 .) In the Aug. 1950 issue of ''Poetry London'', Pinter's first poems to appear in such a poetry magazine ("New Year in the Midlands" and "Chandeliers and Shadows") were "published under the name of Harold Pinta largely because one of his aunts was convinced—against all the evidence—that the family came from distinguished Portuguese ancestors, the da Pintas" (29). Pinter also discussed his heritage with ], during a public interview at the ] in August 2002, later transcribed and posted online on ] public radio (''Books and Writing''). At that time, Pinter repeated some of these details, referring to speculations about his family's ] and ] derivations: "My mother and father were born in England, by the way, in about 1902 and 1904; so they were here. They were English. . . . they were English-Jewish. My grandparents came from a rather mysterious area which some call Odessa and others call Hungary. I have no idea. My wife is convinced that after a lot of research, and she’s pretty good at research, that my family did actually come from Odessa. And she has pretty good evidence of that. However, I found that in the 1946 Olympics there was a Hungarian sprinter called Pinter. And I also know that—I’ve been told, anyway—one of my aunts believed that we were originally da Pinta in Portugal and that we were thrown out by the ]. I wasn’t quite sure whether they had a Spanish Inquisition in Portugal, but according to my aunt, they certainly did. . ].] And where they went from the Spanish Inquisition is rather misty, shall we say, so I’m not quite sure . . . Anyway, in short, my background is slightly misty. But my family, nevertheless, was a very stable and conventional Jewish family." (''Pintér'' is a common Hungarian surname; ''Pinto'', ''Pinta'', and ''da Pinta'' are common Portuguese surnames and place names. ''Pinto'' and ''da Pinto'' also occur in ] . Cf. ].)</ref> Harold Pinter was educated at ]. A "profound influence" on him was his ] to ] and ] from ] during 1940 and 1941 before and during ] and facing "the life-and-death intensity of daily experience" (Billington, ''Life and Work'' 5-10). Pinter frequently wrote and published ] as a teenager (and has continued to do so throughout his career). He played Romeo and Macbeth in 1947 and 1948, while still a student at Hackney Downs Grammar School in productions directed by his English tutor, mentor, and friend Joseph Brearley (13-14).


===Early life and education===
Beginning in autumn 1948, for two semesters, Pinter attended the ] (RADA). Later that year, he was "called up for ]," registered as a ], was brought to trial twice, and ultimately fined by the magistrate for refusing to serve. He "loath" RADA, mostly cut classes, and dropped out in 1949. He had a minor role in ''Dick Whittington and His Cat'' at the Chesterfield Hippodrome in 1949-50. From January to July 1951, he attended "two terms" at the ]. From 1951-52, he toured Ireland with the Anew McMaster repertory company, playing over a dozen roles; in 1952 he began regional repertory acting jobs in England; and from 1953-54, he worked for the ] Company, King's Theatre, Hammersmith, performing nearly ten roles. From 1954 until 1959, Harold Pinter acted under the stage name '''David Baron''', working as an actor for "about nine years", primarly in regional repertory companies, performing nearly twenty-five roles.<ref>Pinter's paternal "grandmother's maiden name was Baron . . . he adopted it as his stage-name . . . used it for the autobiographical character of Mark in the first draft of ''The Dwarfs'' (Billington, ''Life and Work'' 3).</ref>Harold Pinter also performed occasional roles in his own and others' works (for radio, tv, and film) during that period, as he has done increasingly more recently.<ref>Billington, ''Life and Work'' 20-25; 31, 36, 38; Batty, "Chronology" in ''About Pinter''; Batty, comp., "Acting" & "Directing" at ''HaroldPinter.org.''</ref>
Pinter was born on 10 October 1930, in ], east London, the only child of British Jewish parents of Eastern European descent: his father, Hyman "Jack" Pinter (1902–1997) was a ladies' tailor; his mother, Frances (née Moskowitz; 1904–1992), a housewife.<ref name=GussowConv103>Harold Pinter, as quoted in Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 103.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Pinter|first=Harold|title=Harold Pinter: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center|url=https://legacy.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00108/hrc-00108.html|access-date=2021-04-27|website=legacy.lib.utexas.edu|language=en}}</ref> Pinter believed an aunt's erroneous view that the family was ] and had fled the ]; thus, for his early poems, Pinter used the pseudonym ''Pinta'' and at other times used variations such as ''da Pinto''.<ref name=Billington1>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 1–5.</ref> Later research by ], Pinter's second wife, revealed the legend to be apocryphal; three of Pinter's grandparents came from Poland and the fourth from ], so the family was ].<ref name=Billington1/><ref name=JewishBackground>For some accounts of the significance of Pinter's Jewish background, see Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 2, 40–41, 53–54, 79–81, 163–64, 177, 286, 390, 429.</ref><ref name=Woolf1>] {{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2007/jul/12/theatre.haroldpinter |title=My 60 Years in Harold's Gang |first=Henry |last=Woolf |work=] |date=12 July 2007 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu6rYC0X?url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2007/jul/12/theatre.haroldpinter |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}; Woolf, as quoted in Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" 144–45; {{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/howard-jacobson/howard-jacobson-harold-pinter-didnt-get-my-joke-and-i-didnt-get-him-ndash-until-it-was-too-late-1297593.html |title=Harold Pinter didn't get my joke, and I didn't get him – until it was too late |first=Howard |last=Jacobson |work=] |date=10 January 2009 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0951-9467 |oclc=185201487 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu70UVpG?url=http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/howard-jacobson/howard-jacobson-harold-pinter-didnt-get-my-joke-and-i-didnt-get-him-ndash-until-it-was-too-late-1297593.html |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


Pinter's family home in London is described by his official biographer ] as "a solid, red-brick, three-storey villa just off the noisy, bustling, traffic-ridden thoroughfare of the ] Road".<ref name="Billington, Harold Pinter 2">Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 2.</ref> In 1940 and 1941, after ], Pinter was ] from their house in London to ] and ].<ref name="Billington, Harold Pinter 2"/> Billington states that the "life-and-death intensity of daily experience" before and during the Blitz left Pinter with profound memories "of loneliness, bewilderment, separation and loss: themes that are in all his works."<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 5–10.</ref>
From 1956 until 1980, Pinter was married to ], a rep actress whom he met on tour, probably best known for her performance in the original film '']'' (1966). Their son, Daniel, was born in 1958. Through the early 70s, Merchant appeared in many of Pinter's works, most notably '']'' on stage (1965) and screen (1973). Pinter's marriage was rather "turbulent" and began disintegrating in the mid-1960s, however (Billington, ''Life and Work''). For seven years, from 1962-69, Pinter was "otherwise engaged" in a clandestine affair with ], which informs his play '']'' (1978). According to his own program notes for that play, between 1975 and 1980, Pinter "lived with" historian ], wife of ]. In 1975 Vivien Merchant filed for divorce.<ref>"People." Online posting. '''' 11 Aug. 1975. 7 July 2006.</ref>. The Frasers' divorce became final in 1977 and the Pinters' in 1980. In 1980, Pinter married Antonia Fraser.<ref>Unable to overcome her bitterness and grief at the loss of husband Pinter, Vivien Merchant died of acute alcoholism in 1983. According to Billington, Pinter "did everything possible to support" Merchant until her death and regrets that he became estranged from their son, Daniel, after their separation and Pinter's marrying Antonia Fraser. Now nearing fifty, a reclusive "gifted" writer and musician who prefers anonymity, Daniel does not use the surname ''Pinter'', having adopted as his surname "his maternal grandmother's maiden name" ''Brand'' after his parents separated (''Life and Work'' 276; 255).</ref> Pinter has stated publicly in several recent interviews that he remains "very happy" in his second marriage and enjoys family life, which includes his six adult step-children and over twice as many grandchildren.<ref>See Billington, Moss, and others.</ref>


Pinter discovered his social potential as a student at ], a London grammar school, between 1944 and 1948. "Partly through the school and partly through the social life of Hackney Boys' Club&nbsp;... he formed an almost ] belief in the power of male friendship. The friends he made in those days – most particularly ], Michael (Mick) Goldstein and Morris (Moishe) Wernick – have always been a vital part of the emotional texture of his life."<ref name=Woolf1/><ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 11.</ref> A major influence on Pinter was his inspirational English teacher Joseph Brearley, who directed him in school plays and with whom he took long walks, talking about literature.<ref>A collection of Pinter's correspondence with Brearley is held in the ] in the British Library. Pinter's memorial epistolary poem "Joseph Brearley 1909–1977 (Teacher of English)", published in his collection ''Various Voices'' (177), ends with the following stanza: "You're gone. I'm at your side,/Walking with you from ] to ],/And on, and on."</ref> According to Billington, under Brearley's instruction, "Pinter shone at English, wrote for the school magazine and discovered a gift for acting."<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 10–11.</ref><ref>See also "Introduction by Harold Pinter, ''Nobel Laureate''", 7–9 in Watkins, ed., '' 'Fortune's Fool': The Man Who Taught Harold Pinter: A Life of Joe Brearley''.</ref> In 1947 and 1948, he played ] and ] in productions directed by Brearley.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 13–14.</ref>
==Career (1957- )==
Pinter is the author of twenty-nine plays, fifteen dramatic sketches, and over twenty screenplays and filmscripts for cinema and television and co-author of two works for stage and radio. Along with the 1967 ] for '']'' and several other American awards and award nominations, he and his plays have received many awards in the UK and elsewhere throughout the world. His screenplays for '']'' and '']'' were nominated for ] in the category of "Writing: Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium" in 1981 and 1983, respectively. (See ].)


At the age of 12, Pinter began writing poetry, and in spring 1947, his poetry was first published in the ''Hackney Downs School Magazine''.<ref>Baker and Ross 127.</ref> In 1950 his poetry was first published outside the school magazine, in '']'', some of it under the pseudonym "Harold Pinta".<ref name=RansomColl>{{cite web|url=http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00108/hrc-00108.html |title=Harold Pinter: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center |last=Staff |work=] |publisher=] |year=2011 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604035449/http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00108/hrc-00108.html |archive-date= 4 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 29–35.</ref>
Pinter's first ], '']'', written in 1957, was a student production at ] directed by (later acclaimed) actor ], who also originated the role of Mr. Kidd in that play (which he reprised in 2001). After his longtime friend Pinter had mentioned that he had an "idea" for a play, Woolf asked him to write it so that he could direct it as part of fulfilling requirements for his postgraduate work. Pinter wrote it in three days.<ref>Woolf, as qtd. in Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" 147.</ref>


Pinter was an atheist.<ref>"The Meeting is a about the afterlife, despite Pinter being well known as an atheist. He admitted it was a "strange" piece for him to have written." Pinter 'on road to recovery', BBC.co.uk, 26 August 2002.</ref>
His second play (among his best-known), '']'' (1957), was initially a disaster, despite a rave review in the ''Sunday Times'' by leading theater critic (the late) Sir ], which appeared only after the play closed, so it could not save that production. But after the success of '']'' in 1960, which established his theatrical reputation, ''The Birthday Party'' was revived both on television (with Pinter himself in the role of Goldberg) and on stage and well received. By the time Peter Hall's production of '']'' (1964) reached New York (1967), Harold Pinter had become a celebrity playwright, and the play garnered four ]s, among other awards.<ref>{{ibdb name|name=Harold Pinter|id=6084}}</ref>


===Sport and friendship===
In a review published in 1958, borrowing from the subtitle of ''A Lunatic View'', a play by David Campton, theater critic Irving Wardle also called Pinter's early plays "]," a label that people have applied repeatedly to his work, at times pigeonholing and attempting to tame it. (Cf. ].)<ref>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 225-26.</ref> Such plays begin with an apparently innocent situation that becomes both threatening and ] as Pinter's characters behave in ways often perceived as inexplicable by his audiences and one another. (Cf. ].) Pinter acknowledges the influence of ], particularly on his early work; they became friends, sending each other drafts of their works in progress for comments.<ref>Harold Pinter on ''Newsnight Review''.</ref>
Pinter enjoyed running and broke the Hackney Downs School sprinting record.<ref>Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 28–29.</ref><ref name=Bakerchap1>Baker, "Growing Up", chap. 1 of ''Harold Pinter'' 2–23.</ref>
He was a ] enthusiast, taking his bat with him when evacuated during the Blitz.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 7–9 and 410.</ref> In 1971, he told ]: "one of my main obsessions in life is the game of cricket—I play and watch and read about it all the time."<ref>Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 25.</ref> He was chairman of the Gaieties Cricket Club, a supporter of ],<ref>Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 8.</ref> and devoted a section of his official website to the sport.<ref name=Gaieties>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/cricket/index.shtml |title=Cricket |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |access-date=5 December 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613203308/http://www.haroldpinter.org/cricket/index.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> One wall of his study was dominated by a portrait of himself as a young man playing cricket, which was described by ], writing in '']'': "The painted Mr. Pinter, poised to swing his bat, has a wicked glint in his eye; testosterone all but flies off the canvas."<ref name=Lyall>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/movies/07lyal.html |title=Harold Pinter – Sleuth |first=Sarah |last=Lyall |work=] |date=7 October 2007 |location=New York City |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120104055337/http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/movies/07lyal.html |archive-date= 4 January 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=Sherwin>{{cite news|url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/stage/article5963091.ece |title=Portrait of Harold Pinter playing cricket to be sold at auction |first=Adam |last=Sherwin |work=] |date=24 March 2009 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0140-0460 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616211500/http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/stage/article5963091.ece |archive-date= 16 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Pinter approved of the "urban and exacting idea of cricket as a bold theatre of aggression."<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 410.</ref> After his death, several of his school contemporaries recalled his achievements in sports, especially cricket and running.<ref>Supple, T. Baker, and Watkins, in Watkins, ed.<!--For bibliographical details, if needed, see ].--></ref> The ] memorial tribute included an essay on Pinter and cricket.<ref name=Burtoncricket>{{cite web |url= http://www.lordstaverners.org/news.cfm?fullID=70 |title=Latest News & Charity Fundraising News from The Lord's Taverners |first=Harry |last=Burton |work=] |year=2009 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090627142610/http://www.lordstaverners.org/news.cfm?fullID=70|archive-date=27 June 2009 |access-date=26 June 2011}}</ref>


Other interests that Pinter mentioned to interviewers are family, love and sex, drinking, writing, and reading.<ref name=GussowBillMerr>See, e.g., Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 25–30; Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 7–16; and Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 194.</ref> According to Billington, "If the notion of male loyalty, competitive rivalry and fear of betrayal forms a constant thread in Pinter's work from ''The Dwarfs'' onwards, its origins can be found in his teenage Hackney years. Pinter adores women, enjoys flirting with them, and worships their resilience and strength. But, in his early work especially, they are often seen as disruptive influences on some pure and ] ideal of male friendship: one of the most crucial of all Pinter's lost ]."<ref name=Woolf1/><ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 10–12.</ref>
From the late sixties through the early eighties, Pinter wrote '']'', '']'', "Night," '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']'', '']'', and '']'' , all of which dramatize aspects of ] and which critics sometimes categorize as Pinter's "memory plays."


===Early theatrical training and stage experience===
Pinter began to direct more frequently during the 1970s, becoming an associate director of the ] in 1973, and he has directed almost fifty productions of his own and others' plays for stage, film, and television.


Beginning in late 1948, Pinter attended the ] for two terms, but hating the school, missed most of his classes, feigned a nervous breakdown, and dropped out in 1949.<ref name=BillingtonBatty1>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 20–25, 31–35; and Batty, ''About Pinter'' 7.</ref> In 1948 he was called up for ]. He was initially refused registration as a ], leading to his twice being prosecuted, and fined, for refusing to accept a medical examination, before his CO registration was ultimately agreed.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 20–25.</ref> He had a small part in the Christmas ] '']'' at the Chesterfield Hippodrome in 1949 to 1950.<ref name=BillingtonBatty2>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 37; and Batty, ''About Pinter'' 8.</ref> From January to July 1951, he attended the ].<ref name=BillingtonBatty3>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 31, 36, and 38; and Batty, ''About Pinter'' xiii and 8.</ref>
Beginning in the mid-1980s, his plays tended to become shorter and overtly political, serving as critiques of ], ], and other abuses of ]. In a 1985 interview called "A Play and Its Politics," with Nicholas Hern, published in the Grove Press edition of '']'', Pinter states that whereas his earlier plays presented "metaphors" about power and powerlessness, the later ones present "realities" of power and its abuse. From 1993 to 1999, after the deaths of first his mother and then his father, Pinter wrote the poem "Death" and '']'' and '']'', full-length plays with domestic settings relating to death and dying and (in the latter case) to such "atrocities" as the Holocaust.


From 1951 to 1952, he toured Ireland with the ] repertory company, playing over a dozen roles.<ref name=Mac>Pinter, "Mac", ''Various Voices'' 36–43.</ref> In 1952, he began acting in regional English repertory productions; from 1953 to 1954, he worked for the ] Company, at the King's Theatre, ], performing eight roles.<ref name=BattyAct>{{cite web|editor=Batty, Mark |url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/acting/index.shtml |title=Acting |work=haroldpinter.org |access-date=29 January 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709085529/http://www.haroldpinter.org/acting/index.shtml |archive-date= 9 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=BillingtonActing>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 20–25, 31, 36, and 37–41.</ref> From 1954 until 1959, Pinter acted under the stage name David Baron.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 3 and 47–48. Pinter's paternal grandmother's maiden name was Baron. He also used the name for an autobiographical character in the first draft of his novel ''The Dwarfs''.</ref><ref name=Rep>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/acting/index.shtml |title=The Harold Pinter Acting Career |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldprinter.org |access-date=30 January 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu83jkqV?url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/acting/index.shtml |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}, {{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/acting/acting_otherrepwork.shtml |title=Work in Various Repertory Companies 1954–1958 |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldprinter.org |access-date=30 January 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu88k0a7?url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/acting/acting_otherrepwork.shtml |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In all, Pinter played over 20 roles under that name.<ref name=Rep/><ref name=BillingtonHP1>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 49–55.</ref> To supplement his income from acting, Pinter worked as a waiter, a postman, a bouncer, and a snow-clearer, meanwhile, according to Mark Batty, "harbouring ambitions as a poet and writer."<ref>Batty, ''About Pinter'' 10.</ref> In October 1989 Pinter recalled: "I was in English rep as an actor for about 12 years. My favourite roles were undoubtedly the sinister ones. They're something to get your teeth into."<ref>Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 83.</ref> During that period, he also performed occasional roles in his own and others' works for radio, TV, and film, as he continued to do throughout his career.<ref name=Rep/><ref name=BillingtonActing2>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 20–25, 31, 36, 38.</ref>
In July and August of 2001, a Harold Pinter Festival celebrating his work was held at ] in ], which he participated in as both a director (of a double bill pairing his newest play '']'' with his first play '']'') and an actor (as Nicolas in '']''). That winter his collaboration with director ] resulted in their stage adaptation of his '']'' ('']'') being produced at the ], in London.<ref>Archived production details .</ref> There was also a revival of '']'' in the ]. In October 2001, as part of a weeklong "Harold Pinter ]" at the World Leaders Festival, in ], he presented a dramatic reading of '']'', following the reception and during the dinner honoring him, and also participated in a public interview.<ref>Press release .</ref>


===Marriages and family life===
Late in 2001, Pinter was diagnosed with ], for which, in 2002, he underwent a successful operation and ]. During the course of his treatment, he directed a production of his play '']'', wrote and performed in his new sketch "Press Conference" for a two-part otherwise-retrospective program of his dramatic sketches at the ], and was seen on television in America in the role of Vivian Bearing's father in the HBO film version of ]'s ]-winning play '']''. Since then, having become increasingly politically "engaged" as "citizen Pinter," Pinter has continued to write and present politically-charged poetry, dramatic works, essays and speeches.
], 1962–64]]
From 1956 until 1980, Pinter was married to ], an actress whom he met on tour,<ref name=Telegraphobit>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/3949227/Harold-Pinter-the-most-original-stylish-and-enigmatic-writer-in-the-post-war-revival-of-British-theatre.html |title=Harold Pinter: the most original, stylish and enigmatic writer in the post-war revival of British theatre |last=Staff |work=] |date=25 December 2008 |location=London |issn=0307-1235 |oclc=49632006 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110116050733/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/3949227/Harold-Pinter-the-most-original-stylish-and-enigmatic-writer-in-the-post-war-revival-of-British-theatre.html |archive-date= 16 January 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> perhaps best known for her performance in the 1966 film '']''. Their son Daniel was born in 1958.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 54 and 75.</ref> Through the early 1970s, Merchant appeared in many of Pinter's works, including '']'' on stage (1965) and screen (1973), but the marriage was turbulent.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 252–56.</ref> For seven years, from 1962 to 1969, Pinter was engaged in a clandestine affair with BBC-TV presenter and journalist ], which inspired his 1978 play '']'',<ref name="Billington, pp. 257">Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 257–67.</ref> and also throughout that period and beyond he had an affair with an American socialite, whom he nicknamed "Cleopatra". This relationship was another secret he kept from both his wife and Bakewell.<ref>Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 86.</ref> Initially, ''Betrayal'' was thought to be a response to his later affair with historian ], the wife of ], and Pinter's "marital crack-up".<ref name="Billington, p. 257">Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 257.</ref>


Pinter and Merchant had both met Antonia Fraser in 1969, when all three worked together on a ] programme about ]; several years later, on 8–9 January 1975, Pinter and Fraser became romantically involved.<ref name=Fraserone>Fraser, Chap. 1: "First Night", ''Must You Go?'' 3–19.</ref> That meeting initiated their five-year extramarital love affair.<ref>Fraser, chap. 1: "First Night"; chap. 2: "Pleasure and a Good Deal of Pain"; chap. 8: "It Is Here"; and chap. 13: "Marriage — Again", ''Must You Go?'' 3–33, 113–24, and 188–201.</ref><ref name=Bill252>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 252–53.</ref> After hiding the relationship from Merchant for two and a half months, on 21 March 1975, Pinter finally told her "I've met somebody".<ref>Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 13.</ref> After that, "Life in Hanover Terrace gradually became impossible", and Pinter moved out of their house on 28 April 1975, five days after the première of '']''.<ref name=Billington253>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 253–55.</ref><ref name=People>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,917680-1,00.html |title=People |last=Staff |magazine=] |publisher=Time Inc. |date=11 August 1975 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110520231356/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,917680-1,00.html |archive-date=20 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
In February 2005, in an interview with ] on the ] program '']'', Pinter announced that he would retire from writing plays to dedicate himself to his political ] and writing ]: "I think I've written 29 plays. I think it's enough for me. I think I've found other forms now. My energies are going in different directions—over the last few years I've made a number of political speeches at various locations and ceremonies . . . I'm using a lot of energy more specifically about political states of affairs, which I think are very, very worrying as things stand."<ref>"Pinter to 'give up writing plays.'" Online posting. '''' 28 Feb. 2005].</ref> Pinter has reiterated his statement subsequently, but occasionally leaves open the possibility that if a compelling dramatic "image" were to come to mind (which he states as "not likely"), perhaps he would still be obliged to pursue it. Indeed, after making this point, at the end of the June 2006 '']'' interview with ], he and ] performed a dramatic reading of a "new work" by Pinter, a dramatic sketch called "Apart from That," inspired by Pinter's strong adversion to mobile telephones (He made clear that he doesn't own one).<ref>"Harold Pinter on Newsnight Review." Online posting '']'' 23 June 2006.</ref>


In mid-August 1977, after Pinter and Fraser had spent two years living in borrowed and rented quarters, they moved into her former family home in ],<ref>Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 29, 65–78, and 83.</ref> where Pinter began writing ''Betrayal''.<ref name="Billington, p. 257"/> He reworked it later, while on holiday at the ] in ], in early January 1978.<ref>Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 85–88.</ref> After the Frasers' divorce had become final in 1977 and the Pinters' in 1980, Pinter married Fraser on 27 November 1980.<ref>Fraser, "''27 November — The Diary of Lady Antonia Pinter''", ''Must You Go?'' 122–23.</ref> Because of a two-week delay in Merchant's signing the divorce papers, however, the reception had to precede the actual ceremony, originally scheduled to occur on his 50th birthday.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 271–76.</ref> Vivien Merchant died of acute alcoholism in the first week of October 1982, at the age of 53.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 276.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1982/10/07/arts/death-of-vivien-merchant-is-ascribed-to-alcoholism.html |title=Death of Vivien Merchant Is Ascribed to Alcoholism |last=Staff |work=] |date=7 October 1982 |location=New York City |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100121083451/http://www.nytimes.com/1982/10/07/arts/death-of-vivien-merchant-is-ascribed-to-alcoholism.html |archive-date= 21 January 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Billington writes that Pinter "did everything possible to support" her and regretted that he ultimately became estranged from their son, Daniel, after their separation, Pinter's remarriage, and Merchant's death.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 276 and 345–47.</ref>
==Political activism==
Pinter was an early member of the ] in the ] and supported the British ] (1959-94), participating in British artists' refusal to permit professional productions of their work in ] in 1963 and in subsequent related campaigns).<ref>See E. S. Reddy, "Free Mandela: An Account of the Campaign to Free Nelson Mandela and all other Political Prisoners in South Africa" (July 1988). Online posting. ''''.</ref> He has been active in ], serving as a ], along with ] playwright ]. In 1985, Pinter and Miller traveled to ], on a mission co-sponsored by International PEN and a ] committee to investigate and protest the torture of imprisoned writers. There he met victims of political oppression and their families. At an American ] dinner in ], held in Miller's honor, at which Pinter was also an invited guest, speaking on behalf of those imprisoned Turkish writers, Pinter confronted the ambassador with (in Pinter's words) "he reality . . . of electric current on your genitals": Pinter's outspokenness apparently angered their host and led to indications of his desired departure. Guest of honor Miller left the embassy with him. Recounting this episode for a tribute to Miller on his 80th birthday, Pinter concludes: "Being thrown out of the US embassy in Ankara with Arthur Miller — a voluntary exile — was one of the proudest moments in my life." Pinter's experiences in Turkey and his knowledge of the Turkish suppression of the ] "inspired" his 1988 play '']''.<ref>Billington, ''Life and Work'' 309-10; Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 67-68.</ref>


A reclusive gifted musician and writer, Daniel changed his surname from Pinter to Brand, the maiden name of his maternal grandmother,<ref name="Bill255"/> before Pinter and Fraser became romantically involved; while according to Fraser, his father could not understand it, she says that she could: "Pinter is such a distinctive name that he must have got tired of being asked, 'Any relation?{{'"}}<ref>Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 44.</ref> Michael Billington wrote that Pinter saw Daniel's name change as "a largely pragmatic move on Daniel's part designed to keep the press&nbsp;... at bay."<ref name=Bill254>Billington 254–55; cf. 345.</ref> Fraser told Billington that Daniel "was very nice to me at a time when it would have been only too easy for him to have turned on me&nbsp;... simply because he had been the sole focus of his father's love and now manifestly wasn't."<ref name=Bill254/> Still unreconciled at the time of his father's death, Daniel Brand did not attend Pinter's funeral.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/sarah-sands/sarah-sands-pinters-funeral-ndash-more-final-reckoning-than-reconciliation-1224214.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220509/https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/sarah-sands/sarah-sands-pinters-funeral-ndash-more-final-reckoning-than-reconciliation-1224214.html |archive-date=9 May 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Pinter's funeral – more final reckoning than reconciliation|last=Sands|first=Sarah|newspaper=The Independent|date=4 January 2009|access-date=24 April 2020}}</ref>
He is an active delegate of the Cuba Solidarity Campaign in the ], an organization that defends ], supports the government of ], and campaigns against the U.S. embargo on the country. In 2001 Pinter joined the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milošević (ICDSM), which appealed for a fair trial for and the freedom of ]; he signed a related "Artists' Appeal for Milošević" in 2004. (The organization continues its presence on the internet even after Milošević's death in 2006.)


Billington observes that "The break-up with Vivien and the new life with Antonia was to have a profound effect on Pinter's personality and his work," though he adds that Fraser herself did not claim to have influence over Pinter or his writing.<ref name=Bill255>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 255.</ref> In her own contemporaneous diary entry dated 15 January 1993, Fraser described herself more as Pinter's literary midwife.<ref>Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 211: "With all my timings , Harold calls me his editor. Not so. I was the midwife saying, 'Push, Harold, push,' but the act of creation took place elsewhere and the baby would have been born anyway."</ref> Indeed, she told Billington that "other people ], among others] had a shaping influence on politics" and attributed changes in his writing and political views to a change from "an unhappy, complicated personal life&nbsp;... to a happy, uncomplicated personal life", so that "a side of Harold which had always been there was somehow released. I think you can see that in his work after '']'' , which was a very bleak play."<ref name=Bill255/>
Pinter strongly opposed the 1991 ], the 1999 ] bombing campaign in ] during the ], the 2001 ], and the ]. He has been very active in the current ] in the ], speaking at rallies held by the ]. Pinter has called the ], ], a "mass murderer" and the ], ], both "mass-murdering" and a "deluded idiot"; he alleges that they, along with past U.S. officials, are "war criminals". He has compared the ] ("a bunch of criminal lunatics") with ]'s ], saying that, under Bush, the United States ("a monster out of control") strives to attain "world domination" through ], while, like a "bleating little lamb tagging behind it on a lead, the pathetic and supine Great Britain," led by Blair, participates in a ] instigated on behalf of "the American people," who, Pinter acknowledges, increasingly protest "their government's actions."<ref>Pinter, in a public reading from ''War'', as qtd. by Chrisafis & Tilden, ; Pinter, ; and Pinter, '''': "Many thousands, if not millions, of people in the United States itself are demonstrably sickened, shamed and angered by their government's actions, but as things stand they are not a coherent political force - yet. But the anxiety, uncertainty and fear which we can see growing daily in the United States is unlikely to diminish." Cf. ].</ref>


Pinter was content in his second marriage and enjoyed family life with his six adult stepchildren and 17 step-grandchildren.<ref name=BillingtonHPDD>See Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 388, 429–30.</ref> Even after battling cancer for several years, he considered himself "a very lucky man in every respect".<ref name=Lucky>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolavconsole/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_4780000/newsid_4785400/nb_rm_4785475.stm |title=Harold Pinter on Newsnight Review |last=Wark |first=Kirsty |work=] |publisher=BBC |date=23 June 2006 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121112034535/http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolavconsole/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_4780000/newsid_4785400/nb_rm_4785475.stm |archive-date= 12 November 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ] notes in her 2007 interview with Pinter in '']'' that his "latest work, a slim pamphlet called 'Six Poems for A.', comprises poems written over 32 years, with "A" of course being Lady Antonia. The first of the poems was written in Paris, where she and Mr. Pinter traveled soon after they met. More than three decades later the two are rarely apart, and Mr. Pinter turns soft, even cozy, when he talks about his wife."<ref name=Lyall/> In that interview Pinter "acknowledged that his plays—full of infidelity, cruelty, inhumanity, the lot—seem at odds with his domestic contentment. 'How can you write a happy play?' he said. 'Drama is about conflict and degrees of perturbation, disarray. I've never been able to write a happy play, but I've been able to enjoy a happy life.{{' "}}<ref name=Lyall/> After his death, Fraser told '']'': "He was a great man, and it was a privilege to live with him for over 33 years. He will never be forgotten."<ref name="Siddique">{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2008/dec/25/harold-pinter-dies |title=Nobel prize winning dramatist Harold Pinter dies |first=Haroon |last=Siddique |work=] |date=25 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110905141709/http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/dec/25/harold-pinter-dies |archive-date= 5 September 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite news
Harold Pinter continues to sign petitions on behalf of artistic and political causes that he supports. Pinter became a signatory of the mission statement of Jews For Justice For Palestinians in 2005 and of its full-page advertisement "What Is Israel Doing? A Call by Jews in Britain" featured in the '']'' on 6 July 2006.<ref>See , featuring its mission statement and links to a pdf file of the ad.</ref> Pinter contributes letters to the editor, essays, speeches, and poetry strongly expressing his artistic and political viewpoints, which are frequently published initially in British ]s, both via print and ] ], and, increasingly, distributed and re-distributed extensively over the ] and throughout the ]. Such publications by Pinter have become distributed far more widely since his winning the ] in 2005; subsequent related news accounts often cite his status as a Nobel Laureate.
|url=https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2008/dec/26/harold-pinter-death-tributes
|title=Multi-award winning playwright lauded by dignitaries of theatrical and political worlds
|first1=Peter
|last1=Walker
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|first3=Haroon
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|date=26 December 2008
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|location=London
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|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120111163934/http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2008/dec/26/harold-pinter-death-tributes
|archive-date= 11 January 2012
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== Civic activities and political activism ==
==Honors==
{{Main|Harold Pinter and politics}}
Pinter was appointed ] in 1966 and became a ] in 2002 (having previously declined a knighthood in 1996). He has also received the 1995 David Cohen British Literature Prize, in recognition of a lifetime's achievement in literature, the 1996 ] for a lifetime's achievement in the theater; a 2001 World Leaders Award for "creative genius"; the 2004 ] Award for Poetry—"in recognition of Pinter's lifelong contribution to literature, 'and specifically for his collection of poetry entitled ''War'', published in 2003,'" and the Europe Theatre Prize, in recognition of lifetime achievements pertaining to drama and theater (conferred March 2006).<ref>''Wilfred Owen Association Newsletter'' 4 Aug. 2004; and the ; see espec. . '''NB''': More fully-complete lists of Pinter's many other awards, including several honorary degrees from universities around the world, appear in the section on Pinter's posted online at his official website ''HaroldPinter.org'' and in published chronologies of his career. See also his Nobel Prize '''', notably: Baker and Ross; Gordon (ed.), ''Pinter at 70''; Merritt (comp.), "Harold Pinter Bibliography"; and webpages of The Harold Pinter Society. Updates are generally listed on ''HaroldPinter.org''.</ref>
In 1948–49, when he was 18, Pinter opposed the politics of the ], leading to his decision to become a ] and to refuse to comply with ] in the British military. However, he told interviewers that, if he had been old enough at the time, he would have fought against the ] in ].<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 21–24, 92, and 286.</ref> He seemed to express ambivalence, both indifference and hostility, towards political structures and politicians in his Fall 1966 '']'' interview conducted by ].<ref name=Bensky>{{cite magazine |url= http://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/4351/the-art-of-theater-no-3-harold-pinter |title=The Art of Theater No. 3, Harold Pinter |first=Lawrence M. |last=Bensky |magazine=Paris Review |publisher=Paris Review Foundation|year=1966|volume=Fall 1966 |issue=39 |access-date=26 June 2011|archive-date=1 January 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070101223541/http://www.theparisreview.org/media/4351_PINTER.pdf|format=PDF}}</ref> Yet, he had been an early member of the ] and also had supported the British ] (1959–1994), participating in British artists' refusal to permit professional productions of their work in South Africa in 1963 and in subsequent related campaigns.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/anctoday/2005/at42.htm |title=Letter from the President: Hail the Nobel Laureates – Apostles of Human Curiosity! |journal=ANC Today|publisher=]|volume=5|issue=42|date=21 October 2005|last=Mbeki |first=Thabo |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080622112823/http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/anctoday/2005/at42.htm |archive-date= 22 June 2008| access-date=26 June 2011|oclc=212406525}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.anc.org.za/show.php?id=43 |work=ANC Today |publisher=] |title=Free Mandela: An Account of the Campaign to Free Nelson Mandela and All Other Political Prisoners in South Africa |first=E.S. |last=Reddy |date=July 1988 |access-date=26 June 2011 |oclc=212406525 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111015215838/http://www.anc.org.za/show.php?id=43 |archive-date= 15 October 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=politics>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 286–305 (chap. 15: "Public Affairs"), 400–03, and 433–41; and Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 171–209 (chap. 8: "Cultural Politics", espec. "Pinter and Politics").</ref> In "A Play and Its Politics", a 1985 interview with Nicholas Hern, Pinter described his earlier plays retrospectively from the perspective of the politics of power and the dynamics of oppression.<ref name=MerrittPandP>Merritt, "Pinter and Politics," ''Pinter in Play'' 171–89.</ref>


In his last 25 years, Pinter increasingly focused his essays, interviews and public appearances directly on political issues. He was an officer in ], travelling with American playwright ] to ] in 1985 on a mission co-sponsored with a ] committee to investigate and protest against the torture of imprisoned writers. There he met victims of political oppression and their families. Pinter's experiences in Turkey and his knowledge of the Turkish suppression of the ] inspired his 1988 play ''].''<ref name=BillingtonGussow>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 309–10; and Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 67–68.</ref> He was also an active member of the ], an organisation that "campaigns in the UK against the US blockade of ]".<ref name=CubaSolidarityCampaign>{{cite web|url=http://www.cuba-solidarity.org/aims.asp |title=Cuba Solidarity Campaign – Our Aims |work=cuba-solidarity.org |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718215408/http://www.cuba-solidarity.org/aims.asp |archive-date= 18 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2001, Pinter joined the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milošević (ICDSM), which appealed for a fair trial and for the freedom of ], signing a related "Artists' Appeal for Milošević" in 2004.<ref name=timesobit>{{cite news|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article5398006.ece |title=Harold Pinter: An impassioned artist who lost direction on the political stage |first=Oliver |last=Kamm |work=] |date=26 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0140-0460 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=http://wayback.vefsafn.is/wayback/20100417023241/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article5398006.ece |archive-date= 17 April 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
===The Nobel Prize in Literature 2005===
On ],] the ] announced that the ] for 2005 was being awarded to '''Harold Pinter''', '''"who in his plays uncovers the precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into oppression's closed rooms"'''.<ref>Press release .</ref>


Pinter strongly opposed the 1991 ], the 1999 ] bombing campaign in ] during the ], the United States' 2001 ], and the ]. Among his provocative political statements, Pinter called Prime Minister ] a "deluded idiot" and compared the administration of President ] to ].<ref name=timesobit/><ref name=ChrisafisandTilden>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2003/jun/11/books.arts |title=Pinter blasts 'Nazi America' and 'deluded idiot' Blair |first1=Angelique |last1=Chrisafis |first2=Imogen |last2=Tilden |work=] |date=11 June 2003 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110517075730/http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2003/jun/11/books.arts |archive-date= 17 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He stated that the United States "was charging towards world domination while the American public and Britain's ']ing' prime minister sat back and watched."<ref name=ChrisafisandTilden /> He was very active in the ] in the United Kingdom, speaking at rallies held by the ]<ref name=Turinspeech>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3585148/The-American-administration-is-a-bloodthirsty-wild-animal.html |title=The American administration is a bloodthirsty wild animal |first=Harold |last=Pinter |work=] |date=11 December 2002 |location=London |issn=0307-1235 |oclc=49632006 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629120116/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3585148/The-American-administration-is-a-bloodthirsty-wild-animal.html |archive-date= 29 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and frequently criticising American aggression, as when he asked rhetorically, in his acceptance speech for the ] Award for Poetry on 18 March 2007: "What would Wilfred Owen make of the ]? A bandit act, an act of blatant ], demonstrating absolute contempt for the conception of ]."<ref>Pinter, ''Various Voices'' 267.</ref><ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 428.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://articles.cnn.com/2006-03-16/entertainment/pinter.europe_1_theater-harold-pinter-prize-ceremony |title=Harold Pinter: Theater's angry old man |first=Porter |last=Anderson |work=CNN |publisher=Turner Broadcasting System |date=17 March 2006 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111016132831/http://articles.cnn.com/2006-03-16/entertainment/pinter.europe_1_theater-harold-pinter-prize-ceremony?_s=PM:SHOWBIZ |archive-date=16 October 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Due to concerns about his ], Pinter and his family could not attend the ] Awards Ceremony and related events of Nobel Week in ] and elsewhere in ], although he had originally planned to travel to ] to present his lecture. After his doctor barred such travel when Pinter was hospitalized for a rare mouth infection, Pinter went from hospital to a ] studio to videotape his Nobel Lecture: ''Art, Truth & Politics'', which was shown on three large screens at the ] on ], ]. The video was simultaneously broadcast, introduced by friend and fellow playwright ], that evening on ] in the ] as well. Subsequently, the full text and streaming video formats were posted for the public on the Nobel Prize and Swedish Academy official websites.<ref>These formats of have been widely cited, quoted, and distributed by print and online media and the source of much commentary and debate. For selected commentary, see ]</ref>


Pinter earned a reputation for being pugnacious, enigmatic, taciturn, terse, prickly, explosive and forbidding.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Harold Pinter's poetry: The known and the unknown |newspaper=] |location=London |publisher=] |date=20 August 2011 |volume=400 |issue=8747}}</ref> Pinter's blunt political statements, and the award of the Nobel Prize in Literature, elicited strong criticism and even, at times, provoked ridicule and personal attacks.<ref name="HariPryce-Jones">See, e.g., {{cite web|url=http://www.johannhari.com/2005/12/05/harold-pinter-does-not-deserve-the-nobel-prize |title=Harold Pinter does not deserve the Nobel Prize : Johann Hari |first=Johann |last=Hari |work=johannhari.com |date=5 December 2005 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu9LmhTL?url=http://www.johannhari.com/2005/12/05/harold-pinter-does-not-deserve-the-nobel-prize |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}; {{cite news|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB112950379731670200#articleTabs%3Darticle |title=The Sinister Mediocrity of Harold Pinter - WSJ.com |first=Christopher |last=Hitchens |work=] |url-access=subscription |date=17 October 2005 |publisher=] |location=New York City |issn=0099-9660 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu9P9hXJ?url=http://online.wsj.com/article/SB112950379731670200.html |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}; and
==='''Art, Truth, & Politics: The Nobel Lecture'''===
{{cite web|url=http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/215795/harold-pinters-special-triteness/david-pryce-jones |title=Harold Pinter's Special Triteness |first=David |last=Pryce-Jones |work=National Review Online |url-access=subscription |date=28 October 2005 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5zu9UAqOB?url=http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/215795/harold-pinters-special-triteness/david-pryce-jones |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The historian ], author of the official history of Hackney Downs School, expressed his own "Jewish View" of Harold Pinter: "Whatever his merit as a writer, actor and director, on an ethical plane Harold Pinter seems to me to have been intensely flawed, and his moral compass deeply fractured."<ref name=Alderman>{{cite web |url=http://www.currentviewpoint.com/cgibin/news.cgi?id=11&command=shownews&newsid=1075 |title=Harold Pinter – A Jewish View |first=Geoffrey |last=Alderman |work=currentviewpoint.com |year=2011 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708213833/http://www.currentviewpoint.com/cgibin/news.cgi?id=11&command=shownews&newsid=1075 |archive-date=8 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ], writing in '']'', defended Pinter against what he termed Pinter's "being berated by the belligerati" like ], who felt that he did not "deserve" to win the Nobel Prize.<ref name=Edgard>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2008/dec/29/harold-pinter-politics |title=Pinter's early politics |first=David |last=Edgar |work=] |date=29 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=26 June 2011 |quote=The idea that he was a dissenting figure only in later life ignores the politics of his early work. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121110122749/http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/dec/29/harold-pinter-politics |archive-date= 10 November 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=PinterColossal>See also the comments of ] and others, excerpted in "A Colossal Figure", which accompanies a reprinting of Pinter's essay {{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/pinter-torture-and-misery-in-name-of-freedom-510906.html |title=Pinter: Torture and misery in name of freedom – World Politics, World – The Independent |first=Harold |last=Pinter |work=] |date=14 October 2005 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0951-9467 |oclc=185201487 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100216021411/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/pinter-torture-and-misery-in-name-of-freedom-510906.html |archive-date= 16 February 2010 |url-status=dead }}, adapted from Pinter's "Acceptance Speech" for the 2005 ] Award for Poetry published in Pinter, ''Various Voices'' 267–68.</ref> Later Pinter continued to campaign against the Iraq War and on behalf of other political causes that he supported.
In his ] Nobel Lecture ''Art, Truth & Politics,'' speaking with obvious difficulty while seated in a wheelchair, Harold Pinter distinguishes between the search for ] in ] and the avoidance of truth in ].<ref>"Art, Truth, & Politics:</ref> He asserts:<blockquote>Political language, as used by politicians, does not venture into any of this territory since the majority of politicians, on the evidence available to us, are interested not in truth but in power and in the maintenance of that power. To maintain that power it is essential that people remain in ignorance, that they live in ignorance of the truth, even the truth of their own lives. What surrounds us therefore is a vast tapestry of lies, upon which we feed.</blockquote> <blockquote>As every single person here knows, the justification for the invasion of Iraq was that Saddam Hussein possessed a highly dangerous body of weapons of mass destruction, some of which could be fired in 45 minutes, bringing about appalling devastation. We were assured that was true. It was not true. We were told that Iraq had a relationship with Al-Qaeda and shared responsibility for the atrocity in New York of September 11th 2001. We were assured that this was true. It was not true. We were told that Iraq threatened the security of the world. We were assured it was true. It was not true.</blockquote> <blockquote>The truth is something entirely different. The truth is to do with how the United States understands its role in the world and how it chooses to embody it.</blockquote> Charging the ] with having "supported and in many cases engendered every ] military dictatorship in the world after the end of the ]," leading to "hundreds of thousands of deaths," Pinter asks: "Did they take place? And are they in all cases attributable to US foreign policy?" Then he answers his own question: "The answer is yes they did take place and they are attributable to American foreign policy. But you wouldn't know it."


Pinter signed the mission statement of ] in 2005 and its full-page advertisement, "What Is Israel Doing? A Call by Jews in Britain", published in '']'' on 6 July 2006,<ref name=Alderman/> and he was a patron of the ]. In April 2008, Pinter signed the statement "We're not celebrating Israel's anniversary". The statement noted: "We cannot celebrate the birthday of a state founded on terrorism, massacres and the dispossession of another people from their land.", "We will celebrate when Arab and Jew live as equals in a peaceful Middle East"<ref>{{cite web |title=Letters: We're not celebrating Israel's anniversary |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/apr/30/israelandthepalestinians |website=The Guardian |date=30 April 2008}}</ref>
Revisiting arguments from his political essays and speeches of the past decade (]), Pinter reiterates:<blockquote>It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn't happening. It didn't matter. It was of no interest. The crimes of the United States have been systematic, constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few people have actually talked about them. You have to hand it to America. It has exercised a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force for universal good. It's a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis.</blockquote><blockquote>I put to you that the United States is without doubt the greatest show on the road. Brutal, indifferent, scornful and ruthless it may be but it is also very clever. As a salesman it is out on its own and its most saleable commodity is self love. It's a winner. Listen to all American presidents on television say the words, "the American people," as in the sentence, "I say to the American people it is time to pray and to defend the rights of the American people and I ask the American people to trust their president in the action he is about to take on behalf of the American people."</blockquote>In imagery recalling his description of "speech" as "a constant stratagem to cover nakedness,"<ref>In his 1962 speech to the ] in ], in an often-quoted passage, Pinter observes:<blockquote>There are two silences. One when no word is spoken. The other when perhaps a torrent of language is being employed. This speech is speaking of a language locked beneath it. That is its continual reference. The speech we hear is an indication of that which we don't hear. It is a necessary avoidance, a violent, sly, anguished or mocking smoke screen which keeps the other in its place. When true silence falls we are still left with echo but are nearer nakedness. One way of looking at speech is to say that it is a constant stratagem to cover nakedness. ("Writing for the Theatre," rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 24-25)</blockquote></ref> Pinter adds:<blockquote>It's a scintillating stratagem. Language is actually employed to keep thought at bay. The words "the American people" provide a truly voluptuous cushion of reassurance. You don't need to think. Just lie back on the cushion. The cushion may be suffocating your intelligence and your critical faculties but it's very comfortable. This does not apply of course to the 40 million people living below the poverty line and the 2 million men and women imprisoned in the vast gulag of prisons, which extends across the US.</blockquote>Toward the end of the lecture, after reading two poems referring to "blood in the streets," "deaths," "dead bodies," and "death" by fellow Nobel Laureate ] and himself, in a whimsically-humble gesture, Pinter offers to "volunteer" for the "job" of "speech writer" for President ], penning a ruthless message of fierce ] masquerading as ] struggle between ] versus ] yet finally proferring the "]" of his (Bush's) "fist". (The June 23, 2006 ] program featuring Wark's interview of Pinter presents a video clip of his subsequent reading of "Bush's speech" before a later audience in London.) Pinter demands prosecution of ] in the ], while pointing out, with irony, that he would do the same for ] if Bush had not so shrewedly refused to "ratify" that Court. Pinter concludes his Nobel Lecture with a call for "unflinching, unswerving, fierce intellectual determination, as citizens, to define the real truth of our lives and our societies" as "a crucial obligation which devolves upon us all," one which he regards as "in fact mandatory," for, he warns, "If such a determination is not embodied in our political vision we have no hope of restoring what is so nearly lost to us — the dignity of man."<ref>Online posting of the full text of .</ref>


==Miscellaneous== ==Career==
{{Further|Works of Harold Pinter|Characteristics of Harold Pinter's work}}
*Pinter is the chairman of the Gaieties Cricket Club and has called ] one of his three great "loves." The other "two" are "love" (of women) and "writing" (Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 28-29). "Running" (as a teenage sprinter ) and "reading" are two other pleasures that he mentions at times in interviews.)
]


===As actor===
*Pinter is an Honorary Associate of the ].
Pinter's acting career spanned over 50 years and, although he often played ]s, included a wide range of roles on stage and in radio, film, and television.<ref name=BattyAct/><ref name=BFIFilmTVCredits>{{cite web|url=http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/453152/credits.html |title=Pinter, Harold (1930–2008) Credits |work=BFI Screenonline |year=2011 |publisher=] |access-date=3 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040705202826/http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/453152/credits.html |archive-date= 5 July 2004 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In addition to roles in radio and television adaptations of his own plays and dramatic sketches, early in his screenwriting career he made several cameo appearances in films based on his own screenplays; for example, as a society man in '']'' (1963) and as Mr. Bell in '']'' (1967), both directed by ]; and as a bookshop customer in his later film '']'' (1985), starring ], ], and ].<ref name=BattyAct/>


Pinter's notable film and television roles included the lawyer Saul Abrahams opposite ] in '']'', ]'s 1976 adaptation of ]'s 1939 novel, and a drunk Irish journalist in '']'' (starring ] and ]) distributed on ] in 1978<ref name=BFIFilmTVCredits/> and released in movie theatres in 2002.<ref name=HPFLC>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/home/lincolnfestival.shtml |title=The Lincoln Center Festival |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2001 |access-date=3 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613213945/http://www.haroldpinter.org/home/lincolnfestival.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Pinter's later film roles included the criminal Sam Ross in ''Mojo'' (1997), written and directed by ], based on Butterworth's ]; Sir Thomas Bertram (his most substantial feature-film role) in '']'' (1998), a character that Pinter described as "a very civilised man&nbsp;... a man of great sensibility but in fact, he's upholding and sustaining a totally brutal system from which he derives his money"; and Uncle Benny, opposite ] and ], in '']'' (2001).<ref name=BattyAct/> In ], he played Mr. Bearing, the father of ] patient Vivian Bearing, played by ] in ]'s ] film of the ]-winning play '']'' (2001); and the Director opposite ] (Gielgud's last role) and ] in '']'', by ], directed by ] as part of ''Beckett on Film'' (2001).<ref name=BattyAct/><ref name=BFIFilmTVCredits/>
*On ],], the day his Nobel Prize was announced, the ] reader saw his name and ]. It was widely known that he had been battling ] since 2002 and that he had fallen and injured his head in Dublin, upon returning from the ] festival celebrating his 75th birthday that previous weekend; that knowledge may have led to her mistaken assumption. When interviewed about his reaction to the Nobel Prize announcement by Billington, Pinter joked: "I was told today that one of the Sky channels said this morning that 'Harold Pinter is dead'. Then they changed their mind and said, 'No, he's won the Nobel prize.' So I've risen from the dead."<ref></ref>


===As director===
*Harold Pinter's drama has spawned the adjective '']'', placing him in the company of authors considered unique or influential enough to elicit ] adjectives, such as ] ('']''), ] ('']''), ] ('']''), ] ('']''), ] ('']''), and ] ('']''). Pinter has occasionally objected to the use of '']'', and he did so again when ] asked him about it, replying that he has no idea what '']'' specifies.<ref>"Harold Pinter on Newsnight Review" </ref> The Online '']'' (OED) entry for '']'' is: "Of or relating to '''Harold Pinter'''; resembling or characteristic of his plays. . . . Pinter's plays are typically characterized by implications of threat and strong feeling produced through colloquial language, apparent triviality, and long pauses."
Pinter began to direct more frequently during the 1970s, becoming an associate director of the ] (NT) in 1973.<ref name=HPNT>{{cite web|url=http://nationaltheatre.org.uk/download.php?id=4019 |title=Harold Pinter, Director and Playwright at the National Theatre |format=MSWord |publisher=] |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110529045912/http://www.nationaltheatre.org.uk/download.php?id=4019 |archive-date= 29 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He directed almost 50 productions of his own and others' plays for stage, film, and television, including 10 productions of works by ]: the stage and/or film premières of '']'' (stage, 1971; film, 1974), '']'' (1975), ''The Rear Column'' (stage, 1978; TV, 1980), ''Close of Play'' (NT, 1979), '']'' (1981), ''Life Support'' (1997), ''The Late Middle Classes'' (1999), and ''The Old Masters'' (2004).<ref name=Telegraphobit/> Several of those productions starred ] (1934–2003), who originated the stage and screen roles of not only Butley but also Mick in Pinter's first major commercial success, '']'' (stage, 1960; film, 1964); and in Pinter's double-bill produced at the ] in 1984, he played Nicolas in '']'' and the cab driver in '']''.<ref>{{cite journal |url= http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/277/49/155675618w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS269061759&dyn=3!xrn_21_0_CS269061759&hst_1?sw_aep=uwesteng |title=Critics' Choice |last=Staff|journal=] |publisher=Times Digital Archive |date=31 March 1984 |page=16 |issue=61794 |url-access=subscription |access-date=27 June 2011}}</ref> Among over 35 plays that Pinter directed were ''Next of Kin'' (1974), by ]; '']'' (1976), by ]; '']'' (1976), by ]; ''Circe and Bravo'' (1986), by ]; '']'' (1995), by ]; and '']'' (1996), by ].<ref name=HPNT/><ref name=BattyDir>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/directing/index.shtml |title=Stage, film and TV productions directed by Harold Pinter |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2011 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613201759/http://www.haroldpinter.org/directing/index.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


===As playwright===
*Once asked what his plays are about, Pinter lobbed back a phrase "the weasel under the cocktail cabinet," which he regrets has been taken seriously and applied in popular criticism. Like one of the "two silences" that he defined in his 1962 speech to the ] in ],<ref>"I am not suggesting that no character in a play can never say what he in fact means. Not at all. I have found that there invariably does come a moment when this happens, when he says something, perhaps, which he has never said before. And where this happens, what he says is irrevocable, and can never be taken back" (rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 25).</ref> such a time when "too many words are spoken" may be "irrevocable"; it cannot be "taken back".<blockquote>Once many years ago, I found myself engaged uneasily in a public discussion on theatre. Someone asked me what was my work "about." I replied with no thought at all and merely to frustrate this line of enquiry: "the weasel under the cocktail cabinet." This was a great mistake. Over the years I have seen that remark quoted in a number of learned columns. It has now seemingly acquired a profound significance, and is seen to be a highly relevant and meaningful observation about my own work. But for me the remark meant precisely nothing.<ref>Harold Pinter, "On Being Awarded the German Shakespeare Prize in Hamburg" (1970), rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 39.</ref></blockquote>
Pinter was the author of 29 plays and 15 dramatic sketches and the co-author of two works for stage and radio.<ref name=Plays>{{cite web|editor1=Evans, Daisy |editor2=Herdman, Katie |editor3=Lankester, Laura |url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/index.shtml |title=Plays |work=haroldpinter.org |access-date=9 May 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613203248/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/index.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He was considered to have been one of the most influential modern British dramatists,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturenews/3949591/Harold-Pinter-one-of-the-most-influential-British-playwrights-of-modern-times.html |title=Harold Pinter: one of the most influential British playwrights of modern times |last=Staff |work=] |date=25 December 2008 |location=London |issn=0307-1235 |oclc=49632006 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110518121424/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturenews/3949591/Harold-Pinter-one-of-the-most-influential-British-playwrights-of-modern-times.html |archive-date= 18 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=NYTobit>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/26/theater/26pinter.html |title=Harold Pinter, Playwright of the Anxious Pause, Dies at 78 |first1=Mel |last1=Gussow |first2=Ben |last2=Brantley |work=] |date=25 December 2008 |location=New York City |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121103184959/http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/26/theater/26pinter.html |archive-date= 3 November 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Along with the 1967 ] for ''The Homecoming'' and several other American awards and award nominations, he and his plays received many awards in the UK and elsewhere throughout the world.<ref>Gordon, "Chronology", ''Pinter at 70'' xliii–lxv; Batty, "Chronology", ''About Pinter'' xiii–xvi.</ref> His style has entered the English language as an adjective, "]", although Pinter himself disliked the term and found it meaningless.<ref name=Wark>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolavconsole/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_4780000/newsid_4785400 |title=Harold Pinter on Newsnight Review with Kirsty Wark |work=] |publisher=BBC |access-date=26 June 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121112034520/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/5110060.stm |archive-date= 12 November 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


===="Comedies of menace" (1957–1968)====
*A witty homage to Pinter's play '']'' occurs in an episode of '']'' entitled "]" Structured in reverse somewhat like the play, the episode features a character named "Pinter." Coincidentally, Pinter's play features a character named "Jerry," the first name of co-creator ] and the main character of '']'' based on himself.


Pinter's first play, '']'', written and first performed in 1957, was a student production at the ], directed by his good friend, actor ], who also originated the role of Mr. Kidd (which he reprised in 2001 and 2007).<ref name=Plays/> After Pinter mentioned that he had an idea for a play, Woolf asked him to write it so that he could direct it to fulfill a requirement for his postgraduate work. Pinter wrote it in three days.<ref name=MerrittWoolf>Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" 147.</ref> The production was described by Billington as "a staggeringly confident debut which attracted the attention of a young producer, ], who decided to present Pinter's next play, '']'', at the ], in 1958."<ref name=Billobit>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2008/dec/25/pinter-theatre |title=The most provocative, poetic and influential playwright of his generation |first=Michael |last=Billington |work=] |date=25 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110227094739/http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2008/dec/25/pinter-theatre |archive-date= 27 February 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
*The fourth episode of the second season of '']'', "Tamara's Return" (28 Oct. 1998), alludes to Pinter in dialogue between lead character Pacey Witter (played by ]) and Tamara Jacobs (]), his former English teacher with whom Pacey has had an affair. Tamara tells Pacey that an awkward moment of silence between them is "what we ex-English teachers call a classic 'Pinter' moment, where everything is said in silence because the emotion behind what we really want to say is just too overwhelming. . . . ilence is an acquired taste. The more complicated life becomes the better it is to learn to say nothing." When Pacey inquires "Who is this Pinter guy?" Tamara urges him, "Stay in school." Later Pacey tells Tamara that he has "looked up this Pinter guy. Harold, playwright, the king of subtext. You say one thing, but you mean another," wondering further: "Do you think it's possible for us to have a moment without all the subtext?" "Uh, I don't know, Pacey," Tamara replies. "Words have always gotten us into so much trouble." Pacey and Tamara finally agree that "This Pinter guy was really onto something." Ironically, one of those words which has "gotten" Pinter critics "into so much trouble" is that very word ''subtext''.<ref>"Some Other Language Games," chap. 7 in Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 137-70.</ref>


Written in 1957 and produced in 1958, Pinter's second play, ''The Birthday Party'', one of his best-known works, was initially both a commercial and critical disaster, despite an enthusiastic review in '']'' by its influential drama critic ],<ref>{{cite news|last=Hobson|first=Harold|title=The Screw Turns Again|newspaper=The Sunday Times|date=25 May 1958|location=London}}</ref> which appeared only after the production had closed and could not be reprieved.<ref name=Billobit/><ref>Hobson, "The Screw Turns Again"; cited by Merritt in "Sir Harold Hobson: The Promptings of Personal Experience", ''Pinter in Play'' 221–25; rpt. in {{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_bdayparty.shtml |title=The Birthday Party – Premiere |first=Harold |last=Hobson |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2011 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709085019/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_bdayparty.shtml |archive-date= 9 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Critical accounts often quote Hobson:
==Works==
===Stage and television plays===
*'']'' (1957)
*'']'' (1957)
*'']'' (1957)
*'']'' (1958)
*'']'' (1958)
*'']'' (1959)
*'']'' (1959)
*'']'' (1960)
*'']'' (1960)
*'']'' (1961)
*'']'' (1962)
*'']'' (1964)
*'']'' (1964)
*'']'' (1966)
*'']'' (1967)
*'']'' (1968)
*'']'' (1970)
*'']'' (1972)
*'']'' (1974)
*'']'' (1978)
*'']'' (1980)
*'']'' (1982)
*'']'' (1982)
*'']'' (1984)
*'']'' (1988)
*'']'' (1991)
*'']'' (1993)
*'']'' (1996)
*'']'' (1999)
*'']'' (2000) ]''; a collaboration with ]]


{{blockquote|I am well aware that Mr Pinters play received extremely bad notices last Tuesday morning. At the moment I write these it is uncertain even whether the play will still be in the bill by the time they appear, though it is probable it will soon be seen elsewhere. Deliberately, I am willing to risk whatever reputation I have as a judge of plays by saying that ''The Birthday Party'' is not a Fourth, not even a Second, but a First ; and that Pinter, on the evidence of his work, possesses the most original, disturbing and arresting talent in theatrical London&nbsp;... Mr Pinter and ''The Birthday Party'', despite their experiences last week, will be heard of again. Make a note of their names.}}
===Dramatic sketches===
*"The Black and White" (1959)
*"Trouble in the Works" (1959)
*"Last to Go" (1959)
*"Request Stop" (1959)
*"Special Offer" (1959)
*"That's Your Trouble" (1959)
*"That's All" (1959)
*"Interview" (1959)
*"Applicant" (1959)
*"Dialogue for Three" (1959)
*"Night" (1969)
*"Precisely" (1983)
*"The New World Order" (1991)<ref>''HaroldPinter.org'' lists this work as a "play," but it is actually a 4-page dramatic sketch; it lasts approximately eight to ten minutes in production. It was first produced as a "curtain raiser" for '']'' by ] at the ] Upstairs in London, in July 1991; the featured on ''HaroldPinter.org'' identifies it a "sketch." "The New World Order" is also identified as a "sketch" in a review of the Royal Court première by Mel Gussow, Online posting. ''New York Times'' 31 July 1991. Recent productions and publications do refer to it, however, more generically, as a "play," perhaps following the website's "Plays" section. </ref>
*"Press Conference" (2002)
*"Apart from That" (first public reading 2006)


Pinter himself and later critics generally credited Hobson as bolstering him and perhaps even rescuing his career.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 85; Gussow, ''Conversations with Pinter'' 141.</ref>
===Radio plays===
*'']'' (2005) (collaboration with composer ])


In a review published in 1958, borrowing from the subtitle of ''The Lunatic View: A Comedy of Menace'', a play by ], critic ] called Pinter's early plays "]"—a label that people have applied repeatedly to his work.<ref name=Merritt3>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 5, 9, 225–26, and 310.</ref> Such plays begin with an apparently innocent situation that becomes both threatening and "]" as Pinter's characters behave in ways often perceived as inexplicable by his audiences and one another. Pinter acknowledges the influence of ], particularly on his early work; they became friends, sending each other drafts of their works in progress for comments.<ref name = Wark /><ref name=BillingtonWark>See Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 64, 65, 84, 197, 251 and 354</ref>
===Screenplays for films===
*'']'' (1963)
*'']'' (1963)
*'']'' (1963)
*'']'' (1963) ]]
*'']'' (1965)
*'']'' (1966)
*'']'' (1967)
*'']'' (1969)
*'']'' (1969)
*'']'' (1970; adapt. for TV 1978; film release 2002]
*'']'' (1972)
*'']'' (1974)
*'']'' (1980)
*'']'' (1981)
*'']'' (1982)
*'']'' (1984)
*'']'' (1987)
*'']'' (1988)
*'']'' (1988)
*'']'' (1989)
*'']'' (1992) (Rev. & adapt. for TV)
*'']'' (1989)
*'']'' (1994) ]]
*'']'' (1997)
*'']'' (2000)


Pinter wrote '']'' in 1958, which he shelved for over 20 years (See "Overtly political plays and sketches" below). Next he wrote '']'' (1959), which premièred in Germany and was then produced in a ] with ''The Room'' at the ], in London, in 1960.<ref name="Plays"/> It was then not produced often until the 1980s, and it has been revived more frequently since 2000, including the ] ] production in 2007. The first production of '']'', at the ], in London, in 1960, established Pinter's theatrical reputation.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://roundabouttheatre.org/fc/fall03/jones.htm |title=Roundabout Theatre Company – |first=David |last=Jones |work=Front & Center Online |publisher=Roundabout Theatre Company |date=Fall 2003 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727223238/http://roundabouttheatre.org/fc/fall03/jones.htm |archive-date= 27 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The play transferred to the ] in May 1960 and ran for 444 performances,<ref name=sheffcare>{{cite web|title=Background to The Caretaker|url=http://www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk/creativedevelopmentprogramme/productions/thecaretaker/background.shtml|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090514101843/http://www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk/creativedevelopmentprogramme/productions/thecaretaker/background.shtml|archive-date=14 May 2009|work=Sheffield Theatres education resource|publisher=Sheffield Theatres|access-date=11 July 2011}}</ref> receiving an ] for best play of 1960.<ref>{{cite web|last=Shama|first=Sunita|title=Pinter awards saved for the nation|url=http://www.mla.gov.uk/news_and_views/press_releases/2010/Pinter_awards|work=British Library Press Release|publisher=Museums Arts and Libraries|access-date=11 July 2011|date=20 October 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727121002/http://www.mla.gov.uk/news_and_views/press_releases/2010/Pinter_awards|archive-date=27 July 2011}}</ref> Large radio and television audiences for his one-act play '']'', along with the popularity of his revue sketches, propelled him to further critical attention.<ref>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 18.</ref> In 1964, ''The Birthday Party'' was revived both on television (with Pinter himself in the role of Goldberg) and on stage (directed by Pinter at the ]) and was well received.<ref>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 18, 219–20.</ref>
===Prose fiction===
*"Kullus" (1949)
*''The Dwarfs'' (written from 1952-1956; rev. and published 1990) (Novel)
*"Latest Reports from the Stock Exchange" (1953)
*"The Black and White" (1954-55)
*"The Examination" (1955)
*"Tea Party" (1963)
*"The Coast" (1975)
*"Problem" (1976)
*"Lola" (1977)
*"Short Story" (1995)
*"Girls" (1995)
*"God's District" (1997)
*"Sorry About This" (1999)
*"Tess" (2000)
*"Voices in the Tunnel" (2001)


By the time Peter Hall's London production of ''The Homecoming'' (1964) reached ] in 1967, Pinter had become a celebrity playwright, and the play garnered four ]s, among other awards.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tonyawards.com/p/tonys_search?start=0&year=&award=&lname=&fname=&show=%3Ci%3EThe+Homecoming%3C%2Fi%3E |title=The Homecoming – 1967 |work=tonyawards.com |publisher=Tony Award Productions |year=2011 |access-date=3 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181201140353/https://www.tonyawards.com/p/tonys_search?start=0&year=&award=&lname=&fname=&show=%3Ci%3EThe+Homecoming%3C%2Fi%3E |archive-date=1 December 2018 |url-status=dead }}</ref> During this period, Pinter also wrote the radio play '']'', first broadcast on the ] in 1959 and then adapted to the stage and performed at the ] in 1961. ''A Night Out'' (1960) was broadcast to a large audience on ]'s television show '']'', after being transmitted on BBC Radio 3, also in 1960. His play '']'' was first televised in 1960 on ]. '']'' premièred at the ] in 1962, and ''The Dwarfs'', adapted from Pinter's then unpublished novel of the same title, was first broadcast on radio in 1960, then adapted for the stage (also at the Arts Theatre Club) in a double bill with '']'', which had previously been televised by Associated Rediffusion in 1963; and '']'', a play that Pinter developed from his 1963 short story, first broadcast on ] in 1965.<ref name=Plays/>
===Collected poetry===
*''Poems'' (1971)
*''I Know the Place'' (1977)
*''Poems and Prose 1949-1977'' (1978)
*''Ten Early Poems'' (1990)
*''Collected Poems and Prose'' (1995)
*''"The Disappeared" and Other Poems'' (2002)
*''War'' (2003)


Working as both a screenwriter and as a playwright, Pinter composed a script called '']'' (1966), for a trilogy of films to be contributed by ], ], and Pinter, of which only Beckett's film, titled '']'', was actually produced. Then Pinter turned his unfilmed script into a television play, which was produced as '']'', both on ] and also on stage in 1968.<ref name=BRChronology>Baker and Ross, "Chronology" xxiii–xl.</ref>
===Anthologies and other collections===
*''99 Poems in Translation: An Anthology Selected by Harold Pinter, Anthony Astbury, & Geoffrey Godbert'' (1994)
*''100 Poems by 100 Poets: An Anthology Selected by Harold Pinter, Anthony Astbury, & Geoffrey Godbert'' (1987; rpt. 1992)
*''101 Poems Against War'' (2003). Eds. Matthew Hollis & Paul Kegan. Afterword ]. (Incl. "American Football," by Harold Pinter .)
*''The Essential Pinter'' (Grove Press, forthcoming Aug. 2006)
*''Poems by Harold Pinter Chosen by Antonia Fraser''. (Greville Press Pamphlets, 2002)
*''Various Voices: Prose, Poetry, Politics 1948-2005'' (1998; rev. 2005)
*''Death etc.'' (2005)


===="Memory plays" (1968–1982)====
==Notes==
<div class="references-small">
<references />
</div>


From the late 1960s through the early 1980s, Pinter wrote a series of plays and sketches that explore complex ambiguities, elegiac mysteries, comic vagaries, and other "quicksand-like" characteristics of ] and which critics sometimes classify as Pinter's "]s".<ref name=BillingtonETP>Billington, Introduction, "Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics", ''Europe Theatre Prize–X Edition'', ], 10–12 March 2006. Retrieved 29 January 2011. ] Billington, chap. 29: "Memory Man" and "Afterword: Let's Keep Fighting", ''Harold Pinter'' 388–430.</ref> These include '']'' (1968), '']'' (1969), '']'' (1969), '']'' (1971), '']'' (1975), ''The Proust Screenplay'' (1977), '']'' (1978), '']'' (1981), '']'' (1982), and '']'' (1982). Some of Pinter's later plays, including ''Party Time'' (1991), '']'' (1993), '']'' (1996), and '']'' (2000), draw upon some features of his "memory" ] in their focus on the past in the present, but they have personal and political resonances and other tonal differences from these earlier memory plays.<ref name=BillingtonETP/><ref name=MemoryPlays>See Batty, ''About Pinter''; Grimes; and Baker (all ''passim'').</ref>
==References==
*Batty, Mark. ''About Pinter: The Playwright and The Work''. London: Faber and Faber, 2005. ISBN 0-571-22005-3. .
*Bensky, Lawrence M. . Online posting. '']'' 39 (Fall 1966). 30 June 2006.
*Billington, Michael. ''The Life and Work of Harold Pinter''. 1996; rpt. London: Faber and Faber, 1997. ISBN 0-571-17103-6. .
*. Broadcast on Radio National ] 15 Sept. 2002. Online posting of transcript of interview conducted at Edinburgh Book Festival, Aug. 2002.
*Gussow, Mel. ''Conversations with Pinter.'' London: Nick Hern Books, 1994. ISBN 1-85459-201-7. Rpt. New York: Limelight, 2004. ISBN 0-87910-179-2. .
* Online posting. '']'' 13 Oct. 2005. 8 July 2006.
**Billington, Michael. Online posting. '']'' 14 Oct. 2005.
**]. "Commentary: The Sinister Mediocrity of Harold Pinter." '']'' 17 Oct. 2005: A18.
***. Online posting of "Commentary" by Hitchens. '']'' 18 Oct. 2005. 4 July 2006.
**Howard, Jennifer. Online posting. '']'' 13 Oct. 2006. 8 July 2006.
**Pilger, John. Online posting. '']'' 16 Oct. 2005. 5 July 2006.
**Traub, James. Online posting. ''] Mag.'' 30 Oct. 2005. 2 July 2006.
*Merritt, Susan Hollis. ''Pinter in Play: Critical Strategies and the Plays of Harold Pinter''. 1990; Durham and London: Duke UP, 1995. ISBN 0-8223-1674-9. .
*---. "Talking about Pinter." (On the Lincoln Center 2001: Harold Pinter Festival Symposia.) ''The Pinter Review: Collected Essays 2001 and 2002''. Eds. Francis Gillen and Steven H. Gale. Tampa U of Tampa P, 2002. 144-67.
*---, comp. ''The Pinter Review'' 1987- .
*Moss, Stephen. Online posting. ''] Unlimited'' 4 Sept. 1999. 7 July 2006.
* Interview with ] on '']'' (]). Online posting. '']'' 28 Feb. 2005. 2 July 2006.
*Pinter, Harold. . Online posting. 7 Dec. 2005. (RealPlayer streaming audio and video as well as text available). London: Faber and Faber, 2006. ISBN 0-571-23396-1. . Rpt. in '''' (London: Stop the War Coalition, 2006); forthcoming in ''The Essential Pinter''.
**Billington, Michael. : Shades of Beckett As Ailing Playwright Delivers Powerful Nobel Lecture."] Online posting. '']''. 8 Dec. 2005.
**Bond, Paul. Online posting. '']'' 29 Dec. 2005.
** Online posting. ] 7 Dec. 2005.
**Riddell, Mary. ]. 11 Dec. 2005. Online posting. '']'' 11 Dec. 2005. 3 July 2006.
**. Online posting. '']'' Dec. 2005. 30 June 2006.
*---. . ("Written as a tribute to ], on the occasion of his 80th birthday.") Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. 3 July 2006. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 56-57.
*---. ''Death etc.'' New York: Grove, 2005. ISBN 0-8021-4225-7. .
*---. ''The Essential Pinter: Selections from the Work of Harold Pinter.'' New York: Grove, forthcoming (Aug.) 2006. ISBN 0-8021-4269-9. .
*---. ''Various Voices: Prose, Poetry, Politics 1948-2005.'' rev. ed. 1998; London: Faber and Faber, 2005. ISBN 0-571-23009-1. .
*---. ''War.'' London: Faber and Faber, 2003. ISBN 0-571-22131-9. .
**Brown, Mark. Book review. Online posting. '']'' (Sept. 2003).
**Chrisafis, Angelique, and Imogen Tilden. Online posting. '']'' 11 June 2003.
*Riddell, Mary. Online posting. '']'' 8 Nov. 1999. 1 July 2006. (Limited access.)
*]. . Online posting. '']'' 23 June 2006. (RealPlayer streaming video accessible from 24-30 June 2006.)


====Overtly political plays and sketches (1980–2000)====
==External links==
Following a three-year period of creative drought in the early 1980s after his marriage to Antonia Fraser and the death of Vivien Merchant,<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 258.</ref> Pinter's plays tended to become shorter and more overtly political, serving as critiques of ], ], and other abuses of human rights,<ref name=MerrittPIPGrimes>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' xi–xv and 170–209; Grimes 19.</ref> linked by the apparent "invulnerability of power."<ref>Grimes 119.</ref> Just before this hiatus, in 1979, Pinter re-discovered his manuscript of '']'', which he had written in 1958 but had set aside; he revised it and then directed its first production himself at ] in London, in 1980.<ref name=HHNote>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_hothouse.shtml |title=The Hothouse – Premiere |first=Benedict |last=Nightingale |work=Originally published in the ], archived at haroldpinter.org |year=2001 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613220750/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_hothouse.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Like his plays of the 1980s, ''The Hothouse'' concerns authoritarianism and the abuses of power politics, but it is also a comedy, like his earlier ]. Pinter played the major role of Roote in a 1995 revival at the ].<ref name=MerrittGrimesHH>Merritt, "Pinter Playing Pinter" (''passim''); and Grimes 16, 36–38, 61–71.</ref>
*. Streaming video. Online posting. ''Eamelje.net'' 28 June 2006. 3 July 2006. (NB: See )
* by the ]. Online posting. ] and ] Official Websites.
* HaroldPinter.org: Official website of Harold Pinter. .
*{{ibdb name|name=Harold Pinter|id=6084}}.
*{{imdb name|name=Harold Pinter|id=0056217}}.
* Online posting. ''The Artists Network of Refuse & Resist!'' 12 Dec. 2005. 4 July 2006. (17 pages.) A selection of writings by and commentary about Pinter.
* Online posting. ''Contemporary Writers.'' Biography and critical account provided by Michael Billington for ].
* Online posting. ''Literary Encyclopedia''. Biography and critical account.
* Online posting. ''The Poetry Archive''. Biography, critical account, and streaming audio of a special recording of Pinter reading four of his poems: "Cancer Cells," "It is Here," "Later," and "Episode"; recorded 16 Dec. 2002, The Audio Workshop, London; prod. Richard Carrington.
* Online posting. ''Books and Writers''. Biography and critical account. (Featured on 2005-2006). 1 July 2006.
*. Allied organization of the ].
*


Pinter's brief dramatic sketch ''Precisely'' (1983) is a duologue between two bureaucrats exploring the absurd power politics of mutual nuclear annihilation and ]. His first overtly political one-act play is '']'' (1984). In 1985 Pinter stated that whereas his earlier plays presented metaphors for power and powerlessness, the later ones present literal realities of power and its abuse.<ref>Hern 8–9, 16–17, and 21.</ref> Pinter's "political theatre dramatizes the interplay and conflict of the opposing poles of involvement and disengagement."<ref>Hern 19.</ref> '']'' (1988) is about the Turkish suppression of the ].<ref name=BillingtonGussow/> The dramatic sketch ''The New World Order'' (1991) provides what Robert Cushman, writing in '']'' described as "10 nerve-wracking minutes" of two men threatening to torture a third man who is blindfolded, gagged and bound in a chair; Pinter directed the British première at the ], where it opened on 9 July 1991, and the production then transferred to Washington, D.C., where it was revived in 1994.<ref name=NWO>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_newworldorder.shtml |title=Ten Nerve Racking Minutes of Pinter |first=Robert |last=Cushman |work=], archived at haroldpinter.org |date=21 July 1991 |access-date=27 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110614003407/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_newworldorder.shtml |archive-date= 14 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Pinter's longer ] ''Party Time'' (1991) premièred at the ] in London, in a double-bill with ''Mountain Language''. Pinter adapted it as a screenplay for television in 1992, directing that production, first broadcast in the UK on ] on 17 November 1992.<ref name=PT>Grimes 101–28 and 139–43; {{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_partytime.shtml |title=Plays |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2011 |access-date=3 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110614004649/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_partytime.shtml |archive-date= 14 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
{{Wikiquote}}

Intertwining political and personal concerns, his next full-length plays, '']'' (1993) and '']'' (1996) are set in domestic households and focus on dying and death; in their personal conversations in ''Ashes to Ashes'', Devlin and Rebecca allude to unspecified atrocities relating to the ].<ref name=MerrittGrimesATA>Merritt, "Harold Pinter's ''Ashes to Ashes'': Political/Personal Echoes of the Holocaust" (''passim''); Grimes 195–220.</ref> After experiencing the deaths of first his mother (1992) and then his father (1997), again merging the personal and the political, Pinter wrote the poems "Death" (1997) and "The Disappeared" (1998).

Pinter's last stage play, '']'' (2000), is a social satire set in an opulent restaurant, which lampoons ], a fashionable venue in London's West End theatre district, and its patrons who "have just come from performances of either the ballet or the opera. Not that they can remember a darn thing about what they saw, including the titles. gilded, foul-mouthed souls are just as myopic when it comes to their own table mates (and for that matter, their food), with conversations that usually connect only on the surface, if there."<ref name=BrantleyLC>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/home/lincolnfestival.shtml |title=Pinter's Silences, Richly Eloquent |last=Brantley |first=Ben |author-link=Ben Brantley |work=] archived at haroldpinter.org |date=27 July 2001 |access-date=9 May 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613213945/http://www.haroldpinter.org/home/lincolnfestival.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> On its surface the play may appear to have fewer overtly political resonances than some of the plays from the 1980s and 1990s; but its central male characters, brothers named Lambert and Matt, are members of the elite (like the men in charge in ''Party Time''), who describe themselves as "peaceful strategy consultants we don't carry guns."<ref>Pinter, ''Celebration'' 60.</ref> At the next table, Russell, a banker, describes himself as a "totally disordered personality&nbsp;... a psychopath",<ref>Pinter, ''Celebration'' 39.</ref> while Lambert "vows to be reincarnated as ' more civilised, gentler person, nicer person'."<ref>Pinter, ''Celebration'' 56.</ref><ref>Grimes 129.</ref> These characters' deceptively smooth exteriors mask their extreme viciousness. ''Celebration'' evokes familiar ] political contexts: "The ritzy loudmouths in 'Celebration'&nbsp;... and the quieter working-class mumblers of 'The Room'&nbsp;... have everything in common beneath the surface".<ref name=BrantleyLC/> "Money remains in the service of entrenched power, and the brothers in the play are 'strategy consultants' whose jobs involve force and violence&nbsp;... It is tempting but inaccurate to equate the comic power inversions of the social behaviour in ''Celebration'' with lasting change in larger political structures", according to Grimes, for whom the play indicates Pinter's pessimism about the possibility of changing the status quo.<ref>Grimes 130.</ref> Yet, as the Waiter's often comically unbelievable reminiscences about his grandfather demonstrate in ''Celebration'', Pinter's final stage plays also extend some ] aspects of his earlier "memory plays", while harking back to his "comedies of menace", as illustrated in the characters and in the Waiter's final speech:
{{blockquote|My grandfather introduced me to the mystery of life and I'm still in the middle of it. I can't find the door to get out. My grandfather got out of it. He got right out of it. He left it behind him and he didn't look back. He got that absolutely right. And I'd like to make one further interjection.<br /> ''He stands still. Slow fade''.<ref>Pinter, ''Celebration'' 72.</ref>}}

During 2000–2001, there were also simultaneous productions of '']'', Pinter's stage adaptation of his unpublished ''Proust Screenplay'', written in collaboration with and directed by ], at the ], and a revival of '']'' directed by ] and starring ], ], and ], at the ].<ref name=Plays/>

Like ''Celebration'', Pinter's penultimate sketch, ''Press Conference'' (2002), "invokes both torture and the fragile, circumscribed existence of dissent".<ref>Grimes 135.</ref> In its première in the ]'s two-part production of ''Sketches'', despite undergoing chemotherapy at the time, Pinter played the ruthless Minister willing to murder little children for the benefit of "The State".<ref name=Sketches>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_sketches.shtml |first=Alastair |last=Macaulay |title=The Playwright's Triple Risk |work=] archived at haroldpinter.org |access-date=9 May 2009 |date=13 February 2002 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613214229/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_sketches.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

===As screenwriter===
Pinter composed 27 screenplays and film scripts for cinema and television, many of which were filmed, or adapted as stage plays.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/harold-pinter-true-star-of-the-screen-1212438.html |title=Harold Pinter: True star of the screen |first=Geoffrey |last=MacNab |work=] |date=27 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0951-9467 |oclc=185201487 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110624013629/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/harold-pinter-true-star-of-the-screen-1212438.html |archive-date= 24 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> His fame as a screenwriter began with his three screenplays written for films directed by ], leading to their close friendship: '']'' (1963), based on the novel by ]; '']'' (1967), adapted from the novel by ]; and '']'' (1971), based on the novel by ].<ref>{{cite news|first=Jeff |last=Dawson |url =http://www.lexisnexis.com/uk/nexis/results/listview/listview.do?risb=21_T12277901740&startDocNo=1&sort=null&format=GNBEXLIST&dateSelector=All&segSpecifyDate=Date&day1=&month1=&year1=&day2=&month2=&year2=&numericUnit=1&calendarUnit=days&BCT=G1 |title=Open Your Eyes to These Cult Classics |work=] archived at LexisNexis|date= 21 June 2009|page= 10|publisher=]|location=London|url-access=subscription }}</ref> Films based on Pinter's adaptations of his own stage plays are: '']'' (1963), directed by ]; '']'' (1968), directed by ]; '']'' (1973), directed by Peter Hall; and '']'' (1983), directed by ].

Pinter also adapted other writers' novels to screenplays, including '']'' (1964), based on the novel by ], directed by ]; '']'' (1966), from the 1965 spy novel ''The Berlin Memorandum'', by ], directed by ]; '']'' (1976), from the unfinished novel by ], directed by ]; '']'' (1981), from the novel by ], directed by ]; '']'' (1985), based on the novel by ]; ''The Heat of the Day'' (1988), a television film, from the 1949 novel by ]; '']'' (1990), from the novel by ], directed by ]; and '']'' (1993), from the novel by ], directed by David Jones.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE1DA1638F937A15752C1A965958260 |title=Kafka's Sinister World by Way of Pinter |first= Janet|last=Maslin |work=] |date=24 November 1993 |location=New York City |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=3 July 2011}}</ref>

His commissioned screenplays of others' works for the films '']'' (1990), '']'' (1990), and '']'' (1997), remain unpublished and in the case of the latter two films, uncredited, though several scenes from or aspects of his scripts were used in these finished films.<ref>Hudgins 132–39.</ref> His screenplays '']'' (1972), ''Victory'' (1982), and '']'' (1997) and his unpublished screenplay '']'' (2000) have not been filmed.<ref>Gale, "Appendix A: Quick Reference", ''Sharp Cut'' 416–17.</ref> A section of Pinter's ''Proust Screenplay'' was, however, released as the 1984 film '']'' (''Un amour de Swann''), directed by ], and it was also adapted by ] as a two-hour radio drama broadcast on ] in 1995,<ref>Baker and Ross xxxiii.</ref> before Pinter and director Di Trevis collaborated to adapt it for the 2000 National Theatre production.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_remembrance.shtml |title=Remembrance of Things Past, Cottesloe Theatre, London, November 2000 |work=haroldpinter.org |access-date=1 July 2009 |editor=Batty, Mark |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613214134/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/plays_remembrance.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

Pinter's last filmed screenplay was an adaptation of the 1970 ]-winning play '']'', by ], which was commissioned by ], one of the film's producers.<ref name=Lyall/> It is the basis for the 2007 film '']'', directed by ].<ref name=Lyall/><ref name=Levy1>{{cite web|first=Emanuel |last=Levey |author-link=Emanuel Levy |url=http://www.emanuellevy.com/interview/sleuth-with-pinter-branagh-law-and-caine-3/ |title=Interviews: Sleuth with Pinter, Branagh, Law and Caine |work=emanuellevy.com |date=29 August 2007 |access-date=31 January 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515140851/http://www.emanuellevy.com/interview/sleuth-with-pinter-branagh-law-and-caine-3/ |archive-date= 15 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=Levy2>{{cite web |first=Emanuel | last= Levey |author-link =Emanuel Levy |url=http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=6636 |title=Sleuth 2007: Remake or Revamping of Old Play |work=emanuellevy.com |date=29 August 2007 |access-date=31 January 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009180537/http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=6636 |archive-date=9 October 2007}}</ref> Pinter's screenplays for '']'' and ''Betrayal'' were nominated for ]s in 1981 and 1983, respectively.<ref>Gale, "Appendix B: Honors and Awards for Screenwriting", ''Sharp Cut'' (n. pag.) .</ref>

===2001–2008===
], 2007. ('']'', 12 January 2009)]]
From 16 to 31 July 2001, a Harold Pinter Festival celebrating his work, curated by ], artistic director of the ], Dublin, was held as part of the annual Lincoln Center Festival at ] in New York City. Pinter participated both as an actor, as Nicolas in ''One for the Road'', and as a director of a double bill pairing his last play, ''Celebration'', with his first play, ''The Room''.<ref name=reports>Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" (''passim'').</ref> As part of a two-week "Harold Pinter Homage" at the World Leaders Festival of Creative Genius, held from 24 September to 30 October 2001, at the Harbourfront Centre, in Toronto, Canada, Pinter presented a dramatic reading of ''Celebration'' (2000) and also participated in a public interview as part of the ].<ref name=IFOA>{{cite web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020225161916/http://www.readings.org/news/011001pinter.html |archive-date= 25 February 2002 |title=Harold Pinter Added to IFOA Lineup|url= http://www.readings.org/news/011001pinter.html|work=Harbourfront Reading Series |publisher=Harbourfront Centre |location=Toronto |access-date=27 June 2011}}</ref><ref name=IFOA2>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/09/travel/travel-advisory-toronto-festival-honors-14-leaders-in-the-arts.html |title=Travel Advisory; Toronto Festival Honors 14 Leaders in the Arts – New York Times |last=Staff |work=] |date=9 September 2001 |location=New York City |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=28 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110703234324/http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/09/travel/travel-advisory-toronto-festival-honors-14-leaders-in-the-arts.html |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>Merritt, "Staging Pinter: From Pregnant Pauses to Political Causes" 123–43.</ref>

In December 2001, Pinter was diagnosed with ], for which, in 2002, he underwent an operation and ].<ref name=BillingtonKoval>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/bwriting/stories/s671912.htm |title=Books and Writing – 15/9/2002: Harold Pinter |first=Ramona |last=Koval |work=] |publisher=] |date=15 September 2009 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110316201156/http://www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/bwriting/stories/s671912.htm |archive-date= 16 March 2011 |url-status=dead }}; Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 413–16.</ref> During the course of his treatment, he directed a production of his play ''No Man's Land'', and wrote and performed in a new sketch, "Press Conference", for a production of his dramatic sketches at the National Theatre, and from 2002 on he was increasingly active in political causes, writing and presenting politically charged poetry, essays, speeches, as well as involved in developing his final two screenplay adaptations, ''The Tragedy of King Lear'' and ''Sleuth'', whose drafts are in the British Library's ] (Add MS 88880/2).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/manuscripts/HITS0001.ASP?VPath=arevhtml/78575.htm&Search=%27Harold+Pinter%27&Highlight=T |title=Pinter Archive |last=Staff |work=Manuscripts catalogue |publisher=British Library |year=2011 |quote=MS 88880/2 |access-date=4 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111124185019/http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/manuscripts/HITS0001.ASP?VPath=arevhtml%2F78575.htm&Search=%27Harold+Pinter%27&Highlight=T |archive-date=24 November 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

From 9 to 25 January 2003, the Manitoba Theatre Centre, in ], Canada, held a nearly month-long ''PinterFest'', in which over 130 performances of twelve of Pinter's plays were performed by a dozen different theatre companies.<ref name=PinterFest>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/frn_pinterfestival_ca03.shtml |title=Pinter Fest 2003 |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2003 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613220837/http://www.haroldpinter.org/plays/frn_pinterfestival_ca03.shtml |archive-date= 13 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Productions during the Festival included: ''The Hothouse'', ''Night School'', ''The Lover'', ''The Dumb Waiter'', ''The Homecoming'', ''The Birthday Party'', ''Monologue'', ''One for the Road'', ''The Caretaker'', ''Ashes to Ashes'', ''Celebration'', and ''No Man's Land''.<ref name=MerrittPinterFest>Merritt, "PinterFest", in "Forthcoming Publications, Upcoming Productions, and Other Works in Progress", "Harold Pinter Bibliography: 2000–2002" (299).</ref>

In 2005, Pinter stated that he had stopped writing plays and that he would be devoting his efforts more to his political activism and writing poetry: "I think I've written 29 plays. I think it's enough for me&nbsp;... My energies are going in different directions—over the last few years I've made a number of political speeches at various locations and ceremonies&nbsp;... I'm using a lot of energy more specifically about political states of affairs, which I think are very, very worrying as things stand."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/arts/4305725.stm |title=Pinter 'to give up writing plays' |first=Mark |last=Lawson |work=] |date=28 February 2005 |publisher=] |location=London |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120324141852/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4305725.stm |archive-date= 24 March 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=Robinson>{{cite web|url=http://news.scotsman.com/uk/Im-written-out-says-controversial.2805471.jp |title=I'm written out, says controversial Pinter |first=David |last=Robinson |work=Scotsman.com News |publisher=Johnston Press Digital Publishing |date=26 August 2006 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629205724/http://news.scotsman.com/uk/Im-written-out-says-controversial.2805471.jp |archive-date= 29 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Some of this later poetry included "The 'Special Relationship'", "Laughter", and "The Watcher".

From 2005, Pinter experienced ill health, including a rare skin disease called ]<ref name=Billingtonwritten>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2006/mar/14/theatre.stage |title='I've written 29 damn plays. Isn't that enough?' |first=Michael |last=Billington |work=] |date=14 March 2006 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100830080949/http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2006/mar/14/theatre.stage |archive-date= 30 August 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and "a form of ] that afflict his feet and made it difficult for him to walk."<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 395.</ref> Yet, he completed his screenplay for the film of ''Sleuth'' in 2005.<ref name=Lyall/><ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 418–20.</ref><!-- See reference to Sleuth just above--> His last dramatic work for radio, ''Voices'' (2005), a collaboration with composer ], adapting selected works by Pinter to music, premièred on ] on his 75th birthday on 10 October 2005.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/voices/pip/2v1eq/ |title=BBC – Radio 3 – Voices – Harold Pinter's 75th birthday |last=Staff |work=bbc.co.uk |year=2011 |access-date=4 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120207073915/http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/voices/pip/2v1eq/ |archive-date= 7 February 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Three days later, it was announced that he had won the 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature.<ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 420.</ref>

In an interview with Pinter in 2006, conducted by critic Michael Billington as part of the cultural programme of the ] in ], Italy, Pinter confirmed that he would continue to write poetry but not plays.<ref name=Billingtonwritten/> In response, the audience shouted ''No'' in unison, urging him to keep writing.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Merritt |first=Susan Hollis |title=Europe Theatre Prize Celebration – Turin, Italy|journal= Harold Pinter Society Newsletter|date= Fall 2006|type=Print}}</ref> Along with the international symposium on Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics, curated by Billington, the 2006 ] theatrical events celebrating Pinter included new productions (in French) of ''Precisely'' (1983), ''One for the Road'' (1984), ''Mountain Language'' (1988), ''The New World Order'' (1991), ''Party Time'' (1991), and ''Press Conference'' (2002) (French versions by Jean Pavans); and ''Pinter Plays, Poetry & Prose'', an evening of dramatic readings, directed by ], of the ], Dublin.<ref name=ETPEvent>{{cite web|url=http://www.premio-europa.org/open_page.php?id=336 |title=Europe Theatre Prize – X Edition – spettacoli |work=premio-europa.org |year=2006 |access-date=29 June 2011 |language=it, en |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727184646/http://www.premio-europa.org/open_page.php?id=336 |archive-date= 27 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In June 2006, the ] (BAFTA) hosted a celebration of Pinter's films curated by his friend, the playwright ]. Hare introduced the selection of film clips by saying: "To jump back into the world of Pinter's movies&nbsp;... is to remind yourself of a literate mainstream cinema, focused as much as ]'s is on the human face, in which tension is maintained by a carefully crafted mix of image and dialogue."<ref name="bill429">Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 429.</ref>

After returning to London from the ], in September 2006, Pinter began rehearsing for his performance of the role of ] in ]'s one-act ] '']'', which he performed from a motorised wheelchair in a limited run the following month at the ] to sold-out audiences and "ecstatic" critical reviews.<ref name=KLTrev>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2006/oct/16/theatre.beckettat100 |title=Krapp's Last Tape, Royal Court, London |first=Michael |last=Billington |work=] |date=16 October 2006 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121113140056/http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2006/oct/16/theatre.beckettat100 |archive-date= 13 November 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The production ran for only nine performances, as part of the 50th-anniversary celebration season of the ]; it sold out within minutes of the opening of the box office and tickets commanded large sums from ].<ref>Münder 220; cf. Fraser, ''Must You Go?'' 304 and 307.</ref> One performance was filmed and broadcast on ] on 21 June 2007, and also screened later, as part of the memorial PEN Tribute to Pinter, in New York, on 2 May 2009.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.gc.cuny.edu/mestc/events/s09/PEN_World_Voices.html |title=PEN World Voices Festival: Harold Pinter Memorial Celebration |work=Martin E. Segal Theatre Center |publisher=The City University of New York |year=2009 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110614060751/http://web.gc.cuny.edu/mestc/events/s09/PEN_World_Voices.html |archive-date= 14 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

In October and November 2006, ] hosted ]. It featured productions of seven of Pinter's plays: ''The Caretaker'', ''Voices'', ''No Man's Land'', ''Family Voices'', ''Tea Party'', ''The Room'', ''One for the Road'', and ''The Dumb Waiter''; and films (most his screenplays; some in which Pinter appears as an actor).<ref name=SheffieldNews>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=news.view&NewsID=222 |title=Pinter: A Celebration |work=sheffieldtheatres.co.uk |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716090843/http://www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=news.view&NewsID=222 |archive-date=16 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

In February and March 2007, a 50th anniversary of ''The Dumb Waiter'', was produced at the ]. Later in February 2007, ]'s film version of Pinter's play ''Celebration'' (2000) was shown on '']'' (], UK). On 18 March 2007, ] broadcast a new radio production of ''The Homecoming'', directed by ] and produced by Martin J. Smith, with Pinter performing the role of Max (for the first time; he had previously played Lenny on stage in 1964). A revival of ''The Hothouse'' opened at the National Theatre, in London, in July 2007, concurrently with a revival of ''Betrayal'' at the ], directed by ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2007/mar/17/featuresreviews.guardianreview13 |title=Fathers and sons |first=Samuel |last=West |work=] |date=17 March 2007 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100411070458/http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2007/mar/17/featuresreviews.guardianreview13 |archive-date= 11 April 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

]'' revival at ], 30 December 2008]]
Revivals in 2008 included the 40th-anniversary production of the American première of ''The Homecoming'' on Broadway, directed by ].<ref name=Upcomingevents>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/calendar/index.shtml |title=Worldwide Calendar |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709085619/http://www.haroldpinter.org/calendar/index.shtml |archive-date= 9 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> From 8 to 24 May 2008, the ] celebrated the 50th anniversary of ''The Birthday Party'' with a revival and related events, including a gala performance and reception hosted by Harold Pinter on 19 May 2008, exactly 50 years after its London première there. The final revival during Pinter's lifetime was a production of ''No Man's Land'', directed by ], opening at the Gate Theatre, Dublin, in August 2008, and then transferring to the ], London, where it played until 3 January 2009.<ref name=BWW>{{cite web|url=http://westend.broadwayworld.com/article/Photo_Flash_NO_MANS_LAND_at_the_Duke_of_York_20000101 |title=Photo Flash: No Man's Land at the Duke of York |last=Staff |work=westend.broadwayworld.com |date=10 November 2008 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120117182820/http://westend.broadwayworld.com/article/Photo_Flash_NO_MANS_LAND_at_the_Duke_of_York_20000101 |archive-date= 17 January 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> On the Monday before Christmas 2008, Pinter was admitted to ], where he died on Christmas Eve from liver cancer, aged 78.<ref name=Goodnight>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2009/jan/01/pinter-theatre |title=Goodnight, sweet prince: Shakespearean farewell to Pinter |first=Michael |last=Billington |work=] |date=1 January 2009 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100326011045/http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2009/jan/01/pinter-theatre |archive-date= 26 March 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

On 26 December 2008, when ''No Man's Land'' reopened at the Duke of York's, the actors paid tribute to Pinter from the stage, with Michael Gambon reading Hirst's monologue about his "photograph album" from Act Two that Pinter had asked him to read at his funeral, ending with a standing ovation from the audience, many of whom were in tears:
{{blockquote|I might even show you my photograph album. You might even see a face in it which might remind you of your own, of what you once were. You might see faces of others, in shadow, or cheeks of others, turning, or jaws, or backs of necks, or eyes, dark under hats, which might remind you of others, whom once you knew, whom you thought long dead, but from whom you will still receive a sidelong glance if you can face the good ghost. Allow the love of the good ghost. They possess all that emotion&nbsp;... trapped. Bow to it. It will assuredly never release them, but who knows&nbsp;... what relief&nbsp;... it may give them&nbsp;... who knows how they may quicken&nbsp;... in their chains, in their glass jars. You think it cruel&nbsp;... to quicken them, when they are fixed, imprisoned? No&nbsp;... no. Deeply, deeply, they wish to respond to your touch, to your look, and when you smile, their joy&nbsp;... is unbounded. And so I say to you, tender the dead, as you would yourself be tendered, now, in what you would describe as your life.<ref name=Goodnight/><ref>Pinter, ''No Man's Land'', ''Four Plays'' 69–70.</ref><ref name=Tribute>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7800829.stm |title=West End pays tribute to Pinter |last=Staff |work=] |date=27 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131112044005/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7800829.stm |archive-date= 12 November 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref>}}

==Posthumous events==
===Funeral===
]]]
Pinter's funeral was a private, half-hour secular ceremony conducted at the graveside at ], 31 December 2008. The eight readings selected in advance by Pinter included passages from seven of his own writings and from the story "]", by ], which was read by actress ]. ] read the "photo album" speech from ''No Man's Land'' and three other readings, including Pinter's poem "Death" (1997). Other readings honoured Pinter's widow and his love of cricket.<ref name=Goodnight/> The ceremony was attended by many notable theatre people, including ], but not by Pinter's son, Daniel Brand. At its end, Pinter's widow, Antonia Fraser, stepped forward to his grave and quoted from ]'s speech after the death of ]: "Goodnight, sweet prince, / And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest."<ref name=Goodnight/>

===Memorial tributes===
The night before Pinter's burial, theatre marquees on Broadway dimmed their lights for a minute in tribute,<ref name=Friends>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/arts_and_culture/7805812.stm |title=Friends bid Pinter final farewell |last=Staff |work=] |date=31 December 2008 |publisher=] |location=London |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120730042522/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/arts_and_culture/7805812.stm |archive-date= 30 July 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and on the final night of ''No Man's Land'' at the Duke of York's Theatre on 3 January 2009, all of the ] in the West End dimmed their lights for an hour to honour the playwright.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/22984/pinter-to-be-honoured-before-final |title=The Stage / News / Pinter to be honoured before final performance of No Man's Land |first=Alistair |last=Smith |work=thestage.co.uk |publisher=The Stage Newspaper Limited |location=London |date=2 January 2009 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612044629/http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/22984/pinter-to-be-honoured-before-final |archive-date= 12 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> <!-- Commented out as reference is no longer online and nor at Internet archive. The ], Dublin's Gate Theatre, and the ], whose co-artistic directors are Australian actress ] and her husband, ], on 1 February, gave a free, hour-long tribute performance of readings from Pinter's works. It was directed and introduced by Colgan and featured Blanchett, fellow Australian actor Robert Menzies (grandson of former Australian Prime Minister ]), and others.<ref name=McCallum>John McCallum, , '']'', ], 2 February 2009. Retrieved 14 April 2009.</ref> -->

], the ] for ] proposed an ] in the ] to support a residents' campaign to restore the Clapton Cinematograph Theatre, established in ] in 1910, and to turn it into a memorial to Pinter "to honour this Hackney boy turned literary great."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dianeabbott.org.uk/news/press/news.aspx?p=102369 |title=Diane Abbott Calls for Pinter Cinema |work=dianeabbott.org.uk |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110929013913/http://www.dianeabbott.org.uk/news/press/news.aspx?p=102369 |archive-date= 29 September 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> On 2 May 2009, a free public memorial tribute was held at ] of The ]. It was part of the 5th Annual ] of International Literature, taking place in New York City.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/3239/prmID/1831 |title=PEN American Center – Tribute to Harold Pinter |work=pen.org |date=2 May 2009 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110714015021/http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/3239/prmID/1831 |archive-date= 14 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Another memorial celebration, held in the Olivier Theatre, at the ], in London, on the evening of 7 June 2009, consisted of excerpts and readings from Pinter's writings by nearly three dozen actors, many of whom were his friends and associates, including: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]; and a troupe of students from the ], directed by Ian Rickson.<ref name="A Celebration">{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00qby7v |title=BBC Two Programmes – Arena, Harold Pinter – A Celebration |work=] |year=2009 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100121193519/http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00qby7v |archive-date= 21 January 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=Coveney>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/reviews/harold-pinter-a-celebration-national-theatre-london-1700071.html |title=Harold Pinter: a celebration, National Theatre, London |first=Michael |last=Coveney |work=] |date=9 June 2009 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0951-9467 |oclc=185201487 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110518090602/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/reviews/harold-pinter-a-celebration-national-theatre-london-1700071.html |archive-date= 18 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

On 16 June 2009, Antonia Fraser officially opened a commemorative room at the ]. The theatre also established a writer's residency in Pinter's name.<ref name=Jury>{{cite web|url=http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23708548-harold-pinter-honoured-by-hackney-empire.do |title=Harold Pinter honoured by Hackney Empire |first=Louise |last=Jury |work=thisislondon.co.uk |date=17 June 2009 |publisher=ES London Limited |location=London |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606080711/http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23708548-harold-pinter-honoured-by-hackney-empire.do |archive-date= 6 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Most of issue number 28 of ]'s Arts Tri-Quarterly '']'' was devoted to pieces remembering Pinter, beginning with Pinter's 1987 unpublished love poem dedicated "To Antonia" and his poem "Paris", written in 1975 (the year in which he and Fraser began living together), followed by brief memoirs by some of Pinter's associates and friends, including ], ], ], ], ], ], and David Hare.<ref>'']'' 28 (Spring/Summer 2009): 17–89. {{ISBN|978-0-9554553-8-4}}.</ref>

A memorial cricket match at ] between the Gaieties Cricket Club and the Lord's Taverners, followed by performances of Pinter's poems and excerpts from his plays, took place on 27 September 2009.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/6255151/Lords-tribute-was-celebration-of-Harold-Pinters-two-great-loves-cricket-and-literature.html |title=Lord's tribute was celebration of Harold Pinter's two great loves: cricket and literature – Telegraph |first=Ed |last=Smith |work=] |date=2 October 2009 |location=London |issn=0307-1235 |oclc=49632006 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110519171448/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/6255151/Lords-tribute-was-celebration-of-Harold-Pinters-two-great-loves-cricket-and-literature.html |archive-date= 19 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

In 2009, ] established the ], which is awarded annually to a British writer or a writer resident in Britain who, in the words of Pinter's Nobel speech, casts an 'unflinching, unswerving' gaze upon the world, and shows a 'fierce intellectual determination&nbsp;... to define the real truth of our lives and our societies'. The prize is shared with an international writer of courage. The inaugural winners of the prize were ] and the Burmese poet and comedian ].<ref>English PEN website http://www.englishpen.org/prizes/pen-pinter-prize/</ref>

===''Being Harold Pinter''===
In January 2011 ''Being Harold Pinter'', a theatrical collage of excerpts from Pinter's dramatic works, his Nobel Lecture, and letters of Belarusian prisoners, created and performed by the ], evoked a great deal of attention in the ]. The Free Theatre's members had to be smuggled out of ], owing to a government crackdown on dissident artists, to perform their production in a two-week sold-out engagement at ] in New York as part of the 2011 ]. In an additional sold-out benefit performance at the ], co-hosted by playwrights ] and ], the prisoner's letters were read by ten guest performers: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref name=BFT>{{cite web|url=http://broadwayworld.com/article/Kline_Hoffman_et_al_Lend_Support_to_Belarus_Free_Theater_with_BEING_HAROLD_PINTER_Benefit_at_The_Public_Tonight_117_20110117 |title=Kline, Hoffman et al. Lend Support to Belarus Free Theater with 'Being Harold Pinter' Benefit at The Public Tonight, 1/17 |work=broadwayworld.com |date=17 January 2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120505094146/http://broadwayworld.com/article/Kline_Hoffman_et_al_Lend_Support_to_Belarus_Free_Theater_with_BEING_HAROLD_PINTER_Benefit_at_The_Public_Tonight_117_20110117 |archive-date= 5 May 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In solidarity with the Belarus Free Theatre, collaborations of actors and theatre companies joined in offering additional benefit readings of ''Being Harold Pinter'' across the United States.<ref name=Gunderson>{{cite web|url=https://huffingtonpost.com/lauren-gunderson/countrywide-free-theatre-_b_809947.html |title=Countrywide, Free Theatre Stands up to Dictators |first=Lauren |last=Gunderson |work=huffingtonpost.com |date=19 January 2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110402215205/http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lauren-gunderson/countrywide-free-theatre-_b_809947.html |archive-date= 2 April 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

===The Harold Pinter Theatre, London===
In September 2011, British Theatre owners, ] (ATG) announced it was renaming its ''Comedy Theatre'', Panton Street, London to become ''The ]''. ], Joint CEO and Creative Director of ATG told the ], "The work of Pinter has become an integral part of the history of the Comedy Theatre. The re-naming of one of our most successful West End theatres is a fitting tribute to a man who made such a mark on British theatre who, over his 50 year career, became recognised as one of the most influential modern British dramatists."<ref>{{cite news|title=Harold Pinter has London theatre named after him|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-14827867|access-date=8 September 2011|work=BBC News|date=7 September 2011|publisher=BBC|location=London}}</ref>

==Honours==
{{Further|Honours and awards to Harold Pinter}}
An Honorary Associate of the ], a Fellow of the ], and an Honorary Fellow of the ] (1970),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mla.org/honfell_past |title=Past Honorary Fellows |work=Modern Language Association |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081204143428/http://www.mla.org/honfell_past |archive-date= 4 December 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haroldpinter.org/biography/index.shtml |title=Biography |editor=Batty, Mark |work=haroldpinter.org |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709085705/http://www.haroldpinter.org/biography/index.shtml |archive-date= 9 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Pinter was appointed ] in 1966<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/44004/supplements/6539 |title=Supplement to The London Gazette, 11th June 1966 |journal=] |publisher=] |date=11 June 1996 |access-date=29 June 2011 |issue=44004 |page=6539 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111019015146/http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/44004/supplements/6539 |archive-date= 19 October 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and became a ] in 2002, having declined a knighthood in 1996.<ref name=White>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2002/jun/15/arts.politics |title=Arise Sir Mick, but Pinter takes surprise top honour |first=Michael |last=White |work=] |date=15 June 2002 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121113031402/http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2002/jun/15/arts.politics |archive-date= 13 November 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 1995, he accepted the ], in recognition of a lifetime of literary achievement. In 1996, he received a ] for lifetime achievement in the theatre.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.officiallondontheatre.co.uk/olivier_awards/past_winners/view/item98530/Olivier-Winners-1996/ |title=Olivier Winners 1996 |work=The Official London Theatre Guide |date=24 April 2008 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515145552/http://www.officiallondontheatre.co.uk/olivier_awards/past_winners/view/item98530/Olivier-Winners-1996/ |archive-date= 15 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 1997 he became a ] Fellow.<ref name=BAFTAawards>{{cite web |url=http://www.bafta.org/awards/academy-fellows,125,BA.html |title=Academy Fellows |work=bafta.org |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110525123941/http://www.bafta.org/awards/academy-fellows,125,BA.html |archive-date=25 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He received the World Leaders Award for "Creative Genius" as the subject of a week-long "Homage" in Toronto, in October 2001.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/09/travel/travel-advisory-toronto-festival-honors-14-leaders-in-the-arts.html |title=Travel Advisory: Toronto Festival Honors 14 Leaders in the Arts |last=Staff |work=] |date=9 September 2001 |location=New York City |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=3 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110703234324/http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/09/travel/travel-advisory-toronto-festival-honors-14-leaders-in-the-arts.html |archive-date= 3 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2004, he received the ] Award for Poetry for his "lifelong contribution to literature, 'and specifically for his collection of poetry entitled ''War'', published in 2003'".<ref name=GuardianWOAPA>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/aug/04/iraq.books |title=Pinter awarded Wilfred Owen prize for poetry opposing Iraq conflict |first=John |last=Ezard |work=] |date=4 August 2004 |publisher=] |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=3 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110323212608/http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/aug/04/iraq.books |archive-date= 23 March 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In March 2006, he was awarded the ] in recognition of lifetime achievements pertaining to drama and theatre.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.premio-europa.org/open_page.php?id=319 |title=Europe Theatre Prize – X Edition – pinter_motivazioni |work=premio-europa.org |year=2006 |access-date=29 June 2011 |language=it, en |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727184239/http://www.premio-europa.org/open_page.php?id=319 |archive-date= 27 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In conjunction with that award, the critic Michael Billington coordinated an international conference on Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics, including scholars and critics from Europe and the Americas, held in ], Italy, from 10 to 14 March 2006.<ref name=BillingtonETP/><ref name=ETPEvent/><ref>Billington, ''Harold Pinter'' 427–28.</ref>

In October 2008, the ] announced that Pinter had agreed to become its president and awarded him an ] at its graduation ceremony.<ref name=Central2008>{{cite web|url=http://www.cssd.ac.uk/content/obituaries#harold |title=Obituaries: Harold Pinter – 1930–2008 |work=] |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110520165624/http://www.cssd.ac.uk/content/obituaries |archive-date= 20 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> On his appointment, Pinter commented: "I was a student at Central in 1950–51. I enjoyed my time there very much and I am delighted to become president of a remarkable institution."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/22095/pinter-replaces-mandelson-as-central |title=The Stage / News / Pinter replaces Mandelson as Central president |first=Alistair |last=Smith |work=thestage.co.uk |publisher=The Stage Newspaper Limited |date=14 October 2008 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716014556/http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/22095/pinter-replaces-mandelson-as-central |archive-date= 16 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> But he had to receive that honorary degree, his 20th, in absentia owing to ill health.<ref name=Central2008/> His presidency of the school was brief; he died just two weeks after the graduation ceremony, on 24 December 2008.

In 2013, he was posthumously awarded the ] of ].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Укази о одликовањима|url=https://www.predsednik.rs/predsednik/ukazi-o-odlikovanjima|access-date=2021-01-27|website=Председник Републике Србије}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Nikolić odlikovao strane državnike i zaslužne pojedince|url=https://www.kurir.rs/vesti/drustvo/655721/nikolic-odlikovao-strane-drzavnike-i-zasluzne-pojedince|access-date=2021-01-27|website=kurir.rs|language=sr}}</ref>

===Nobel Prize in Literature===
{{main|2005 Nobel Prize in Literature}}

===Légion d'honneur===
On 18 January 2007, French Prime Minister ] presented Pinter with France's highest civil honour, the ], at a ceremony at the French embassy in London. De Villepin praised Pinter's poem "American Football" (1991) stating: "With its violence and its cruelty, it is for me one of the most accurate images of war, one of the most telling metaphors of the temptation of imperialism and violence." In response, Pinter praised France's opposition to the war in Iraq. M. de Villepin concluded: "The poet stands still and observes what doesn't deserve other men's attention. Poetry teaches us how to live and you, Harold Pinter, teach us how to live." He said that Pinter received the award particularly "because in seeking to capture all the facets of the human spirit, works respond to the aspirations of the French public, and its taste for an understanding of man and of what is truly universal".<ref name=FE>{{cite web|url=http://www.ambafrance-uk.org/Legion-d-honneur-for-Harold-Pinter.html |title=Légion d'Honneur for Harold Pinter |last=France in the United Kingdom |work=French Embassy in the UK |date=17 January 2007 |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717003151/http://www.ambafrance-uk.org/Legion-d-honneur-for-Harold-Pinter.html |archive-date= 17 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6273365.stm |title=French PM honours Harold Pinter |last=Staff |work=] |date=18 January 2007 |publisher=] |location=London |access-date=26 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110813095244/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/6273365.stm |archive-date= 13 August 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Lawrence Pollard observed that "the award for the great playwright underlines how much Mr Pinter is admired in countries like France as a model of the uncompromising radical intellectual".<ref name=FE/>

==Scholarly response==
{{Main|Harold Pinter and academia}}
Some scholars and critics challenge the validity of Pinter's critiques of what he terms "the modes of thinking of those in power"<ref>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 171–89.</ref> or dissent from his retrospective viewpoints on his own work.<ref>Begley; Karwowski; and Quigley.</ref> In 1985, Pinter recalled that his early act of conscientious objection resulted from being "terribly disturbed as a young man by the Cold War. And McCarthyism&nbsp;... A profound hypocrisy. 'They' the monsters, 'we' the good. In 1948, the Russian suppression of Eastern Europe was an obvious and brutal fact, but I felt very strongly then and feel as strongly now that we have an obligation to subject our own actions and attitudes to an equivalent critical and moral scrutiny."<ref>Quoted in Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 178.</ref> Scholars agree that Pinter's dramatic rendering of power relations results from this scrutiny.<ref name=BattyGrimes2>], e.g., Batty, "Preface" (xvii–xix) and chap. 6–9 (55–221) in ''About Pinter''; Grimes 19, 36–71, 218–20, and ''passim''.</ref>

Pinter's aversion to any censorship by "the authorities" is epitomised in Petey's line at the end of ''The Birthday Party''. As the broken-down and reconstituted Stanley is being carted off by the figures of authority Goldberg and McCann, Petey calls after him, "Stan, don't let them tell you what to do!" Pinter told Gussow in 1988, "I've lived that line all my damn life. Never more than now."<ref name=GussowConv>Quoted in Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 179.</ref> The example of Pinter's stalwart opposition to what he termed "the modes of thinking of those in power"—the "brick wall" of the "minds" perpetuating the "status quo"<ref>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' 180.</ref>—infused the "vast political pessimism" that some academic critics may perceive in his artistic work,<ref>Grimes 220.</ref> its "drowning landscape" of harsh contemporary realities, with some residual "hope for restoring the dignity of man."<ref>Pinter, ''Art, Truth and Politics'' 9 and 24.</ref>

As Pinter's long-time friend David Jones reminded analytically inclined scholars and dramatic critics, Pinter was one of the "great comic writers":<ref>{{cite book|url= http://cco.cambridge.org/extract?id=ccol0521651239_CCOL0521651239A006 |title=Cambridge Collections Online : The sacred joke: Comedy and politics in Pinter's early plays |first=Francesca |last=Coppa |author-link=Francesca Coppa |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2011 |isbn=978-0-521-65842-3 |editor=Raby, Peter |url-access=subscription |access-date=30 June 2011 |page=45}}</ref>{{blockquote|The trap with Harold's work, for performers and audiences, is to approach it too earnestly or portentously. I have always tried to interpret his plays with as much humour and humanity as possible. There is always mischief lurking in the darkest corners. The world of ''The Caretaker'' is a bleak one, its characters damaged and lonely. But they are all going to survive. And in their dance to that end they show a frenetic vitality and a wry sense of the ridiculous that balance heartache and laughter. Funny, but not too funny. As Pinter wrote, back in 1960: "As far as I am concerned ''The Caretaker'' IS funny, up to a point. Beyond that point, it ceases to be funny, and it is because of that point that I wrote it."<ref name=JonesWoolf>{{cite web|url=http://roundabouttheatre.org/fc/fall03/jones.htm |title=Roundabout Theatre Company – Front & Center Online |first=David |last=Jones |work=roundabouttheatre.org |date=Fall 2003 |access-date=29 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727223238/http://roundabouttheatre.org/fc/fall03/jones.htm |archive-date= 27 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}; ] Woolf, quoted in Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" 147–48.</ref>}} His dramatic conflicts present serious implications for his characters and his audiences, leading to sustained inquiry about "the point" of his work and multiple "critical strategies" for developing interpretations and stylistic analyses of it.<ref>Merritt, ''Pinter in Play'' (''passim'').</ref>

==Pinter research collections==
{{Further|Harold Pinter Archive}}
Pinter's unpublished manuscripts and letters to and from him are held in the Harold Pinter Archive in the Modern Literary Manuscripts division of the ]. Smaller collections of Pinter manuscripts are in the ], the ];<ref name=RansomColl/> ], ]; the Mandeville Special Collections Library, Geisel Library, at the ]; the ], in London; and the Margaret Herrick Library, ], the ], ].<ref>Baker and Ross, "Appendix One" 224.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.haroldpinter.org/links/links_academia.shtml |title=Links – Libraries and Academia |editor=Batty, Mark|work=haroldpinter.org |year=2011 |access-date=29 June 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081228191355/http://www.haroldpinter.org/links/links_academia.shtml | archive-date = 28 December 2008}}</ref>

==List of works and bibliography==
{{Further|List of works by Harold Pinter}}
{{Further|Harold Pinter bibliography}}


==See also== ==See also==
*]
*Pinter, Harold. Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. 7 July 2006.
*]
*---. ] 4 Dec. 1996. Online posting. '']'' May 1996. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 209-12.
*]
*---. Foreword. ''Degraded Capability: The Media and the Kosovo Crisis''. Ed. ] and ]. London: ], 2000. ISBN 074531631X. .
*]
*---. Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. Rpt. in ''Death etc.'' 71-73.
*]
*---. . Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 244.

*---. Online posting. '']'' Feb. 1997. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 214-17.
==References==
*---. Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 245-46.
{{Reflist}}
*---. ] 17 Feb. 1998. Online posting in "The Gulf War and the Continuing Bombing of Iraq." ''HaroldPinter.org''. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 235-37.

*---. Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. 6 July 2006.
===Works cited===
*---. Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org.'' Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 238-40.
{{Refbegin}}
*---. Online posting. '']''. Also published as Online posting. '']'' 11 Dec. 2002. Rpt. in ''Various Voices'' 241-43; ''War'' .
*{{cite book|last=Baker |first=William |title=Harold Pinter|url=https://archive.org/details/haroldpinter0000bake |url-access=registration |series= Writers' Lives Series. |location=London and New York|publisher=]|year=2008 |isbn=978-0-8264-9970-7}}
*---. Online posting. '']'' Dec. 2002.
*{{cite book|last1=Baker|first1=William|last2=Ross|first2=John C.|title=Harold Pinter: A Bibliographical History|location=London|publisher=] and New Castle, DE|year=2005|isbn=1-58456-156-4|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/trent_0116405528849}}
*---. Online posting. ''HaroldPinter.org''. Rpt. in ''Death etc.'' 1-2; ''Various Voices'' 247-48.
*{{cite book|last=Batty |first=Mark |title=About Pinter: The Playwright and the Work |location= London |publisher=] |year=2005 |isbn= 0-571-22005-3}}
*{{cite book| last=Begley |first=Varun |title=Harold Pinter and the Twilight of Modernism |location= Toronto |publisher= University of Toronto Press |year=2005 |isbn= 978-0-8020-3887-6}}
*{{cite book |author-link=Michael Billington (critic) |last=Billington |first=Michael |title=Harold Pinter |location=London |publisher=] |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-571-19065-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/lifeworkofharo00bill }}
*{{cite book|author-link=Antonia Fraser|last=Fraser |first=Antonia |title=Must You Go? My Life with Harold Pinter |location= London |publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson (Orion Books)|isbn=978-0-297-85971-0|year=2010}}
*{{cite book |last=Gale |first=Steven H. |title=Sharp Cut: Harold Pinter's Screenplays and the Artistic Process |location=Lexington |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2003 |isbn=0-8131-2244-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/sharpcutharoldpi0000gale }}
*{{cite book|editor=Gordon, Lois |title=Pinter at 70: A Casebook| series=Casebooks on Modern Dramatists |year=2001|edition=2 |location=New York and London |publisher=Routledge |isbn= 978-0-415-93630-9}}
*{{cite book|last=Grimes |first=Charles |title=Harold Pinter's Politics: A Silence Beyond Echo |location= Madison & Teaneck, NJ |publisher= Fairleigh Dickinson University Press |year=2005 |isbn=0-8386-4050-8}}
*{{cite book|author-link=Mel Gussow |last=Gussow |first=Mel |title=Conversations with Pinter |location= London |publisher=]| year=1994 |isbn= 978-1-85459-201-9}}
*{{cite book |last1=Hern |first1=Nicholas |last2=Pinter | first2=Harold |title=A Play and Its Politics: A Conversation between Harold Pinter and Nicholas Hern |date=February 1985| pages=5–23 |series=Harold Pinter, 'One for the Road'| location=New York |publisher=Grove |isbn= 0-394-62363-0}}
*{{cite journal|last=Hudgins |first=Christopher C. |title=Three Unpublished Harold Pinter Filmscripts |journal=The Pinter Review: Nobel Prize/Europe Theatre Prize Volume: 2005–2008 |editor= Gillen, Francis |editor2=Gale, Steven H. |location=Tampa |publisher=University of Tampa Press |year=2008 |pages=132–39|oclc=16878624|issn=0895-9706}}
*{{cite journal|last=Karwowski |first=Michael |url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-111858203.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090112100320/http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-111858203.html |archive-date=12 January 2009 |title=Harold Pinter––a Political Playwright?]|journal=]|date=1 November 2003 |pages=291–96|url-access=subscription |location=Oxford |issn=0010-7565 |oclc= 1564974 }}
*{{cite book |last=Merritt |first=Susan Hollis |title=Pinter in Play: Critical Strategies and the Plays of Harold Pinter |year=1995 |location=Durham and London |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=978-0-8223-1674-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/pinterinplay00susa }}
*{{cite journal|last=Merritt |first=Susan Hollis |title=Harold Pinter's 'Ashes to Ashes': Political/Personal Echoes of the Holocaust |journal=The Pinter Review: Collected Essays 1999 and 2000 |editor=Gillen, Francis |editor2=Gale, Steven H. |location=Tampa |publisher=University of Tampa Press|year= 2000 |pages= 73–84|oclc=16878624|issn=0895-9706}}
*{{cite journal|last=Merritt |first=Susan Hollis |title=Talking about Pinter: Collected Essays 2001 and 2002|journal= The Pinter Review: Collected Essays: 2003 and 2004|editor= Gillen, Francis |editor2=Gale, Steven H. |location=Tampa |publisher=University of Tampa Press |year=2002 |pages=144–467|oclc=16878624|issn=0895-9706}}
*{{cite journal|last=Merritt |first=Susan Hollis |title=Staging Pinter: From Pregnant Pauses to Political Cause|journal=The Pinter Review: Collected Essays: 2003 and 2004|editor= Gillen, Francis |editor2=Gale, Steven H. |location=Tampa |publisher=University of Tampa Press |year=2004 |pages=123–43|oclc=16878624|issn=0895-9706}}
*{{cite journal|last=Münder |first=Peter |title=Endgame with Spools: Harold Pinter in 'Krapp's Last Tape'|journal=The Pinter Review: Nobel Prize/Europe Theatre Prize Volume: 2005– 008 |editor= Gillen, Francis |editor2=Gale, Steven H. |location=Tampa |publisher=University of Tampa Press |year=2008|pages=220–22|oclc=16878624|issn=0895-9706}}
*{{cite book|last=Pinter |first=Harold |title='Celebration' and 'The Room': Two Plays by Harold Pinter |location=London |publisher=] |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-571-20497-7}}
*{{cite book|last=Pinter |first=Harold |title=Art, Truth and Politics: The Nobel Lecture |location= London |publisher=] |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-571-23396-0}}
*{{cite book|last=Pinter |first=Harold |chapter=Introduction by Harold Pinter, Nobel Laureate|pages =7–9 |title=Fortune's Fool: The Man Who Taught Harold Pinter: A Life of Joe Brearley |editor=Watkins, G. L. |location=Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, UK |publisher=TwigBooks in association with The Clove Club |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-9547236-8-2}}
*{{cite book|last=Pinter |first=Harold |title=Various Voices: Sixty Years of Prose, Poetry, Politics 1948–2008 |edition=3 |location= London |publisher= ] |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-571-24480-5}}
*{{cite book|last=Quigley |first=Austin E. |chapter-url= http://cco.cambridge.org/extract?id=ccol0521651239_CCOL0521651239_root |title=The Cambridge Companion to Harold Pinter |editor=Raby, Peter |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2001 |pages=7–27 |isbn= 978-0-521-65842-3 |chapter=Pinter, Politics and Postmodernmism (I)|chapter-url-access=subscription }}
*{{cite journal|editor=Watkins, G. L. |journal=The Clove's Lines: The Newsletter of the Clove Club: The Old Boys of Hackney Downs School|volume= 3 | issue= 2 |date = March 2009|pages=1–36}}
{{Refend}}

== Further reading ==

=== Editions ===
*Pinter, Harold. ''Plays: One'' | ''], The Room, The Dumb Waiter, ], The Hothouse, A Night Out''. (London: Methuen, 1983) {{ISBN|0-413-34650-1}} Contains an introductory essay, ''Writing for the Theatre''.
*Pinter, Harold. ''Plays: Two'' | ''], The Collection, The Lover, Night School, The Dwarfs''. (London: Eyre Methuen, 1979) {{ISBN|0-413-37300-2}} Contains an introductory essay, ''Writing for Myself''.
*Pinter, Harold. ''Plays: Three'' | ''], The Tea Party, The Basement, Landscape, Silence''. (London: Eyre Methuen, 1978) {{ISBN|0-413-38480-2}}

=== Works of criticism ===
*Naismith, Bill (ed.), ''Harold Pinter: Faber Critical Guide: ], ], ]'' (London: ], 2000). {{ISBN|978-0-571-19781-1}}. Contains introductory essays and explanatory notes.

== External links ==
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Commons category|Harold Pinter}}
* {{Official website|http://www.haroldpinter.org/home/index.shtml}}{{bots|deny=InternetArchiveBot}}
* {{OL author}}
* {{IMDb name|name=Harold Pinter|id=0056217}}
* {{IBDB name}}
* (Allied Organization of the ], co-publisher of ''The Pinter Review'')
* at ] (collection of useful links)
* at '']'' ("The best of The Guardian's coverage, including tributes, reviews and articles from the archive," periodically updated)
* in "Times Topics" at '']'' (periodically updated collection of news articles, reviews, commentaries, photographs, and Web resources from ''The New York Times'' )
* on ''The Mark Shenton Show'', ''TheatreVoice'', recorded on 21 February 2007 (critics Michael Billington and Alastair Macaulay review '']'' and '']''; director and actor Harry Burton talks about his experiences with Pinter)
* on ''TheatreVoice'', recorded on 14 October 2005 (critical assessments by Michael Billington, Dan Rebellato, ] and Ian Smith)
*
* , ''] Online Gallery: What's On'', British Library, 8 September 2008 (Pinter discusses his memories of postwar British theatre with Harry Burton)
* , Nobel Luminaries – Jewish Nobel Prize Winners, on the Website.
* {{Nobelprize}}
*


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Latest revision as of 03:36, 14 December 2024

British playwright (1930–2008) "Pinter" redirects here. For other people named Pinter, see Pinter (surname).

Harold Pinter
CH CBE
Pinter in 2005Pinter in 2005
Born(1930-10-10)10 October 1930
London, England
Died24 December 2008(2008-12-24) (aged 78)
London, England
OccupationPlaywright, screenwriter, actor, theatre director, poet
Alma materRoyal Central School of Speech and Drama
Period1947–2008
Notable awards
Spouse
Vivien Merchant
​ ​(m. 1956; div. 1980)
Lady Antonia Fraser
​ ​(m. 1980)
Children1
Signature
Harold Pinter's voice from the BBC programme Front Row Interviews, 26 December 2008.
Website
www.haroldpinter.org

Literature portal

Harold Pinter (/ˈpɪntər/; 10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008) was a British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor. A Nobel Prize winner, Pinter was one of the most influential modern British dramatists with a writing career that spanned more than 50 years. His best-known plays include The Birthday Party (1957), The Homecoming (1964) and Betrayal (1978), each of which he adapted for the screen. His screenplay adaptations of others' works include The Servant (1963), The Go-Between (1971), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), The Trial (1993) and Sleuth (2007). He also directed or acted in radio, stage, television and film productions of his own and others' works.

Pinter was born and raised in Hackney, east London, and educated at Hackney Downs School. He was a sprinter and a keen cricket player, acting in school plays and writing poetry. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art but did not complete the course. He was fined for refusing national service as a conscientious objector. Subsequently, he continued training at the Central School of Speech and Drama and worked in repertory theatre in Ireland and England. In 1956 he married actress Vivien Merchant and had a son, Daniel, born in 1958. He left Merchant in 1975 and married author Lady Antonia Fraser in 1980.

Pinter's career as a playwright began with a production of The Room in 1957. His second play, The Birthday Party, closed after eight performances but was enthusiastically reviewed by critic Harold Hobson. His early works were described by critics as "comedy of menace". Later plays such as No Man's Land (1975) and Betrayal (1978) became known as "memory plays". He appeared as an actor in productions of his own work on radio and film, and directed nearly 50 productions for stage, theatre and screen. Pinter received over 50 awards, prizes and other honours, including the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2005 and the French Légion d'honneur in 2007.

Despite frail health after being diagnosed with oesophageal cancer in December 2001, Pinter continued to act on stage and screen, last performing the title role of Samuel Beckett's one-act monologue Krapp's Last Tape, for the 50th anniversary season of the Royal Court Theatre, in October 2006. He died from liver cancer on 24 December 2008.

Biography

Early life and education

Pinter was born on 10 October 1930, in Hackney, east London, the only child of British Jewish parents of Eastern European descent: his father, Hyman "Jack" Pinter (1902–1997) was a ladies' tailor; his mother, Frances (née Moskowitz; 1904–1992), a housewife. Pinter believed an aunt's erroneous view that the family was Sephardic and had fled the Spanish Inquisition; thus, for his early poems, Pinter used the pseudonym Pinta and at other times used variations such as da Pinto. Later research by Lady Antonia Fraser, Pinter's second wife, revealed the legend to be apocryphal; three of Pinter's grandparents came from Poland and the fourth from Odesa, so the family was Ashkenazic.

Pinter's family home in London is described by his official biographer Michael Billington as "a solid, red-brick, three-storey villa just off the noisy, bustling, traffic-ridden thoroughfare of the Lower Clapton Road". In 1940 and 1941, after the Blitz, Pinter was evacuated from their house in London to Cornwall and Reading. Billington states that the "life-and-death intensity of daily experience" before and during the Blitz left Pinter with profound memories "of loneliness, bewilderment, separation and loss: themes that are in all his works."

Pinter discovered his social potential as a student at Hackney Downs School, a London grammar school, between 1944 and 1948. "Partly through the school and partly through the social life of Hackney Boys' Club ... he formed an almost sacerdotal belief in the power of male friendship. The friends he made in those days – most particularly Henry Woolf, Michael (Mick) Goldstein and Morris (Moishe) Wernick – have always been a vital part of the emotional texture of his life." A major influence on Pinter was his inspirational English teacher Joseph Brearley, who directed him in school plays and with whom he took long walks, talking about literature. According to Billington, under Brearley's instruction, "Pinter shone at English, wrote for the school magazine and discovered a gift for acting." In 1947 and 1948, he played Romeo and Macbeth in productions directed by Brearley.

At the age of 12, Pinter began writing poetry, and in spring 1947, his poetry was first published in the Hackney Downs School Magazine. In 1950 his poetry was first published outside the school magazine, in Poetry London, some of it under the pseudonym "Harold Pinta".

Pinter was an atheist.

Sport and friendship

Pinter enjoyed running and broke the Hackney Downs School sprinting record. He was a cricket enthusiast, taking his bat with him when evacuated during the Blitz. In 1971, he told Mel Gussow: "one of my main obsessions in life is the game of cricket—I play and watch and read about it all the time." He was chairman of the Gaieties Cricket Club, a supporter of Yorkshire Cricket Club, and devoted a section of his official website to the sport. One wall of his study was dominated by a portrait of himself as a young man playing cricket, which was described by Sarah Lyall, writing in The New York Times: "The painted Mr. Pinter, poised to swing his bat, has a wicked glint in his eye; testosterone all but flies off the canvas." Pinter approved of the "urban and exacting idea of cricket as a bold theatre of aggression." After his death, several of his school contemporaries recalled his achievements in sports, especially cricket and running. The BBC Radio 4 memorial tribute included an essay on Pinter and cricket.

Other interests that Pinter mentioned to interviewers are family, love and sex, drinking, writing, and reading. According to Billington, "If the notion of male loyalty, competitive rivalry and fear of betrayal forms a constant thread in Pinter's work from The Dwarfs onwards, its origins can be found in his teenage Hackney years. Pinter adores women, enjoys flirting with them, and worships their resilience and strength. But, in his early work especially, they are often seen as disruptive influences on some pure and Platonic ideal of male friendship: one of the most crucial of all Pinter's lost Edens."

Early theatrical training and stage experience

Beginning in late 1948, Pinter attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art for two terms, but hating the school, missed most of his classes, feigned a nervous breakdown, and dropped out in 1949. In 1948 he was called up for National Service. He was initially refused registration as a conscientious objector, leading to his twice being prosecuted, and fined, for refusing to accept a medical examination, before his CO registration was ultimately agreed. He had a small part in the Christmas pantomime Dick Whittington and His Cat at the Chesterfield Hippodrome in 1949 to 1950. From January to July 1951, he attended the Central School of Speech and Drama.

From 1951 to 1952, he toured Ireland with the Anew McMaster repertory company, playing over a dozen roles. In 1952, he began acting in regional English repertory productions; from 1953 to 1954, he worked for the Donald Wolfit Company, at the King's Theatre, Hammersmith, performing eight roles. From 1954 until 1959, Pinter acted under the stage name David Baron. In all, Pinter played over 20 roles under that name. To supplement his income from acting, Pinter worked as a waiter, a postman, a bouncer, and a snow-clearer, meanwhile, according to Mark Batty, "harbouring ambitions as a poet and writer." In October 1989 Pinter recalled: "I was in English rep as an actor for about 12 years. My favourite roles were undoubtedly the sinister ones. They're something to get your teeth into." During that period, he also performed occasional roles in his own and others' works for radio, TV, and film, as he continued to do throughout his career.

Marriages and family life

Pinter's house in Worthing, 1962–64

From 1956 until 1980, Pinter was married to Vivien Merchant, an actress whom he met on tour, perhaps best known for her performance in the 1966 film Alfie. Their son Daniel was born in 1958. Through the early 1970s, Merchant appeared in many of Pinter's works, including The Homecoming on stage (1965) and screen (1973), but the marriage was turbulent. For seven years, from 1962 to 1969, Pinter was engaged in a clandestine affair with BBC-TV presenter and journalist Joan Bakewell, which inspired his 1978 play Betrayal, and also throughout that period and beyond he had an affair with an American socialite, whom he nicknamed "Cleopatra". This relationship was another secret he kept from both his wife and Bakewell. Initially, Betrayal was thought to be a response to his later affair with historian Antonia Fraser, the wife of Hugh Fraser, and Pinter's "marital crack-up".

Pinter and Merchant had both met Antonia Fraser in 1969, when all three worked together on a National Gallery programme about Mary, Queen of Scots; several years later, on 8–9 January 1975, Pinter and Fraser became romantically involved. That meeting initiated their five-year extramarital love affair. After hiding the relationship from Merchant for two and a half months, on 21 March 1975, Pinter finally told her "I've met somebody". After that, "Life in Hanover Terrace gradually became impossible", and Pinter moved out of their house on 28 April 1975, five days after the première of No Man's Land.

In mid-August 1977, after Pinter and Fraser had spent two years living in borrowed and rented quarters, they moved into her former family home in Holland Park, where Pinter began writing Betrayal. He reworked it later, while on holiday at the Grand Hotel in Eastbourne, in early January 1978. After the Frasers' divorce had become final in 1977 and the Pinters' in 1980, Pinter married Fraser on 27 November 1980. Because of a two-week delay in Merchant's signing the divorce papers, however, the reception had to precede the actual ceremony, originally scheduled to occur on his 50th birthday. Vivien Merchant died of acute alcoholism in the first week of October 1982, at the age of 53. Billington writes that Pinter "did everything possible to support" her and regretted that he ultimately became estranged from their son, Daniel, after their separation, Pinter's remarriage, and Merchant's death.

A reclusive gifted musician and writer, Daniel changed his surname from Pinter to Brand, the maiden name of his maternal grandmother, before Pinter and Fraser became romantically involved; while according to Fraser, his father could not understand it, she says that she could: "Pinter is such a distinctive name that he must have got tired of being asked, 'Any relation?'" Michael Billington wrote that Pinter saw Daniel's name change as "a largely pragmatic move on Daniel's part designed to keep the press ... at bay." Fraser told Billington that Daniel "was very nice to me at a time when it would have been only too easy for him to have turned on me ... simply because he had been the sole focus of his father's love and now manifestly wasn't." Still unreconciled at the time of his father's death, Daniel Brand did not attend Pinter's funeral.

Billington observes that "The break-up with Vivien and the new life with Antonia was to have a profound effect on Pinter's personality and his work," though he adds that Fraser herself did not claim to have influence over Pinter or his writing. In her own contemporaneous diary entry dated 15 January 1993, Fraser described herself more as Pinter's literary midwife. Indeed, she told Billington that "other people had a shaping influence on politics" and attributed changes in his writing and political views to a change from "an unhappy, complicated personal life ... to a happy, uncomplicated personal life", so that "a side of Harold which had always been there was somehow released. I think you can see that in his work after No Man's Land , which was a very bleak play."

Pinter was content in his second marriage and enjoyed family life with his six adult stepchildren and 17 step-grandchildren. Even after battling cancer for several years, he considered himself "a very lucky man in every respect". Sarah Lyall notes in her 2007 interview with Pinter in The New York Times that his "latest work, a slim pamphlet called 'Six Poems for A.', comprises poems written over 32 years, with "A" of course being Lady Antonia. The first of the poems was written in Paris, where she and Mr. Pinter traveled soon after they met. More than three decades later the two are rarely apart, and Mr. Pinter turns soft, even cozy, when he talks about his wife." In that interview Pinter "acknowledged that his plays—full of infidelity, cruelty, inhumanity, the lot—seem at odds with his domestic contentment. 'How can you write a happy play?' he said. 'Drama is about conflict and degrees of perturbation, disarray. I've never been able to write a happy play, but I've been able to enjoy a happy life.'" After his death, Fraser told The Guardian: "He was a great man, and it was a privilege to live with him for over 33 years. He will never be forgotten."

Civic activities and political activism

Main article: Harold Pinter and politics

In 1948–49, when he was 18, Pinter opposed the politics of the Cold War, leading to his decision to become a conscientious objector and to refuse to comply with National Service in the British military. However, he told interviewers that, if he had been old enough at the time, he would have fought against the Nazis in World War II. He seemed to express ambivalence, both indifference and hostility, towards political structures and politicians in his Fall 1966 Paris Review interview conducted by Lawrence M. Bensky. Yet, he had been an early member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and also had supported the British Anti-Apartheid Movement (1959–1994), participating in British artists' refusal to permit professional productions of their work in South Africa in 1963 and in subsequent related campaigns. In "A Play and Its Politics", a 1985 interview with Nicholas Hern, Pinter described his earlier plays retrospectively from the perspective of the politics of power and the dynamics of oppression.

In his last 25 years, Pinter increasingly focused his essays, interviews and public appearances directly on political issues. He was an officer in International PEN, travelling with American playwright Arthur Miller to Turkey in 1985 on a mission co-sponsored with a Helsinki Watch committee to investigate and protest against the torture of imprisoned writers. There he met victims of political oppression and their families. Pinter's experiences in Turkey and his knowledge of the Turkish suppression of the Kurdish language inspired his 1988 play Mountain Language. He was also an active member of the Cuba Solidarity Campaign, an organisation that "campaigns in the UK against the US blockade of Cuba". In 2001, Pinter joined the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milošević (ICDSM), which appealed for a fair trial and for the freedom of Slobodan Milošević, signing a related "Artists' Appeal for Milošević" in 2004.

Pinter strongly opposed the 1991 Gulf War, the 1999 NATO bombing campaign in FR Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War, the United States' 2001 War in Afghanistan, and the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. Among his provocative political statements, Pinter called Prime Minister Tony Blair a "deluded idiot" and compared the administration of President George W. Bush to Nazi Germany. He stated that the United States "was charging towards world domination while the American public and Britain's 'mass-murdering' prime minister sat back and watched." He was very active in the antiwar movement in the United Kingdom, speaking at rallies held by the Stop the War Coalition and frequently criticising American aggression, as when he asked rhetorically, in his acceptance speech for the Wilfred Owen Award for Poetry on 18 March 2007: "What would Wilfred Owen make of the invasion of Iraq? A bandit act, an act of blatant state terrorism, demonstrating absolute contempt for the conception of international law."

Pinter earned a reputation for being pugnacious, enigmatic, taciturn, terse, prickly, explosive and forbidding. Pinter's blunt political statements, and the award of the Nobel Prize in Literature, elicited strong criticism and even, at times, provoked ridicule and personal attacks. The historian Geoffrey Alderman, author of the official history of Hackney Downs School, expressed his own "Jewish View" of Harold Pinter: "Whatever his merit as a writer, actor and director, on an ethical plane Harold Pinter seems to me to have been intensely flawed, and his moral compass deeply fractured." David Edgar, writing in The Guardian, defended Pinter against what he termed Pinter's "being berated by the belligerati" like Johann Hari, who felt that he did not "deserve" to win the Nobel Prize. Later Pinter continued to campaign against the Iraq War and on behalf of other political causes that he supported.

Pinter signed the mission statement of Jews for Justice for Palestinians in 2005 and its full-page advertisement, "What Is Israel Doing? A Call by Jews in Britain", published in The Times on 6 July 2006, and he was a patron of the Palestine Festival of Literature. In April 2008, Pinter signed the statement "We're not celebrating Israel's anniversary". The statement noted: "We cannot celebrate the birthday of a state founded on terrorism, massacres and the dispossession of another people from their land.", "We will celebrate when Arab and Jew live as equals in a peaceful Middle East"

Career

Further information: Works of Harold Pinter and Characteristics of Harold Pinter's work
Pinter in 1962

As actor

Pinter's acting career spanned over 50 years and, although he often played villains, included a wide range of roles on stage and in radio, film, and television. In addition to roles in radio and television adaptations of his own plays and dramatic sketches, early in his screenwriting career he made several cameo appearances in films based on his own screenplays; for example, as a society man in The Servant (1963) and as Mr. Bell in Accident (1967), both directed by Joseph Losey; and as a bookshop customer in his later film Turtle Diary (1985), starring Michael Gambon, Glenda Jackson, and Ben Kingsley.

Pinter's notable film and television roles included the lawyer Saul Abrahams opposite Peter O'Toole in Rogue Male, BBC TV's 1976 adaptation of Geoffrey Household's 1939 novel, and a drunk Irish journalist in Langrishe, Go Down (starring Judi Dench and Jeremy Irons) distributed on BBC Two in 1978 and released in movie theatres in 2002. Pinter's later film roles included the criminal Sam Ross in Mojo (1997), written and directed by Jez Butterworth, based on Butterworth's play of the same name; Sir Thomas Bertram (his most substantial feature-film role) in Mansfield Park (1998), a character that Pinter described as "a very civilised man ... a man of great sensibility but in fact, he's upholding and sustaining a totally brutal system from which he derives his money"; and Uncle Benny, opposite Pierce Brosnan and Geoffrey Rush, in The Tailor of Panama (2001). In television films, he played Mr. Bearing, the father of ovarian cancer patient Vivian Bearing, played by Emma Thompson in Mike Nichols's HBO film of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play Wit (2001); and the Director opposite John Gielgud (Gielgud's last role) and Rebecca Pidgeon in Catastrophe, by Samuel Beckett, directed by David Mamet as part of Beckett on Film (2001).

As director

Pinter began to direct more frequently during the 1970s, becoming an associate director of the National Theatre (NT) in 1973. He directed almost 50 productions of his own and others' plays for stage, film, and television, including 10 productions of works by Simon Gray: the stage and/or film premières of Butley (stage, 1971; film, 1974), Otherwise Engaged (1975), The Rear Column (stage, 1978; TV, 1980), Close of Play (NT, 1979), Quartermaine's Terms (1981), Life Support (1997), The Late Middle Classes (1999), and The Old Masters (2004). Several of those productions starred Alan Bates (1934–2003), who originated the stage and screen roles of not only Butley but also Mick in Pinter's first major commercial success, The Caretaker (stage, 1960; film, 1964); and in Pinter's double-bill produced at the Lyric Hammersmith in 1984, he played Nicolas in One for the Road and the cab driver in Victoria Station. Among over 35 plays that Pinter directed were Next of Kin (1974), by John Hopkins; Blithe Spirit (1976), by Noël Coward; The Innocents (1976), by William Archibald; Circe and Bravo (1986), by Donald Freed; Taking Sides (1995), by Ronald Harwood; and Twelve Angry Men (1996), by Reginald Rose.

As playwright

Pinter was the author of 29 plays and 15 dramatic sketches and the co-author of two works for stage and radio. He was considered to have been one of the most influential modern British dramatists, Along with the 1967 Tony Award for Best Play for The Homecoming and several other American awards and award nominations, he and his plays received many awards in the UK and elsewhere throughout the world. His style has entered the English language as an adjective, "Pinteresque", although Pinter himself disliked the term and found it meaningless.

"Comedies of menace" (1957–1968)

Pinter's first play, The Room, written and first performed in 1957, was a student production at the University of Bristol, directed by his good friend, actor Henry Woolf, who also originated the role of Mr. Kidd (which he reprised in 2001 and 2007). After Pinter mentioned that he had an idea for a play, Woolf asked him to write it so that he could direct it to fulfill a requirement for his postgraduate work. Pinter wrote it in three days. The production was described by Billington as "a staggeringly confident debut which attracted the attention of a young producer, Michael Codron, who decided to present Pinter's next play, The Birthday Party, at the Lyric Hammersmith, in 1958."

Written in 1957 and produced in 1958, Pinter's second play, The Birthday Party, one of his best-known works, was initially both a commercial and critical disaster, despite an enthusiastic review in The Sunday Times by its influential drama critic Harold Hobson, which appeared only after the production had closed and could not be reprieved. Critical accounts often quote Hobson:

I am well aware that Mr Pinters play received extremely bad notices last Tuesday morning. At the moment I write these it is uncertain even whether the play will still be in the bill by the time they appear, though it is probable it will soon be seen elsewhere. Deliberately, I am willing to risk whatever reputation I have as a judge of plays by saying that The Birthday Party is not a Fourth, not even a Second, but a First ; and that Pinter, on the evidence of his work, possesses the most original, disturbing and arresting talent in theatrical London ... Mr Pinter and The Birthday Party, despite their experiences last week, will be heard of again. Make a note of their names.

Pinter himself and later critics generally credited Hobson as bolstering him and perhaps even rescuing his career.

In a review published in 1958, borrowing from the subtitle of The Lunatic View: A Comedy of Menace, a play by David Campton, critic Irving Wardle called Pinter's early plays "comedy of menace"—a label that people have applied repeatedly to his work. Such plays begin with an apparently innocent situation that becomes both threatening and "absurd" as Pinter's characters behave in ways often perceived as inexplicable by his audiences and one another. Pinter acknowledges the influence of Samuel Beckett, particularly on his early work; they became friends, sending each other drafts of their works in progress for comments.

Pinter wrote The Hothouse in 1958, which he shelved for over 20 years (See "Overtly political plays and sketches" below). Next he wrote The Dumb Waiter (1959), which premièred in Germany and was then produced in a double bill with The Room at the Hampstead Theatre Club, in London, in 1960. It was then not produced often until the 1980s, and it has been revived more frequently since 2000, including the West End Trafalgar Studios production in 2007. The first production of The Caretaker, at the Arts Theatre Club, in London, in 1960, established Pinter's theatrical reputation. The play transferred to the Duchess Theatre in May 1960 and ran for 444 performances, receiving an Evening Standard Award for best play of 1960. Large radio and television audiences for his one-act play A Night Out, along with the popularity of his revue sketches, propelled him to further critical attention. In 1964, The Birthday Party was revived both on television (with Pinter himself in the role of Goldberg) and on stage (directed by Pinter at the Aldwych Theatre) and was well received.

By the time Peter Hall's London production of The Homecoming (1964) reached Broadway in 1967, Pinter had become a celebrity playwright, and the play garnered four Tony Awards, among other awards. During this period, Pinter also wrote the radio play A Slight Ache, first broadcast on the BBC Third Programme in 1959 and then adapted to the stage and performed at the Arts Theatre Club in 1961. A Night Out (1960) was broadcast to a large audience on ABC Weekend TV's television show Armchair Theatre, after being transmitted on BBC Radio 3, also in 1960. His play Night School was first televised in 1960 on Associated Rediffusion. The Collection premièred at the Aldwych Theatre in 1962, and The Dwarfs, adapted from Pinter's then unpublished novel of the same title, was first broadcast on radio in 1960, then adapted for the stage (also at the Arts Theatre Club) in a double bill with The Lover, which had previously been televised by Associated Rediffusion in 1963; and Tea Party, a play that Pinter developed from his 1963 short story, first broadcast on BBC TV in 1965.

Working as both a screenwriter and as a playwright, Pinter composed a script called The Compartment (1966), for a trilogy of films to be contributed by Samuel Beckett, Eugène Ionesco, and Pinter, of which only Beckett's film, titled Film, was actually produced. Then Pinter turned his unfilmed script into a television play, which was produced as The Basement, both on BBC 2 and also on stage in 1968.

"Memory plays" (1968–1982)

From the late 1960s through the early 1980s, Pinter wrote a series of plays and sketches that explore complex ambiguities, elegiac mysteries, comic vagaries, and other "quicksand-like" characteristics of memory and which critics sometimes classify as Pinter's "memory plays". These include Landscape (1968), Silence (1969), Night (1969), Old Times (1971), No Man's Land (1975), The Proust Screenplay (1977), Betrayal (1978), Family Voices (1981), Victoria Station (1982), and A Kind of Alaska (1982). Some of Pinter's later plays, including Party Time (1991), Moonlight (1993), Ashes to Ashes (1996), and Celebration (2000), draw upon some features of his "memory" dramaturgy in their focus on the past in the present, but they have personal and political resonances and other tonal differences from these earlier memory plays.

Overtly political plays and sketches (1980–2000)

Following a three-year period of creative drought in the early 1980s after his marriage to Antonia Fraser and the death of Vivien Merchant, Pinter's plays tended to become shorter and more overtly political, serving as critiques of oppression, torture, and other abuses of human rights, linked by the apparent "invulnerability of power." Just before this hiatus, in 1979, Pinter re-discovered his manuscript of The Hothouse, which he had written in 1958 but had set aside; he revised it and then directed its first production himself at Hampstead Theatre in London, in 1980. Like his plays of the 1980s, The Hothouse concerns authoritarianism and the abuses of power politics, but it is also a comedy, like his earlier comedies of menace. Pinter played the major role of Roote in a 1995 revival at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester.

Pinter's brief dramatic sketch Precisely (1983) is a duologue between two bureaucrats exploring the absurd power politics of mutual nuclear annihilation and deterrence. His first overtly political one-act play is One for the Road (1984). In 1985 Pinter stated that whereas his earlier plays presented metaphors for power and powerlessness, the later ones present literal realities of power and its abuse. Pinter's "political theatre dramatizes the interplay and conflict of the opposing poles of involvement and disengagement." Mountain Language (1988) is about the Turkish suppression of the Kurdish language. The dramatic sketch The New World Order (1991) provides what Robert Cushman, writing in The Independent described as "10 nerve-wracking minutes" of two men threatening to torture a third man who is blindfolded, gagged and bound in a chair; Pinter directed the British première at the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs, where it opened on 9 July 1991, and the production then transferred to Washington, D.C., where it was revived in 1994. Pinter's longer political satire Party Time (1991) premièred at the Almeida Theatre in London, in a double-bill with Mountain Language. Pinter adapted it as a screenplay for television in 1992, directing that production, first broadcast in the UK on Channel 4 on 17 November 1992.

Intertwining political and personal concerns, his next full-length plays, Moonlight (1993) and Ashes to Ashes (1996) are set in domestic households and focus on dying and death; in their personal conversations in Ashes to Ashes, Devlin and Rebecca allude to unspecified atrocities relating to the Holocaust. After experiencing the deaths of first his mother (1992) and then his father (1997), again merging the personal and the political, Pinter wrote the poems "Death" (1997) and "The Disappeared" (1998).

Pinter's last stage play, Celebration (2000), is a social satire set in an opulent restaurant, which lampoons The Ivy, a fashionable venue in London's West End theatre district, and its patrons who "have just come from performances of either the ballet or the opera. Not that they can remember a darn thing about what they saw, including the titles. gilded, foul-mouthed souls are just as myopic when it comes to their own table mates (and for that matter, their food), with conversations that usually connect only on the surface, if there." On its surface the play may appear to have fewer overtly political resonances than some of the plays from the 1980s and 1990s; but its central male characters, brothers named Lambert and Matt, are members of the elite (like the men in charge in Party Time), who describe themselves as "peaceful strategy consultants we don't carry guns." At the next table, Russell, a banker, describes himself as a "totally disordered personality ... a psychopath", while Lambert "vows to be reincarnated as ' more civilised, gentler person, nicer person'." These characters' deceptively smooth exteriors mask their extreme viciousness. Celebration evokes familiar Pinteresque political contexts: "The ritzy loudmouths in 'Celebration' ... and the quieter working-class mumblers of 'The Room' ... have everything in common beneath the surface". "Money remains in the service of entrenched power, and the brothers in the play are 'strategy consultants' whose jobs involve force and violence ... It is tempting but inaccurate to equate the comic power inversions of the social behaviour in Celebration with lasting change in larger political structures", according to Grimes, for whom the play indicates Pinter's pessimism about the possibility of changing the status quo. Yet, as the Waiter's often comically unbelievable reminiscences about his grandfather demonstrate in Celebration, Pinter's final stage plays also extend some expressionistic aspects of his earlier "memory plays", while harking back to his "comedies of menace", as illustrated in the characters and in the Waiter's final speech:

My grandfather introduced me to the mystery of life and I'm still in the middle of it. I can't find the door to get out. My grandfather got out of it. He got right out of it. He left it behind him and he didn't look back. He got that absolutely right. And I'd like to make one further interjection.
He stands still. Slow fade.

During 2000–2001, there were also simultaneous productions of Remembrance of Things Past, Pinter's stage adaptation of his unpublished Proust Screenplay, written in collaboration with and directed by Di Trevis, at the Royal National Theatre, and a revival of The Caretaker directed by Patrick Marber and starring Michael Gambon, Rupert Graves, and Douglas Hodge, at the Comedy Theatre.

Like Celebration, Pinter's penultimate sketch, Press Conference (2002), "invokes both torture and the fragile, circumscribed existence of dissent". In its première in the National Theatre's two-part production of Sketches, despite undergoing chemotherapy at the time, Pinter played the ruthless Minister willing to murder little children for the benefit of "The State".

As screenwriter

Pinter composed 27 screenplays and film scripts for cinema and television, many of which were filmed, or adapted as stage plays. His fame as a screenwriter began with his three screenplays written for films directed by Joseph Losey, leading to their close friendship: The Servant (1963), based on the novel by Robin Maugham; Accident (1967), adapted from the novel by Nicholas Mosley; and The Go-Between (1971), based on the novel by L. P. Hartley. Films based on Pinter's adaptations of his own stage plays are: The Caretaker (1963), directed by Clive Donner; The Birthday Party (1968), directed by William Friedkin; The Homecoming (1973), directed by Peter Hall; and Betrayal (1983), directed by David Jones.

Pinter also adapted other writers' novels to screenplays, including The Pumpkin Eater (1964), based on the novel by Penelope Mortimer, directed by Jack Clayton; The Quiller Memorandum (1966), from the 1965 spy novel The Berlin Memorandum, by Elleston Trevor, directed by Michael Anderson; The Last Tycoon (1976), from the unfinished novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald, directed by Elia Kazan; The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), from the novel by John Fowles, directed by Karel Reisz; Turtle Diary (1985), based on the novel by Russell Hoban; The Heat of the Day (1988), a television film, from the 1949 novel by Elizabeth Bowen; The Comfort of Strangers (1990), from the novel by Ian McEwan, directed by Paul Schrader; and The Trial (1993), from the novel by Franz Kafka, directed by David Jones.

His commissioned screenplays of others' works for the films The Handmaid's Tale (1990), The Remains of the Day (1990), and Lolita (1997), remain unpublished and in the case of the latter two films, uncredited, though several scenes from or aspects of his scripts were used in these finished films. His screenplays The Proust Screenplay (1972), Victory (1982), and The Dreaming Child (1997) and his unpublished screenplay The Tragedy of King Lear (2000) have not been filmed. A section of Pinter's Proust Screenplay was, however, released as the 1984 film Swann in Love (Un amour de Swann), directed by Volker Schlöndorff, and it was also adapted by Michael Bakewell as a two-hour radio drama broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in 1995, before Pinter and director Di Trevis collaborated to adapt it for the 2000 National Theatre production.

Pinter's last filmed screenplay was an adaptation of the 1970 Tony Award-winning play Sleuth, by Anthony Shaffer, which was commissioned by Jude Law, one of the film's producers. It is the basis for the 2007 film Sleuth, directed by Kenneth Branagh. Pinter's screenplays for The French Lieutenant's Woman and Betrayal were nominated for Academy Awards in 1981 and 1983, respectively.

2001–2008

Study of Pinter by Reginald Gray, 2007. (New Statesman, 12 January 2009)

From 16 to 31 July 2001, a Harold Pinter Festival celebrating his work, curated by Michael Colgan, artistic director of the Gate Theatre, Dublin, was held as part of the annual Lincoln Center Festival at Lincoln Center in New York City. Pinter participated both as an actor, as Nicolas in One for the Road, and as a director of a double bill pairing his last play, Celebration, with his first play, The Room. As part of a two-week "Harold Pinter Homage" at the World Leaders Festival of Creative Genius, held from 24 September to 30 October 2001, at the Harbourfront Centre, in Toronto, Canada, Pinter presented a dramatic reading of Celebration (2000) and also participated in a public interview as part of the International Festival of Authors.

In December 2001, Pinter was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer, for which, in 2002, he underwent an operation and chemotherapy. During the course of his treatment, he directed a production of his play No Man's Land, and wrote and performed in a new sketch, "Press Conference", for a production of his dramatic sketches at the National Theatre, and from 2002 on he was increasingly active in political causes, writing and presenting politically charged poetry, essays, speeches, as well as involved in developing his final two screenplay adaptations, The Tragedy of King Lear and Sleuth, whose drafts are in the British Library's Harold Pinter Archive (Add MS 88880/2).

From 9 to 25 January 2003, the Manitoba Theatre Centre, in Manitoba, Canada, held a nearly month-long PinterFest, in which over 130 performances of twelve of Pinter's plays were performed by a dozen different theatre companies. Productions during the Festival included: The Hothouse, Night School, The Lover, The Dumb Waiter, The Homecoming, The Birthday Party, Monologue, One for the Road, The Caretaker, Ashes to Ashes, Celebration, and No Man's Land.

In 2005, Pinter stated that he had stopped writing plays and that he would be devoting his efforts more to his political activism and writing poetry: "I think I've written 29 plays. I think it's enough for me ... My energies are going in different directions—over the last few years I've made a number of political speeches at various locations and ceremonies ... I'm using a lot of energy more specifically about political states of affairs, which I think are very, very worrying as things stand." Some of this later poetry included "The 'Special Relationship'", "Laughter", and "The Watcher".

From 2005, Pinter experienced ill health, including a rare skin disease called pemphigus and "a form of septicaemia that afflict his feet and made it difficult for him to walk." Yet, he completed his screenplay for the film of Sleuth in 2005. His last dramatic work for radio, Voices (2005), a collaboration with composer James Clarke, adapting selected works by Pinter to music, premièred on BBC Radio 3 on his 75th birthday on 10 October 2005. Three days later, it was announced that he had won the 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature.

In an interview with Pinter in 2006, conducted by critic Michael Billington as part of the cultural programme of the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, Pinter confirmed that he would continue to write poetry but not plays. In response, the audience shouted No in unison, urging him to keep writing. Along with the international symposium on Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics, curated by Billington, the 2006 Europe Theatre Prize theatrical events celebrating Pinter included new productions (in French) of Precisely (1983), One for the Road (1984), Mountain Language (1988), The New World Order (1991), Party Time (1991), and Press Conference (2002) (French versions by Jean Pavans); and Pinter Plays, Poetry & Prose, an evening of dramatic readings, directed by Alan Stanford, of the Gate Theatre, Dublin. In June 2006, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) hosted a celebration of Pinter's films curated by his friend, the playwright David Hare. Hare introduced the selection of film clips by saying: "To jump back into the world of Pinter's movies ... is to remind yourself of a literate mainstream cinema, focused as much as Bergman's is on the human face, in which tension is maintained by a carefully crafted mix of image and dialogue."

After returning to London from the Edinburgh International Book Festival, in September 2006, Pinter began rehearsing for his performance of the role of Krapp in Samuel Beckett's one-act monologue Krapp's Last Tape, which he performed from a motorised wheelchair in a limited run the following month at the Royal Court Theatre to sold-out audiences and "ecstatic" critical reviews. The production ran for only nine performances, as part of the 50th-anniversary celebration season of the Royal Court Theatre; it sold out within minutes of the opening of the box office and tickets commanded large sums from ticket resellers. One performance was filmed and broadcast on BBC Four on 21 June 2007, and also screened later, as part of the memorial PEN Tribute to Pinter, in New York, on 2 May 2009.

In October and November 2006, Sheffield Theatres hosted Pinter: A Celebration. It featured productions of seven of Pinter's plays: The Caretaker, Voices, No Man's Land, Family Voices, Tea Party, The Room, One for the Road, and The Dumb Waiter; and films (most his screenplays; some in which Pinter appears as an actor).

In February and March 2007, a 50th anniversary of The Dumb Waiter, was produced at the Trafalgar Studios. Later in February 2007, John Crowley's film version of Pinter's play Celebration (2000) was shown on More4 (Channel 4, UK). On 18 March 2007, BBC Radio 3 broadcast a new radio production of The Homecoming, directed by Thea Sharrock and produced by Martin J. Smith, with Pinter performing the role of Max (for the first time; he had previously played Lenny on stage in 1964). A revival of The Hothouse opened at the National Theatre, in London, in July 2007, concurrently with a revival of Betrayal at the Donmar Warehouse, directed by Roger Michell.

No Man's Land revival at Duke of York's Theatre, 30 December 2008

Revivals in 2008 included the 40th-anniversary production of the American première of The Homecoming on Broadway, directed by Daniel J. Sullivan. From 8 to 24 May 2008, the Lyric Hammersmith celebrated the 50th anniversary of The Birthday Party with a revival and related events, including a gala performance and reception hosted by Harold Pinter on 19 May 2008, exactly 50 years after its London première there. The final revival during Pinter's lifetime was a production of No Man's Land, directed by Rupert Goold, opening at the Gate Theatre, Dublin, in August 2008, and then transferring to the Duke of York's Theatre, London, where it played until 3 January 2009. On the Monday before Christmas 2008, Pinter was admitted to Hammersmith Hospital, where he died on Christmas Eve from liver cancer, aged 78.

On 26 December 2008, when No Man's Land reopened at the Duke of York's, the actors paid tribute to Pinter from the stage, with Michael Gambon reading Hirst's monologue about his "photograph album" from Act Two that Pinter had asked him to read at his funeral, ending with a standing ovation from the audience, many of whom were in tears:

I might even show you my photograph album. You might even see a face in it which might remind you of your own, of what you once were. You might see faces of others, in shadow, or cheeks of others, turning, or jaws, or backs of necks, or eyes, dark under hats, which might remind you of others, whom once you knew, whom you thought long dead, but from whom you will still receive a sidelong glance if you can face the good ghost. Allow the love of the good ghost. They possess all that emotion ... trapped. Bow to it. It will assuredly never release them, but who knows ... what relief ... it may give them ... who knows how they may quicken ... in their chains, in their glass jars. You think it cruel ... to quicken them, when they are fixed, imprisoned? No ... no. Deeply, deeply, they wish to respond to your touch, to your look, and when you smile, their joy ... is unbounded. And so I say to you, tender the dead, as you would yourself be tendered, now, in what you would describe as your life.

Posthumous events

Funeral

Grave of Harold Pinter in Kensal Green Cemetery

Pinter's funeral was a private, half-hour secular ceremony conducted at the graveside at Kensal Green Cemetery, 31 December 2008. The eight readings selected in advance by Pinter included passages from seven of his own writings and from the story "The Dead", by James Joyce, which was read by actress Penelope Wilton. Michael Gambon read the "photo album" speech from No Man's Land and three other readings, including Pinter's poem "Death" (1997). Other readings honoured Pinter's widow and his love of cricket. The ceremony was attended by many notable theatre people, including Tom Stoppard, but not by Pinter's son, Daniel Brand. At its end, Pinter's widow, Antonia Fraser, stepped forward to his grave and quoted from Horatio's speech after the death of Hamlet: "Goodnight, sweet prince, / And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest."

Memorial tributes

The night before Pinter's burial, theatre marquees on Broadway dimmed their lights for a minute in tribute, and on the final night of No Man's Land at the Duke of York's Theatre on 3 January 2009, all of the Ambassador Theatre Group in the West End dimmed their lights for an hour to honour the playwright.

Diane Abbott, the Member of Parliament for Hackney North & Stoke Newington proposed an early day motion in the House of Commons to support a residents' campaign to restore the Clapton Cinematograph Theatre, established in Lower Clapton Road in 1910, and to turn it into a memorial to Pinter "to honour this Hackney boy turned literary great." On 2 May 2009, a free public memorial tribute was held at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York. It was part of the 5th Annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature, taking place in New York City. Another memorial celebration, held in the Olivier Theatre, at the Royal National Theatre, in London, on the evening of 7 June 2009, consisted of excerpts and readings from Pinter's writings by nearly three dozen actors, many of whom were his friends and associates, including: Eileen Atkins, David Bradley, Colin Firth, Henry Goodman, Sheila Hancock, Alan Rickman, Penelope Wilton, Susan Wooldridge, and Henry Woolf; and a troupe of students from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, directed by Ian Rickson.

On 16 June 2009, Antonia Fraser officially opened a commemorative room at the Hackney Empire. The theatre also established a writer's residency in Pinter's name. Most of issue number 28 of Craig Raine's Arts Tri-Quarterly Areté was devoted to pieces remembering Pinter, beginning with Pinter's 1987 unpublished love poem dedicated "To Antonia" and his poem "Paris", written in 1975 (the year in which he and Fraser began living together), followed by brief memoirs by some of Pinter's associates and friends, including Patrick Marber, Nina Raine, Tom Stoppard, Peter Nichols, Susanna Gross, Richard Eyre, and David Hare.

A memorial cricket match at Lord's Cricket Ground between the Gaieties Cricket Club and the Lord's Taverners, followed by performances of Pinter's poems and excerpts from his plays, took place on 27 September 2009.

In 2009, English PEN established the PEN Pinter Prize, which is awarded annually to a British writer or a writer resident in Britain who, in the words of Pinter's Nobel speech, casts an 'unflinching, unswerving' gaze upon the world, and shows a 'fierce intellectual determination ... to define the real truth of our lives and our societies'. The prize is shared with an international writer of courage. The inaugural winners of the prize were Tony Harrison and the Burmese poet and comedian Maung Thura (a.k.a. Zarganar).

Being Harold Pinter

In January 2011 Being Harold Pinter, a theatrical collage of excerpts from Pinter's dramatic works, his Nobel Lecture, and letters of Belarusian prisoners, created and performed by the Belarus Free Theatre, evoked a great deal of attention in the public media. The Free Theatre's members had to be smuggled out of Minsk, owing to a government crackdown on dissident artists, to perform their production in a two-week sold-out engagement at La MaMa in New York as part of the 2011 Under the Radar Festival. In an additional sold-out benefit performance at the Public Theater, co-hosted by playwrights Tony Kushner and Tom Stoppard, the prisoner's letters were read by ten guest performers: Mandy Patinkin, Kevin Kline, Olympia Dukakis, Lily Rabe, Linda Emond, Josh Hamilton, Stephen Spinella, Lou Reed, Laurie Anderson, and Philip Seymour Hoffman. In solidarity with the Belarus Free Theatre, collaborations of actors and theatre companies joined in offering additional benefit readings of Being Harold Pinter across the United States.

The Harold Pinter Theatre, London

In September 2011, British Theatre owners, Ambassador Theatre Group (ATG) announced it was renaming its Comedy Theatre, Panton Street, London to become The Harold Pinter Theatre. Howard Panter, Joint CEO and Creative Director of ATG told the BBC, "The work of Pinter has become an integral part of the history of the Comedy Theatre. The re-naming of one of our most successful West End theatres is a fitting tribute to a man who made such a mark on British theatre who, over his 50 year career, became recognised as one of the most influential modern British dramatists."

Honours

Further information: Honours and awards to Harold Pinter

An Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and an Honorary Fellow of the Modern Language Association of America (1970), Pinter was appointed CBE in 1966 and became a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in 2002, having declined a knighthood in 1996. In 1995, he accepted the David Cohen Prize, in recognition of a lifetime of literary achievement. In 1996, he received a Laurence Olivier Special Award for lifetime achievement in the theatre. In 1997 he became a BAFTA Fellow. He received the World Leaders Award for "Creative Genius" as the subject of a week-long "Homage" in Toronto, in October 2001. In 2004, he received the Wilfred Owen Award for Poetry for his "lifelong contribution to literature, 'and specifically for his collection of poetry entitled War, published in 2003'". In March 2006, he was awarded the Europe Theatre Prize in recognition of lifetime achievements pertaining to drama and theatre. In conjunction with that award, the critic Michael Billington coordinated an international conference on Pinter: Passion, Poetry, Politics, including scholars and critics from Europe and the Americas, held in Turin, Italy, from 10 to 14 March 2006.

In October 2008, the Central School of Speech and Drama announced that Pinter had agreed to become its president and awarded him an honorary fellowship at its graduation ceremony. On his appointment, Pinter commented: "I was a student at Central in 1950–51. I enjoyed my time there very much and I am delighted to become president of a remarkable institution." But he had to receive that honorary degree, his 20th, in absentia owing to ill health. His presidency of the school was brief; he died just two weeks after the graduation ceremony, on 24 December 2008.

In 2013, he was posthumously awarded the Sretenje Order of Serbia.

Nobel Prize in Literature

Main article: 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature

Légion d'honneur

On 18 January 2007, French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin presented Pinter with France's highest civil honour, the Légion d'honneur, at a ceremony at the French embassy in London. De Villepin praised Pinter's poem "American Football" (1991) stating: "With its violence and its cruelty, it is for me one of the most accurate images of war, one of the most telling metaphors of the temptation of imperialism and violence." In response, Pinter praised France's opposition to the war in Iraq. M. de Villepin concluded: "The poet stands still and observes what doesn't deserve other men's attention. Poetry teaches us how to live and you, Harold Pinter, teach us how to live." He said that Pinter received the award particularly "because in seeking to capture all the facets of the human spirit, works respond to the aspirations of the French public, and its taste for an understanding of man and of what is truly universal". Lawrence Pollard observed that "the award for the great playwright underlines how much Mr Pinter is admired in countries like France as a model of the uncompromising radical intellectual".

Scholarly response

Main article: Harold Pinter and academia

Some scholars and critics challenge the validity of Pinter's critiques of what he terms "the modes of thinking of those in power" or dissent from his retrospective viewpoints on his own work. In 1985, Pinter recalled that his early act of conscientious objection resulted from being "terribly disturbed as a young man by the Cold War. And McCarthyism ... A profound hypocrisy. 'They' the monsters, 'we' the good. In 1948, the Russian suppression of Eastern Europe was an obvious and brutal fact, but I felt very strongly then and feel as strongly now that we have an obligation to subject our own actions and attitudes to an equivalent critical and moral scrutiny." Scholars agree that Pinter's dramatic rendering of power relations results from this scrutiny.

Pinter's aversion to any censorship by "the authorities" is epitomised in Petey's line at the end of The Birthday Party. As the broken-down and reconstituted Stanley is being carted off by the figures of authority Goldberg and McCann, Petey calls after him, "Stan, don't let them tell you what to do!" Pinter told Gussow in 1988, "I've lived that line all my damn life. Never more than now." The example of Pinter's stalwart opposition to what he termed "the modes of thinking of those in power"—the "brick wall" of the "minds" perpetuating the "status quo"—infused the "vast political pessimism" that some academic critics may perceive in his artistic work, its "drowning landscape" of harsh contemporary realities, with some residual "hope for restoring the dignity of man."

As Pinter's long-time friend David Jones reminded analytically inclined scholars and dramatic critics, Pinter was one of the "great comic writers":

The trap with Harold's work, for performers and audiences, is to approach it too earnestly or portentously. I have always tried to interpret his plays with as much humour and humanity as possible. There is always mischief lurking in the darkest corners. The world of The Caretaker is a bleak one, its characters damaged and lonely. But they are all going to survive. And in their dance to that end they show a frenetic vitality and a wry sense of the ridiculous that balance heartache and laughter. Funny, but not too funny. As Pinter wrote, back in 1960: "As far as I am concerned The Caretaker IS funny, up to a point. Beyond that point, it ceases to be funny, and it is because of that point that I wrote it."

His dramatic conflicts present serious implications for his characters and his audiences, leading to sustained inquiry about "the point" of his work and multiple "critical strategies" for developing interpretations and stylistic analyses of it.

Pinter research collections

Further information: Harold Pinter Archive

Pinter's unpublished manuscripts and letters to and from him are held in the Harold Pinter Archive in the Modern Literary Manuscripts division of the British Library. Smaller collections of Pinter manuscripts are in the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, the University of Texas at Austin; The Lilly Library, Indiana University at Bloomington; the Mandeville Special Collections Library, Geisel Library, at the University of California, San Diego; the British Film Institute, in London; and the Margaret Herrick Library, Pickford Center for Motion Picture Study, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Beverly Hills, California.

List of works and bibliography

Further information: List of works by Harold Pinter Further information: Harold Pinter bibliography

See also

References

  1. "Michael Caine". Front Row Interviews. 26 December 2008. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  2. Harold Pinter, as quoted in Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 103.
  3. Pinter, Harold. "Harold Pinter: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center". legacy.lib.utexas.edu. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  4. ^ Billington, Harold Pinter 1–5.
  5. For some accounts of the significance of Pinter's Jewish background, see Billington, Harold Pinter 2, 40–41, 53–54, 79–81, 163–64, 177, 286, 390, 429.
  6. ^ Cf. Woolf, Henry (12 July 2007). "My 60 Years in Harold's Gang". The Guardian. London: GMG. ISSN 0261-3077. OCLC 60623878. Archived from the original on 3 July 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.; Woolf, as quoted in Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" 144–45; Jacobson, Howard (10 January 2009). "Harold Pinter didn't get my joke, and I didn't get him – until it was too late". The Independent. London: INM. ISSN 0951-9467. OCLC 185201487. Archived from the original on 3 July 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  7. ^ Billington, Harold Pinter 2.
  8. Billington, Harold Pinter 5–10.
  9. Billington, Harold Pinter 11.
  10. A collection of Pinter's correspondence with Brearley is held in the Harold Pinter Archive in the British Library. Pinter's memorial epistolary poem "Joseph Brearley 1909–1977 (Teacher of English)", published in his collection Various Voices (177), ends with the following stanza: "You're gone. I'm at your side,/Walking with you from Clapton Pond to Finsbury Park,/And on, and on."
  11. Billington, Harold Pinter 10–11.
  12. See also "Introduction by Harold Pinter, Nobel Laureate", 7–9 in Watkins, ed., 'Fortune's Fool': The Man Who Taught Harold Pinter: A Life of Joe Brearley.
  13. Billington, Harold Pinter 13–14.
  14. Baker and Ross 127.
  15. ^ Staff (2011). "Harold Pinter: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center". Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. University of Texas at Austin. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  16. Billington, Harold Pinter 29–35.
  17. "The Meeting is a about the afterlife, despite Pinter being well known as an atheist. He admitted it was a "strange" piece for him to have written." Pinter 'on road to recovery', BBC.co.uk, 26 August 2002.
  18. Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 28–29.
  19. Baker, "Growing Up", chap. 1 of Harold Pinter 2–23.
  20. Billington, Harold Pinter 7–9 and 410.
  21. Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 25.
  22. Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 8.
  23. Batty, Mark (ed.). "Cricket". haroldpinter.org. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 5 December 2010.
  24. ^ Lyall, Sarah (7 October 2007). "Harold Pinter – Sleuth". The New York Times. New York City. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 4 January 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  25. Sherwin, Adam (24 March 2009). "Portrait of Harold Pinter playing cricket to be sold at auction". TimesOnline. London: News Intl. ISSN 0140-0460. Archived from the original on 16 June 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  26. Billington, Harold Pinter 410.
  27. Supple, T. Baker, and Watkins, in Watkins, ed.
  28. Burton, Harry (2009). "Latest News & Charity Fundraising News from The Lord's Taverners". Lord's Taverners. Archived from the original on 27 June 2009. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  29. See, e.g., Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 25–30; Billington, Harold Pinter 7–16; and Merritt, Pinter in Play 194.
  30. Billington, Harold Pinter 10–12.
  31. Billington, Harold Pinter 20–25, 31–35; and Batty, About Pinter 7.
  32. Billington, Harold Pinter 20–25.
  33. Billington, Harold Pinter 37; and Batty, About Pinter 8.
  34. Billington, Harold Pinter 31, 36, and 38; and Batty, About Pinter xiii and 8.
  35. Pinter, "Mac", Various Voices 36–43.
  36. ^ Batty, Mark (ed.). "Acting". haroldpinter.org. Archived from the original on 9 July 2011. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  37. Billington, Harold Pinter 20–25, 31, 36, and 37–41.
  38. Billington, Harold Pinter 3 and 47–48. Pinter's paternal grandmother's maiden name was Baron. He also used the name for an autobiographical character in the first draft of his novel The Dwarfs.
  39. ^ Batty, Mark (ed.). "The Harold Pinter Acting Career". haroldprinter.org. Archived from the original on 3 July 2011. Retrieved 30 January 2011., Batty, Mark (ed.). "Work in Various Repertory Companies 1954–1958". haroldprinter.org. Archived from the original on 3 July 2011. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  40. Billington, Harold Pinter 49–55.
  41. Batty, About Pinter 10.
  42. Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 83.
  43. Billington, Harold Pinter 20–25, 31, 36, 38.
  44. ^ Staff (25 December 2008). "Harold Pinter: the most original, stylish and enigmatic writer in the post-war revival of British theatre". The Daily Telegraph. London. ISSN 0307-1235. OCLC 49632006. Archived from the original on 16 January 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  45. Billington, Harold Pinter 54 and 75.
  46. Billington, Harold Pinter 252–56.
  47. Billington, Harold Pinter 257–67.
  48. Fraser, Must You Go? 86.
  49. ^ Billington, Harold Pinter 257.
  50. Fraser, Chap. 1: "First Night", Must You Go? 3–19.
  51. Fraser, chap. 1: "First Night"; chap. 2: "Pleasure and a Good Deal of Pain"; chap. 8: "It Is Here"; and chap. 13: "Marriage — Again", Must You Go? 3–33, 113–24, and 188–201.
  52. Billington, Harold Pinter 252–53.
  53. Fraser, Must You Go? 13.
  54. Billington, Harold Pinter 253–55.
  55. Staff (11 August 1975). "People". Time. Time Inc. Archived from the original on 20 May 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  56. Fraser, Must You Go? 29, 65–78, and 83.
  57. Fraser, Must You Go? 85–88.
  58. Fraser, "27 November — The Diary of Lady Antonia Pinter", Must You Go? 122–23.
  59. Billington, Harold Pinter 271–76.
  60. Billington, Harold Pinter 276.
  61. Staff (7 October 1982). "Death of Vivien Merchant Is Ascribed to Alcoholism". The New York Times. New York City. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 21 January 2010. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  62. Billington, Harold Pinter 276 and 345–47.
  63. ^ Billington, Harold Pinter 255.
  64. Fraser, Must You Go? 44.
  65. ^ Billington 254–55; cf. 345.
  66. Sands, Sarah (4 January 2009). "Pinter's funeral – more final reckoning than reconciliation". The Independent. Archived from the original on 9 May 2022. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  67. Fraser, Must You Go? 211: "With all my timings , Harold calls me his editor. Not so. I was the midwife saying, 'Push, Harold, push,' but the act of creation took place elsewhere and the baby would have been born anyway."
  68. See Billington, Harold Pinter 388, 429–30.
  69. Wark, Kirsty (23 June 2006). "Harold Pinter on Newsnight Review". Newsnight. BBC. Archived from the original on 12 November 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  70. Siddique, Haroon (25 December 2008). "Nobel prize winning dramatist Harold Pinter dies". The Guardian. London: GMG. ISSN 0261-3077. OCLC 60623878. Archived from the original on 5 September 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  71. Walker, Peter; Smith, David; Siddique, Haroon (26 December 2008). "Multi-award winning playwright lauded by dignitaries of theatrical and political worlds". The Guardian. London: GMG. ISSN 0261-3077. OCLC 60623878. Archived from the original on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  72. Billington, Harold Pinter 21–24, 92, and 286.
  73. Bensky, Lawrence M. (1966). "The Art of Theater No. 3, Harold Pinter" (PDF). Paris Review. Vol. Fall 1966, no. 39. Paris Review Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 January 2007. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  74. Mbeki, Thabo (21 October 2005). "Letter from the President: Hail the Nobel Laureates – Apostles of Human Curiosity!". ANC Today. 5 (42). African National Congress. OCLC 212406525. Archived from the original on 22 June 2008. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  75. Reddy, E.S. (July 1988). "Free Mandela: An Account of the Campaign to Free Nelson Mandela and All Other Political Prisoners in South Africa". ANC Today. African National Congress. OCLC 212406525. Archived from the original on 15 October 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  76. Billington, Harold Pinter 286–305 (chap. 15: "Public Affairs"), 400–03, and 433–41; and Merritt, Pinter in Play 171–209 (chap. 8: "Cultural Politics", espec. "Pinter and Politics").
  77. Merritt, "Pinter and Politics," Pinter in Play 171–89.
  78. ^ Billington, Harold Pinter 309–10; and Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 67–68.
  79. "Cuba Solidarity Campaign – Our Aims". cuba-solidarity.org. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  80. ^ Kamm, Oliver (26 December 2008). "Harold Pinter: An impassioned artist who lost direction on the political stage". TimesOnline. London: News International. ISSN 0140-0460. Archived from the original on 17 April 2010. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  81. ^ Chrisafis, Angelique; Tilden, Imogen (11 June 2003). "Pinter blasts 'Nazi America' and 'deluded idiot' Blair". The Guardian. London: GMG. ISSN 0261-3077. OCLC 60623878. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  82. Pinter, Harold (11 December 2002). "The American administration is a bloodthirsty wild animal". The Daily Telegraph. London. ISSN 0307-1235. OCLC 49632006. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  83. Pinter, Various Voices 267.
  84. Billington, Harold Pinter 428.
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Works cited

Further reading

Editions

  • Pinter, Harold. Plays: One | The Birthday Party, The Room, The Dumb Waiter, A Slight Ache, The Hothouse, A Night Out. (London: Methuen, 1983) ISBN 0-413-34650-1 Contains an introductory essay, Writing for the Theatre.
  • Pinter, Harold. Plays: Two | The Caretaker, The Collection, The Lover, Night School, The Dwarfs. (London: Eyre Methuen, 1979) ISBN 0-413-37300-2 Contains an introductory essay, Writing for Myself.
  • Pinter, Harold. Plays: Three | The Homecoming, The Tea Party, The Basement, Landscape, Silence. (London: Eyre Methuen, 1978) ISBN 0-413-38480-2

Works of criticism

External links

Harold Pinter
Plays
Dramatic sketches
  • The Black and White (1959)
  • Trouble in the Works (1959)
  • The Last to Go (1959)
  • Request Stop (1959)
  • Special Offer (1959)
  • That's Your Trouble (1959)
  • That's All (1959)
  • Interview (1959)
  • Applicant (1959)
  • Dialogue for Three (1959)
  • Umbrellas (1960)
  • Night (1969)
  • Precisely (1983)
  • God's District (1997)
  • Press Conference (2002)
  • Apart From That (2006)
  • The Pres and an Officer (2018)
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