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Martin Crimp

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Martin Crimp
Crimp (centre) at theThéâtre des Abbesses,Paris
Born
Martin Andrew Crimp

(1956-02-14)14 February 1956(age 68)
Dartford,Kent, England
OccupationPlaywright

Martin Andrew Crimp(born 14 February 1956 inDartford,Kent) is aBritishplaywright.

Early life and career

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The son of John Crimp, a British Rail signalling engineer, and his wife Jennie, Crimp's family moved in 1960 toStreathamwhere he attended a local primary school before winning a scholarship toDulwich College.But when his father was transferred to York, he went to the nearbyPocklington School,where he showed an aptitude for languages, music, English literature, and theatre. He read English atSt Catharine's College, Cambridge(1975–78), where his first playClangwas staged by fellow studentRoger Michell.[1]Before establishing himself as a playwright, he put togetherAn Anatomy,a collection of short stories, and also wrote a novelStill Early Days.These remain unpublished.

His first six plays were performed at theOrange Tree Theatrein Richmond. As he told Marsha Hanlon in an interview for the Orange Tree appeal brochure in 1991: "When the Orange Tree ran a workshop for local writers [in September 1981], I was invited to take part. The carrot was the chance of a lunchtime production, so I wroteLiving Remainsand the Orange Tree staged it – my first-ever produced play! I was so excited that I didn't think about the space where it was performed [then a room above a pub], but now I realise that the Orange Tree's intimacy and simplicity provided an extra layer of excitement. "

Seven of his plays, and his second Ionesco translation have also been presented at the Royal Court Theatre, London, where he became writer-in-residence in 1997.

Professional career

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Playwright

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Crimp’s play Attempts on Her Life, which premiered at London’s Royal Court Theatre in 1997, was described by criticAleks Sierzas the "event that secured his reputation as the most innovative, most exciting, and most exportable playwright of his generation" [Sierz, Aleks, Aleks, (2013) p.48].[1]The play presents a unique structure, as none of the lines are assigned to specific characters, and Crimp does not specify the number of actors required to perform the piece. The play consists of seventeen seemingly unrelated scenes in which groups of people provide contradictory descriptions of an absent protagonist, a woman who is discussed as a terrorist, the daughter of grieving parents, an artist, and even a new car. Through its deliberate fragmentation, Attempts on Her Life challenges the audience to reconsider their understanding of what constitutes a "play" and raises questions about the existence of individuals beyond the constructs we create.

His other plays range from tragi-comic studies of suburban guilt and repression —Definitely the Bahamas(1987),Dealing with Clair(1989),The Country(2000) — via the satirical ‘entertainment’In the Republic of Happiness(2012) — to powerful re-writings of Greek classics —Cruel & Tender(2004),The Rest Will Be Familiar to You from Cinema(2013). This unusual variety has led Vicky Angelaki to write:

Crimp’s multifaceted theatre, rich in textual, visual and visceral nuances, moves beyond rigid groupings of drama types and genres. What makes Crimp’s work both challenging and fascinating is its dual and equal focus on the private and the public, the collective and the individual, the humorous and the dramatic, the spoken and the unspoken. [Angelaki, Vicky (2012), The Plays of Martin Crimp, Palgrave Macmillan, page1][2]

Crimp's work has successfully received numerous productions abroad. In Germany, he is considered to be "one of the most respected British playwrights" and it was reported in 2013 that there has been "more than 60 German-language productions of his work in the past two decades."[3]

In 2021, Crimp was recipient of Germany’s Nyssen-Bansemer theater prize in recognition of the importance of his body of work. [Süddeutsche Zeitung, 29 March 2021][4]Writing about the prize inTheater heutemagazine, Till Briegleb praises the way that “With great authority, Crimp sketches the most diverse victims of a bourgeois society that wants to ignore all connections between their tranquil existence and the violence that makes it possible. From the murderer to the child, everyone who appears is unique, their life-lies and fears individual.”[4]

Martin Crimp is sometimes described as a practitioner of the "in-yer-face"school of contemporary British drama, although he rejects the label.[5]

In 2022, he performed his playNot one of these people,which gave voice to 299 different characters. Supported with a livedeepfakevideo generator, imagined by Quebec director Christian Lapointe, the playwright accepted Lapointe’s invitation to perform as an actor on stage for the first time.[6]

Theatre translator

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From 1997 onwards, Crimp has had a parallel career as theatre translator, making his first impact at the Royal Court Theatre with a translation ofIonesco’sThe Chairs,a production that subsequently transferred to Broadway. His re-writings ofMolière’sThe Misanthrope(1996, revived 2009)[7]andRostand’sCyrano de Bergerac(2019/22) were both commercially and critically successful, the latter transferring from London’s West End to the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[8]These rewritings have led some critics to see them as new plays. Angelaki, for example, argues that "Crimp’s radical adaptations… depart substantially from the early versions of the texts that inspire them and as such belong to a discussion of Crimp’s playwriting canon, rather than of his translations or versions" [Angelaki, Vicky, Op. Cit. page 154][2]

Opera librettist

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Scene from a 2018 performance ofWritten on SkinbyOpera Philadelphia

In 2006, Crimp began a collaboration with composerGeorge Benjaminthat has led to the creation of three operas:Into the Little Hill(2006),Written on Skin(2012) andLessons in Love and Violence(2018).Written on Skinin particular has garnered international acclaim since its premiere at theFestival d’Aix en Provencein 2012.[9]

Works

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Plays

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  • Not One Of These People(Carrefour international de théâtreThéâtre La Bordée2022 )
  • When We Have Sufficiently Tortured Each Other: 12 Variations on Samuel Richardson’s Pamela,( "provoked" by Richardson'sPamela,National Theatre,Dorfman, 2019)[10]
  • Men Asleep(Deutsches Schauspielhaus2018)
  • The Rest Will Be Familiar to You from Cinema(inspired byEuripides'Phoenician Women,Deutsches Schauspielhaus2013)
  • In the Republic of Happiness(Royal Court Theatre2012)[11]
  • Play House(Orange Tree2012, revived withDefinitely the Bahamasand directed by the author)
  • The City(Royal Court, Jerwood Theatre Downstairs 2008)
  • Fewer Emergencies(Royal Court, Theatre Upstairs 2005)[12]
  • Cruel and Tender(Young Vic2004)
  • Advice to Iraqi women(Royal Court 2003)
  • Face to the Wall(Royal Court 2002)
  • The Country(Royal Court 2000, revived at theTabard TheatreMay 2008)
  • Attempts on Her Life(Royal Court 1997; National Theatre, Lyttelton, March 2007)
  • The Treatment(Royal Court 1993; revivedAlmeida Theatre2017)
  • Getting Attention(Royal Court, Theatre Upstairs 1991)
  • No One Sees the Video(Royal Court, Theatre Upstairs 1990)
  • Play with Repeats(Orange Tree 1989)
  • Dealing with Clair(Orange Tree 1988)
  • Definitely the Bahamas,"a group of three plays for consecutive performance" also includingA Kind of ArdenandThe Spanish Girls(Orange Tree1987)
  • A Variety of Death-Defying Acts(Orange Tree 1985)
  • Four Attempted Acts(Orange Tree 1984)
  • Living Remains(Orange Tree lunchtime, 9–25 July 1982)

Translations

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Opera libretti

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References

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  1. ^abSierz, Aleks (2013)."The Theatre of Martin Crimp: Second Edition: Critical Companions Aleks Sierz Methurn Drama".Bloomsbury.Retrieved1 August2022.
  2. ^abAngelaki, Vicky (2012)."Vicky Angelaki. The Plays of Martin Crimp: Making Theatre Strange. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2012".Degruyter.com.doi:10.1515/jcde-2015-0012.Retrieved1 August2022.
  3. ^Sierz, Aleks (2013).The Theatre of Martin Crimp(Second ed.). Bloomsbury Methuen Drama. pp. xii.ISBN978-1472517012.
  4. ^abBriegleb, Till (2021)."Article" Satirist of Pain ": Der Theaterverlag".der-theaterverlag.de.Retrieved1 August2022.
  5. ^Devine, Harriet (2006)."Looking Back: Playwrights at the Royal Court, 1956-2006 Faber".Faber.co.uk.Retrieved1 August2022.
  6. ^Brown, Mark (2022)."Not One of These People: a triumph of deep fakery? Yes, really".Telegraph.co.uk.Retrieved1 August2022.
  7. ^Sierz, Aleks (2009)."The Misanthrope, Comedy Theatre, reviews, The Arts Desk".theartsdesk.com.Retrieved1 August2022.
  8. ^Green, Jesse (2022)."Review: 'Cyrano De Bergerac' Now Noseless and Drunk on Words The New York Times".The New York Times.Retrieved1 August2022.
  9. ^Machart, Renaud (2012)."The best opera written for twenty years?".www-lemonde-fr.Retrieved1 August2022.
  10. ^"When We Have Sufficiently Tortured Each Other".National Theatre.Retrieved23 November2018.
  11. ^"In the Republic of Happiness".Royal Court.Retrieved11 October2022.
  12. ^"The British Theatre Guide: Reviews - Fewer Emergencies (Royal Court)".16 May 2008. Archived fromthe originalon 16 May 2008.Retrieved11 October2022.
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