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Boris Vian

Boris Vian (French: [bɔʁis vjɑ̃]; 10 March 1920 – 23 June 1959) was a French polymath: writer, poet, musician, singer, translator, critic, actor, inventor and engineer who is primarily remembered for his novels. Those published under the pseudonym Vernon Sullivan were bizarre parodies of criminal fiction, highly controversial at the time of their release due to their unconventional outlook.

Boris Vian
Vian in 1948
Born(1920-03-10)10 March 1920
Ville-d'Avray, Hauts-de-Seine, France
Died23 June 1959(1959-06-23) (aged 39)
Paris, France
Pen nameVernon Sullivan, Bison Ravi, Baron Visi, Brisavion
OccupationNovelist, poet, playwright, journalist, engineer, musician, songwriter, singer
Alma materÉcole Centrale Paris
Notable worksL'Écume des jours
J'irai cracher sur vos tombes
L'Automne à Pékin
L'Herbe rouge
L'Arrache-cœur
SpousesMichelle Léglise (divorced)
Ursula Kübler

Vian's other fiction, published under his real name, featured a highly individual writing style with numerous made-up words, subtle wordplay and surrealistic plots. His novel Froth on the Daydream (L'Écume des jours) is the best known of these works and one of the few translated into English.

Vian was an important influence on the French jazz scene. He served as liaison for Hoagy Carmichael, Duke Ellington and Miles Davis in Paris, wrote for several French jazz-reviews (Le Jazz Hot, Paris Jazz) and published numerous articles dealing with jazz both in the United States and in France. His own music and songs enjoyed popularity during his lifetime, particularly the anti-war song "Le Déserteur" (The Deserter).

Biography

Early life

Vian was born in 1920 into an upper middle-class family in the wealthy Parisian suburb of Ville d'Avray (Hauts-de-Seine). His parents were Paul Vian, a young rentier, and Yvonne Ravenez, amateur pianist and harpist. From his father, Vian inherited a distrust of the church and the military, as well as a love of the bohemian life. Vian was the second of four children: the others were Lélio (1918–1984), Alain (1921–1995) and Ninon (1924–2003). The family occupied the Les Fauvettes villa. The name "Boris" was chosen by Yvonne, an avid classical music lover, after seeing a performance of Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov.[1]

Boris' later childhood was also marked with sickness as he suffered from Rheumatic fever when he was 12. From then on Boris' parents became overprotective toward him, and he would later judge them harshly for this in L'Herbe rouge and L'Arrache-coeur.[citation needed]

Formal education and teenage years

From 1932 to 1937, Vian studied at Lycée Hoche in Versailles. In 1936, Vian and his two brothers began to organize what they called "surprise-parties" (surprise parties). They partook of mescaline in the form of a Mexican cactus called peyote. These gatherings became the basis of his early novels: Trouble dans les andains (Turmoil in the Swaths) (1943) and particularly Vercoquin et le plancton (Vercoquin and the Plankton) (1943–44). It was also in 1936 that Vian became interested in jazz; the next year he started playing the trumpet and joined the Hot Club de France.

In 1937, Vian graduated from Lycée Hoche, passing baccalauréats in mathematics, philosophy, Latin, Greek and German. He subsequently enrolled at Lycée Condorcet, Paris, where he studied special mathematics until 1939. Vian became fully immersed in the French jazz scene: for example, in 1939 he helped organize Duke Ellington's second concert in France. When WWII started, Vian was not accepted into the army due to poor health. He entered École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures in Paris and subsequently moved to Angoulême when the school moved there because of the war.

In 1940, Vian met Michelle Léglise, who became his wife in 1941. She taught Vian English and introduced him to translations of American literature. Also in 1940, Vian met Jacques Loustalot, who became a recurring character in several early novels and short stories as "The Colonel". Loustalot died accidentally in 1949 falling from a building he was trying to climb on in order to enter into a flat by the window, after a bet. In 1942, Vian and his brothers joined a jazz orchestra under the direction of Claude Abbadie, who became a minor character in Vian's Vercoquin et le plancton. The same year, Vian graduated from École Centrale with a diploma in metallurgy, and his son Patrick was born.

Career

After Vian's graduation, he and Michelle moved to the 10th arrondissement of Paris and, on 24 August 1942 he became an engineer at the French Association for Standardisation (AFNOR). By this time he was an accomplished jazz trumpeter, and in 1943 he wrote his first novel, Trouble dans les andains (Turmoil in the Swaths). His literary career started in 1943 with his first publication, a poem, in the Hot Club de France bulletin. The poem was signed Bison Ravi ("Delighted Bison"), an anagram of Vian's real name. The same year Vian's father died, murdered at home by burglars.

In 1944, Vian completed Vercoquin et le plancton (Vercoquin and the Plankton), a novel inspired partly by surprise-parties of his youth and partly by his job at the AFNOR (which is heavily satirized in the novel). Raymond Queneau and Jean Rostand helped Vian to publish this work at Éditions Gallimard in 1947, along with several works Vian completed in 1946. These included his first major novels, L'Écume des jours and L'automne à Pékin (Autumn in Peking). The former, a tragic love story in which real world objects respond to the characters' emotions, is now regarded as Vian's masterpiece, but at the time of its publication it failed to attract any considerable attention. L'automne à Pékin, which also had a love story at its heart but was somewhat more complex, also failed to sell well.

Frustrated by the commercial failure of his works, Vian vowed he could write a best-seller and wrote the hard-boiled novel I Spit on Your Graves (J'irai cracher sur vos tombes) in only 15 days. The book was ascribed to a fictitious American writer, Vernon Sullivan, with Vian credited as translator. Vian persuaded his publisher friend Jean d'Halluin to publish the novel in 1947. Eventually the hoax became known and the book became one of the best-selling titles of that year. Vian wrote three more Vernon Sullivan novels from 1947 to 1949.

The year 1946 marked a turning point in Vian's life: At one of the popular parties that he and Michelle hosted he made the acquaintance of Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Albert Camus, became a regular in their literary circles and started regularly publishing various materials in Les Temps modernes. Vian admired Sartre in particular and gave him a prominent role—as "Jean-Sol Partre"—in L'Écume des jours (litt. "The foam of the days") published in English under the title: Froth on the Daydream. Ironically, Sartre and Michelle Vian commenced a relationship that would eventually destroy Vian's marriage.

Despite his literary work becoming more important, Vian never left the jazz scene. He became a regular contributor to jazz-related magazines, and played trumpet at Le Tabou. As a result, his financial situation improved, and he abandoned the job at the AFNOR. Vian also formed his own choir, La petite chorale de Saint-Germain-des-Pieds [sic].[2]

Later years

The year 1948 saw the birth of Vian's daughter, Carole. He continued his literary career by writing Vernon Sullivan novels, and also published poetry collections: Barnum's Digest (1948) and Cantilènes en gelée (Cantelinas in Jelly, 1949). Vian also started writing plays, the first of which, L'Équarrissage pour tous (Slaughter for Everyone), was staged the year it was written, 1950. The same year saw the publication of Vian's third major novel, L'Herbe rouge (The Red Grass). This was a much darker story than its predecessors, centering on a man who built a giant machine that could help him psychoanalyze his soul. Like the previous two books, it did not sell well; Vian's financial situation had been steadily worsening since late 1948, and he was forced to take up translation of English-language literature and articles in order to get by. Vian separated from his wife, and in 1950 he met Ursula Kübler (1928–2010), a Swiss dancer; the two started an affair, and in 1951 Vian divorced Michelle. Ursula and Boris married in 1954.

Vian's last novel, L'Arrache-cœur (The Heartsnatcher), was published in 1953, yet again to poor sales and Vian effectively stopped writing fiction. The only work that appeared after 1953 was a revised version of L'automne à Pékin, published 1956. He concentrated on a new field, song-writing and performing, and continued writing poetry. Vian's songs were successful; in 1954 he embarked on his first tour as singer-songwriter. By 1955, when he was working as art director for Philips, Vian was active in a wide variety of fields: song-writing, opera, screenplays and several more plays. His first album, Chansons possibles et impossibles (Possible and Impossible Songs), was also recorded in 1955. He wrote the first French rock and roll songs with his friend Henri Salvador, who sang them under the nickname Henry Cording. He also wrote "Java Pour Petula" (a song about an English girl arriving in France, written in Parisian argot) for Petula Clark's first concert performances in France.

Still in 1955, Vian decided to perform some of his songs on stage himself. He had been unhappy about the fact that French singer Marcel Mouloudji (1922–1994), who had interpreted "Le Deserteur" (The Deserter) on stage the year before, had not accepted the original lyrics because he thought that they would lead to the song being banned. Although Vian accepted a change to one verse, the song was banned from TV and radio channels until 1967. The record of Vian's songs performed by himself was not successful in France until ten years after his death.

Vian's life was endangered in 1956 by a pulmonary edema, but he survived and continued working with the same intensity as before. In 1957, Vian completed another play: Les Bâtisseurs d'empire (The Empire Builders), which was only published and staged in 1959. In 1958, Vian worked on the opera Fiesta with Darius Milhaud, and a collection of his essays, En avant la zizique... Et par ici les gros sous (On with the Muzak... And Bring in the Big Bucks), was published the same year.

Death

On the morning of 23 June 1959, Vian was at the Cinéma Marbeuf for the screening of the film version of I will Spit on Your Graves. He had already fought with the producers over their interpretation of his work, and he publicly denounced the film, stating that he wished to have his name removed from the credits. A few minutes after the film began, he reportedly blurted out: "These guys are supposed to be American? My ass!" He then collapsed into his seat and died from sudden cardiac death on his way to the hospital.[3]

Legacy

During his lifetime, only the novels published under the name of Vernon Sullivan were successful. Those published under his real name, which had real literary value in his eyes, remained a commercial failure, despite the support of prominent writers of the time.[4]

Almost immediately after his death, L'Écume des jours, and then L'automne à Pékin, L'Arrache-cœur, and L'Herbe rouge, began to gain recognition in France and were taken up by the young in the 1960s and 1970s.[5]

As a songwriter, Vian had mixed success. When he decided that he himself should sing the songs that were rejected by the stars, he succeeded only in reaching a limited audience (including Léo Ferré and Georges Brassens), the public remaining unconvinced of his talent for singing.[6] Nevertheless the May 1968 in France generation, even more than the previous ones, loved his songs, especially because of their impertinence.

As a songwriter, Vian inspired Serge Gainsbourg, who used to attend his show at the cabaret Les Trois Baudets and who wrote, thirty years later: "I took it on the chin [...], he sang terrific things [...], it is because I heard him that I decided to try something interesting".[7] As a critic, Boris Vian was the first to support Gainsbourg in Le Canard enchaîné, in 1957.

Over the years, Vian's works have become modern classics, often celebrated and selected as subjects for study in schools. Vian is still viewed by many as the emblematic figure of Saint Germain des Prés as it existed during the postwar decade, when this district was the centre of artistic and intellectual life in Paris.[8][9]

Selected bibliography

Prose

Novels

  • Trouble dans les andains (Turmoil in the Swaths) (1942–43, published posthumously in 1966 by La Jeune Parque)
  • Vercoquin et le plancton (Vercoquin and the Plankton) (1943–45, published 1947 by Éditions Gallimard)
  • L'Écume des jours (Foam of the Days) (1946, published 1947 by Éditions Gallimard; translated variously as Froth on the Daydream, Mood Indigo and Foam of the Daze)
  • L'Automne à Pékin (Autumn in Peking) (1946, published 1947 by Éditions du Scorpion, revised version published in 1956; Autumn in Peking)
  • L'Herbe rouge (The Red Grass) (1948–49, published 1950 by Éditions Toutain)
  • L'Arrache-cœur (Heartsnatcher) (1947–1951, published 1953 by Éditions Vrille; Heartsnatcher)
  • On n’y échappe pas (published posthumously)

Vernon Sullivan novels

  • J'irai cracher sur vos tombes (I Shall Spit on Your Graves[10]) (Éditions du Scorpion, 1946)
  • Les morts ont tous la même peau (The Dead All Have the Same Skin) (Éditions du Scorpion, 1947)
  • Et on tuera tous les affreux (To Hell With the Ugly) (Éditions du Scorpion, 1948)
  • Elles se rendent pas compte (They Do Not Realize) (1948–50, published 1950 by Éditions du Scorpion)

Short story collections

  • Les Fourmis (The Ants) (1944–47, published 1949 by Éditions du Scorpion)
  • Les Lurettes fourrées (Ages Fulfilled) (1948–49, published 1950 by Le Livre de Poche as an addendum to their edition of L'Herbe rouge)
  • Le Ratichon baigneur (Toothy Bather) (1946–52, published posthumously in 1981 by Éditions Bourgois)
  • Le Loup-garou (The Werewolf) (1945–53?, published posthumously in 1970 by Éditions Bourgois)

Dramatic works

  • L'Équarrissage pour tous (Knackery for All), play (1947, published 1950 by Éditions Toutain), published in English as The Knacker's ABC.
  • Le Dernier des métiers (The Last of the Trades), play (1950, published 1965 by Éditions Pauvert)
  • Tête de Méduse (Medusa's Head), comedy in one act (1951, published 1971 by U.G.E.)
  • Série Blême (Pallid Series), tragedy in three acts (1952?, published 1971 by U.G.E.)
  • Le Chasseur français (The French Hunter), vaudeville (1955, published 1971 by U.G.E.)
  • Les Bâtisseurs d'Empire (The Empire Builders), (1957, published 1959 by Collège de 'Pataphysique)
  • Le Goûter des généraux (The Snack of Generals), (1951, published 1962 by Collège de 'Pataphysique)

Poetry

  • Barnum's Digest (1948, a collection of 10 poems)
  • Cantilènes en gelée (Cantelinas in Jelly) (1949)
  • Je voudrais pas crever (I'd prefer not to die) (posthumously published in 1962)

Translations

Other works

  • Manuel de St-Germain-des-Prés, originally commissioned to be a tourist guide to the St-Germain-des-Prés district (published 1950 by Éditions Toutain)

Selected discography

  • Nouveau code de la route 1955 (1955)
  • Chansons possibles et impossibles (1956)

See also

Video

Notes

  1. ^ Boris Vian: La schiuma dei giorni. 2 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine marcosymarcos.com. Retrieved 18 August 2014. (in Italian)
  2. ^ La petite chorale de Saint-Germain-des-Pieds 2 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Boggio p. 461
  4. ^ Richaud p. 151
  5. ^ Dictionnaire des auteurs p. 606
  6. ^ Boggio p. 414, 437
  7. ^ L'Arc Journal (#90) special issue devoted to Boris Vian, 1984
  8. ^ Richaud p. 78, 80
  9. ^ Boggio p. 175, 224
  10. ^ full title in the BNF exposition

References

  • Biographie, in L'Arrache-cœur, LGF – Livre de Poche, 2006. ISBN 978-2-253-00662-6
  • Geoffrey Dearson. Lexical Transfer in the novels of Boris Vian (Diss. University of Wales, UK), [1]
  • Martin Weiss, Boris Vian. La langue qui trébuche. Jeux de mots dans l'oeuvre d'un génie. Grazer Linguistische Studien 20, University of Graz 1983, new edition (eBook) 2014
  • Frédéric Richaud, Boris Vian, c'est joli de vivre, éditions du Chêne, Paris, 1999, 174 p. ISBN 978-2-842-77177-5
  • Dictionnaire des auteurs, vol. 4, t. IV, by Antoine Berman, Laffont-Bompiani edition, Paris, 1990, 756 p ISBN 2-221-50175-6
  • Rolls, Alistair Charles (1999). The Flight of the Angels: Intertextuality in Four Novels of Boris Vian. Atlanta, Georgia: Editions Ropodi. ISBN 90-420-0467-3.

External links

  • Official website (in French)
  • Le Déserteur
  • Boris Vian at IMDb

boris, vian, others, with, this, surname, vian, french, bɔʁis, vjɑ, march, 1920, june, 1959, french, polymath, writer, poet, musician, singer, translator, critic, actor, inventor, engineer, primarily, remembered, novels, those, published, under, pseudonym, ver. For others with this surname see Vian Boris Vian French bɔʁis vjɑ 10 March 1920 23 June 1959 was a French polymath writer poet musician singer translator critic actor inventor and engineer who is primarily remembered for his novels Those published under the pseudonym Vernon Sullivan were bizarre parodies of criminal fiction highly controversial at the time of their release due to their unconventional outlook Boris VianVian in 1948Born 1920 03 10 10 March 1920Ville d Avray Hauts de Seine FranceDied23 June 1959 1959 06 23 aged 39 Paris FrancePen nameVernon Sullivan Bison Ravi Baron Visi BrisavionOccupationNovelist poet playwright journalist engineer musician songwriter singerAlma materEcole Centrale ParisNotable worksL Ecume des joursJ irai cracher sur vos tombesL Automne a PekinL Herbe rougeL Arrache cœurSpousesMichelle Leglise divorced Ursula KublerVian s other fiction published under his real name featured a highly individual writing style with numerous made up words subtle wordplay and surrealistic plots His novel Froth on the Daydream L Ecume des jours is the best known of these works and one of the few translated into English Vian was an important influence on the French jazz scene He served as liaison for Hoagy Carmichael Duke Ellington and Miles Davis in Paris wrote for several French jazz reviews Le Jazz Hot Paris Jazz and published numerous articles dealing with jazz both in the United States and in France His own music and songs enjoyed popularity during his lifetime particularly the anti war song Le Deserteur The Deserter Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Formal education and teenage years 1 3 Career 1 4 Later years 1 5 Death 1 6 Legacy 2 Selected bibliography 2 1 Prose 2 1 1 Novels 2 1 2 Vernon Sullivan novels 2 1 3 Short story collections 2 2 Dramatic works 2 3 Poetry 2 4 Translations 2 5 Other works 3 Selected discography 4 See also 5 Video 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBiography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Boris Vian news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early life Edit Vian was born in 1920 into an upper middle class family in the wealthy Parisian suburb of Ville d Avray Hauts de Seine His parents were Paul Vian a young rentier and Yvonne Ravenez amateur pianist and harpist From his father Vian inherited a distrust of the church and the military as well as a love of the bohemian life Vian was the second of four children the others were Lelio 1918 1984 Alain 1921 1995 and Ninon 1924 2003 The family occupied the Les Fauvettes villa The name Boris was chosen by Yvonne an avid classical music lover after seeing a performance of Mussorgsky s opera Boris Godunov 1 Boris later childhood was also marked with sickness as he suffered from Rheumatic fever when he was 12 From then on Boris parents became overprotective toward him and he would later judge them harshly for this in L Herbe rouge and L Arrache coeur citation needed Formal education and teenage years Edit From 1932 to 1937 Vian studied at Lycee Hoche in Versailles In 1936 Vian and his two brothers began to organize what they called surprise parties surprise parties They partook of mescaline in the form of a Mexican cactus called peyote These gatherings became the basis of his early novels Trouble dans les andains Turmoil in the Swaths 1943 and particularly Vercoquin et le plancton Vercoquin and the Plankton 1943 44 It was also in 1936 that Vian became interested in jazz the next year he started playing the trumpet and joined the Hot Club de France In 1937 Vian graduated from Lycee Hoche passing baccalaureats in mathematics philosophy Latin Greek and German He subsequently enrolled at Lycee Condorcet Paris where he studied special mathematics until 1939 Vian became fully immersed in the French jazz scene for example in 1939 he helped organize Duke Ellington s second concert in France When WWII started Vian was not accepted into the army due to poor health He entered Ecole Centrale des Arts et Manufactures in Paris and subsequently moved to Angouleme when the school moved there because of the war In 1940 Vian met Michelle Leglise who became his wife in 1941 She taught Vian English and introduced him to translations of American literature Also in 1940 Vian met Jacques Loustalot who became a recurring character in several early novels and short stories as The Colonel Loustalot died accidentally in 1949 falling from a building he was trying to climb on in order to enter into a flat by the window after a bet In 1942 Vian and his brothers joined a jazz orchestra under the direction of Claude Abbadie who became a minor character in Vian s Vercoquin et le plancton The same year Vian graduated from Ecole Centrale with a diploma in metallurgy and his son Patrick was born Career Edit After Vian s graduation he and Michelle moved to the 10th arrondissement of Paris and on 24 August 1942 he became an engineer at the French Association for Standardisation AFNOR By this time he was an accomplished jazz trumpeter and in 1943 he wrote his first novel Trouble dans les andains Turmoil in the Swaths His literary career started in 1943 with his first publication a poem in the Hot Club de France bulletin The poem was signed Bison Ravi Delighted Bison an anagram of Vian s real name The same year Vian s father died murdered at home by burglars In 1944 Vian completed Vercoquin et le plancton Vercoquin and the Plankton a novel inspired partly by surprise parties of his youth and partly by his job at the AFNOR which is heavily satirized in the novel Raymond Queneau and Jean Rostand helped Vian to publish this work at Editions Gallimard in 1947 along with several works Vian completed in 1946 These included his first major novels L Ecume des jours and L automne a Pekin Autumn in Peking The former a tragic love story in which real world objects respond to the characters emotions is now regarded as Vian s masterpiece but at the time of its publication it failed to attract any considerable attention L automne a Pekin which also had a love story at its heart but was somewhat more complex also failed to sell well Frustrated by the commercial failure of his works Vian vowed he could write a best seller and wrote the hard boiled novel I Spit on Your Graves J irai cracher sur vos tombes in only 15 days The book was ascribed to a fictitious American writer Vernon Sullivan with Vian credited as translator Vian persuaded his publisher friend Jean d Halluin to publish the novel in 1947 Eventually the hoax became known and the book became one of the best selling titles of that year Vian wrote three more Vernon Sullivan novels from 1947 to 1949 The year 1946 marked a turning point in Vian s life At one of the popular parties that he and Michelle hosted he made the acquaintance of Jean Paul Sartre Simone de Beauvoir and Albert Camus became a regular in their literary circles and started regularly publishing various materials in Les Temps modernes Vian admired Sartre in particular and gave him a prominent role as Jean Sol Partre in L Ecume des jours litt The foam of the days published in English under the title Froth on the Daydream Ironically Sartre and Michelle Vian commenced a relationship that would eventually destroy Vian s marriage Despite his literary work becoming more important Vian never left the jazz scene He became a regular contributor to jazz related magazines and played trumpet at Le Tabou As a result his financial situation improved and he abandoned the job at the AFNOR Vian also formed his own choir La petite chorale de Saint Germain des Pieds sic 2 Later years Edit The year 1948 saw the birth of Vian s daughter Carole He continued his literary career by writing Vernon Sullivan novels and also published poetry collections Barnum s Digest 1948 and Cantilenes en gelee Cantelinas in Jelly 1949 Vian also started writing plays the first of which L Equarrissage pour tous Slaughter for Everyone was staged the year it was written 1950 The same year saw the publication of Vian s third major novel L Herbe rouge The Red Grass This was a much darker story than its predecessors centering on a man who built a giant machine that could help him psychoanalyze his soul Like the previous two books it did not sell well Vian s financial situation had been steadily worsening since late 1948 and he was forced to take up translation of English language literature and articles in order to get by Vian separated from his wife and in 1950 he met Ursula Kubler 1928 2010 a Swiss dancer the two started an affair and in 1951 Vian divorced Michelle Ursula and Boris married in 1954 Vian s last novel L Arrache cœur The Heartsnatcher was published in 1953 yet again to poor sales and Vian effectively stopped writing fiction The only work that appeared after 1953 was a revised version of L automne a Pekin published 1956 He concentrated on a new field song writing and performing and continued writing poetry Vian s songs were successful in 1954 he embarked on his first tour as singer songwriter By 1955 when he was working as art director for Philips Vian was active in a wide variety of fields song writing opera screenplays and several more plays His first album Chansons possibles et impossibles Possible and Impossible Songs was also recorded in 1955 He wrote the first French rock and roll songs with his friend Henri Salvador who sang them under the nickname Henry Cording He also wrote Java Pour Petula a song about an English girl arriving in France written in Parisian argot for Petula Clark s first concert performances in France Still in 1955 Vian decided to perform some of his songs on stage himself He had been unhappy about the fact that French singer Marcel Mouloudji 1922 1994 who had interpreted Le Deserteur The Deserter on stage the year before had not accepted the original lyrics because he thought that they would lead to the song being banned Although Vian accepted a change to one verse the song was banned from TV and radio channels until 1967 The record of Vian s songs performed by himself was not successful in France until ten years after his death Vian s life was endangered in 1956 by a pulmonary edema but he survived and continued working with the same intensity as before In 1957 Vian completed another play Les Batisseurs d empire The Empire Builders which was only published and staged in 1959 In 1958 Vian worked on the opera Fiesta with Darius Milhaud and a collection of his essays En avant la zizique Et par ici les gros sous On with the Muzak And Bring in the Big Bucks was published the same year Death Edit On the morning of 23 June 1959 Vian was at the Cinema Marbeuf for the screening of the film version of I will Spit on Your Graves He had already fought with the producers over their interpretation of his work and he publicly denounced the film stating that he wished to have his name removed from the credits A few minutes after the film began he reportedly blurted out These guys are supposed to be American My ass He then collapsed into his seat and died from sudden cardiac death on his way to the hospital 3 Legacy Edit During his lifetime only the novels published under the name of Vernon Sullivan were successful Those published under his real name which had real literary value in his eyes remained a commercial failure despite the support of prominent writers of the time 4 Almost immediately after his death L Ecume des jours and then L automne a Pekin L Arrache cœur and L Herbe rouge began to gain recognition in France and were taken up by the young in the 1960s and 1970s 5 As a songwriter Vian had mixed success When he decided that he himself should sing the songs that were rejected by the stars he succeeded only in reaching a limited audience including Leo Ferre and Georges Brassens the public remaining unconvinced of his talent for singing 6 Nevertheless the May 1968 in France generation even more than the previous ones loved his songs especially because of their impertinence As a songwriter Vian inspired Serge Gainsbourg who used to attend his show at the cabaret Les Trois Baudets and who wrote thirty years later I took it on the chin he sang terrific things it is because I heard him that I decided to try something interesting 7 As a critic Boris Vian was the first to support Gainsbourg in Le Canard enchaine in 1957 Over the years Vian s works have become modern classics often celebrated and selected as subjects for study in schools Vian is still viewed by many as the emblematic figure of Saint Germain des Pres as it existed during the postwar decade when this district was the centre of artistic and intellectual life in Paris 8 9 Selected bibliography EditProse Edit Novels Edit Trouble dans les andains Turmoil in the Swaths 1942 43 published posthumously in 1966 by La Jeune Parque Vercoquin et le plancton Vercoquin and the Plankton 1943 45 published 1947 by Editions Gallimard L Ecume des jours Foam of the Days 1946 published 1947 by Editions Gallimard translated variously as Froth on the Daydream Mood Indigo and Foam of the Daze L Automne a Pekin Autumn in Peking 1946 published 1947 by Editions du Scorpion revised version published in 1956 Autumn in Peking L Herbe rouge The Red Grass 1948 49 published 1950 by Editions Toutain L Arrache cœur Heartsnatcher 1947 1951 published 1953 by Editions Vrille Heartsnatcher On n y echappe pas published posthumously Vernon Sullivan novels Edit J irai cracher sur vos tombes I Shall Spit on Your Graves 10 Editions du Scorpion 1946 Les morts ont tous la meme peau The Dead All Have the Same Skin Editions du Scorpion 1947 Et on tuera tous les affreux To Hell With the Ugly Editions du Scorpion 1948 Elles se rendent pas compte They Do Not Realize 1948 50 published 1950 by Editions du Scorpion Short story collections Edit Les Fourmis The Ants 1944 47 published 1949 by Editions du Scorpion Les Lurettes fourrees Ages Fulfilled 1948 49 published 1950 by Le Livre de Poche as an addendum to their edition of L Herbe rouge Le Ratichon baigneur Toothy Bather 1946 52 published posthumously in 1981 by Editions Bourgois Le Loup garou The Werewolf 1945 53 published posthumously in 1970 by Editions Bourgois Dramatic works Edit L Equarrissage pour tous Knackery for All play 1947 published 1950 by Editions Toutain published in English as The Knacker s ABC Le Dernier des metiers The Last of the Trades play 1950 published 1965 by Editions Pauvert Tete de Meduse Medusa s Head comedy in one act 1951 published 1971 by U G E Serie Bleme Pallid Series tragedy in three acts 1952 published 1971 by U G E Le Chasseur francais The French Hunter vaudeville 1955 published 1971 by U G E Les Batisseurs d Empire The Empire Builders 1957 published 1959 by College de Pataphysique Le Gouter des generaux The Snack of Generals 1951 published 1962 by College de Pataphysique Poetry Edit Barnum s Digest 1948 a collection of 10 poems Cantilenes en gelee Cantelinas in Jelly 1949 Je voudrais pas crever I d prefer not to die posthumously published in 1962 Translations Edit The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler as Le grand sommeil 1948 The Lady in the Lake by Raymond Chandler as La dame du lac 1948 The World of Null A by A E van Vogt as Le Monde des A 1958 Other works Edit Manuel de St Germain des Pres originally commissioned to be a tourist guide to the St Germain des Pres district published 1950 by Editions Toutain Selected discography EditNouveau code de la route 1955 1955 Chansons possibles et impossibles 1956 See also Edit Poetry portalBoris Vian in French The Vian family in French Existentialism Pataphysics Zazou Amour de poche 1957 Video EditLes freres Vian Sheikh of Araby on Archives InaNotes Edit Boris Vian La schiuma dei giorni Archived 2 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine marcosymarcos com Retrieved 18 August 2014 in Italian La petite chorale de Saint Germain des Pieds Archived 2 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Boggio p 461 Richaud p 151 Dictionnaire des auteurs p 606 Boggio p 414 437 L Arc Journal 90 special issue devoted to Boris Vian 1984 Richaud p 78 80 Boggio p 175 224 full title in the BNF expositionReferences EditBiographie in L Arrache cœur LGF Livre de Poche 2006 ISBN 978 2 253 00662 6 Geoffrey Dearson Lexical Transfer in the novels of Boris Vian Diss University of Wales UK 1 Martin Weiss Boris Vian La langue qui trebuche Jeux de mots dans l oeuvre d un genie Grazer Linguistische Studien 20 University of Graz 1983 new edition eBook 2014 Frederic Richaud Boris Vian c est joli de vivre editions du Chene Paris 1999 174 p ISBN 978 2 842 77177 5 Dictionnaire des auteurs vol 4 t IV by Antoine Berman Laffont Bompiani edition Paris 1990 756 p ISBN 2 221 50175 6 Rolls Alistair Charles 1999 The Flight of the Angels Intertextuality in Four Novels of Boris Vian Atlanta Georgia Editions Ropodi ISBN 90 420 0467 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boris Vian Official website in French Le Deserteur Boris Vian at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boris Vian amp oldid 1121229963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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