fbpx
Wikipedia

Luigi Pirandello

Luigi Pirandello (Italian: [luˈiːdʒi piranˈdɛllo]; 28 June 1867 – 10 December 1936) was an Italian dramatist, novelist, poet, and short story writer whose greatest contributions were his plays.[1] He was awarded the 1934 Nobel Prize in Literature for "his almost magical power to turn psychological analysis into good theatre."[2] Pirandello's works include novels, hundreds of short stories, and about 40 plays, some of which are written in Sicilian. Pirandello's tragic farces are often seen as forerunners of the Theatre of the Absurd.

Luigi Pirandello
Luigi Pirandello in 1932
Born(1867-06-28)28 June 1867
Girgenti (now Agrigento), Sicily, Italy
Died10 December 1936(1936-12-10) (aged 69)
Rome, Italy
OccupationWriter
NationalityItalian
Alma materUniversity of Bonn
GenreDrama, novel, poetry
SubjectInsanity, humour
Literary movementItalian modernism
Years active1893–1933
Notable works
Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature
1934
Spouse
Maria Antonietta Portulano
(m. 1894)
(1871-1959)
ChildrenStefano (1895–1972)
Rosalia (1897–1971)
Fausto (1899–1975)
Signature

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
Pirandello in 1884.

Pirandello was born into an upper-class family in an area called "Caos" ("Chaos" in Italian, but in Sicilian dialect lit. "Trouser", from the shape of a nearby ravine), near Porto Empedocle, a poor suburb of Girgenti (Agrigento, a town in southern Sicily). His father, Stefano Pirandello, belonged to a wealthy family involved in the sulphur industry, and his mother, Caterina Ricci Gramitto, was also of a well-to-do background, descending from a family of the bourgeois professional class of Agrigento. Both families, the Pirandellos and the Ricci Gramittos, were ferociously anti-Bourbon and actively participated in the struggle for unification and democracy ("Il Risorgimento"). Stefano participated in the famous Expedition of the Thousand, later following Garibaldi all the way to the battle of Aspromonte, and Caterina, who had hardly reached the age of thirteen, was forced to accompany her father to Malta, where he had been sent into exile by the Bourbon monarchy. But the open participation in the Garibaldian cause and the strong sense of idealism of those early years were quickly transformed, above all in Caterina, into an angry and bitter disappointment with the new reality created by the unification. Pirandello would eventually assimilate this sense of betrayal and resentment and express it in several of his poems and in his novel The Old and the Young. It is also probable that this climate of disillusion inculcated in the young Luigi the sense of disproportion between ideals and reality which is recognizable in his essay on humorism (L'Umorismo).

 
L'Umorismo, 1908

Pirandello received his elementary education at home, but was much more fascinated by the fables and legends, somewhere between popular and magic, that his elderly servant Maria Stella used to recount to him than by anything scholastic or academic. By the age of twelve, he had already written his first tragedy. At the insistence of his father, he was registered at a technical school, but eventually switched to the study of the humanities at the ginnasio, something which had always attracted him.

In 1880, the Pirandello family moved to Palermo. It was here, in the capital of Sicily, that Luigi completed his high school education. He also began reading omnivorously, focusing, above all, on 19th-century Italian poets such as Giosuè Carducci and Arturo Graf. He then started writing his first poems and fell in love with his cousin Lina.

During this period, the first signs of serious differences arose between Luigi and his father; Luigi had discovered some notes revealing the existence of Stefano's extramarital relations. As a reaction to the ever-increasing distrust and disharmony that Luigi was developing toward his father, a man of a robust physique and crude manners, his attachment to his mother would continue growing to the point of profound veneration. This later expressed itself, after her death, in the moving pages of the novella Colloqui con i personaggi in 1915.

His romantic feelings for his cousin, initially looked upon with disfavour, were suddenly taken very seriously by Lina's family. They demanded that Luigi abandon his studies and dedicate himself to the sulphur business so that he could immediately marry her. In 1886, during a vacation from school, Luigi went to visit the sulphur mines of Porto Empedocle and started working with his father. This experience was essential to him and would provide the basis for such stories as Il Fumo, Ciàula scopre la Luna as well as some of the descriptions and background in the novel The Old and the Young. The marriage, which had seemed imminent, was postponed.

Pirandello then registered at the University of Palermo in the departments of Law and of Letters. The campus at Palermo, and above all the Department of Law, was the centre in those years of the vast movement which would eventually evolve into the Fasci Siciliani. Although Pirandello was not an active member of this movement, he had close ties of friendship with its leading ideologists: Rosario Garibaldi Bosco, Enrico La Loggia, Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida and Francesco De Luca.[3]

Higher education edit

In 1887, having definitively chosen the Department of Letters, he moved to Rome in order to continue his studies. But the encounter with the city, centre of the struggle for unification to which the families of his parents had participated with generous enthusiasm, was disappointing and nothing close to what he had expected. "When I arrived in Rome it was raining hard, it was night time and I felt like my heart was being crushed, but then I laughed like a man in the throes of desperation."[4]

Pirandello, who was an extremely sensitive moralist, finally had a chance to see for himself the irreducible decadence of the so-called heroes of the Risorgimento in the person of his uncle Rocco, now a greying and exhausted functionary of the prefecture who provided him with temporary lodgings in Rome. The "desperate laugh",the only manifestation of revenge for the disappointment undergone, inspired the bitter verses of his first collection of poems, Mal Giocondo (1889). But not all was negative; this first visit to Rome provided him with the opportunity to assiduously visit the many theatres of the capital: Il Nazionale, Il Valle, il Manzoni. "Oh the dramatic theatre! I will conquer it. I cannot enter into one without experiencing a strange sensation, an excitement of the blood through all my veins..."

Because of a conflict with a Latin professor, he was forced to leave the University of Rome and went to Bonn with a letter of presentation from one of his other professors. The stay in Bonn, which lasted two years, was fervid with cultural life. He read the German romantics, Jean Paul, Tieck, Chamisso, Heinrich Heine and Goethe. He began translating the Roman Elegies of Goethe, composed the Elegie Boreali in imitation of the style of the Roman Elegies, and he began to meditate on the topic of humorism by way of the works of Cecco Angiolieri.

In March 1891 he received his doctorate in Romance Philology[5] with a dissertation on the dialect of Agrigento: Sounds and Developments of Sounds in the Speech of Craperallis.

Marriage edit

After a brief sojourn in Sicily, during which the planned marriage with his cousin was finally called off, he returned to Rome, where he became friends with a group of writer-journalists including Ugo Fleres, Tomaso Gnoli, Giustino Ferri and Luigi Capuana. Capuana encouraged Pirandello to dedicate himself to narrative writing. In 1893 he wrote his first important work, Marta Ajala, which was published in 1901 as l'Esclusa. In 1894 he published his first collection of short stories, Amori senza Amore. He also married in 1894, choosing (on his father's suggestion) a shy, withdrawn girl of a good family of Agrigentine origin educated by the nuns of San Vincenzo: Maria Antonietta Portulano.

The first years of matrimony brought on in him a new fervour for his studies and writings: his encounters with his friends and the discussions on art continued, more vivacious and stimulating than ever, while his family life, despite the complete incomprehension of his wife with respect to the artistic vocation of her husband,[4] proceeded relatively tranquilly with the birth of two sons (Stefano and Fausto) and a daughter (Rosalia "Lietta"). In the meantime, Pirandello intensified his collaborations with newspaper editors and other journalists in magazines such as La Critica and La Tavola Rotonda in which he published, in 1895, the first part of the Dialoghi tra Il Gran Me e Il Piccolo Me.

In 1897 he accepted an offer to teach Italian at the Istituto Superiore di Magistero di Roma, and in the magazine Il Marzocco he published several more pages of the Dialogi. In 1898, with Italo Falbo and Ugo Fleres, he founded the weekly Ariel, in which he published the one-act play L'Epilogo (later changed to La Morsa) and some novellas (La Scelta, Se...). The end of the 19th century and the beginnings of the 20th were a period of extreme productivity for Pirandello. In 1900, he published in Il Marzocco some of the most celebrated of his novellas (Lumie di Sicilia, La Paura del Sonno...) and, in 1901, the collection of poems Zampogna. In 1902 he published the first series of Beffe della Morte e della Vita and his second novel, Il Turno.

Family disaster edit

The year 1903 was fundamental to the life of Pirandello. The flooding of the sulphur mines of Aragona, in which his father Stefano had invested not only an enormous amount of his own capital but also Antonietta's dowry, precipitated the financial collapse of the family. Antonietta, after opening and reading the letter announcing the catastrophe, entered into a state of semi-catatonia and underwent such a psychological shock that her mental balance remained profoundly and irremediably shaken.

Pirandello, who had initially harboured thoughts of suicide, attempted to remedy the situation as best he could by increasing the number of his lessons in both Italian and German and asking for compensation from the magazines to which he had freely given away his writings and collaborations. In the magazine New Anthology, directed by G. Cena, meanwhile, the novel which Pirandello had been writing while in this horrible situation (watching over his mentally ill wife at night after an entire day spent at work) began appearing in episodes. The title was Il Fu Mattia Pascal (The Late Mattia Pascal). This novel contains many autobiographical elements that have been fantastically re-elaborated. It was an immediate and resounding success. Translated into German in 1905, this novel paved the way to the notoriety and fame which allowed Pirandello to publish with the more important firms such as Treves, with whom he published, in 1906, another collection of novellas Erma Bifronte. In 1908 he published a volume of essays entitled Arte e Scienza and the important essay L'Umorismo, in which he initiated the legendary debate with Benedetto Croce that would continue with increasing bitterness and venom on both sides for many years.

In 1905 he took his wife to stay in Chianciano Terme together with their children where they stay there for two months in what the writer called the village nestled on the windy hill right in opposite the Collegiata.[6] Two short stories contained in the book Short stories for a year are coveted in this country: Bitter water and Pallino and Mimì.

In 1909 the first part of I Vecchi e I Giovani was published in episodes. This novel retraces the history of the failure and repression of the Fasci Siciliani in the period from 1893 to 1894. When the novel came out in 1913 Pirandello sent a copy of it to his parents for their fiftieth wedding anniversary along with a dedication which said that "their names, Stefano and Caterina, live heroically." However, while the mother is transfigured in the novel into the otherworldly figure of Caterina Laurentano, the father, represented by the husband of Caterina, Stefano Auriti, appears only in memories and flashbacks, since, as was acutely observed by Leonardo Sciascia, "he died censured in a Freudian sense by his son who, in the bottom of his soul, is his enemy." Also in 1909, Pirandello began his collaboration with the prestigious journal Corriere della Sera in which he published the novellas Mondo di Carta (World of Paper), La Giara, and, in 1910, Non è una cosa seria and Pensaci, Giacomino! (Think it over, Giacomino!) At this point Pirandello's fame as a writer was continually increasing. His private life, however, was poisoned by the suspicion and obsessive jealousy of Antonietta who began turning physically violent.

In 1911, while the publication of novellas and short stories continued, Pirandello finished his fourth novel, Suo Marito, republished posthumously (1941), and completely revised in the first four chapters, with the title Giustino Roncella nato Boggiòlo. During his life the author never republished this novel for reasons of discretion; within are implicit references to the writer Grazia Deledda. But the work which absorbed most of his energies at this time was the collection of stories La vendetta del cane, Quando s'è capito il giuoco, Il treno ha fischiato, Filo d'aria and Berecche e la guerra. They were all published from 1913 to 1914 and are all now considered classics of Italian literature.

First World War edit

As Italy entered the First World War, Pirandello's son Stefano volunteered for service and was taken prisoner by the Austro-Hungarians. In 1916 the actor Angelo Musco successfully recited the three-act comedy that the writer had extracted from the novella Pensaci, Giacomino! and the pastoral comedy Liolà.

In 1917 the collection of novellas E domani Lunedì (And Tomorrow, Monday...) was published, but the year was mostly marked by important theatrical representations: Così è (se vi pare) (Right you are (if you think so)), A birrita cu' i ciancianeddi and Il Piacere dell'onestà (The Pleasure Of Honesty). A year later, Ma non è una cosa seria (But It's Nothing Serious) and Il Gioco delle Parti (The Game of Roles) were all produced on stage. Pirandello's son Stefano returned home when the war ended.

 
Bust of Pirandello in the Giardino Inglese park in Palermo

In 1919 Pirandello had his wife placed in an asylum.[7] The separation from his wife, despite her morbid jealousies and hallucinations, caused great suffering for Pirandello who, even as late as 1924, believed he could still properly care for her at home. She never left the asylum.

1920 was the year of comedies such as Tutto per bene, Come prima meglio di prima, and La Signora Morli. In 1921, the Compagnia di Dario Niccodemi staged, at the Valle di Roma, the play, Sei Personaggi in Cerca d'Autore, Six Characters in Search of an Author. It was a clamorous failure. The public divided into supporters and adversaries, the latter of whom shouted, "Asylum, Asylum!" The author, who was present at the performance with his daughter Lietta, left through a side exit to avoid the crowd of enemies. The same drama, however, was a great success when presented in Milan. In 1922 in Milan, Enrico IV was performed for the first time and was acclaimed universally as a success. Pirandello's international reputation was developing as well. The Sei personaggi was performed in London and New York.

Italy under the Fascists edit

Pirandello was an Italian nationalist and supported Fascism in a moderate way. In 1924 he wrote a letter to Benito Mussolini asking him to be accepted as a member of the National Fascist Party.

In 1925 Pirandello, with the help of Mussolini, assumed the artistic direction and ownership of the Teatro d'Arte di Roma, founded by the Gruppo degli Undici. He described himself as "a Fascist because I am Italian." For his devotion to Mussolini, the satirical magazine Il Becco Giallo used to call him P. Randello (randello in Italian means cudgel).[8]

He expressed publicly apolitical belief, saying "I'm apolitical, I'm only a man in the world."[9] During these years, he had continuous conflicts with fascist leaders. In 1927 he tore his fascist membership card to pieces in front of the startled secretary-general of the Fascist Party.[10] For the remainder of his life, Pirandello was always under close surveillance by the secret fascist police OVRA.[11]

His play, I Giganti della Montagna (The Giants of the Mountain), has been interpreted as evidence of his realization that the fascists were hostile to culture; yet, during a later appearance in New York, Pirandello distributed a statement announcing his support of Italy's annexation of Abyssinia. He then gave his Nobel Prize medal to the Fascist government to be melted down as part of the 1935 Oro alla Patria (Gold to the Fatherland) campaign during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War.[12]

Pirandello's conception of the theatre underwent a significant change at this point. The idea of the actor as an inevitable betrayer of the text, as in the Sei Personaggi, gave way to the identification of the actor with the character that they play. The company took their act throughout the major cities of Europe, and the Pirandellian repertoire became increasingly well known. Between 1925 and 1926 Pirandello's last and perhaps greatest novel, Uno, Nessuno e Centomila (One, No one and One Hundred Thousand), was published serially in the magazine La Fiera Letteraria. He was one of the contributors of the nationalist women's magazine, Lidel,[13] and the Fascist daily Il Tevere.[14]

Legacy edit

On 14 July 1930, a version of his short play The Man with the Flower in His Mouth, adapted and produced by Lance Sieveking, co-produced with John Logie Baird's company and starring Val Gielgud and Lionel Millard, became the first drama broadcast in both picture and sound when the British Broadcasting Corporation showed it for London audiences.[15][16]

Pirandello was nominated Academic of Italy in 1929, and in 1934 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature after he had been nominated by Guglielmo Marconi, member of the Royal Academy of Italy.[5][17] He was the last Italian playwright to be chosen for the award until Dario Fo won on 9 October 1997.[18][19]

Pirandello died alone in his home at Via Bosio, Rome, on 10 December 1936.[20] He refused a State funeral offered by Mussolini and only in 1947 were his cremated remains buried in Sicily.[21] The Via Luigi Pirandello in Acquaviva delle Fonti is named after him.

In the context of playwriting during the early and mid-1900s, Pirandello's impact is notable. Pirandello inspired playwrights such as Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter to write plays that echo the themes of existential exploration and metaphysical questioning that he focused on in his works.[22][23] However, his influence goes beyond playwright; French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre was also heavily inspired by Pirandello’s ideas to dive deep into one of the main pillars of his philosophy: existentialism. The playwrights's portrayal of fractured identities and the ambiguity of existence in his plays served as inspiration for  Sartre's concepts of freedom, authenticity, and existential angst. Pirandello’s character narratives and metaphysical themes not only aligned with but also enriched Sartre's philosophical discourses, creating a link between existential thought in both theater and philosophy, where each medium deepened and reflected upon the complexities and theories of the other. Thus, the dialogues between self and other, freedom and responsibility, authenticity and bad faith, found ground in the intersection of their respective domains. His legacy pushes further reflection into the complexities of characters, human consciousness, and identity.[24]

Pirandello's contributions to theater and philosophy provide a rich tapestry of existential themes interwoven with detailed character narratives. His thorough and insightful examinations of the intricacies of the human psyche and identity have left a mark that is palpable in contemporary theater and academic circles. This influence, while rooted in a specific historical context, manages to bridge the gap between past and present. The careful juxtaposition of simplicity and depth in his works not only invites but stimulates discourse, resonating deeply with modern artists, playwrights, and thinkers. As a result, discussions on existential concepts, identity, and the nature of reality continue to be enriched by Pirandello's foundational ideas.[25]

Selected works edit

 
Pirandello with his friend Albert Einstein in 1935

Major plays edit

  • 1916: Liolà
  • 1917: Così è (se vi pare) (So It Is (If You Think So))
  • 1917: Il piacere dell'onestà (The Pleasure of Honesty)
  • 1918: Il gioco delle parti (The Rules of the Game)
  • 1919: L'uomo, la bestia e la virtù (Man, Beast and Virtue)
  • 1921: Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore (Six Characters in Search of an Author)
  • 1922: Enrico IV (Henry IV)
  • 1922: L'imbecille (The Imbecile)
  • 1922: Vestire gli ignudi (To Clothe the Naked)
  • 1923: L'uomo dal fiore in bocca (The Man with the Flower in His Mouth)
  • 1923: L'altro figlio (The Other Son)
  • 1923: La vita che ti diedi (The Life I Gave You)
  • 1924: Ciascuno a suo modo (Each in His Own Way)
  • 1924: Sagra del Signore della Nave (The Rite of the Lord of the Ship)
  • 1926: L'Amica delle Mogli (The Friend of the Wives)
  • 1926: Bellavita (Bellavita)
  • 1927: Diana e la Tuda (Diana and Tuda)
  • 1929: O di Uno o di Nessuno (Either of One or of None)
  • 1929: Come Tu Mi Vuoi (How You Love Me)
  • 1930: Questa sera si recita a soggetto (Tonight We Improvise)
 
Original text of the most famous novel of Pirandello (One, No One and One Hundred Thousand)

Novels edit

  • 1902: Il turno (The Turn)
  • 1904: Il fu Mattia Pascal (The Late Mattia Pascal)
  • 1908: L'esclusa (The Excluded Woman)
  • 1911: Suo marito (Her Husband)
  • 1913: I vecchi e i giovani (The Old and the Young)
  • 1915: Si Gira, Quaderni di Serafino Gubbio (Shoot!, The Notebooks of Serafino Gubbio, Cinematograph Operator, 1926 English translation by C. K. Scott Moncrieff)
  • 1926: Uno, nessuno e centomila (One, No One and One Hundred Thousand)

Short stories edit

  • 1922–37: Novelle per un anno (Short Stories for a Year), 15 volumes. A selection of thirty stories was translated by Virginia Jewiss as Stories for the Years (Yale, 2021).

Poetry edit

  • 1889: Mal giocondo (Playful Evil)
  • 1891: Pasqua di Gea (Easter of Gea)
  • 1894: Pier Gudrò, 1809–1892
  • 1895: Elegie renane, 1889–90 (Rheinland Elegies)
  • 1901: Zampogna (The Bagpipe)
  • 1909: Scamandro
  • 1912: Fuori di chiave (Out of Tune)

English translations edit

Nearly all of Pirandello's plays were translated into English by the actor Robert Rietti. Pirandello's poetry was translated for the first time in 2016 by George Hochfield.[26] William Weaver is a noted translator of Luigi Pirandello. Frederick May translated a number of Pirandello's plays and short stories in editions published by Oxford University Press and Penguin Books.

Filmography edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Luigi Pirandello - Biographical". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Nobelprize.org". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  3. ^ (in Italian) Biografia di Luigi Pirandello 20 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Biblioteca dei Classici italiani di Giuseppe Bonghi (Accessed 2 November 2010)
  4. ^ a b "Luigi Pirandello". www.tititudorancea.com. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  5. ^ a b Bergin, Thomas G (1976). "Pirandello, Luigi". In William D. Halsey (ed.). Collier's Encyclopedia. Vol. 19. New York: Macmillan Educational Corporation. pp. 76–78.
  6. ^ Luigi Pagnotta (2009). Pirandello tells Chianciano. Edizioni il pavone.
  7. ^ Nichols, Nina daVinci (1 January 1995). Pirandello and Film. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0803233361.
  8. ^ Chiesa, Adolfo (1990) La satira politica in Italia: con un'intervista a Tullio Pericoli, p.38
  9. ^ Giudice, p. 422.
  10. ^ Giudice, p. 413.
  11. ^ L'Ovra a Cinecittà di Natalia ed Emanuele V. Marino, Bollati Boringhieri, 2005 10 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ WINEGARTEN, RENEE (1994). "The Nobel Prize for Literature". The American Scholar. 63 (1): 63–75. ISSN 0003-0937. JSTOR 41212206.
  13. ^ Eugenia Paulicelli (2002). "Fashion, the Politics of Style and National Identity in Pre-Fascist and Fascist Italy". Gender & History. 14 (3): 552. doi:10.1111/1468-0424.00281. S2CID 144286579.
  14. ^ Meir Michaelis (1998). "Mussolini's unofficial mouthpiece: Telesio Interlandi: Il Tevere and the evolution of Mussolini's anti-Semitism". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 3 (3): 217–240. doi:10.1080/13545719808454979.
  15. ^ Lawson, Mark (26 September 2022). "100 years of the BBC – the first live FA Cup final and the dawn of true crime". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  16. ^ "First television Production". The Radio Times. No. 354, Southern. 11 July 1930.
  17. ^ "Nomination Database". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  18. ^ Mitchell, Tony (1999), Dario Fo: People's Court Jester (Updated and Expanded), London: Methuen, p. 204, ISBN 0-413-73320-3.
  19. ^ Gumbel, Andrew (10 October 1997). "Nobel Prize: Dario Fo, the showman, wins Nobel literature prize". The Independent. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  20. ^ Giudice, pp. 117, 158
  21. ^ Roberto Alajmo, "Le ceneri di Pirandello", ed. Drago, 2008
  22. ^ "20TH CENTURY BLUES: A STUDY OF AFFINITIES BETWEEN HAROLD PINTER AND LUIGI PIRANDELLO - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. ProQuest 303083330. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  23. ^ De Chiara, Mariafilomena (6 March 2009). La ruta de la máscara: el teatro de Luigi Pirandello y Samuel Beckett (Ph.D. Thesis thesis). Universitat Pompeu Fabra.
  24. ^ Angelini, Franca (2011). "Note preliminari: da Pirandello a Sartre". Ariel (Nuova serie): Semestrale di drammaturgia dell'istituto di studi pirandelliani e sul teatro contemporaneo: 2, 2011 (2): 1–189. doi:10.1400/201706.
  25. ^ Alessio, Antonio; Pietropaolo, Domenico; Katz, Giuliana Sanguinetti (1992). Pirandello and the Modern Theatre (in Italian). Biblioteca di Quaderni d’italianistica. ISBN 978-0-9691979-9-7.
  26. ^ Luigi Pirandello, Selected Poems of Luigi Pirandello, translated by George Hochfield (New York: Italica Press, 2016).

Further reading edit

  • Giudice, Gaspare. Luigi Pirandello, UTET, 1963.
  • Baccolo, L. Pirandello. Milan: Bocca. 1949 (second edition).
  • Di Pietro, L. Pirandello. Milano: Vita e Pensiero. 1950. (second edition).
  • Ferrante, R. Luigi Pirandello. Firenze: Parenti. 1958.
  • Gardair, Pirandello e il Suo Doppio. Rome: Abete. 1977.
  • Janner, A. Luigi Pirandello. Firenze, La Nuova Italia. 1948.
  • Monti, M. Pirandello, Palermo: Palumbo. 1974.
  • Moravia. A. "Pirandello" in Fiera Leteraria. Rome. 12 December 1946.
  • Pancrazi, P. "L'altro Pirandello" In Scrittori Italiani del Novecento. Bari: Laterza. 1939.
  • Pasini. F. Pirandello nell'arte e nella vita. Padova. 1937.
  • Podestà. G. "Kafka e Pirandello." Humanitas, XI, 1956, pp. 230–44.
  • Sarah Zappulla Muscarà, Enzo Zappulla, Pirandello e il teatro siciliano, Giuseppe Maimone Editore, Catania 1986.
  • Mirella Maugeri Salerno, Pirandello e dintorni, Giuseppe Maimone Editore, Catania, 1987.
  • Sarah Zappulla Muscarà (a cura di), Narratori siciliani del secondo dopoguerra, Giuseppe Maimone Editore, Catania 1990.
  • Elio Providenti (a cura di), Archeologie pirandelliane, Giuseppe Maimone Editore, Catania, 1990.
  • Carlo Schirru, Per un’analisi interlinguistica d’epoca: Grazia Deledda e contemporanei, Rivista Italiana di Linguistica e di Dialettologia, Fabrizio Serra editore, Pisa-Roma, Anno XI, 2009, pp. 9–32.
  • Virdia. F. Pirandello. Milan: Mursia. 1975.
  • Frederick May, Three Major Symbols in Four Plays by Pirandello, Lawrence, Kansas: Allen Press, 1974.
  • Massimo Colella, Ritratto, autoritratto, profezia: Bontempelli esegeta di Pirandello, in «Pirandello Studies (Journal of the Society for Pirandello Studies)», 42, 2022, pp. 20–40.

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Luigi Pirandello at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Luigi Pirandello at Wikimedia Commons
  • Works by Luigi Pirandello in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Luigi Pirandello at Project Gutenberg
  • List of Works
  • Works by or about Luigi Pirandello at Internet Archive
  • Works by Luigi Pirandello at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)    
  • The complete works of Pirandello in Italian and English section
  • Luigi Pirandello on Nobelprize.org  
  • his bold and ingenious revival of dramatic and scenic art
  • Listen to some Pirandello's work in Italian on audio MP3 – free download
  • Suo Marito, English translation, Her Husband, by Martha King and Mary Ann Frese Witt.
  • Newspaper clippings about Luigi Pirandello in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW  
  • One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand, translated by William Weaver, published in 2018 by Spurl Editions

luigi, pirandello, italian, luˈiːdʒi, piranˈdɛllo, june, 1867, december, 1936, italian, dramatist, novelist, poet, short, story, writer, whose, greatest, contributions, were, plays, awarded, 1934, nobel, prize, literature, almost, magical, power, turn, psychol. Luigi Pirandello Italian luˈiːdʒi piranˈdɛllo 28 June 1867 10 December 1936 was an Italian dramatist novelist poet and short story writer whose greatest contributions were his plays 1 He was awarded the 1934 Nobel Prize in Literature for his almost magical power to turn psychological analysis into good theatre 2 Pirandello s works include novels hundreds of short stories and about 40 plays some of which are written in Sicilian Pirandello s tragic farces are often seen as forerunners of the Theatre of the Absurd Luigi PirandelloLuigi Pirandello in 1932Born 1867 06 28 28 June 1867Girgenti now Agrigento Sicily ItalyDied10 December 1936 1936 12 10 aged 69 Rome ItalyOccupationWriterNationalityItalianAlma materUniversity of BonnGenreDrama novel poetrySubjectInsanity humourLiterary movementItalian modernismYears active1893 1933Notable worksThe Late Mattia Pascal 1904 Six Characters in Search of an Author 1921 Henry IV 1922 One No One and One Hundred Thousand 1926 Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature 1934SpouseMaria Antonietta Portulano m 1894 wbr 1871 1959 ChildrenStefano 1895 1972 Rosalia 1897 1971 Fausto 1899 1975 Signature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Higher education 1 3 Marriage 1 4 Family disaster 1 5 First World War 1 6 Italy under the Fascists 2 Legacy 3 Selected works 3 1 Major plays 3 2 Novels 3 3 Short stories 3 4 Poetry 3 5 English translations 4 Filmography 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography editEarly life edit nbsp Pirandello in 1884 Pirandello was born into an upper class family in an area called Caos Chaos in Italian but in Sicilian dialect lit Trouser from the shape of a nearby ravine near Porto Empedocle a poor suburb of Girgenti Agrigento a town in southern Sicily His father Stefano Pirandello belonged to a wealthy family involved in the sulphur industry and his mother Caterina Ricci Gramitto was also of a well to do background descending from a family of the bourgeois professional class of Agrigento Both families the Pirandellos and the Ricci Gramittos were ferociously anti Bourbon and actively participated in the struggle for unification and democracy Il Risorgimento Stefano participated in the famous Expedition of the Thousand later following Garibaldi all the way to the battle of Aspromonte and Caterina who had hardly reached the age of thirteen was forced to accompany her father to Malta where he had been sent into exile by the Bourbon monarchy But the open participation in the Garibaldian cause and the strong sense of idealism of those early years were quickly transformed above all in Caterina into an angry and bitter disappointment with the new reality created by the unification Pirandello would eventually assimilate this sense of betrayal and resentment and express it in several of his poems and in his novel The Old and the Young It is also probable that this climate of disillusion inculcated in the young Luigi the sense of disproportion between ideals and reality which is recognizable in his essay on humorism L Umorismo nbsp L Umorismo 1908Pirandello received his elementary education at home but was much more fascinated by the fables and legends somewhere between popular and magic that his elderly servant Maria Stella used to recount to him than by anything scholastic or academic By the age of twelve he had already written his first tragedy At the insistence of his father he was registered at a technical school but eventually switched to the study of the humanities at the ginnasio something which had always attracted him In 1880 the Pirandello family moved to Palermo It was here in the capital of Sicily that Luigi completed his high school education He also began reading omnivorously focusing above all on 19th century Italian poets such as Giosue Carducci and Arturo Graf He then started writing his first poems and fell in love with his cousin Lina During this period the first signs of serious differences arose between Luigi and his father Luigi had discovered some notes revealing the existence of Stefano s extramarital relations As a reaction to the ever increasing distrust and disharmony that Luigi was developing toward his father a man of a robust physique and crude manners his attachment to his mother would continue growing to the point of profound veneration This later expressed itself after her death in the moving pages of the novella Colloqui con i personaggi in 1915 His romantic feelings for his cousin initially looked upon with disfavour were suddenly taken very seriously by Lina s family They demanded that Luigi abandon his studies and dedicate himself to the sulphur business so that he could immediately marry her In 1886 during a vacation from school Luigi went to visit the sulphur mines of Porto Empedocle and started working with his father This experience was essential to him and would provide the basis for such stories as Il Fumo Ciaula scopre la Luna as well as some of the descriptions and background in the novel The Old and the Young The marriage which had seemed imminent was postponed Pirandello then registered at the University of Palermo in the departments of Law and of Letters The campus at Palermo and above all the Department of Law was the centre in those years of the vast movement which would eventually evolve into the Fasci Siciliani Although Pirandello was not an active member of this movement he had close ties of friendship with its leading ideologists Rosario Garibaldi Bosco Enrico La Loggia Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida and Francesco De Luca 3 Higher education edit In 1887 having definitively chosen the Department of Letters he moved to Rome in order to continue his studies But the encounter with the city centre of the struggle for unification to which the families of his parents had participated with generous enthusiasm was disappointing and nothing close to what he had expected When I arrived in Rome it was raining hard it was night time and I felt like my heart was being crushed but then I laughed like a man in the throes of desperation 4 Pirandello who was an extremely sensitive moralist finally had a chance to see for himself the irreducible decadence of the so called heroes of the Risorgimento in the person of his uncle Rocco now a greying and exhausted functionary of the prefecture who provided him with temporary lodgings in Rome The desperate laugh the only manifestation of revenge for the disappointment undergone inspired the bitter verses of his first collection of poems Mal Giocondo 1889 But not all was negative this first visit to Rome provided him with the opportunity to assiduously visit the many theatres of the capital Il Nazionale Il Valle il Manzoni Oh the dramatic theatre I will conquer it I cannot enter into one without experiencing a strange sensation an excitement of the blood through all my veins Because of a conflict with a Latin professor he was forced to leave the University of Rome and went to Bonn with a letter of presentation from one of his other professors The stay in Bonn which lasted two years was fervid with cultural life He read the German romantics Jean Paul Tieck Chamisso Heinrich Heine and Goethe He began translating the Roman Elegies of Goethe composed the Elegie Boreali in imitation of the style of the Roman Elegies and he began to meditate on the topic of humorism by way of the works of Cecco Angiolieri In March 1891 he received his doctorate in Romance Philology 5 with a dissertation on the dialect of Agrigento Sounds and Developments of Sounds in the Speech of Craperallis Marriage edit After a brief sojourn in Sicily during which the planned marriage with his cousin was finally called off he returned to Rome where he became friends with a group of writer journalists including Ugo Fleres Tomaso Gnoli Giustino Ferri and Luigi Capuana Capuana encouraged Pirandello to dedicate himself to narrative writing In 1893 he wrote his first important work Marta Ajala which was published in 1901 as l Esclusa In 1894 he published his first collection of short stories Amori senza Amore He also married in 1894 choosing on his father s suggestion a shy withdrawn girl of a good family of Agrigentine origin educated by the nuns of San Vincenzo Maria Antonietta Portulano The first years of matrimony brought on in him a new fervour for his studies and writings his encounters with his friends and the discussions on art continued more vivacious and stimulating than ever while his family life despite the complete incomprehension of his wife with respect to the artistic vocation of her husband 4 proceeded relatively tranquilly with the birth of two sons Stefano and Fausto and a daughter Rosalia Lietta In the meantime Pirandello intensified his collaborations with newspaper editors and other journalists in magazines such as La Critica and La Tavola Rotonda in which he published in 1895 the first part of the Dialoghi tra Il Gran Me e Il Piccolo Me In 1897 he accepted an offer to teach Italian at the Istituto Superiore di Magistero di Roma and in the magazine Il Marzocco he published several more pages of the Dialogi In 1898 with Italo Falbo and Ugo Fleres he founded the weekly Ariel in which he published the one act play L Epilogo later changed to La Morsa and some novellas La Scelta Se The end of the 19th century and the beginnings of the 20th were a period of extreme productivity for Pirandello In 1900 he published in Il Marzocco some of the most celebrated of his novellas Lumie di Sicilia La Paura del Sonno and in 1901 the collection of poems Zampogna In 1902 he published the first series of Beffe della Morte e della Vita and his second novel Il Turno Family disaster edit The year 1903 was fundamental to the life of Pirandello The flooding of the sulphur mines of Aragona in which his father Stefano had invested not only an enormous amount of his own capital but also Antonietta s dowry precipitated the financial collapse of the family Antonietta after opening and reading the letter announcing the catastrophe entered into a state of semi catatonia and underwent such a psychological shock that her mental balance remained profoundly and irremediably shaken Pirandello who had initially harboured thoughts of suicide attempted to remedy the situation as best he could by increasing the number of his lessons in both Italian and German and asking for compensation from the magazines to which he had freely given away his writings and collaborations In the magazine New Anthology directed by G Cena meanwhile the novel which Pirandello had been writing while in this horrible situation watching over his mentally ill wife at night after an entire day spent at work began appearing in episodes The title was Il Fu Mattia Pascal The Late Mattia Pascal This novel contains many autobiographical elements that have been fantastically re elaborated It was an immediate and resounding success Translated into German in 1905 this novel paved the way to the notoriety and fame which allowed Pirandello to publish with the more important firms such as Treves with whom he published in 1906 another collection of novellas Erma Bifronte In 1908 he published a volume of essays entitled Arte e Scienza and the important essay L Umorismo in which he initiated the legendary debate with Benedetto Croce that would continue with increasing bitterness and venom on both sides for many years In 1905 he took his wife to stay in Chianciano Terme together with their children where they stay there for two months in what the writer called the village nestled on the windy hill right in opposite the Collegiata 6 Two short stories contained in the book Short stories for a year are coveted in this country Bitter water and Pallino and Mimi In 1909 the first part of I Vecchi e I Giovani was published in episodes This novel retraces the history of the failure and repression of the Fasci Siciliani in the period from 1893 to 1894 When the novel came out in 1913 Pirandello sent a copy of it to his parents for their fiftieth wedding anniversary along with a dedication which said that their names Stefano and Caterina live heroically However while the mother is transfigured in the novel into the otherworldly figure of Caterina Laurentano the father represented by the husband of Caterina Stefano Auriti appears only in memories and flashbacks since as was acutely observed by Leonardo Sciascia he died censured in a Freudian sense by his son who in the bottom of his soul is his enemy Also in 1909 Pirandello began his collaboration with the prestigious journal Corriere della Sera in which he published the novellas Mondo di Carta World of Paper La Giara and in 1910 Non e una cosa seria and Pensaci Giacomino Think it over Giacomino At this point Pirandello s fame as a writer was continually increasing His private life however was poisoned by the suspicion and obsessive jealousy of Antonietta who began turning physically violent In 1911 while the publication of novellas and short stories continued Pirandello finished his fourth novel Suo Marito republished posthumously 1941 and completely revised in the first four chapters with the title Giustino Roncella nato Boggiolo During his life the author never republished this novel for reasons of discretion within are implicit references to the writer Grazia Deledda But the work which absorbed most of his energies at this time was the collection of stories La vendetta del cane Quando s e capito il giuoco Il treno ha fischiato Filo d aria and Berecche e la guerra They were all published from 1913 to 1914 and are all now considered classics of Italian literature First World War edit As Italy entered the First World War Pirandello s son Stefano volunteered for service and was taken prisoner by the Austro Hungarians In 1916 the actor Angelo Musco successfully recited the three act comedy that the writer had extracted from the novella Pensaci Giacomino and the pastoral comedy Liola In 1917 the collection of novellas E domani Lunedi And Tomorrow Monday was published but the year was mostly marked by important theatrical representations Cosi e se vi pare Right you are if you think so A birrita cu i ciancianeddi and Il Piacere dell onesta The Pleasure Of Honesty A year later Ma non e una cosa seria But It s Nothing Serious and Il Gioco delle Parti The Game of Roles were all produced on stage Pirandello s son Stefano returned home when the war ended nbsp Bust of Pirandello in the Giardino Inglese park in PalermoIn 1919 Pirandello had his wife placed in an asylum 7 The separation from his wife despite her morbid jealousies and hallucinations caused great suffering for Pirandello who even as late as 1924 believed he could still properly care for her at home She never left the asylum 1920 was the year of comedies such as Tutto per bene Come prima meglio di prima and La Signora Morli In 1921 the Compagnia di Dario Niccodemi staged at the Valle di Roma the play Sei Personaggi in Cerca d Autore Six Characters in Search of an Author It was a clamorous failure The public divided into supporters and adversaries the latter of whom shouted Asylum Asylum The author who was present at the performance with his daughter Lietta left through a side exit to avoid the crowd of enemies The same drama however was a great success when presented in Milan In 1922 in Milan Enrico IV was performed for the first time and was acclaimed universally as a success Pirandello s international reputation was developing as well The Sei personaggi was performed in London and New York Italy under the Fascists edit Pirandello was an Italian nationalist and supported Fascism in a moderate way In 1924 he wrote a letter to Benito Mussolini asking him to be accepted as a member of the National Fascist Party In 1925 Pirandello with the help of Mussolini assumed the artistic direction and ownership of the Teatro d Arte di Roma founded by the Gruppo degli Undici He described himself as a Fascist because I am Italian For his devotion to Mussolini the satirical magazine Il Becco Giallo used to call him P Randello randello in Italian means cudgel 8 He expressed publicly apolitical belief saying I m apolitical I m only a man in the world 9 During these years he had continuous conflicts with fascist leaders In 1927 he tore his fascist membership card to pieces in front of the startled secretary general of the Fascist Party 10 For the remainder of his life Pirandello was always under close surveillance by the secret fascist police OVRA 11 His play I Giganti della Montagna The Giants of the Mountain has been interpreted as evidence of his realization that the fascists were hostile to culture yet during a later appearance in New York Pirandello distributed a statement announcing his support of Italy s annexation of Abyssinia He then gave his Nobel Prize medal to the Fascist government to be melted down as part of the 1935 Oro alla Patria Gold to the Fatherland campaign during the Second Italo Ethiopian War 12 Pirandello s conception of the theatre underwent a significant change at this point The idea of the actor as an inevitable betrayer of the text as in the Sei Personaggi gave way to the identification of the actor with the character that they play The company took their act throughout the major cities of Europe and the Pirandellian repertoire became increasingly well known Between 1925 and 1926 Pirandello s last and perhaps greatest novel Uno Nessuno e Centomila One No one and One Hundred Thousand was published serially in the magazine La Fiera Letteraria He was one of the contributors of the nationalist women s magazine Lidel 13 and the Fascist daily Il Tevere 14 Legacy editOn 14 July 1930 a version of his short play The Man with the Flower in His Mouth adapted and produced by Lance Sieveking co produced with John Logie Baird s company and starring Val Gielgud and Lionel Millard became the first drama broadcast in both picture and sound when the British Broadcasting Corporation showed it for London audiences 15 16 Pirandello was nominated Academic of Italy in 1929 and in 1934 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature after he had been nominated by Guglielmo Marconi member of the Royal Academy of Italy 5 17 He was the last Italian playwright to be chosen for the award until Dario Fo won on 9 October 1997 18 19 Pirandello died alone in his home at Via Bosio Rome on 10 December 1936 20 He refused a State funeral offered by Mussolini and only in 1947 were his cremated remains buried in Sicily 21 The Via Luigi Pirandello in Acquaviva delle Fonti is named after him In the context of playwriting during the early and mid 1900s Pirandello s impact is notable Pirandello inspired playwrights such as Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter to write plays that echo the themes of existential exploration and metaphysical questioning that he focused on in his works 22 23 However his influence goes beyond playwright French philosopher Jean Paul Sartre was also heavily inspired by Pirandello s ideas to dive deep into one of the main pillars of his philosophy existentialism The playwrights s portrayal of fractured identities and the ambiguity of existence in his plays served as inspiration for Sartre s concepts of freedom authenticity and existential angst Pirandello s character narratives and metaphysical themes not only aligned with but also enriched Sartre s philosophical discourses creating a link between existential thought in both theater and philosophy where each medium deepened and reflected upon the complexities and theories of the other Thus the dialogues between self and other freedom and responsibility authenticity and bad faith found ground in the intersection of their respective domains His legacy pushes further reflection into the complexities of characters human consciousness and identity 24 Pirandello s contributions to theater and philosophy provide a rich tapestry of existential themes interwoven with detailed character narratives His thorough and insightful examinations of the intricacies of the human psyche and identity have left a mark that is palpable in contemporary theater and academic circles This influence while rooted in a specific historical context manages to bridge the gap between past and present The careful juxtaposition of simplicity and depth in his works not only invites but stimulates discourse resonating deeply with modern artists playwrights and thinkers As a result discussions on existential concepts identity and the nature of reality continue to be enriched by Pirandello s foundational ideas 25 Selected works edit nbsp Pirandello with his friend Albert Einstein in 1935Major plays edit 1916 Liola 1917 Cosi e se vi pare So It Is If You Think So 1917 Il piacere dell onesta The Pleasure of Honesty 1918 Il gioco delle parti The Rules of the Game 1919 L uomo la bestia e la virtu Man Beast and Virtue 1921 Sei personaggi in cerca d autore Six Characters in Search of an Author 1922 Enrico IV Henry IV 1922 L imbecille The Imbecile 1922 Vestire gli ignudi To Clothe the Naked 1923 L uomo dal fiore in bocca The Man with the Flower in His Mouth 1923 L altro figlio The Other Son 1923 La vita che ti diedi The Life I Gave You 1924 Ciascuno a suo modo Each in His Own Way 1924 Sagra del Signore della Nave The Rite of the Lord of the Ship 1926 L Amica delle Mogli The Friend of the Wives 1926 Bellavita Bellavita 1927 Diana e la Tuda Diana and Tuda 1929 O di Uno o di Nessuno Either of One or of None 1929 Come Tu Mi Vuoi How You Love Me 1930 Questa sera si recita a soggetto Tonight We Improvise nbsp Original text of the most famous novel of Pirandello One No One and One Hundred Thousand Novels edit 1902 Il turno The Turn 1904 Il fu Mattia Pascal The Late Mattia Pascal 1908 L esclusa The Excluded Woman 1911 Suo marito Her Husband 1913 I vecchi e i giovani The Old and the Young 1915 Si Gira Quaderni di Serafino Gubbio Shoot The Notebooks of Serafino Gubbio Cinematograph Operator 1926 English translation by C K Scott Moncrieff 1926 Uno nessuno e centomila One No One and One Hundred Thousand Short stories edit 1922 37 Novelle per un anno Short Stories for a Year 15 volumes A selection of thirty stories was translated by Virginia Jewiss as Stories for the Years Yale 2021 Poetry edit 1889 Mal giocondo Playful Evil 1891 Pasqua di Gea Easter of Gea 1894 Pier Gudro 1809 1892 1895 Elegie renane 1889 90 Rheinland Elegies 1901 Zampogna The Bagpipe 1909 Scamandro 1912 Fuori di chiave Out of Tune English translations edit Nearly all of Pirandello s plays were translated into English by the actor Robert Rietti Pirandello s poetry was translated for the first time in 2016 by George Hochfield 26 William Weaver is a noted translator of Luigi Pirandello Frederick May translated a number of Pirandello s plays and short stories in editions published by Oxford University Press and Penguin Books Filmography editIl crollo directed by Mario Gargiulo Italy 1920 based on the play Lumie di Sicilia Il lume dell altra casa directed by Ugo Gracci Italy 1920 based on the short story Il lume dell altra casa Lo scaldino it directed by Augusto Genina Italy 1920 based on the short story Lo scaldino But It Isn t Serious directed by Augusto Camerini it Italy 1921 based on the play Ma non e una cosa seria La rosa directed by Arnaldo Frateili it Italy 1921 based on the short story La rosa The Voyage directed by Gennaro Righelli Italy 1921 based on the short story Il viaggio Feu Mathias Pascal directed by Marcel L Herbier France 1925 based on the novel Il fu Mattia Pascal The Flight in the Night directed by Amleto Palermi Germany 1926 based on the play Enrico IV The Song of Love directed by Gennaro Righelli Italy 1930 based on the short story In silenzio La Derniere berceuse directed by Gennaro Righelli and Jean Cassagne France 1931 based on the short story In silenzio Liebeslied it directed by Constantin J David Germany 1931 based on the short story In silenzio As You Desire Me directed by George Fitzmaurice 1932 based on the play Come tu mi vuoi Steel directed by Walter Ruttmann Italy 1933 based on the story Giuoca Pietro Pensaci Giacomino it directed by Gennaro Righelli Italy 1936 based on the play Pensaci Giacomino But It s Nothing Serious directed by Mario Camerini Italy 1936 based on the play Ma non e una cosa seria The Man Who Couldn t Say No directed by Mario Camerini Germany 1938 based on the play Ma non e una cosa seria The Man from Nowhere directed by Pierre Chenal France 1937 based on the novel Il fu Mattia Pascal The Former Mattia Pascal directed by Pierre Chenal Italy 1937 based on the novel Il fu Mattia Pascal No Man s Land directed by Mario Baffico Italy 1939 based on two short stories Enrico IV it directed by Giorgio Pastina Italy 1943 based on the play Enrico IV This Love of Ours directed by William Dieterle 1945 based on the play Come prima meglio di prima Man Beast and Virtue directed by Steno Italy 1953 based on the play L uomo la bestia e la virtu Of Life and Love directed by Aldo Fabrizi Giorgio Pastina Mario Soldati and Luigi Zampa Italy 1954 based on four short stories Vestire gli ignudi directed by Marcello Pagliero Italy 1954 based on the play Vestire gli ignudi Never Say Goodbye directed by Jerry Hopper 1956 based on the play Come prima meglio di prima Todo sea para bien es directed by Carlos Rinaldi Argentina 1957 based on the play Tutto per bene Liola directed by Alessandro Blasetti Italy 1963 based on the play Liola The Voyage directed by Vittorio De Sica Italy 1974 based on the short story Il viaggio Il turno directed by Tonino Cervi Italy 1981 based on the novel Il turno Henry IV directed by Marco Bellocchio Italy 1984 based on the play Enrico IV Kaos directed by Paolo and Vittorio Taviani Italy 1984 based on four short stories Wir directed by Henryk Jacek Schoen Poland 1984 based on two short stories The Two Lives of Mattia Pascal directed by Mario Monicelli Italy 1985 based on the novel Il fu Mattia Pascal You Laugh directed by Paolo and Vittorio Taviani Italy 1998 based on two short stories The Nanny directed by Marco Bellocchio Italy 1999 based on the short story La balia The Choice directed by Michele Placido Italy 2015 based on the play L innesto The Wait directed by Piero Messina Italy 2015 based on the play La vita che ti diedi A Respectable Woman directed by Bernard Emond Canada 2023 based on the short story Pena di vivere cosi References edit Luigi Pirandello Biographical www nobelprize org Retrieved 20 March 2018 Nobelprize org www nobelprize org Retrieved 20 March 2018 in Italian Biografia di Luigi Pirandello Archived 20 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Biblioteca dei Classici italiani di Giuseppe Bonghi Accessed 2 November 2010 a b Luigi Pirandello www tititudorancea com Retrieved 4 February 2019 a b Bergin Thomas G 1976 Pirandello Luigi In William D Halsey ed Collier s Encyclopedia Vol 19 New York Macmillan Educational Corporation pp 76 78 Luigi Pagnotta 2009 Pirandello tells Chianciano Edizioni il pavone Nichols Nina daVinci 1 January 1995 Pirandello and Film U of Nebraska Press ISBN 0803233361 Chiesa Adolfo 1990 La satira politica in Italia con un intervista a Tullio Pericoli p 38 Giudice p 422 Giudice p 413 L Ovra a Cinecitta di Natalia ed Emanuele V Marino Bollati Boringhieri 2005 Archived 10 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine WINEGARTEN RENEE 1994 The Nobel Prize for Literature The American Scholar 63 1 63 75 ISSN 0003 0937 JSTOR 41212206 Eugenia Paulicelli 2002 Fashion the Politics of Style and National Identity in Pre Fascist and Fascist Italy Gender amp History 14 3 552 doi 10 1111 1468 0424 00281 S2CID 144286579 Meir Michaelis 1998 Mussolini s unofficial mouthpiece Telesio Interlandi Il Tevere and the evolution of Mussolini s anti Semitism Journal of Modern Italian Studies 3 3 217 240 doi 10 1080 13545719808454979 Lawson Mark 26 September 2022 100 years of the BBC the first live FA Cup final and the dawn of true crime The Guardian Retrieved 27 September 2022 First television Production The Radio Times No 354 Southern 11 July 1930 Nomination Database www nobelprize org Retrieved 20 March 2018 Mitchell Tony 1999 Dario Fo People s Court Jester Updated and Expanded London Methuen p 204 ISBN 0 413 73320 3 Gumbel Andrew 10 October 1997 Nobel Prize Dario Fo the showman wins Nobel literature prize The Independent Retrieved 22 March 2013 Giudice pp 117 158 Roberto Alajmo Le ceneri di Pirandello ed Drago 2008 20TH CENTURY BLUES A STUDY OF AFFINITIES BETWEEN HAROLD PINTER AND LUIGI PIRANDELLO ProQuest www proquest com ProQuest 303083330 Retrieved 9 October 2023 De Chiara Mariafilomena 6 March 2009 La ruta de la mascara el teatro de Luigi Pirandello y Samuel Beckett Ph D Thesis thesis Universitat Pompeu Fabra Angelini Franca 2011 Note preliminari da Pirandello a Sartre Ariel Nuova serie Semestrale di drammaturgia dell istituto di studi pirandelliani e sul teatro contemporaneo 2 2011 2 1 189 doi 10 1400 201706 Alessio Antonio Pietropaolo Domenico Katz Giuliana Sanguinetti 1992 Pirandello and the Modern Theatre in Italian Biblioteca di Quaderni d italianistica ISBN 978 0 9691979 9 7 Luigi Pirandello Selected Poems of Luigi Pirandello translated by George Hochfield New York Italica Press 2016 Further reading editGiudice Gaspare Luigi Pirandello UTET 1963 Baccolo L Pirandello Milan Bocca 1949 second edition Di Pietro L Pirandello Milano Vita e Pensiero 1950 second edition Ferrante R Luigi Pirandello Firenze Parenti 1958 Gardair Pirandello e il Suo Doppio Rome Abete 1977 Janner A Luigi Pirandello Firenze La Nuova Italia 1948 Monti M Pirandello Palermo Palumbo 1974 Moravia A Pirandello in Fiera Leteraria Rome 12 December 1946 Pancrazi P L altro Pirandello In Scrittori Italiani del Novecento Bari Laterza 1939 Pasini F Pirandello nell arte e nella vita Padova 1937 Podesta G Kafka e Pirandello Humanitas XI 1956 pp 230 44 Sarah Zappulla Muscara Enzo Zappulla Pirandello e il teatro siciliano Giuseppe Maimone Editore Catania 1986 Mirella Maugeri Salerno Pirandello e dintorni Giuseppe Maimone Editore Catania 1987 Sarah Zappulla Muscara a cura di Narratori siciliani del secondo dopoguerra Giuseppe Maimone Editore Catania 1990 Elio Providenti a cura di Archeologie pirandelliane Giuseppe Maimone Editore Catania 1990 Carlo Schirru Per un analisi interlinguistica d epoca Grazia Deledda e contemporanei Rivista Italiana di Linguistica e di Dialettologia Fabrizio Serra editore Pisa Roma Anno XI 2009 pp 9 32 Virdia F Pirandello Milan Mursia 1975 Frederick May Three Major Symbols in Four Plays by Pirandello Lawrence Kansas Allen Press 1974 Massimo Colella Ritratto autoritratto profezia Bontempelli esegeta di Pirandello in Pirandello Studies Journal of the Society for Pirandello Studies 42 2022 pp 20 40 External links edit nbsp Quotations related to Luigi Pirandello at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Luigi Pirandello at Wikimedia Commons Works by Luigi Pirandello in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Luigi Pirandello at Project Gutenberg List of Works Works by or about Luigi Pirandello at Internet Archive Works by Luigi Pirandello at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp nbsp The complete works of Pirandello in Italian and English section Luigi Pirandello on Nobelprize org nbsp his bold and ingenious revival of dramatic and scenic art Listen to some Pirandello s work in Italian on audio MP3 free download Pirandello s Girgenti Places in Agrigento associated with his literary works Panoramic virtual tour of Piazza Luigi Pirandello in Agrigento The Light from the House Opposite The Panton Audio Library Suo Marito English translation Her Husband by Martha King and Mary Ann Frese Witt Newspaper clippings about Luigi Pirandello in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW nbsp One No One and One Hundred Thousand translated by William Weaver published in 2018 by Spurl Editions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luigi Pirandello amp oldid 1183875337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.