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Roland Topor

Roland Topor (7 January 1938 – 16 April 1997) was a French illustrator, cartoonist, comics artist, painter, novelist, playwright, film and TV writer, filmmaker and actor,[1] who was known for the surreal nature of his work. He was of Polish-Jewish origin. His parents were Jewish refugees from Warsaw.[2] He spent the early years of his life in Savoy, where his family hid him from the Gestapo.[1]

Roland Topor
Born(1938-01-07)7 January 1938
Paris, France
Died16 April 1997(1997-04-16) (aged 59)
Paris, France
OccupationIllustrator, cartoonist, painter, playwright, designer, painter, animator, fiction writer, actor, film and TV script writer
Period1964–1997
GenreSatire, Surrealism
Literary movementPanic Movement
Notable worksThe Tenant

Biography edit

Roland Topor's parents came to France in the 1930s. In 1941 Topor's father, Abram, along with thousands of other Jewish men living in Paris, were required to register with the Vichy authorities. Topor's father was subsequently arrested and interned in a prison camp at Pithiviers, where inmates would be held before being sent to other concentration camps, usually Auschwitz. Of the thousands who were sent to Pithiviers only 159 survived. But Topor's father, Abram, managed to escape from Pithiviers and hide in an area south of Paris.[3]

While his father was in hiding, Topor's landlady would confront the children, Topor and his older sister Hélène d'Almeida-Topor, and try to cajole them into giving away the location of their father. The landlady did not succeed. Then in May 1941 a neighbor tipped off the Topor family that the French police along with the Gestapo were going to search the entire building. So the family fled to Vichy France. In Savoy, four-year-old Roland Topor was placed in a French family, was given a false name, and took on the identity of a Catholic schoolboy.[3]

The family survived, and in 1946 they sued the landlady to have their belongings returned, and to be allowed to resume living in their former apartment. The court ruled in their favor, they returned, and soon were once again paying rent to the landlady who had previously tried to have them apprehended.[3]

The night before he died of a cerebral hemorrhage, it is reported that he couldn't sleep, and instead spent the night visiting Parisian cafes, enjoying Cuban cigars, and drinking Bordeaux wine. When he arrived at the Cafe de Flore, he recounted a nightmarish dream he experienced. It was a dream that he thought might inspire his next novel:[4]

I'm awakened suddenly by a feeling of imminent disaster. Turning down the sheet, I discover a cadaver in my bed, the husk of a man of small stature, but fat, and of an age equal to mine. My first reflex is to jump to the telephone to warn the police. But I hesitate; the presence of this rotting carcass in my bed is embarrassing. Explanations will be demanded of me that I'll be incapable of furnishing. They'll suspect me of a crime that's abominable."[4]

Art edit

Roland Topor may be best known for his graphic works with their surrealist humor. He studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. His artworks have appeared in books, newspapers, posters, and film animations.[5]

Literature edit

Few of Topor's writings are available in English. His fictions are sometimes classed as "post-surrealist horror" that go beyond established limits, to portray carnivalesque worlds of bizarre situations, in which human realities that are normally unspoken are laid bare in confrontations with (using Topor's phrase) "le sang, la merde et le sexe" (blood, shit, and sex).[3]

Roland Topor wrote the novel The Tenant (Le Locataire chimérique, 1964), which was adapted to film by Roman Polanski in 1976. The Tenant is the story of a Parisian of Polish descent, who develops an obsession regarding what has happened to his apartment's previous tenant.[4] His 1969 novel Joko's Anniversary is a fable about loss of identity and is a satire on social conformity.[6] Topor returned to these themes in his later novel Head-to-Toe Portrait of Suzanne (1978).

In 1965 David De Silva (Becca Productions Ltd) bought the film rights to The Tenant for $15,000 and sent the novel to Roman Polanski in the hope that he would consider directing it. De Silva made the mistake of phoning Polanski from New York around 7PM which would be just about midnight London time. He received Polanski's response to the project in a letter dated 4 May 1966.[7] Subsequently, De Silva sold the rights to Universal Pictures because Edward Albee wanted to adapt it as his first screenplay under a three-picture deal with Universal but the deal never materialized. Polanski adapted the film 10 years later in 1976. De Silva believes Polanski never read the novel 10 years before. He says, "When the timing is right the timing is right.".[7]

A new presentation of The Tenant by Roland Topor was released in October 2006. The book has Topor's original novel, a new introduction by Thomas Ligotti, a selection of short stories by Topor, a representation of Topor's artwork and an essay on the famous Roman Polanski film version.

Thomas Ligotti's introduction concerns the affirmative themes of world-renowned authors, focusing on Luigi Pirandello, with the negationist themes of Roland Topor's The Tenant.

In 2018, Atlas Press published Topor's Head-to-Toe Portrait of Suzanne, translated and introduced by Andrew Hodgson. It was the first of Topor's novels to enter English in nearly 50 years.[8]

Songs edit

Roland Topor wrote two songs for Megumi Satsu, "Je m'aime" and "Monte dans mon Ambulance".[1]

Cinema edit

With René Laloux, Topor made "The Dead Times" (Les Temps morts, 1964), "The Snails" (Les Escargots, 1965) and their most famous work, the feature length La Planète sauvage (1973).[1]

Topor also worked as an actor, his most famous part being Renfield in Werner Herzog's Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht (1979). In the same year, he also performed the surrealistic paralyzed boss in the movie Ratataplan by Maurizio Nichetti.[9]

Theatre edit

Topor variously wrote, directed and designed a number of theatre works. Topor's absurd narratives are rife with macabre ironies, scatologies, and cruelties, which seem intended to shock and reframe human interactions to an insane extent. When Topor's play Joko fête son anniversaire was performed in Brussels in 1972, one critic commented, "In some countries, the author would be shot." Topor's play Vinci avait raison (somewhat of a pastiche of J. B. Priestley's 1945 play An Inspector Calls) is set in a house where no one can escape, the toilets are clogged, and excrement becomes evident on stage. It was performed in Brussels in 1977 and caused a scandal. Critical responses include the suggestion, "We must put this idiot in prison for creating such filth."[3]

His plays include:

  • 1972 – Les derniers jours de solitude de Robinson Crusoé (The Last Lonely Days of Robinson Crusoe)
  • 1972 – Le Bébé de Monsieur Laurent (Monsieur Laurent’s Baby)
  • 1975 – De Moïse à Mao, 5000 ans d’aventures (From Moses to Mao, 5000 Adventurous Years)
  • 1983 – Batailles (with Jean-Michel Ribes) (Battles)
  • 1989 – Joko fête son anniversaire (Joko Celebrates his Birthday)[10]
  • 1989 – Vinci avait raison (Vinci was Right)
  • 1994 – L'Hiver sous la table (Winter Under the Table)[11]
  • 1996 – L’Ambigu (Ambiguity)[12]

Chronology edit

Topor published several books of drawings, including Dessins panique (1965) Quatre roses pour Lucienne (1967) and Toporland (1975). Selections from Quatre roses pour Lucienne were reprinted in the English language collection Stories and Drawings (1967). His carefully detailed, realistic style, with elaborate crosshatching, emphasises the fantastic and macabre subject matter of the images.

Bibliography edit

In 2010, the French publishing company United Dead Artists founded by Stéphane Blanquet published an oversized book "ReBonjour" on the work of Topor.[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Roland Topor". lambiek.net.
  2. ^ [1] Kraus, Jerelle. “Endpaper -- The Lives They Lived: Roland Topor; A Graphic Wit”. The New York Times Magazine. 4 Jan 1998
  3. ^ a b c d e [2] Hodgson, Andrew. "Blood, Shit, and Sex". The Paris Review. 22 March 2019.
  4. ^ a b c [3] Kraus, Jerelle. “Endpaper -- The Lives They Lived: Roland Topor; A Graphic Wit”. The New York Times Magazine. 4 Jan 1998
  5. ^ [4] Author: S. S. M. “The eclectic genius of Roland Topor”. The Economist. Apr 11th 2017
  6. ^ [5] Hodgson, Andrew. "Why the Silence?". 3:AM Magazine. 23 July 2013.
  7. ^ a b David De Silva
  8. ^ "HEAD-TO-TOE PORTRAIT OF SUZANNE". 19 March 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  9. ^ The Ratataplan movie webpage in the Maurizio Nichetti's website webpage
  10. ^ Topor, Roland. Joko fête son anniversaire. Publisher: Wombat (2016). ISBN 978-2-919186-90-7
  11. ^ Lemaire, Véronique. Hainaux, René. Theatre and Architecture - Stage Design - Costume: A Bibliographic Guide in Five Languages. Publisher: Peter Lang, 2006. p. 135 ISBN 978-90-5201-281-0
  12. ^ Toper, Roland. L'Ambigu (Théâtre panique II). Wombat 2016. ISBN 978-2-37498-056-0
  13. ^ The Ian Potter Museum of Art webpage
  14. ^ United Dead Artist page on the Topor book website

External links edit

  • Lambiek Comiclopedia article
  • Roland Topor at IMDb
  • by professor Gilles Methel and his student Marijan Rubesa from E.S.A.V./Université Toulouse II le Mirail
  • The Very Rich Blog of Frantz Vaillant (in French)
  • An interview (20-12-2007, in French) with Daniel Colagrossi about his then-recent book Topor traits

roland, topor, january, 1938, april, 1997, french, illustrator, cartoonist, comics, artist, painter, novelist, playwright, film, writer, filmmaker, actor, known, surreal, nature, work, polish, jewish, origin, parents, were, jewish, refugees, from, warsaw, spen. Roland Topor 7 January 1938 16 April 1997 was a French illustrator cartoonist comics artist painter novelist playwright film and TV writer filmmaker and actor 1 who was known for the surreal nature of his work He was of Polish Jewish origin His parents were Jewish refugees from Warsaw 2 He spent the early years of his life in Savoy where his family hid him from the Gestapo 1 Roland ToporBorn 1938 01 07 7 January 1938Paris FranceDied16 April 1997 1997 04 16 aged 59 Paris FranceOccupationIllustrator cartoonist painter playwright designer painter animator fiction writer actor film and TV script writerPeriod1964 1997GenreSatire SurrealismLiterary movementPanic MovementNotable worksThe Tenant Contents 1 Biography 2 Art 3 Literature 4 Songs 5 Cinema 6 Theatre 7 Chronology 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBiography editRoland Topor s parents came to France in the 1930s In 1941 Topor s father Abram along with thousands of other Jewish men living in Paris were required to register with the Vichy authorities Topor s father was subsequently arrested and interned in a prison camp at Pithiviers where inmates would be held before being sent to other concentration camps usually Auschwitz Of the thousands who were sent to Pithiviers only 159 survived But Topor s father Abram managed to escape from Pithiviers and hide in an area south of Paris 3 While his father was in hiding Topor s landlady would confront the children Topor and his older sister Helene d Almeida Topor and try to cajole them into giving away the location of their father The landlady did not succeed Then in May 1941 a neighbor tipped off the Topor family that the French police along with the Gestapo were going to search the entire building So the family fled to Vichy France In Savoy four year old Roland Topor was placed in a French family was given a false name and took on the identity of a Catholic schoolboy 3 The family survived and in 1946 they sued the landlady to have their belongings returned and to be allowed to resume living in their former apartment The court ruled in their favor they returned and soon were once again paying rent to the landlady who had previously tried to have them apprehended 3 The night before he died of a cerebral hemorrhage it is reported that he couldn t sleep and instead spent the night visiting Parisian cafes enjoying Cuban cigars and drinking Bordeaux wine When he arrived at the Cafe de Flore he recounted a nightmarish dream he experienced It was a dream that he thought might inspire his next novel 4 I m awakened suddenly by a feeling of imminent disaster Turning down the sheet I discover a cadaver in my bed the husk of a man of small stature but fat and of an age equal to mine My first reflex is to jump to the telephone to warn the police But I hesitate the presence of this rotting carcass in my bed is embarrassing Explanations will be demanded of me that I ll be incapable of furnishing They ll suspect me of a crime that s abominable 4 Art editRoland Topor may be best known for his graphic works with their surrealist humor He studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris His artworks have appeared in books newspapers posters and film animations 5 Literature editFew of Topor s writings are available in English His fictions are sometimes classed as post surrealist horror that go beyond established limits to portray carnivalesque worlds of bizarre situations in which human realities that are normally unspoken are laid bare in confrontations with using Topor s phrase le sang la merde et le sexe blood shit and sex 3 Roland Topor wrote the novel The Tenant Le Locataire chimerique 1964 which was adapted to film by Roman Polanski in 1976 The Tenant is the story of a Parisian of Polish descent who develops an obsession regarding what has happened to his apartment s previous tenant 4 His 1969 novel Joko s Anniversary is a fable about loss of identity and is a satire on social conformity 6 Topor returned to these themes in his later novel Head to Toe Portrait of Suzanne 1978 In 1965 David De Silva Becca Productions Ltd bought the film rights to The Tenant for 15 000 and sent the novel to Roman Polanski in the hope that he would consider directing it De Silva made the mistake of phoning Polanski from New York around 7PM which would be just about midnight London time He received Polanski s response to the project in a letter dated 4 May 1966 7 Subsequently De Silva sold the rights to Universal Pictures because Edward Albee wanted to adapt it as his first screenplay under a three picture deal with Universal but the deal never materialized Polanski adapted the film 10 years later in 1976 De Silva believes Polanski never read the novel 10 years before He says When the timing is right the timing is right 7 A new presentation of The Tenant by Roland Topor was released in October 2006 The book has Topor s original novel a new introduction by Thomas Ligotti a selection of short stories by Topor a representation of Topor s artwork and an essay on the famous Roman Polanski film version Thomas Ligotti s introduction concerns the affirmative themes of world renowned authors focusing on Luigi Pirandello with the negationist themes of Roland Topor s The Tenant In 2018 Atlas Press published Topor s Head to Toe Portrait of Suzanne translated and introduced by Andrew Hodgson It was the first of Topor s novels to enter English in nearly 50 years 8 Songs editRoland Topor wrote two songs for Megumi Satsu Je m aime and Monte dans mon Ambulance 1 Cinema editWith Rene Laloux Topor made The Dead Times Les Temps morts 1964 The Snails Les Escargots 1965 and their most famous work the feature length La Planete sauvage 1973 1 Topor also worked as an actor his most famous part being Renfield in Werner Herzog s Nosferatu Phantom der Nacht 1979 In the same year he also performed the surrealistic paralyzed boss in the movie Ratataplan by Maurizio Nichetti 9 Theatre editTopor variously wrote directed and designed a number of theatre works Topor s absurd narratives are rife with macabre ironies scatologies and cruelties which seem intended to shock and reframe human interactions to an insane extent When Topor s play Joko fete son anniversaire was performed in Brussels in 1972 one critic commented In some countries the author would be shot Topor s play Vinci avait raison somewhat of a pastiche of J B Priestley s 1945 playAn Inspector Calls is set in a house where no one can escape the toilets are clogged and excrement becomes evident on stage It was performed in Brussels in 1977 and caused a scandal Critical responses include the suggestion We must put this idiot in prison for creating such filth 3 His plays include 1972 Les derniers jours de solitude de Robinson Crusoe The Last Lonely Days of Robinson Crusoe 1972 Le Bebe de Monsieur Laurent Monsieur Laurent s Baby 1975 De Moise a Mao 5000 ans d aventures From Moses to Mao 5000 Adventurous Years 1983 Batailles with Jean Michel Ribes Battles 1989 Joko fete son anniversaire Joko Celebrates his Birthday 10 1989 Vinci avait raison Vinci was Right 1994 L Hiver sous la table Winter Under the Table 11 1996 L Ambigu Ambiguity 12 Chronology editTopor published several books of drawings including Dessins panique 1965 Quatre roses pour Lucienne 1967 and Toporland 1975 Selections from Quatre roses pour Lucienne were reprinted in the English language collection Stories and Drawings 1967 His carefully detailed realistic style with elaborate crosshatching emphasises the fantastic and macabre subject matter of the images 1962 Creates the Panic Movement Mouvement panique together with Alejandro Jodorowsky and Fernando Arrabal 1961 to 1965 Contributes to French satirical magazine Hara Kiri 1965 Creates with partner Rene Laloux the animated short film Les Escargots The Snails The film won Special Jury Prize at the Cracow Film Festival 1966 Illustrates Daniel Spoerri s An Anecdoted Topography of Chance Re Anecdoted Version published by the Something Else Press Also illustrates Melvin Van Peebles Le Chinois du XIV 1971 Creates the drawings for the bizarre introduction of Fernando Arrabal s film Viva la muerte 1973 Topor designs and Rene Laloux directs La Planete sauvage a 72 minute long animated film based on a novel by Stefan Wul 1974 Topor has a cameo in Dusan Makavejev s Sweet Movie 1975 Illustrates Patricia Highsmith s Kleine Geschichtgen fur Weiberfeinde published by Diogenes Verlag Published in English in 1977 by Heinemann as Little Tales of Misogyny 1976 Roman Polanski directs a film version of Topor s book The Tenant 1979 Plays the role of Renfield in Werner Herzog s film Nosferatu the Vampyre 1983 Creates with Henri Xhonneux the popular French television series Telechat a parody of news broadcasts featuring puppets of a cat and an ostrich 1989 With Henri Xhonneux co writes the screenplay for the film Marquis loosely based on the life and writings of Marquis de Sade The cast consisted of actors in period costumes with animal masks with a separate puppet for de Sade s anthropomorphised bodily appendage 2011 The Ian Potter Museum of Art at the University of Melbourne mounted a survey exhibition of 22 promotional posters designed by Roland Topor 13 Bibliography editIn 2010 the French publishing company United Dead Artists founded by Stephane Blanquet published an oversized book ReBonjour on the work of Topor 14 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roland Topor References edit a b c d Roland Topor lambiek net 1 Kraus Jerelle Endpaper The Lives They Lived Roland Topor A Graphic Wit The New York Times Magazine 4 Jan 1998 a b c d e 2 Hodgson Andrew Blood Shit and Sex The Paris Review 22 March 2019 a b c 3 Kraus Jerelle Endpaper The Lives They Lived Roland Topor A Graphic Wit The New York Times Magazine 4 Jan 1998 4 Author S S M The eclectic genius of Roland Topor The Economist Apr 11th 2017 5 Hodgson Andrew Why the Silence 3 AM Magazine 23 July 2013 a b David De Silva HEAD TO TOE PORTRAIT OF SUZANNE 19 March 2019 Retrieved 20 August 2021 The Ratataplan movie webpage in the Maurizio Nichetti s website webpage Topor Roland Joko fete son anniversaire Publisher Wombat 2016 ISBN 978 2 919186 90 7 Lemaire Veronique Hainaux Rene Theatre and Architecture Stage Design Costume A Bibliographic Guide in Five Languages Publisher Peter Lang 2006 p 135 ISBN 978 90 5201 281 0 Toper Roland L Ambigu Theatre panique II Wombat 2016 ISBN 978 2 37498 056 0 The Ian Potter Museum of Art webpage United Dead Artist page on the Topor book websiteExternal links editLambiek Comiclopedia article Roland Topor at IMDb Covers of works by professor Gilles Methel and his student Marijan Rubesa from E S A V Universite Toulouse II le Mirail The Very Rich Blog of Frantz Vaillant in French An interview 20 12 2007 in French with Daniel Colagrossi about his then recent book Topor traits Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roland Topor amp oldid 1181099870, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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