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The President Wrote Absurdist Plays


Article # : 17819 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 3 / 1990  3,384 Words
Author : Josef Skvorecky
Josef Skvorecky's books include Talkin' Moscow Blues, The Swell Season, Sins for Fathers, The Mournful Demeanor of Lieutenant Boruvka, The Engineer of Human Souls, Dvorak in Love, and the Cowards. He emigrated from Czechoslovakia in 1968 and now teaches literature and film at the University of Toronto.

       A playwright for president? At a critical time like this? A man without any political experience?
       
       Doubts hovered over a party I attended when he world first learned that the next president of Czechoslovakia would most likely be the author of The Memorandum, The Garden party, and other pieces written in the Beckettian vein of modern drama. A guest, known for his distrust of gloomy news about conditions in the workers' paradise, grumbled, "At least he isn't an actor!"
       
       Václav Havel is not an actor (although he did appear in amateur theatricals and a secretly taped studio production of his Audience), but no matter how many differences there are between the two men, of one thing I'm pretty sure: Havel would not call Regan's notorious characterization of the USSR an "unjustifiable simplification." Havel's life is an indication that though the former U.S. president's bon mot may be a simplification - after all, concise definitions always are - it is hardly an unjustifiable one. As a highly idealistic man of deep civil morality, Havel has been fighting evil in both its abstract philosophical and concrete political forms ever since he was a teenager, because he has lived his life in a Soviet colony.
       
       The will to create
       
       Havel's encounter with the simplifications of Marxism Leninism was intense, since he born into a family of enterprising capitalists. His great-great-grandfather was a wealthy miller, his grandfather an architect who built some of the handsomest fin de siecle houses in Prague and also the legendary Lucerne, a sort of Carnegie Hall of ... (1986 of 20551 Characters)
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