“A
theatre, a literature, an artistic expression that does not speak for its own
time has no relevance.” – Dario Fo
Born on this date in 1926, Fo often said he was “an idiot” who
just happened to win the Nobel Prize.
But “brilliant” would be a more fitting description. An Italian actor, playwright, director,
songwriter, and political campaigner he was “arguably the most widely performed
contemporary playwright in world theatre” during his lifetime.
A master of satire and irony, he
grew up the son of a self-educated writing mother and day-laborer father who
also was a traveling actor in the ancient Italian tradition of regional
performance, lampooning local politicos and religious figures. “When I was a
boy, unconsciously, spontaneously I learned the art of telling ironic stories,”
he said.
Whether as an actor, writer or
director, Fo found religion and politics to be “fertile ground” for his works. “Every artistic expression is either
influenced
by or adds something to politics,” he once wrote.
Fo’s writings – translated into 30 languages – address issues ranging from dictatorial brutality to AIDS, religion, organized crime, and “military actions.” His satire, he said, can be adapted to unjust situations throughout the world. “Satire can always be found everywhere. A people without love for satire is a dead people.”
No comments:
Post a Comment