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Lettres à Génica Athanasiou

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En 1919, Génica Athanasiou quitte la Roumanie où elle est née, pour devenir comédienne à Paris, où elle étudie avec Charles Dullin. En 1921, membre à part entière de l'Atelier, la nouvelle troupe de Dullin, elle participe à son premier spectacle.
À la fin de cette année, un jeune acteur, nouveau membre de la troupe, Antonin Artaud, tombe sous le charme de sa singulière beauté. Une passion nait entre eux ; chaque jour où ils sont éloignés, Artaud lui envoie des lettres intenses, des poèmes... Artaud écrit qu'il a trouvé : « l'amour parfait, céleste que j'avais rêvé », (Lettres à Génica Athanasiou, 41) ; Génica est « le seul être avec qui je puisse être moi-même » (Lettres, 125).
« Génica fut, à n'en pas douter, le grand amour d'Artaud. Comme lui elle était comédienne et les lettres qu'il lui adresse sont à la fois l'évocation la plus douloureuse qu'un homme ait pu faire de sa souffrance, et l'une des plus belles correspondances amoureuse qu'il soit donné de lire. » Thierry Galibert

377 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1969

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About the author

Antonin Artaud

282 books798 followers
French surrealist poet and playwright Antonin Artaud advocated a deliberately shocking and confrontational style of drama that he called "theater of cruelty."

People better knew Antoine Marie Joseph Artaud, an essayist, actor, and director.

Considered among the most influential figures in the evolution of modern theory, Antonin Artaud associated with artists and experimental groups in Paris during the 1920s.

Political differences then resulted in him breaking and founding the theatre Alfred Jarry with Roger Vitrac and Robert Aron. Together, they expected to create a forum for works to change radically. Artaud especially expressed disdain for west of the day, panned the ordered plot and scripted language that his contemporaries typically employed to convey ideas, and recorded his ideas in such works as Le Theatre de la cruaute and The Theatre and Its Double .

Artaud thought to represent reality and to affect the much possible audience and therefore used a mixture of strange and disturbing forms of lighting, sound, and other performance elements.

Artaud wanted that the "spectacle" that "engulfed and physically affected" this audience, put in the middle. He referred to this layout like a "vortex," a "trapped and powerless" constantly shifting shape.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Anda.
47 reviews1 follower
June 3, 2023
4.5 / 5 ⭐

Ar fi meritat punctajul maxim pentru felul în care a fost evidențiată involuția mentalului său pe parcursul corespondenței, dar nu pot sa trec peste niște comentarii grosolane pe care le-a făcut la adresa Genicăi.

Omul era nebun de legat, iar cartea de față atestă acest fapt.
Profile Image for Ron Scrogham.
84 reviews
February 3, 2021
This collection of letters between Antonin Artaud--actor, director, and dramaturge--and the Romanian actress Génica Athanasiou traces the arc of their love from its beginning in 1921 through their break to Artaud's confinement in the asylum at Ville-Evrard, 1939-1943. These letters swing from expressions of passionate devotion and affection to anger, coldness, and distance and culminate in the paranoia of the confined Artaud looking to Génica for rescue. The scholarly apparatus provides helpful information as to the provenance of the letters, as well as explanations of references. There are also plates of Artaud's drawings. This is a wonderful representation of the artistic world of 1920's Paris from the perspective of a formative influence on theater in the twentieth century.
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