- Roger Vitrac
Roger Vitrac (1899–1952) was a French surrealist playwright and poet.
Born in
Puisac , Roger Vitrac moved to Paris in 1910. As a young man, he was influenced bysymbolism and the writings ofLautréamont andAlfred Jarry , and he developed a passion for theatre and poetry. A year after his "baccalauréat", he published a collection of poems, "Le Faune noir".During his three year long military service, he met
Marcel Arland ,François Baron ,Georges Limbour andRené Crevel , who together founded the literary revue, "Aventure ". Through the group, Vitrac metAndré Breton andLouis Aragon atCafé Certa in 1921, where manyDada activities took place until it became one of the surrealist group's headquarters. In the early twenties, Vitrac joined the surrealist movement and contributed to the first few editions of "La Révolution Surréaliste ". Slowly segregated from the group along withAntonin Artaud , together they created theThéatre Alfred-Jarry in 1926, where they produced some of their most important plays such as "The Mysteries of Love" ("Les Mystères de l'amour", 1927) and "Victor, or Power to the Children" ("Victor ou les enfants au pouvoir", 1928), setting the tone for theTheatre of the Absurd , twenty years beforeIonesco . "The Cambridge Guide to Theatre" describes "The Mysteries of Love" as a masterpiece of surrealist theatre. It is now considered a key play in 20th-century French theatre.Vitrac joined
Georges Bataille as one of the signaturies of "Un Cadavre " against Breton and contributed to "Documents " with articles on "Gaston-Louis Roux " (1929, issue 7), "The Abduction of the Sabines" (1930, issue 6) and a poem, "Humorage to Picasso" (1930, issue 3), dedicated to the artist. From 1931, he worked as a journalist while further exploring burlesque style playwriting, which often operated betweenboulevard comedy and intimate tragedy. His multi-thematic "Coup de Trafalgar" (1934) and "Les Demoiselles du large" (1938) gained as little recognition as his more slapstick plays such "Le Loup-Garou" (1939) and "Le Sabre de mon père" (1951).Only after his death did Vitrac reached popular stardom status with
Jean Anouilh 's 1962 production of "Victor, or Power to the Children".
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