- Kimon Friar
Kimon Friar (1911–
May 25 ,1993 ) was a Greek-American poet and translator of Greek poetry.Youth and education
Friar was born in 1911 in
Imrali ,Turkey , to an American father and a Greek mother. In 1915, the family moved to the United States and Friar became an American citizen in 1920. As a child, Friar had problems with the English language, and so he spent his time on artistic efforts. At a young age, despite his trouble with English, Friar discoveredpoetry and later he became interested indrama . After reading "Ode to a Grecian Urn" byJohn Keats , Friar became fascinated with the energy of the English language and he determined to master it.Friar was educated at a number of institutions, including the
Chicago Art Institute , theYale School of Drama, theUniversity of Iowa , andUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison where he received his bachelor's degree with honors in 1935. He went on toUniversity of Michigan for his master's degree in 1940, and he won the Avery Hopwood Major Award for "Yeats: A Vision".Poetry and teaching
Although he was dedicated to writing and translating poetry, Friar began teaching to support himself soon after leaving the University of Michigan. He taught English at
Adelphi from 1940-1945, atAmherst College from 1945-1946, atNew York University from 1952-1953, and atUniversity of Minnesota Duluth from 1953-1954. He also served as a visiting lecturer at UC Berkeley, theUniversity of Illinois , Indiana University, and theOhio State University .During these years, Friar organized poetry readings for the pleasure of the public. He was the director of the Poetry Center in the YW/YMHA in
New York City from 1943-1946 where he encouraged famous poets and amateurs to read their poetry at receptions. From 1951-1952, Friar ran the Theatre Circle at the Circle in the Square Theatre, also in New York City. The plays produced there were primarily from the works ofArthur Miller ,Tennessee Williams ,Lillian Hellman , andArchibald MacLeish .Editor and translator
Friar acted as the editor, from 1960-1962, of "The Charioteer", and from 1963-1965, of "Greek Heritage", two magazines dealing with Greek culture. Friar had been translating poetry from Greek into English, learning both languages fluently and gaining a perspective on modern Greek poetry. He has written, translated, and edited innumerable works, including "Modern Poetry: American and British" (with John Malcolm Brinnin) in 1951, the 1960 translation of "Saviors of God" and the 1963 translation of "Sodom and Gomorrah" by
Nikos Kazantzakis , and the 1973 anthology "Modern Greek Poetry: from Cavafis to Elytis". However, Friar is best known for his translation of Kazantzakis' epic poem "". Friar completed this work in 1958 after several years of close collaboration with the author. Some critics declared that Friar lost his way in the double adjectives and complex language of the original (Kazantzakis used ancient vocabulary that is generally unknown to metropolitan scholars), and others agreed that Friar was at his best when he chose the prosaic word over the contrived or archaic. A Time magazine reviewer regarded The Odyssey as "a masterpiece. Kimon Friar received from Kazantzakis the ultimate praise: that his translation was as good as the original."Death and honors
In 1978, Friar received the Greek World Award. Then, in 1986, he won both a
Ford Foundation grant and aNational Foundation of the Arts and Humanities grant. He is quoted as saying: "I like to say that the poet in a translation should be heard, but the translator should be overheard."He spent his last years in Greece. Kimon Friar died on May 25, 1993.
Bibliography
*"Yeats: A Vision" (1940)
*"Modern Poetry: American and British" (with John Malcolm Brinnin) (1951)
*"The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel, translation in verses by Kimon Friar, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1958; London: Secker and Warburg, 1958.
*"Saviors of God" (1960)
*"Sodom and Gomorrah" by Nikos Kazantzakis (translation by Kimon Friar) (1963)
*"Modern Greek Poetry: from Cavafis to Elytis" (1973)
*"The Sovereign Sun: Selected poems by Odysseus Elytis, Trans. Kimon Friar (Philadelphia, U.S.A. 1974)Literary Awards
*Avery Hopwood Major Award
*Ford Foundation Grant
*National Foundation of the Arts Grantources
* [http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/aids/friar.html "Kimon Friar Papers", biography by Maritza Maxwell]
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