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         Pinter Harold:     more books (100)
  1. Harold Pinter the Birthday Party, the Caretaker, the Homecoming: Faber Critical Guides by Bill Naismith, 2001-03
  2. Party Time and The New World Order by Harold Pinter, 1993-12-29
  3. The Pinter Ethic: The Erotic Aesthetic by Penelo Prentice, 1993-12-01
  4. The Hothouse by Harold Pinter, 1999-03-01
  5. The Lover by Harold Pinter, 1998-01-01
  6. One for the Road by Harold Pinter, 1986-06
  7. Harold Pinter (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
  8. Plays: Four (Old Time, No Man's Land, Betrayal, Monologue, Family Voices , A Kind of Alaska, One for the Road, Mountain Language) by Harold Pinter, 1991-02-04
  9. Plays: "Birthday Party", "The Room", "Dumb Waiter", "Slight Ache", "The Hothouse", "Night Out", Black and White (Prose), "The Examination" v. 1 (Faber Contemporary Classics) by Harold Pinter, 1996-09-10
  10. Harold Pinter by 2005-12-08
  11. Landscape by Harold Pinter, 1991-07-08
  12. Harold Pinter's Politics: A Silence Beyond Echo by Charles Grimes, 2005-11
  13. Harold Pinter: A Celebration
  14. Pinter In Play: Critical Strategies and the Plays of Harold Pinter by SusanHollis Merritt, 1995-01-01

41. Being Harold Pinter | Theatre Story | Guardian Unlimited Arts
Yet such is the group s international stature that their debut UK performance was introduced by their patron, Sir Tom Stoppard, with harold pinter who
http://arts.guardian.co.uk/theatre/drama/reviews/story/0,,2058095,00.html
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42. Harold Pinter's "God Bless America"
The latest piece of Brit antiwar poetry hits the streets with an incoherence that must be seen to be believed. Sample line
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/002/172otmgg.asp
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Harold Pinter's "God Bless America"
The latest piece of Brit anti-war poetry hits the streets with an incoherence that must be seen to be believed. Sample line: "Your eyes have gone out and your nose" .
by J. Bottum
01/27/2003 12:00:00 AM
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THERE'S SOMETHING IRRESISTIBLE about the anti-war poetry that's been pouring out of England. Came a Motion . Went a Motion. Came a Paulin . He went, too. Now Harold Pinter finds a printer: Something extra, just for you. What's irresistible, of course, is the impulse to parody. The mockings of Andrew Motion's "Causa Belli," for instance, are all over the blogosphere (many of the best of them collected on Tim Blair's fine site ). Now the web's parodic imagination has begun to savage Pinter's entry. (My favorite, so far, is from Loretta Serrano , a recasting of the poem to bounce along with the music for the Monkees' theme song.) The septuagenarian Pinter deserves whatever obloquy gets poured over his head. I run hot and cold on his plays. On a cold day, I think he hasn't even been interestingly wrong since "The Homecoming" in 1965. More to the point, his forays into politics and social criticism have always been weak. This is the man, after all, who

43. Harold Pinter
pinter s thoughts on US foreign policy Milosovic.
http://members.tripod.com/sarant_2/ks9pinter.html
From The Guardian Thursday April 8, 1999
Milosevic is undoubtedly ruthless and savage. So is Clinton. Clinton continues the vicious Reagan/Bush tradition with no trouble at all. But he combines that tradition with a shy grin and a beguiling southern drawl. He can really be so sweet on television. Blair is the one who kisses Clinton's arse fervently and dreams that he is Mrs Thatcher. The level of intelligence employed in this whole enterprise is pathetic if not infantile. The US is now a highly dangerous force, totally out of control. Harold Pinter
London
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44. Harold Pinter News - The New York Times
News about harold pinter. Commentary and archival information about harold pinter from The New York Times.
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/harold_pinter/index
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  • World U.S. N.Y. / Region ... P > Pinter, Harold E-MAIL Save
    Harold Pinter
    Harold Pinter in 1999. (Photo: Jonathan Player for the New York Times) Harold Pinter, the British playwright and a Nobel laureate in literature, is rightly perceived to be the heir to Samuel Beckett, who was his friend and mentor. Like Beckett, Mr. Pinter creates worlds profoundly comic and tragic, in which meaning is never fixed, memory lies and people are betrayed not just by one another but also by their own minds. Mr. Pinter, who was born in London in 1930, is celebrated for what the critic Irving Wardle has called "the comedy of menace," or as Mr. Pinter once joked, "the weasel under the cocktail cabinet." Whether the setting is a blue-collar tenement as in "The Birthday Party" (1957) and "The Caretaker" (1960) or upper-middle-class drawing rooms as in "Betrayal" (1978) and "Ashes to Ashes" (1996) Mr. Pinter's plays are steeped in a sense of claustrophobia, of people hemmed in by both a hunger for and fear of power. His widely imitated and parodied style is notable for its clipped, elliptical sentences and ominous silences. The influence of Mr. Pinter, whose masterworks include "The Homecoming" (1964) and "No Man's Land" (1974), cannot be underestimated, and it shows up in writers as different as David Mamet and Michael Frayn. Mr. Pinter has been a very vocal critic of totalitarian and imperialist politics. His work as a screenwriter includes adaptations of "The French Lieutenant's Woman," his own "Betrayal" and, more recently, Anthony Shaffer's "Sleuth."

45. USATODAY.com - Playwright Pinter Wins Nobel Prize
harold pinter, 75, already known as one of Britain s greatest living playwrights for such works as The Dumb Waiter, The Birthday Party, The Homecoming,
http://asp.usatoday.com/community/utils/idmap/13164351.story
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46. Harold Pinter - The New York Review Of Books
Bibliography of books and articles by harold pinter, from The New York Review of Books.
http://www.nybooks.com/authors/1033
Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books
Harold Pinter
Harold Pinter Harold Pinter was born in London in 1930. His many plays include The Caretaker The Birthday Party , and Moonlight . Please also see haroldpinter.org
From the Review
May 23, 2002 Cancer Cells (poem) April 20, 1995 The Case of Ken Saro-Wiwa (letter) June 9, 1994 'Dissent on Schindler's List' (letter) May 13, 1993 Murder in Turkey (letter) April 12, 1990 Help Salman Rushdie! (letter) April 13, 1989 Crackdown in Prague (letter) May 10, 1984 One for the Road June 15, 1978 Release Ngugi (letter)
Books by Harold Pinter
Various Voices: Poetry, Prose, Politics 1948-1998
Various Voices: Prose, Poetry, Politics
Plays. Three
Collected Poems and Prose
Ashes to Ashes
Conversations with Pinter
Plays. Four
The Trial: Adapted from the Novel By Franz Kafka
Moonlight
Ten Early Poems
One for the Road No Man's Land The French Lieutenant's Woman and Other Screenplays The Servant and Other Screenplays The Collection; And, the Lover Other Places: Three Plays Tea Party: And Other Plays Plays Party Time Complete Works Zimane Ciya The Comfort of Strangers and Other Screenplays The Dwarfs: A Novel The Heat of the Day: Adapted from the Novel By Elizabeth Bowen Mountain Language Betrayal One for the Road One for the Road: [a Play] Other Places: Three Plays A Kind of Alaska: (from Other Places): A Play Victoria Station: (from Other Places): A Play The French Lieutenant's Woman, and Other Screenplays

47. Samuel Beckett
While Beckett lived, the playwright harold pinter said, He is the most courageous, The hit men, Gus and Ben, in harold pinter s The Dumb Waiter imitate
http://www.groveatlantic.com/grove/bin/wc.dll?groveproc~genauth~56~0~info~misc

48. Time Out London Interviews Harold Pinter Ahead Of His New Film 'Sleuth' - Time O
harold pinter stands as a colossus in our culture, both as a worldclass playwright and, latterly, as a deeply moral voice of protest.
http://www.timeout.com/film/features/show-feature/3852/
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Harold Pinter: interview
Harold Pinter stands as a colossus in our culture, both as a world-class playwright and, latterly, as a deeply moral voice of protest. But he's also the author of 25 screenplays, the latest of which is his adaptation of 'Sleuth'. He tells Time Out how a girl from Hackney film club ignited a life-long love of the silver screen
It was a golden age of film-going.
You enjoyed the close companionship of schoolfriends. Did you talk cinema?

49. Harold Pinter - Poetry Archive
harold pinter (b. 1930) is best known for theatrical work, but was a poet before a playwright, and in early 2005, told the BBC that he was leaving plays to
http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoet.do?poetId=2991

50. Légion D’Honneur For Harold Pinter - French Embassy - Ambassade De Franc
On Wednesday 17 January, the French Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin, presented the insignia of Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur to Mr harold pinter,
http://www.ambafrance-uk.org/Legion-d-honneur-for-Harold-Pinter.html
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    L©gion d’Honneur for Harold Pinter
    (c) AFP Photo - London
    Dear friends, Dear Harold Pinter, I am not here today to give you a prize. You have already received many prizes in your lifetime. I have come here today, dear Harold Pinter, to pay tribute to you as a man who knows the importance of words: for words can change lives. 1. My dear Harold Pinter, it would be an invidious task for me to attempt any literary criticism today. That is neither my purpose nor my vocation. Allow me, however, to talk quite simply as a reader, as a man influenced by your words, emotions and questions. When I was 16, I read contemporary literature at the University of Nanterre. The first of my courses, which was also my first stroke of luck, was to spend a year studying your play The Caretaker . It was shortly after May 1968, at a time when one could still believe that words can shape destiny. Since then, your works have been with me. Always.

51. Harold Pinter Video – Nobel Lecture Art, Truth & Politics - UK Nobel Liter
harold pinter, CH, CBE (born October 10, 1930) is a British playwright and theatre director. He has written for theatre, radio, television and film.
http://www.chris-floyd.com/pinter/

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In 1958 I wrote the following: 'There are no hard distinctions between what is real and what is unreal, nor between what is true and what is false. A thing is not necessarily either true or false; it can be both true and false.' I believe that these assertions still make sense and do still apply to the exploration of reality through art. So as a writer I stand by them but as a citizen I cannot. As a citizen I must ask: What is true? What is false? Truth in drama is forever elusive. You never quite find it but the search for it is compulsive. The search is clearly what drives the endeavour. The search is your task. More often than not you stumble upon the truth in the dark, colliding with it or just glimpsing an image or a shape which seems to correspond to the truth, often without realising that you have done so. But the real truth is that there never is any such thing as one truth to be found in dramatic art. There are many. These truths challenge each other, recoil from each other, reflect each other, ignore each other, tease each other, are blind to each other. Sometimes you feel you have the truth of a moment in your hand, then it slips through your fingers and is lost.

52. Seattle Public Theatre At The Bathhouse
“harold pinter is one of the most important playwrights of our day”. New York Times. it really hums. -John Hartl, Seattle Times
http://www.seattlepublictheater.org/events-betrayal.htm
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BETRAYAL By Harold Pinter
Behind the intimate study of sexual infidelity lurks an affinity of betrayals: friendship, art and the integrity of self. This is Nobel-award winner Pinter at his most lethally ironic. Pinter has never written anything simpler, sadder or funnier than Betrayal
Pinter finds a grim but delicate beauty and humor in such desolation. Each line, each word, is a drop distilled from the sloshing mess of ordinary emotion. "I don't think we don't love each other", Emma tells Jerry in their last meeting in the flat where they've shared seven years of stolen afternoons. The double negative is childlike in the pathos of its pleading logic. Pinter is just as keen on the ambiguities of male friendship. "I've always liked Jerry," Robert tells Emma after he finds out about the affair. "To be honest I've liked him rather more than I've liked you. Perhaps I should have had an affair with him myself."
-New York Times "...it really hums."

53. Harold Pinter - Harvard Film Archive
Of the many hats he has worn with great success (playwright, actor, activist), harold pinter’s accomplishments as a screenwriter provide the focus for this
http://hcl.harvard.edu/hfa/films/2007spring/pinter.html
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May 13 - May 30
Harold Pinter: Stage to Screen
Of the many hats he has worn with great success (playwright, actor, activist), Harold Pinter’s accomplishments as a screenwriter provide the focus for this series. Following the success of his plays The Caretaker and The Birthday Party in the late 1950s, Pinter began a long and prolific career in film, notably in collaboration with London-based American expatriate director Joseph Losey.  These psychological dramas – The Servant Accident (1967), and The Go-Between (1970)– served as a striking counter-narrative to the prevailing kitchen sink realism which dominated British art cinema in the 1960s. In the 1970s, Pinter collaborated with the American Film Theatre, directing Simon Gray’s Butley and adapting his own play, The Homecoming with director Peter Hall. Pinter’s scripts for Betrayal (1981) and The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1983) were also highly regarded for their innovative, unconventional narrative structures. Inspired by the American Repertory Theatre’s new production of Pinter’s No Man’s Land , this retrospective reveals another intriguing facet in the career of this fascinating and complex artist.

54. Harold Pinter - Films As Writer:, Films As Director:, Films As Actor:
harold pinter began his professional career as an actor, touring the provinces with English and Irish repertory companies before achieving success as a
http://www.filmreference.com/Writers-and-Production-Artists-Ni-Po/Pinter-Harold.
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Film Reference
Writers and Production Artists Ni-Po
Harold Pinter
Writer. Nationality: British. Born: Hackney, London, 10 October 1930. Education: Attended Hackney Downs Grammar School, London; Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, London. Family: Married
1) the actress Vivien Merchant, 1956 (divorced 1980), one son; 2) the writer Lady Antonia Fraser, 1980. Career: The Servant Harold Pinter Butley Awards: New York Film Critics Award, for The Servant , 1963; British Academy Award, for The Pumpkin Eater , 1964, and The Go-Between , 1971. Commander, Order of the British Empire, 1966. Address: c/o ACTAC Ltd., 16 Cadogan Lane, London S.W.1, England.
Films as Writer:
The Servant (Losey) (+ ro as society man); The Caretaker The Guest ) (Donner) The Pumpkin Eater (Clayton) The Quiller Memorandum (Anderson) The Accident (Losey) (+ ro as Bell) The Birthday Party (Friedkin) The Go-Between (Losey) The Homecoming (Hall) The Last Tycoon (Kazan) (Reisz) Betrayal (D. Jones) Turtle Diary (Irvin) (+ ro as man in bookshop) The Room (Altman) (adapter);

55. Peter Scott's Library Blog
His Own Domain pays tribute to harold pinter s life in the theatre as an actor, The British Library acquired harold pinter s extensive archive in
http://xrefer.blogspot.com/2008/01/his-own-domain-harold-pinter-life-in.html
Peter Scott's Library Blog Sponsored by Links About Peter Credo Reference Archives
February 2003 March 2003 April 2003 May 2003 June 2003 July 2003 August 2003 September 2003 October 2003 November 2003 December 2003 January 2004 February 2004 March 2004 April 2004 May 2004 June 2004 July 2004 August 2004 September 2004 October 2004 November 2004 December 2004 January 2005 February 2005 March 2005 April 2005 May 2005 June 2005 July 2005 August 2005 September 2005 October 2005 November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 February 2006 March 2006 April 2006 May 2006 June 2006 July 2006 August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 var site="sm8libraryblog" Wednesday, January 09, 2008
His Own Domain: Harold Pinter, A Life in Theatre

His Own Domain
pays tribute to Harold Pinter's life in the theatre as an actor, director, and writer of some of the most significant and celebrated plays of the 20th century. This small display in the British Library's Sir John Ritblat Gallery features a range of unique manuscripts, letters, photographs, and sound recordings. The British Library acquired Harold Pinter's extensive archive in December 2007. 10 January to 13 April 2008 [link]
Credo Reference
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56. Pinter Bibliography
Close up on harold pinter delivering his Nobel Lecture, The harold pinter Bibliography appears in issues and volumes of The pinter Review for 1987;
http://susanhollismerritt.org/_wsn/page2.html
Welcome to the web site of Susan Hollis Merritt
Close up on Harold Pinter delivering his Nobel Lecture, Published with permission
CONGRATULATIONS TO HAROLD PINTER
Winner of the 2005 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE!

For more information, please visit the official websites of The Swedish Academy and The Nobel Prize
Harold Pinter Bibliography
The Swedish Academy, Stockholm, 7 December 2005
Compiled by Susan Hollis Merritt
Bibliographical Editor, The Pinter Review: Collected Essays
  • The "Harold Pinter Bibliography," compiled by Susan Hollis Merritt, is published annually or biennially in The Pinter Review: Collected Essays for the Harold Pinter Society by the University of Tampa Press The official website of Harold Pinter provides links to lists of Pinter's writings and some criticism of them and exceptionally-valuable related resources. Also accessible are its lists of "Contents" of past issues and volumes of The Pinter Review Selected "Pinter-related links" are also provided in the webpages of the Harold Pinter Society The "Harold Pinter Bibliography" appears in issues and volumes of The Pinter Review for 1987; 1988; 1989; 1990; 1991; 1992-93; 1994; 1995 and 1996; 1997 and 1998; 1999 and 2000; 2001 and 2002; and 2003 and 2004.

57. Harold Pinter Quiz
Our quiz this issue is on 2005 Nobel Prize winner harold pinter, absurdist dramatist, screenwriter, poet, prose writer, journalist, and political activist.
http://www.barcelonareview.com/51/e_quiz.htm
issue 51: January - February 2006 Our quiz this issue is on 2005 Nobel Prize winner Harold Pinter, absurdist dramatist, screenwriter, poet, prose writer, journalist, and political activist. The winner will receive a 30-euro (£20 / $30) gift certificate to spend at Amazon; in case of a tie, a name will be drawn. Deadline: March 1, 2006 THIS QUIZ IS NOW FINISHED FOR THE ANSWERS CLICK HERE Pinter remains to his credit, a permanent public nuisance, a questioner of accepted truths, both in life and art. In fact the two persistently inter-act.
The Life and Work of Harold Pinter by Michael Billington
1. At Hackney Downs Grammar School in 1947 and 1948, Pinter played the roles of...
a. Macbeth and Romeo
b. Hamlet and Othello
c. Prospero and King Lear
d. Juliet and Ophelia
2. Which one of the following pseudonyms did Pinter not utilize?
a. David Baron
b. Harold Pinta
c. Harold Baron a. The Room b. The Dumbwaiter c. A Slight Ache 4. When The Birthday Party was first staged in 1958, the critics were generally ... a. full of praise

58. Harold Pinter - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
Research harold pinter at the Questia.com online library.
http://www.questia.com/library/music-and-performing-arts/harold-pinter.jsp

59. Playwright Harold Pinter Presents A Powerful Case In Opposition To NATO Bombardm
Playwright harold pinter, an outspoken opponent of NATO s war against Serbia, presented a coherent and wellargued case opposing the military action on BBC
http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/may1999/pint-m07.shtml
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Playwright Harold Pinter presents a powerful case in opposition to NATO bombardment of Serbia
By Ann Talbot 7 May 1999 Playwright Harold Pinter, an outspoken opponent of NATO's war against Serbia, presented a coherent and well-argued case opposing the military action on BBC 2 television last Tuesday evening. Using news footage and interviews specially recorded for the programme, Pinter showed how the media are being manipulated, and that the humanitarian justification for the war is false. In a powerful condemnation of the war, Pinter described the NATO onslaught against Serbia as "a bandit action, committed with no serious consideration of the consequences, ill-judged, ill-thought, miscalculated, an act of deplorable machismo". Pinter was shown questioning British Defence Minister George Robertson at a news conference. The playwright, citing the Geneva Convention outlawing military attacks on civilian targets, demanded to know how the bombing of a Serbian TV station could be described as anything other than murder. "Mr. Pinter has obviously got a new occupation now but I know his views," was the arrogant reply from Robertson. He justified the bombing by claiming that such targets were the "brains behind the brutality", and "part and parcel of the apparatus that is driving ethnic genocide".

60. The Cambridge Companion To Harold Pinter - Cambridge University Press
harold pinter has written for the theater, radio, television and screen, and is regarded as a highly successful director and actor. This volume examines the
http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521658423

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