George Bernard Show parables about the distant future. Statements on various topics

Years of life: from 07/26/1856 to 11/02/1950

Outstanding Irish English writer, novelist, playwright, music and theater critic, public figure. The second most popular (after Shakespeare) English-language playwright. He made an invaluable contribution to English and world drama. Nobel Prize winner. He is also known for his wit and commitment to socialist views.

George Bernard Shaw was born in Dublin. Shaw's father, a civil servant, decided to go into the grain trade. but he went broke and became addicted to alcohol. The writer's mother was a singer and amateur musician. The boy studied first at home, and then in Catholic and Protestant day schools, after which, at the age of sixteen, he got a job as a clerk in a real estate agency, where he worked for four years. In 1873, Shaw's parents divorced and his mother moved to London. Three years later, Bernard joined them, deciding to become a writer. However, all of his articles were returned by the editors, and not one of the five novels written by Shaw was published. At this time, the writer was entirely dependent on the meager earnings of his mother, who gave music lessons. In 1882, Shaw turned to social problems and became a convinced socialist. In 1884, the playwright joined the Fabian Society, created to spread socialist ideas. Shaw became an extremely active member of the community, often giving lectures three times a week. At the same time, Shaw met the theater critic W. Archer, on whose recommendation Shaw became first a freelance correspondent and then an author of music and theater reviews (since 1886) in such publications as the weekly World and Pall Mall. newspapers" ("Pall Mall Gazette"), the newspaper "Star" ("Star"). Critical works The show brought him popularity and financial independence. In 1895, Shaw became a theater critic for the London magazine Saturday Review. Shaw became increasingly interested in theater, wrote several works about G. Ibsen and R. Wagner, and in 1892 Shaw’s first play, “Widowers” ​​Houses, was staged. The play was not successful and was withdrawn after two performances Several subsequent plays by the playwright also turned out to be unappreciated; directors refused to stage them, and “Mrs Warren’s Profession” was even banned by censors (in the play). we're talking about about prostitution). Shaw publishes his works with his own funds. In 1898, Shaw married Charlotte Payne Townsend, an Irish philanthropist and socialist, who provided him with considerable support. Fame came to the playwright in 1904, when his plays became the basis of the repertoire of the Royal Court Theater in London, where they were staged by D. Vedrenne and Harley Grenville-Barker, who rented this theater. For three seasons (1904-07) the Royal Court Theater staged almost all of the playwright's most significant plays. Simultaneously with the confession, accusations of “lack of seriousness” and buffoonery begin to be heard against Shaw, in particular, the playwright L.N. Tolstoy. Shaw himself writes increasingly “serious” plays, imbued with philosophical ideas and therefore less and less popular with the public. During the First World War, Shaw's anti-war views (which he did not hesitate to express) caused a sharp rejection of the playwright mostly press and colleagues. After his essay “War from the Point of View of Common Sense,” in which the playwright criticizes both England and Germany, calls on both countries to negotiate, ridiculing blind patriotism, Shaw was expelled from the Dramatists’ Club. In the 20s of the 20th century, Shaw’s works again are becoming popular. At this time, the most controversial and complex of Shaw's plays, “Back to Methuselah” (1922), was written, as well as the only tragedy in his repertoire: “Saint Joan” (1924), about Joan D'Arc. In 1926, the Nobel Prize in Literature for 1925 was awarded to Shaw "for a work marked by idealism and humanism, for sparkling satire, which is often combined with exceptional poetic beauty." Being a principled opponent of all kinds of awards, Shaw refused the monetary part of the Nobel Prize, ordering the establishment with this money of an English-Swedish literary fund for translators, especially translators of Strindberg. In 1928, Shaw published “The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Socialism and Capitalism” ( "The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism") - a discussion on political and economic topics. And in 1931, the playwright visited the USSR and met with Stalin. Throughout his life, Shaw remained a convinced socialist and strongly supported the USSR, considering it a prototype society of the future. Shaw's wife died in 1943. After this, the playwright moved from London to his home in Hertfordshire, where he spent the rest of his life in solitude. Shaw died on November 2, 1950, at the age of 94.

The correct pronunciation of the Shaw surname is “Sho”, however, the pronunciation “Shaw” is entrenched in the Russian-speaking tradition.

Of the 988 performances staged at the Royal Court Theater between 1904 and 1907, 701 were based on Shaw's works.

In response to the phrase “The show is a clown”, V.I. Lenin said: “In a bourgeois state he may be a clown for the philistinism, but in a revolution he would not be mistaken for a clown.”

B. Shaw became the first writer to refuse the Nobel Prize.

B. Shaw - the only person, awarded both the Nobel Prize in Literature and the Oscar.

Possessing an excellent sense of humor and a tenacious mind, Shaw became the author of many aphorisms.

Writer's Awards

(1925)
Oscar Award for Best Screenplay (1938)

Bibliography

Cycle “Unpleasant Plays”
Widower's Houses (1885-1892)
Heartbreaker (1893)
Profession of Mrs. Warren (1893-1894)

Cycle “Pleasant Plays”
Arms and Man (1894)
Candida (1894-1895)
Fate's Chosen One (1895)
Let's wait and see (1895-1896)

Cycle "Three Plays for the Puritans"
The Devil's Disciple (1896-1897)
(1898)
Address of Captain Brasbound (1899)

The Magnificent Bashville, or Unrewarded Constancy" (1901)
Man and Superman (1901-1903)
John Bull's Other Island (1904)
How He Lied to Her Husband (1904)
Major Barbara (1906)
Doctor in Dilemma (1906)
Interlude at the Theater (1907)
Marriage (1908)
Exposure of Blanco Posnet (1909)

Cycle "Tomfoolery and Trifles"
Passion, Poison, Petrification, or the Fatal Gasogen (1905)
Newspaper Clippings (1909)
The Charming Foundling (1909)
A Little Reality (1909)

The number of productions of Shaw's plays is incalculable. The list of film adaptations of the playwright’s works on the Kinopoisk website includes 62 film and television films.
The most famous film adaptations are:
Pygmalion (1938, UK) dir. E. Esquith, L. Howard. B. Shaw became the author of the script and received an Oscar for it.
My lovely lady(1964, USA) dir. J. Cukor. Screen adaptation of the play "Pygmalion". The film received 8 Oscar awards, incl. main prize"Best Film"

Domestic film adaptations:
How He Lied to Her Husband (1956) dir. T. Berezantseva
Pygmalion (1957) dir. S. Alekseev
Galatea (1977) dir. A. Belinsky. Film-ballet based on the play "Pygmalion".
Mournful Insensibility (1986) dir. A. Sokurov. Fantasy film based on the play “Heartbreak House”

English George Bernard Shaw

outstanding Irish playwright and novelist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature and one of Ireland's most renowned literary figures; public figure (Fabian socialist, supporter of English writing reform)

Bernard Shaw

Brief biography

English playwright Irish origin, one of the founders of the “drama of ideas”, writer, essayist, one of the reformers theatrical arts XX century, after Shakespeare, the second most popular author of plays in the English theater, Nobel Prize laureate in literature, Oscar winner.

Born in Dublin, Ireland on July 26, 1856. The future writer’s childhood was overshadowed by his father’s addiction to alcohol and discord between his parents. Like all children, Bernard went to school, but the main life lessons learned from the books I read and the music I listened to. After graduating from school in 1871, he began working in a company selling land plots. A year later he took the position of cashier, but four years later, having hated the job, he moved to London: his mother lived there, having divorced his father. From a young age, Shaw saw himself as a writer, but the articles he sent to various editors were not published. For 9 years, only 15 shillings - a fee for a single article - was earned by him by writing, although during this period he wrote as many as 5 novels.

In 1884, B. Shaw joined the Fabian Society and within a short time gained fame as a talented speaker. Visiting the reading room British Museum for the purpose of self-education, he met W. Archer and thanks to him he began to engage in journalism. After initially working as a freelance correspondent, Shaw worked as a music critic for six years and then worked for the Saturday Review as a theater critic for three and a half years. The reviews he wrote comprised a three-volume collection, “Our Theater of the Nineties,” published in 1932. In 1891, Shaw’s original creative manifesto was published - a lengthy article “The Quintessence of Ibsenism,” the author of which revealed a critical attitude towards contemporary aesthetics and sympathy for the drama that illuminated would be conflicts of a social nature.

His debut in the field of drama was the plays “The Widower's House” and “Mrs. Warren's Profession” (1892 and 1893, respectively). They were intended to be staged in an independent theater, which was a closed club, so Shaw could afford to be bold in depicting aspects of life that his contemporary art usually avoided. These and other works were included in the “Unpleasant Plays” cycle. In the same year, “Pleasant Plays” was released, and “representatives” of this cycle began to penetrate the stage of large metropolitan theaters in the late 90s. The first huge success came from “The Devil’s Disciple,” written in 1897, which was part of the third cycle, “Plays for the Puritans.”

The playwright's finest hour came in 1904, when the management of the Kord Theater changed and a number of his plays were included in the repertoire - in particular, Candida, Major Barbara, Man and Superman, etc. After successful productions, Shaw finally the reputation of an author who boldly deals with public morality and traditional ideas about history and subverts what was considered an axim was established. A contribution to the golden treasury of dramaturgy was the resounding success of Pygmalion (1913).

During the First World War, Bernard Shaw had to listen to many unflattering words and direct insults addressed to him by spectators, fellow writers, newspapers and magazines. Nevertheless, he continued to write, and in 1917 a new stage in his creative biography. The tragedy “Saint Joan”, staged in 1924, returned B. Shaw to his former glory, and in 1925 he became the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, and refused its monetary component.

At the age of over 70 in the 30s. The show goes on a trip around the world, visits India, South Africa, New Zealand, USA. He also visited the USSR in 1931, and in July of this year he personally met with Stalin. Being a socialist, Shaw sincerely welcomed the changes taking place in the country of the Soviets and became a supporter of Stalinism. After the Labor Party came to power, B. Shaw was offered a peerage and nobility, but he refused. He later agreed to be awarded the status of an honorary citizen of Dublin and one of the London counties.

B. Shaw wrote until he was very old. He wrote his last plays, Byant's Billions and Fictional Fables, in 1948 and 1950. While remaining sane, November 2, 1950. famous playwright passed away.

Biography from Wikipedia

Born in Dublin on July 26, 1856, to George Shaw, a grain merchant, and Lucinda Shaw, professional singer. He had two sisters: Lucinda Frances, a theater singer, and Elinor Agnes, who died of tuberculosis at the age of 21.

Shaw attended Wesley College in Dublin and grammar school. He received his secondary education in Dublin. At the age of eleven he was sent to a Protestant school, where he was, in his own words, the second to last or last student. He called school the most harmful stage of his education: “It never occurred to me to prepare lessons or tell the truth to this universal enemy and executioner - the teacher.” The education system was more than once criticized by Shaw for focusing on mental rather than spiritual development. The author especially criticized the system of physical punishment at school. At the age of fifteen he became a clerk. The family did not have the means to send him to university, but his uncle's connections helped him get a job at Townsend's fairly well-known real estate agency. One of Shaw's duties was to collect rent from the inhabitants of the Dublin slums, and the sad impressions of these years were subsequently embodied in "Widower's Houses". He was, in all likelihood, a fairly capable clerk, although the monotony of the job bored him. He learned to keep accounting books neatly, and also to write in quite legible handwriting. Everything written in Shaw's handwriting (even in his old age) was easy and pleasant to read. This served Shaw well later, when he became a professional writer: typesetters did not know grief about his manuscripts. When Shaw was 16 years old, his mother ran away from home with her lover and daughters. Bernard decided to stay with his father in Dublin. He received an education and became an employee in a real estate office. He did this work for several years, although he did not like it.

In 1876, Shaw went to his mother in London. The family greeted him very warmly. At this time he was visiting public libraries and museums. He began to study intensively in libraries and created his first works, and later wrote a newspaper column dedicated to music. However, his early novels did not become successful until 1885, when he became known as a creative critic.

In the first half of the 1890s, he worked as a critic for the London World magazine, where he was replaced by Robert Hichens.

At the same time, he became interested in social democratic ideas and joined the Fabian Society, whose goal was to establish socialism through peaceful means. It was in this society that he met his future wife, Charlotte Payne-Townshend, whom he married in 1898. Bernard Shaw had connections on the side.

In recent years, the playwright lived in his own home and died at 94 from kidney failure. His body was cremated and his ashes were scattered along with those of his wife.

Creation

Bernard Shaw's first play was presented in 1892. At the end of the decade, he became famous playwright. He wrote sixty-three plays, as well as novels, critical works, essays and more than 250,000 letters.

Novels

Shaw wrote five unsuccessful novels early in his career between 1879 and 1883. Later they were all published.

Shaw's first published novel was The Profession of Cough Byron (1886), written in 1882. The main character of the novel is a wayward schoolboy who, together with his mother, emigrates to Australia, where he participates in fights for money. He returns to England for a boxing match. Here he falls in love with a smart and rich woman, Lydia Karya. This woman, attracted by animal magnetism, agrees to marriage, despite their different social status. Then it turns out that main character of noble birth and heir to a large fortune. Thus, he becomes a deputy in Parliament and the married couple becomes an ordinary bourgeois family.

The novel "Not a Social Socialist" was published in 1887. It starts out describing a girls' school, but then focuses on a poor worker who is actually hiding his fortune from his wife. He is also an active fighter for the promotion of socialism. From this point on, the entire novel focuses on socialist themes.

The novel Love Among the Artists was written in 1881 and published in 1900 in the United States and in 1914 in England. In this novel, using the example of Victorian society, Shaw shows his views on art, romantic love and marriage.

The Irrational Knot is a novel written in 1880 and published in 1905. In this novel, the author condemns hereditary status and insists on the nobility of workers. The institution of marriage is called into question by the example of a noble woman and a worker who became rich from the invention of the electric motor. Their marriage breaks down due to the family members' inability to find common interests.

Shaw's first novel, Immaturity, written in 1879, was his last published novel. It describes the life and career of Robert Smith, an energetic young Londoner. Condemnation of alcoholism is the first message in the book, based on the author's family memories.

Plays

The show completely breaks with the prim Puritan morality that is still characteristic of a large part of the wealthy circles of English society. He calls things by their real names, considers it possible to depict any everyday phenomenon, and to a certain extent is a follower of naturalism.

Shaw began working on the first play, The Widower's House, in 1885. After some time, the author gave up continuing work on it and completed it only in 1892. The play was presented at the London Royal Theater December 9, 1892. In this play, Shaw gave a picture of the life of the London proletarians, remarkable in its realism. The play begins with the fact that a young man is going to marry a girl whose father rents out slums to the poor, who pay their last money for them. The young man wants to give up both the marriage and the dowry, which he received through the hellish labor of the poor, but then he learns that his income is based on the labor of the poor. Very often Shaw acts as a satirist, mercilessly ridiculing the ugly and vulgar sides English life, especially - the life of bourgeois circles (“John Bull’s Other Island”, “Arms and the Man”, “How He Lied to Her Husband”, etc.).

In the play Mrs. Warren's Profession (1893), a young girl learns that her mother receives income from brothels, and therefore leaves home to earn money by honest work.

Bernard Shaw's plays, like those of Oscar Wilde, include a sharp humor exclusive to playwrights victorian era. Shaw began to reform the theater by introducing new themes and inviting audiences to ponder moral, political, and economic issues. In this he is close to the dramaturgy of Ibsen with his realistic drama, which he used to solve social problems.

As Shaw's experience and popularity increased, his plays became less focused on the reforms he advocated, but their entertainment value did not diminish. Works such as Caesar and Cleopatra (1898), Man and Superman (1903), Major Barbara (1905) and The Doctor in a Dilemma (1906) show mature views author, who was already 50 years old.

Until the 1910s, Shaw was a fully formed playwright. New works such as Fanny's First Play (1911) and Pygmalion (1912) were well known to London audiences.

In the most popular play, Pygmalion, based on a Greek myth in which a sculptor asks the gods to bring a statue to life, Pygmalion appears as professor of phonetics Higgins. His Galatea is street flower vendor Eliza Doolittle. The professor tries to correct the language of a girl who speaks Cockney. Thus, the girl becomes like a noble woman. By this, Shaw is trying to say that people are only different in appearance.

Shaw's views changed after the First World War, which he disapproved of. His first work written after the war was the play Heartbreak House (1919). Appeared in this play new show- the humor remained the same, but his faith in humanism was shaken.

Shaw had previously supported a gradual transition to socialism, but now he saw a government led by a strongman. For him, dictatorship was obvious. At the end of his life, his hopes also died. Thus, in the play “Billions of Buyant” ( Buoyant Billions, 1946-48), his last play, he says that one should not rely on the masses, who act like a blind crowd and can choose people like Hitler as their rulers.

In 1921, Shaw completed Back to Methuselah, a five-play pentalogy that begins in the Garden of Eden and ends a thousand years in the future. These plays argue that life is perfected through trial and error. Shaw himself considered these plays a masterpiece, but critics had a different opinion.

After Methuselah, the play Saint Joan (1923) was written, which is considered one of his best works. The idea of ​​writing a work about Joan of Arc and her canonization appeared in 1920. The play gained worldwide fame and brought the author closer to the Nobel Prize (1925).

Shaw also has plays in psychological genre, sometimes even touching the area of ​​melodrama (“Candida”, etc.).

The author created plays until the end of his life, but only a few of them became as successful as his early works. The Apple Cart (1929) became the most famous play of this period. Later works, such as “Bitter But True,” “Broished” (1933), “The Millionairess” (1935) and “Geneva” (1935), did not receive widespread public recognition.

Trip to the USSR

From July 21 to July 31, 1931, Bernard Shaw visited the USSR, where on July 29 he had a personal meeting with Joseph Stalin. In addition to the capital, Shaw visited the outback - the commune named after. Lenin Tambov region, considered exemplary. Returning from the Soviet Union, Shaw said:

“I am leaving the state of hope and returning to our Western countries- countries of despair... For me, an old man, it is a deep consolation, going to my grave, to know that world civilization will be saved... Here, in Russia, I was convinced that the new communist system is capable of leading humanity out of modern crisis and save it from complete anarchy and destruction.”

In an interview given in Berlin on the way home, Shaw praised Stalin as a politician:

"Stalin is a very nice man and truly the leader of the working class... Stalin is a giant, and all Westerners are pygmies."

“In Russia there is no parliament or other nonsense like that. Russians are not as stupid as we are; It would be difficult for them to even imagine that there could be fools like us. Of course, the statesmen of Soviet Russia have not only a huge moral superiority over ours, but also a significant mental superiority.”

Being a socialist in his political views, Bernard Shaw also became a supporter of Stalinism and the “other USSR.” Thus, in the preface to his play “Aground” (1933), he provides a theoretical basis for the OGPU repressions against the enemies of the people. In an open letter to the editor of the newspaper Manchester Guardian Bernard Shaw calls the information that appeared in the press about the famine in the USSR (1932-1933) a fake.

In a letter to the newspaper Labor Monthly Bernard Shaw also openly sided with Stalin and Lysenko in the campaign against genetic scientists.



The only person to be awarded both the Nobel Prize in Literature (1925, “For creativity marked by idealism and humanism, for sparkling satire, which is often combined with exceptional poetic beauty”) and the Oscar Award (1938, for the screenplay of the film “Pygmalion”) .

Shaw refused the monetary part of the Nobel Prize in Literature (however, he accepted the laureate's medal; Boris Pasternak and Jean-Paul Sartre also subsequently refused the prize).

en.wikipedia.org

Biography



Early on he became interested in social democratic ideas; attracted attention with his apt theatrical and musical reviews; later he himself acted as a playwright and immediately provoked sharp attacks from people who were indignant at their imaginary immorality and excessive courage; in recent years has become increasingly popular with the English public and finds admirers on the continent thanks to the appearance of critical articles about him and translations of his selected plays (for example, in German - Trebitsch). The show completely breaks with the prim Puritan morality that is still characteristic of a large part of the wealthy circles of English society. He calls things by their real names, considers it possible to depict any everyday phenomenon, and to a certain extent is a follower of naturalism.

The play “The Philanderer” reflected the author’s rather negative, ironic attitude towards the institution of marriage, as it was at that time; in Widower's Houses, Shaw gave a remarkable, realistic picture of the life of the London proletarians. Very often, Shaw acts as a satirist, mercilessly ridiculing the ugly and vulgar aspects of English life, especially the life of bourgeois circles (“John Bull’s Other Island”, “Arms and the Man”, “How He Lied to Her Husband”, etc.).

Shaw also has plays in the psychological genre, sometimes even touching the area of ​​melodrama (“Candida”, etc.).

He also owns a novel written at an earlier time: “Love in the World of Artists.”

When writing this article, material from Encyclopedic Dictionary Brockhaus and Efron (1890-1907).

In the first half of the 1890s. worked as a critic for the London World magazine, where he was succeeded by Robert Hichens.

Trip to the USSR




In the 1930s, Bernard Shaw toured the USSR, where he had a personal meeting with Joseph Stalin. Being a socialist in his political views, Bernard Shaw also became a supporter of Stalinism and a “friend of the USSR.” Thus, in the preface to his play “Aground” (1933), he tried to provide a “theoretical basis” for the OGPU repressions against the enemies of the people. In an open letter to the editor of the Manchester Guardian newspaper, Bernard Shaw calls information about the Holodomor that appeared in the press a fake. In a letter to the Labor Monthly newspaper, Bernard Shaw also openly sided with Stalin and Lysenko in the campaign against genetic scientists.

Dramaturgy

1885-1896

* Plays Unpleasant, published 1898
* “Widower’s Houses” (1885-1892)
* "Heartbreaker" (The Philanderer, 1893)
* Mrs. Warren's Profession, 1893-1894
* Plays Pleasant, published 1898
* “Arms and Man” (English) Russian. ("Arms and the Man", 1894)
* "Candida" (Candida, 1894-1895)
* “The Man of Destiny” (1895)
* “Wait and see” (You Never Can Tell, 1895-1896)

1896-1904

* "Three Plays for Puritans"
* “The Devil’s Disciple” (1896-1897)
* “Caesar and Cleopatra” (Caesar and Cleopatra, 1898)
* “Captain Brassbound’s Conversion” (1899)
* “The Admirable Bashville; or, Constancy Unrewarded, 1901”
* "A Sunday Afternoon Among the Surrey Hills" (1888)
* “Man and Superman” (English) Russian. (“Man and Superman”, 1901-1903)
* John Bull's Other Island (1904)

1904-1910

* “How He Lied to Her Husband” (1904)
* “Major Barbara” (Major Barbara, 1906)
* “The Doctor's Dilemma” (1906)
* “The Interlude at the Playhouse” (1907)
* “Getting Married” (1908)
* “The Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet” (1909)
* “Trifles and tomfooleries”
* “Passion, Poison and Petrifaction; or, the Fatal Gasogene, 1905”
* "Newspaper Cuttings" (Press Cuttings, 1909)
* “The Fascinating Foundling” (1909)
* “A Little Bit of Reality” (The Glimps of Reality, 1909)
* « Unequal marriage"(Misalliance, 1910)

1910-1919

* “The Dark Lady of the Sonnets” (1910)
* “Fanny’s First Play” (1911)
* “Androcles and the Lion” (Androcles and the Lion, 1912)
* "Overruled" (Overruled, 1912)
* “Pygmalion” (Pygmalion, 1912-1913)
* “Great Catherine” (Great Catherine, 1913)
* “The Music-cure” (1913)
* "O'Flaherty, MVP" (O'Flaherty, V.C.,)
* “The Inca of Perusalem” (1916)
* “Augustus Does His Bit” (1916)
* “Annayanskaya, extravagant Grand Duchess"(Annajanska, the Wild Grand Duchess, 1917)
* “House where hearts break” (Heartbreak House, 1913-1919)

1918-1931

* “Back to Methuselah” (1918-1920)
* Part I. “In the Beginning”
*Part II. "The Gospel of the Brothers Barnabas"
*Part III. “It’s finished!” (The Thing Happens)
* Part IV. "Tragedy of an Elderly Gentleman"
* Part V. “As Far as Thought Can Reach”
* “Saint Joan” (Saint Joan, 1923)
* “The Apple Cart” (1929)
* “Bitter, but true” (Too True To Be Good, 1931)

1933-1950

Notes

1. Tatyana Vorontsova Visiting the “big brother”:
In the Soviet Union, the great playwright and his companions received a warm welcome and a rich cultural program. The Kremlin, the Lenin Mausoleum, the Park of Culture and Leisure, a car trip around the city, the world-famous Tairov production of Bertolt Brecht’s “The Beggars’ Opera” at the Chamber Theater, an “industrial excursion” (a visit to an electrical plant, where the writer talked with workers and, separately, with members of the Literary Club), meetings at OGIZ, vacations in Uzky, visits to M. Gorky and N. Krupskaya and, finally, a large-scale celebration of Bernard Shaw’s 75th birthday in the Hall of Columns - this is Moscow. The Hermitage, the Russian Museum, a car tour of the city, meetings with writers (including at the Evropeyskaya Hotel), a visit to the pioneer camp in Detskoye Selo, acquaintance with the best works of Soviet cinema and sound filming documentary film at the Soyuzkino factory (where Shaw gave a speech about Lenin) - this is Leningrad. During a magnificent celebration in the Hall of Columns, Shaw said: “I want Stalin ... to become a living person for me, and not remain just a name,” before I leave Moscow. The hero of the day’s wish came true - a personal meeting with the Soviet leader took place on the evening of July 29. Lord and Lady Astor, Lord Lothien and the USSR People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs Maxim Litvinov also took part in the conversation, which lasted almost three hours. On the night of July 31, the English guests went home. “I am leaving the state of hope and returning to our Western countries - countries of despair”; “For me, an old man, it is a deep consolation, going to my grave, to know that world civilization will be saved... Here in Russia, I am convinced that the new communist system is capable of leading humanity out of the modern crisis and saving it from complete anarchy and death” - this is how the English playwright said goodbye to the USSR. As soon as the travelers crossed the border, they became the object of close attention of journalists. Shaw gave his first interview in Berlin. In it he stated: “Stalin is a very pleasant person and truly the leader of the working class,” “Stalin is a giant, and all Western figures are pygmies.” In London, the paradoxical playwright read an hour and a half talk on the topic of the trip (August 6). Here are a number of excerpts from it: “In Russia there is no parliament or other nonsense of that kind. Russians are not as stupid as we are; It would be difficult for them to even imagine that there could be fools like us. Of course, the statesmen of Soviet Russia have not only a huge moral superiority over ours, but also a significant mental superiority”;

2. Letters to the Editor: Social Conditions in Russia by George Bernard Shaw, published in The Manchester Guardian, 2 March 1933. Gareth Jones" Memorial Website. Retrieved 3 June 2007. (English)
3. Shaw, George Bernard (January 1949), "The Lysenko Muddle", Labor Monthly (English)

Biography



George Bernard Shaw (Shaw, George Bernard) (1856-1950), Irish playwright, philosopher and prose writer, an outstanding critic of his time and the most famous - after Shakespeare - playwright writing in English. Born 26 July 1856 in Dublin. His father, having failed in business, became addicted to alcohol; the mother, disillusioned with the marriage, became interested in singing. Shaw did not learn anything in the schools he attended, but he learned a lot from the books of Charles Dickens, W. Shakespeare, D. Bunyan, the Bible, Arabian tales One thousand and one nights, as well as listening to operas and oratorios in which my mother sang, and contemplating the paintings in the Irish National Gallery.

At the age of fifteen, Shaw got a job as a clerk in a sales company. land plots. A year later he became cashier and held this position for four years. Unable to overcome his disgust for such work, at the age of twenty he went to London to live with his mother, who, after divorcing her husband, earned her living by giving singing lessons.



Shaw decided to make a living at a young age literary work, and although the articles sent out returned to him with depressing regularity, he continued to besiege the editors. Only one of his articles was accepted for publication, paying the author fifteen shillings - and that was all that Shaw earned with his pen in nine years. Over the years, he wrote five novels, which were rejected by all English publishing houses.

In 1884 Shaw joined the Fabian Society and soon became one of its most brilliant speakers. At the same time, he improved his education in reading room The British Museum, where he met the writer W. Archer (1856-1924), who introduced him to journalism. After working for some time as a freelance correspondent, Shaw received a position as a music critic in one of the evening newspapers. After six years of music reviewing, Shaw worked as a theater critic for the Saturday Review for three and a half years. During this time, he published books about H. Ibsen and R. Wagner. He also wrote plays (the collection Pleasant and Unpleasant Plays - Plays: Pleasant and Unpleasant, 1898). One of them, Mrs. Warren's Profession, first staged in 1902, was banned by censorship; the other, You Never Can Tell (1895), was rejected after several rehearsals; the third, Arms and the Man (1894), was not understood at all. In addition to those mentioned, the collection includes the plays Candida (1895), The Man of Destiny (1897), Widower’s Houses (1892) and The Philanderer (1893). Staged in America by R. Mansfield, The Devil's Disciple (1897) is Shaw's first play to be a box office success.



Shaw wrote plays, reviews, acted as a street speaker, promoting socialist ideas, and, in addition, was a member of the municipal council of St. Pancras, where he lived. Such overloads led to a sharp deterioration in health, and if not for the care and attention of Charlotte Payne-Townsend, whom he married in 1898, things could have ended badly. During a prolonged illness, Shaw wrote the plays Caesar and Cleopatra (1899) and Captain Brassbound's Conversion (1900), which the writer himself called a “religious treatise.” In 1901, The Devil's Disciple, Caesar and Cleopatra, and The Address of Captain Brasbound were published in Three Plays for Puritans. In Caesar and Cleopatra, Shaw's first play featuring real historical figures, the traditional idea of ​​a hero and heroine is changed beyond recognition.

Having not succeeded in the path of commercial theater, Shaw decided to make drama a vehicle for his philosophy, publishing the play Man and Superman in 1903. However, the following year his time came. The young actor H. Granville-Barker (1877-1946), together with the entrepreneur J. E. Vedrenne, took over the management of the London Court Theater and opened the season, the success of which was ensured by old and new plays by Shaw - Candide, Let's wait and see, John Bull's Other Island (John Bull's Other Island, 1904), Man and Superman, Major Barbara (Major Barbara, 1905) and The Doctor's Dilemma (1906).



Now Shaw decided to write plays entirely devoid of action. The first of these discussion plays, Getting Married (1908), had some success among intellectuals, the second, Misalliance (1910), proved a little difficult for them too. Having given up, Shaw wrote a frankly box-office trifle - Fanny's First Play (1911), which ran on the stage of a small theater for almost two years. Then, as if to recoup this concession to the taste of the crowd, Shaw created a true masterpiece - Androcles and the Lion (Androcles and the Lion, 1913), followed by the play Pygmalion (1914), staged by G. Beerbohm-Three at His Majesty's Theater with Patrick Campbell as Eliza Doolittle.

During the First World War, Shaw was an exceptionally unpopular figure. The press, the public, and colleagues showered him with insults, but meanwhile he calmly finished the play Heartbreak House (1921) and prepared his testament to the human race - Back to Methuselah (1923), where he put it into dramatic form. form their evolutionist ideas. In 1924, fame returned to the writer; he gained worldwide recognition with the drama Saint Joan. In Shaw's eyes, Joan of Arc is a herald of Protestantism and nationalism, and therefore the sentence passed on her by the medieval church and the feudal system is quite logical. In 1925, Shaw was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, which he refused to accept.




The last play to bring Shaw success was The Apple Cart (1929), which opened the Malvern Festival in honor of the playwright.

In years when most people had no time for travel, Shaw visited the USA, USSR, South Africa, India, and New Zealand. In Moscow, where Shaw arrived with Lady Astor, he talked with Stalin. When the Labor Party, for which the playwright had done so much, came to power, he was offered nobility and a peerage, but he refused everything. At the age of ninety, the writer nevertheless agreed to become an honorary citizen of Dublin and the London parish of St. Pancras, where he lived in his youth.

Shaw's wife died in 1943. The writer spent his remaining years in seclusion in Eyot St. Lawrence (Hertfordshire), where, at the age of ninety-two, he completed his last play, Buoyant Billions (1949). Until the end of his days, the writer maintained clarity of mind. Shaw died in Heyot St. Lawrence on November 2, 1950.

Biography



(1856-1950), Irish playwright, philosopher and prose writer, an outstanding critic of his time and the most famous - after Shakespeare - playwright who wrote in English. Born 26 July 1856 in Dublin. His father, having failed in business, became addicted to alcohol; the mother, disillusioned with the marriage, became interested in singing. Shaw did not learn anything in the schools he attended, but he learned a lot from the books of Charles Dickens, W. Shakespeare, D. Bunyan, the Bible, the Arabian tales of One Thousand and One Nights, as well as listening to operas and oratorios in which his mother sang, and contemplating paintings in the Irish National Gallery. At the age of fifteen, Shaw got a job as a clerk in a land sales company. A year later he became cashier and held this position for four years. Unable to overcome his disgust for such work, at the age of twenty he went to London to live with his mother, who, after divorcing her husband, earned her living by giving singing lessons.

Shaw, already in his youth, decided to make a living from literary work, and although the articles sent out returned to him with depressing regularity, he continued to besiege the editors. Only one of his articles was accepted for publication, paying the author fifteen shillings - and that was all that Shaw earned with his pen in nine years. Over the years, he wrote five novels, which were rejected by all English publishing houses. In 1884 Shaw joined the Fabian Society and soon became one of its most brilliant speakers. At the same time, he improved his education in the reading room of the British Museum, where he met the writer W. Archer (1856-1924), who introduced him to journalism. After working for some time as a freelance correspondent, Shaw received a position as a music critic in one of the evening newspapers. After six years of music reviewing, Shaw worked as a theater critic for the Saturday Review for three and a half years. During this time, he published books about H. Ibsen and R. Wagner.



He also wrote plays (the collection Pleasant and Unpleasant Plays - Plays: Pleasant and Unpleasant, 1898). One of them, Mrs. Warren's Profession, first staged in 1902, was banned by censorship; the other, You Never Can Tell (1895) was rejected after several rehearsals; the third, Arms and the Man ( Arms and the Man, 1894), no one understood at all. In addition to those named, the collection included the plays Candida (Candida, 1895), The Man of Destiny (1897), Widower's Houses, 1892 and Heartthrob ( The Philanderer, 1893). Staged in America by R. Mansfield, The Devil's Disciple (1897) is Shaw's first play to be a box office success. Shaw wrote plays, reviews, acted as a street speaker, promoting socialist ideas, and, in addition, was a member of the municipal council St. Pancras County, where he lived.

Such overloads led to a sharp deterioration in health, and if not for the care and attention of Charlotte Payne-Townsend, whom he married in 1898, things could have ended badly. During a protracted illness, Shaw wrote the plays Caesar and Cleopatra (1899) and Captain Brassbound's Conversion (1900), which the writer himself called a "religious treatise." In 1901, The Devil's Disciple, Caesar and Cleopatra and the Conversion Captain Brasbound were published in the collection Three Plays for Puritans. In Caesar and Cleopatra - Shaw's first play, where real historical figures act - the traditional idea of ​​​​a hero and heroine is changed beyond recognition. Shaw decided to make drama a vehicle for his philosophy, publishing the play Man and Superman in 1903.



However, the following year his time came. The young actor H. Granville-Barker (1877-1946), together with the entrepreneur J. E. Vedrenne, took over the management of the London Court Theater and opened the season, the success of which was ensured by old and new plays by Shaw - Candide, Let's wait and see, John Bull's Other Island (John Bull's Other Island, 1904), Man and Superman, Major Barbara (Major Barbara, 1905) and The Doctor's Dilemma, 1906. Now Shaw decided to write plays entirely devoid of action. The first of these discussion plays, Getting Married (1908), had some success among intellectuals, the second, Misalliance (1910), proved a little difficult for them too. Having given up, Shaw wrote a frankly box-office trifle - Fanny's First Play (1911), which ran on the stage of a small theater for almost two years.

Then, as if to recoup this concession to the taste of the crowd, Shaw created a true masterpiece - Androcles and the Lion (Androcles and the Lion, 1913), followed by the play Pygmalion (1914), staged by G. Beerbohm-Three at His Majesty's Theater with Patrick Campbell as Eliza Doolittle. During the First World War, Shaw was an exceptionally unpopular figure. The press, the public, and colleagues showered him with insults, but meanwhile he calmly finished the play Heartbreak House (1921) and prepared his testament to the human race - Back to Methuselah (1923), where he put it into dramatic form. form their evolutionist ideas. In 1924, fame returned to the writer; he gained worldwide recognition with the drama Saint Joan. In the eyes of Shaw, Joan of Arc is the herald of Protestantism and nationalism, and therefore the sentence passed on her by the medieval church and the feudal system is quite natural.




In 1925, Shaw was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, which he refused to accept. The last play to bring Shaw success was The Apple Cart (1929), which opened the Malvern Festival in honor of the playwright. In years when most people had no time for travel, Shaw visited the USA, USSR, South Africa, India, and New Zealand. In Moscow, where Shaw arrived with Lady Astor, he talked with Stalin. When the Labor Party, for which the playwright had done so much, came to power, he was offered nobility and a peerage, but he refused everything. At the age of ninety, the writer nevertheless agreed to become an honorary citizen of Dublin and the London parish of St. Pancras, where he lived in his youth. Shaw's wife died in 1943. The writer spent his remaining years in seclusion in Eyot St. Lawrence (Hertfordshire), where, at the age of ninety-two, he completed his last play, Buoyant Billions (1949). Until the end of his days, the writer maintained clarity of mind. Shaw died on November 2, 1950.

LITERATURE

* J.B. Show About drama and theater. M., 1963
* Romm A.S. George Bernard Shaw. L. - M., 1965
* Hughes E. Bernard Shaw. M., 1968 Shaw J.B. Novels. M., 1971
* J.B. Show Letters. M., 1971
* Obraztsova A.G. Bernard Shaw and European theatrical culture on turn of XIX-XX centuries. M., 1974
* J.B. Show Complete plays, vols. 1-6. M., 1978-1980
* J.B. Show Autobiographical notes. Articles. Letters. M., 1989
* Pearson H. Bernard Shaw. M., 1998

Biography



Bernard Shaw is an outstanding English playwright, one of the founders of realistic drama of the 20th century, a talented satirist, and humorist. His work enjoys well-deserved fame among us and arouses universal interest. In our literary criticism, a whole science has been created about the work of Bernard Shaw. Its foundations were laid by A.V. Lunacharsky, who showed a deep and sympathetic interest in the searches, contradictions and creative originality of the writer.

For lately Scientists have defended a number of doctoral and master's theses on the work of B. Shaw and published a number of books, including a carefully commented volume of the playwright's letters (1971), his statements about drama and theater (1963), a book by A.G. Obraztsova about his theatrical and directorial activities (1974). The merits of the Soviet researchers A. Anikst, P. Balashov, and I. Kantorovich who wrote about the work of B. Shaw are great. Several books were dedicated to Bernard Shaw, his dramatic method and his influence on English and European theater by A.G. Obraztsova. In England, the name of Bernard Shaw is on a par with the name of William Shakespeare, although Shaw was born three hundred years later than his predecessor. Both of them made invaluable contributions to the development national theater England, and the work of each of them became known far beyond the borders of their homeland.




Having experienced its greatest flowering during the Renaissance, English drama rose to new heights only with the arrival of Bernard Shaw. He is Shakespeare's only worthy companion; he is rightly considered the creator of modern English drama. Continuing the best traditions of English drama, and having absorbed the experience of the greatest masters of contemporary theater - Ibsen and Chekhov - Shaw's work opens new page in the literature of the 20th century. Shaw chooses laughter as the main weapon in his fight against social injustice. This weapon served him flawlessly. “My way of joking is to tell the truth,” these words of Bernard Shaw help to understand the originality of his accusatory laughter, which has been loudly sounding from the stage for a whole century. Bernard Shaw was born in 1856 in Dublin, Ireland. Throughout the 19th century. The “Green Island,” as Ireland was called, was seething. The liberation struggle grew. Ireland sought independence from England. Her people lived in poverty, but did not want to endure enslavement. The childhood and youth of the future writer passed in the atmosphere of grief and anger experienced by his homeland. Shaw's parents came from the impoverished nobility. The life of the family was unsettled and unfriendly. Lacking a practical spirit, the constantly drunk father did not succeed in his chosen business - the grain trade. Shaw's Mother - a woman of extraordinary musical abilities– I was forced to support my family myself. She sang in concerts and later earned a living by teaching music. Little attention was paid to the children in the family; there were no funds to educate them. But in their moods and views, Shaw’s parents belong to the advanced patriotic strata of Dublin society. They did not adhere to religious dogma and raised their children to be free-thinking atheists.

The main credit for this belonged to Shaw's mother, whose character was not broken by her unsuccessful family life. Shaw studied at a Dublin school, but his stay there was not particularly joyful for him. It is no coincidence that he later wrote: “I didn’t learn anything at school and forgot a lot.” However, he did not complete the school course. At the age of fifteen he began to earn his own living. He served as a small man in a land office. Collected rent from residents of poor areas of Dublin. He got to know the life of the city slums well. By the age of twenty, Shaw had received the position of senior cashier. This was no little, but by this time Shaw’s interests had already been determined. Nothing to do with career they did not have an official.




Shaw was deeply interested in art - literature, painting, music. In 1876 Shaw left Ireland and moved to London. He had no specific occupation and no means of subsistence, but his range of interests and cultural needs was very wide. He was fond of theater, under the pseudonym Corno de Bosseto published his first music review, and then for a number of years appeared in print as a music critic. Shaw was not only a connoisseur of music, but also a great player himself. His name is becoming well known in London theater circles. Shaw never separated his pursuit of art from his inherent interest in the socio-political life of his time. He attends meetings of Social Democrats, takes part in debates, persistently developing his skills as a speaker, and reads Marx’s “Capital” with passion and deep interest - a work that, in his own words, was a revelation for him. Shaw's interest in pressing contemporary issues was evident in his earliest works. In the period from 1879 to 1883. Shaw wrote five novels: Immaturity, An Unwise Marriage, The Loves of Artists, The Profession of Cashiel Byron, and The Single Socialist. In those years, Shaw's novels did not receive recognition. The aspiring writer had to endure a long and unequal battle with numerous publishers. He received only refusals, but did not give up.

An innovator by nature, Shaw sought to introduce something new into the novel. Shaw's novels testified to his inherent skill as a playwright, which was still waiting for an opportunity to be revealed. In the novels, it manifested itself in a clearly expressed tendency towards dialogic form, in brilliantly constructed dialogues, which occupy the main place in all of Shaw’s works without exception. In 1884, Shaw joined the Fabian Society, shortly after its creation. It was a social reformist organization that sought to lead the labor movement. The members of the Fabian Society considered their task to be the study of the foundations of socialism and the ways of transition to it. Shaw acted as a true innovator in the field of drama. He established a new type of drama in the English theater - intellectual drama, in which the main place belongs not to intrigue, not to an exciting plot, but to those intense debates and witty verbal duels that his heroes wage. Shaw called his plays “discussion plays.” They captivated us with the depth of the problems and the extraordinary form of their resolution; they excited the consciousness of the viewer, forced him to think intensely about what was happening and laugh merrily along with the playwright at the absurdity of existing laws, orders, and morals. The beginning of the show's dramatic activity was associated with the Independent Theater, which opened in 1891 in London. Its founder was the famous English director Jacob Grain. The main task that Grein set for himself was to familiarize the English audience with modern drama. The “Independent Theatre” contrasted the flow of entertaining plays that filled the repertoire of most English theaters of those years with the dramaturgy of big ideas. Many plays by Ibsen, Chekhov, Tolstoy, and Gorky were staged on its stage. Bernard Shaw also began writing for the Independent Theater.



Shaw begins his path as a playwright with a series of plays, united under the general title “Unpleasant Plays.” These included: “The Widower's House,” which Shaw began working on in 1885, “Mrs. Warren's Profession,” and “Red Tape.” In his preface to Unpleasant Plays, Shaw wrote: “...the power of dramatic art in these plays is to force the spectator to face unpleasant facts. Undoubtedly, every author who sincerely desires the good of humanity does not at all take into account the monstrous opinion that the task of literature is flattery. But in these dramas we encounter not only comedy and tragedy individual character and the fate of an individual, but also with terrible and disgusting sides social order. The horror of these relations lies in the fact that an ordinary average Englishman, a man perhaps even dreaming of a thousand-year reign of grace, in his social manifestations turns out to be a criminal citizen, turning a blind eye to the most vile and most terrible abuses, if their elimination threatens to lose him at least one penny from your income.” In “Unpleasant Plays” we see outwardly quite decent respectable English bourgeoisie, who have significant capital and lead a quiet, well-ordered life. But this calm is deceptive. It conceals such phenomena as exploitation, the dirty, dishonest enrichment of the bourgeoisie at the expense of the poverty and misfortunes of the common people. Before the eyes of readers and spectators of Shaw's plays, pictures of injustice, cruelty and meanness of the bourgeois world pass through. It is characteristic that Shaw's plays begin with traditional pictures of the everyday life of a bourgeois family. But, as usually happens in Ibsen’s dramas, a moment comes when the social aspect of a question that deeply concerns the writer comes to the fore: where are the sources of the heroes’ wealth? on what means do they live? In what ways did they manage to achieve the well-being in which they find themselves? The bold posing of these questions and no less the answers to them form the basis of the accusatory power of Shaw's plays, which outraged some and could not help but impress and delight others.

Bernard Shaw's second cycle of plays was Pleasant Plays. These included: “War and Man”, “Candida”, “The Chosen One of Fate”, “You Can Never Tell”. In “Pleasant Plays” Shaw changes the techniques of satirical exposure. If in “Unpleasant Plays” he addressed the “terrible and disgusting aspects of the social order” and angrily attacked the social order, then in “Pleasant Plays” he focuses on that hypocritical morality, which is designed to hide the true essence of bourgeois relations. In these plays, Shaw aims to shed those romantic veils that hide the cruel truth of reality. He calls on people to take a sober and courageous look at life and free themselves from the sticky web of prejudices, outdated traditions, misconceptions and empty illusions. And if in “Unpleasant Plays”, creating the images of Sartorius, Crofts and trying to emphasize the cruelty and inhumanity of these people, Shaw willingly turned to the technique of the grotesque, then the heroes of his “Pleasant Plays” are much more “humane people” and there is no deliberate harshness and sharpening. But at the same time, the wretchedness of the spiritual world of the bourgeoisie, the inveterate bias of his judgments, the perverted ideas hiding under a respectable appearance, callousness and selfishness - all this is shown with great strength penetration into the very essence of bourgeois ideology. The title itself – “Pleasant Pieces” – sounds quite frankly ironic.




Another cycle of plays, “Plays for the Puritans,” was created in the period from 1897 to 1899. This includes the plays “The Devil's Disciple”, “Caesar and Cleopatra”, “The Conversion of Captain Brassbound”. In the preface to Plays for the Puritans, Shaw explains the meaning of the collection's title. He contrasts his plays with dramatic works in which the main interest is centered on love affairs and eroticism. This does not mean that Shaw shuns the depiction of feelings, but he does not want to admit that only love motives underlie human actions. “I am a puritan in my views on art,” he declares. “I sympathize with feelings, but I believe that replacing all intellectual activity and honesty with sensual ecstasy is the greatest evil.” The show strives to show the diversity of forms human activity, contrasting his broadly understood duty and responsibility with narrowly selfish motives and blind sensuality. Shaw's Puritanism is associated with the heroic Puritan traditions of the era of the English Revolution, the era of Cromwell and Milton.

THE LIFE OF REMARKABLE PEOPLE IN THEIR OWN

THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known for his wit, once attended the premiere of a play based on his play. During the first act, the young actress playing the role main character, from the excitement caused by the presence of the great playwright, I forgot the text.
The pause dragged on beyond all decency. Twenty minutes later, when it became clear to everyone in the hall that this silence was not the director’s find at all, the eyes of those present turned towards Bernard Shaw. Everyone was curious how the famous wit would get out of this situation.
And so, to the pleasure of the stalls, Shaw slowly climbed onto the balcony, dusted off his tailcoat, looked around the audience with a sly look and remarked in a soft baritone:
- This is a disgrace!




THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known for his wit, once went backstage after the premiere of his play based on one of his many plays. A young and inexperienced actress, who played the role of the main character in the play, immediately approached him. When the girl timidly asked the master about the quality of her game, the famous wit clenched his fists... However, this is not a typical story. She characterizes Shaw not as a witty person, but rather as a hot-tempered, rude person, although quite strong.

THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known for his wit, once walked along the Thames embankment in the company of Colonel Higgins. They came across a ragged London ragamuffin. Oddly enough, the illiterate slum dweller immediately recognized the playwright and suddenly chased after him, shaking his stick and shouting something indignant about his daughter, an aspiring actress.
Bernard Shaw, not at all embarrassed, winked slyly at Higgins and remarked in a soft baritone:
- Help!

THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known for his wit, was once walking along the Thames embankment in the company of Colonel Mortimer, Colonel Higgins and two policemen. then they came across a ragged London ragamuffin.
The famous wit turned to his companions and, slyly pointing his cane at the ragamuffin, remarked in a soft baritone:
- Here it is!



THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known for his wit, usually returned home well after midnight. One day, several admirers of his talent approached him in the gateway and asked why this famous wit never parted with his muskrat top hat?
Perhaps for the first time, Shaw was not immediately found and could not wittily parry this malicious attack. He just spread the snowdrift with his arms and the air with his legs.

THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known for his wit, usually returned home early. At least until dark, while avoiding annoying fans and gateways.
But then one day Shaw returned home too early. This was also noticed by his fans who were in his apartment at that moment. They were curious why such a famous wit couldn’t sit quietly in the theater?
For the second time in his life (and the last), Shaw was not found immediately. He was found only three days later, somewhere in the suburbs of Liverpool.

THE OUTSTANDING English playwright Bernard Shaw, known more for his wit than for his plays, was only once received by the Queen of England.
- Where is the show? - Her Majesty asked everyone impatiently.
Colonel Mortimer led the queen to the playwright and introduced him:
- Here's the show!
- Then you can start it! - Her Majesty slyly remarked in her soft baritone voice.
The musicians immediately began to play, and Shaw was carried to Westminster Abbey to other, no less famous playwrights.

Animals are my friends... Bernard Shaw



Bernard Shaw's kitchen

Shaw was not a connoisseur of culinary art, like, say, Gogol or Dumas the Father, but he was forced to practically learn the fruits of vegetarian cuisine, and he became a convinced vegetarian at the age of twenty-five. He ate rice, puddings, soups, salads and sauces from vegetables and fruits, drank milk and soda water, loved honey, nut cutlets and devoured sweets like a schoolboy. Shaw never smoked or drank wine, inspired by the negative example of his father. Although Shaw himself had no access to the home kitchen, he remained a “shadow theorist” of his diet. The writer made arithmetic calculations of the calorie content of foods, took into account weight, age, profession and strictly monitored diet, weighing himself daily on cabinet scales. The traditional five o'clock tea in England was strictly observed by Shaw, but at this hour he drank milk, snacking on cookies or home-baked cake. After Shaw's death, his housekeeper Alice Layden published the book "The Vegetarian Cooking of George Bernard Shaw." The book contains many recipes for preparing vegetarian dishes that the writer loved, menus are given for breakfasts, lunches, lunches and dinners, as well as interesting episodes and facts about the vegetarianism of the great playwright. Here's one episode. One day Shaw asked his housekeeper Alice if she had enough money to pay the bills.
“Yes,” Alice answered. - I'll exchange your checks at the butcher shop and that's enough for me.
- What-o-o? At the butcher shop? - Shaw shouted. - You know that I don’t eat meat and I don’t want the butcher to touch my checks! Stop it forever; I'd rather open a bank account for you...




The show refutes

At one time, a rumor spread in London that staunch vegetarian Bernard Shaw ate a steak somewhere and thereby broke his vow never to touch meat. Annoyed by this “duck,” he was forced to refute it: “The rumor about the steak I supposedly ate was a pathetic fabrication of the enemy.” Even my wife is beginning to doubt the inevitability of cannibalism...
Why demand from me an account of why I eat like a decent person? If I were eating the burnt corpses of innocent creatures, you would have reason to ask me why I do this.
People are the only animals that I am terrified of.
It is quite clear that a person can get enough of both steak and bread and cheese. The whole question is, lower or more high shape does he create life in himself by eating steak? I think lower.



He's already good

Shaw was completely exhausted during the rehearsals of his “Pygmalion.” Taking pity on him, the artist who played Higgins suggested:
- Maybe we should feed the vegetarian Shaw a steak and thereby inject at least a little blood into his veins? But actress Patrick Campbell protested loudly:
- For God's sake, don't! He's already good. And if you give him meat, what woman in London will vouch for her safety!..




Trainers

Dearest Ellen!
Public excitement over trained animals is nothing new to me. Mrs. Hayden Coffin was still doing this. Alas! All this is nothing more than a drop in the ocean of cruelty, and I cannot understand why the animals do not either conspire among themselves and destroy the human race, as we destroy the tigers, or commit suicide in despair.

The trainers of the learned dogs should be shot on the spot: their very faces betray them much more eloquently than their whips and their treatment of the unfortunate creatures. The only animals that I think enjoy performing are sea lions and seals. They will not do anything unless they are immediately rewarded with a fish treat. I think that the two dozen lions surrounded by our modern lady-tamers are so fed up that they will turn away in disgust even if a tender and fat baby is presented to them; I still feel sorry for them for being so bored. But when the lady tamer whips them in the eyes, trying to get them to grumble: “Leave me alone, for God’s sake!” - I hope every time that they will tear her apart, “every time my hopes are not justified - they are disgusted even to touch her. Birds and tigers languishing in captivity make an impression more painful than the prisoners of the Bastille in ancient ballads.

Vivisection has now become as commonplace as slaughter, hanging or corporal punishment; many people who do this do so only because it is part of the profession they have chosen. They don't enjoy it, they just overcame their natural aversion and became indifferent to it, as people always become indifferent to what they do quite often. It is precisely the dangerous force of habit that makes it so difficult to convince humanity that any deep-rooted professional tradition originates in a hobby. When an everyday activity emerges from a passion, soon thousands of people will spend their entire lives doing it. In the same way, many people, without being cruel and disgusting, do cruel and disgusting things because the everyday occurrence that they encounter every day is inherently cruel and disgusting.
George Bernard Shaw

The only knowledge we are deprived of by prohibiting cruelty is first-hand knowledge of what cruelty is, that is, the very knowledge from which humane people would like to be spared.

You determine whether an experiment is justified simply by showing its practical utility. The difference is not between useful and useless experiments, but between barbaric and civilized behavior. Vivisection is a social evil because even if it advances the knowledge of mankind, it does so at the expense of human character
- George Bernard Shaw

The writer was asked:
- What is the secret of your longevity, Mr. Shaw?
- I like the vegetarian lifestyle; for half a century it has been the source of my youth. But by this I do not mean that everyone who eats cabbage and beets can equal a certain George Bernard Shaw. That would be overly optimistic...



Doctor's quandary

If you look from the point of view of the vivisector's ethics, you will have to not only allow experiments on people, but also make this the first duty of the vivisector. If you can sacrifice a guinea pig because it will reveal a little more, then why not sacrifice a human because it will reveal a lot more?

The public approves of vivisection mainly because vivisectors claim that it brings great benefits to people. I do not admit a single thought that such arguments can be valid even if they are proven. But when a defender of this view begins with the claim that in the name of science all ordinary ethical standards (including the duty to tell the truth) can be neglected, what should one think about these arguments reasonable person? I would rather lie under oath fifty times than torment an animal that licked my hands in a friendly manner. Even if I were torturing the dog, I, of course, would not have the nerve to turn around and ask how anyone could suspect such a worthy person of telling a lie. I hope that reasonable and humane people will answer this that worthy people do not behave unworthily even towards dogs.

If it is impossible to obtain any knowledge without torturing the dog, it is necessary to do without this knowledge. - George Bernard Shaw

Young woman: You know, I think this lunch is funny. You start your dinner with dessert. We are with snacks. This is probably normal; but I ate so much fruit, bread and everything that I no longer want meat.
Priest: We will not offer you meat. We don't eat it.
Young woman: How do you maintain your strength?
Priest: They support themselves.
"The Simpleton of the Unexpected Isles", Prologue, Scene III

Animals are my friends... and I don't eat my friends. It's horrible! not only by the suffering and death of animals, but by the fact that man needlessly suppresses the highest spiritual treasure in himself - sympathy and compassion for living beings similar to himself, trampling his own feelings, becoming cruel.

Dinner! What a horror! I will become the pretext for killing all these unfortunate animals, birds and fish! Thank you humbly.

If now, instead of a banquet, there was a fast, say, a solemn three-day abstinence from corpses dedicated to me, I could at least pretend that I believe in the selflessness of this act. Bloody sacrifices are beyond my interests.

We pray to God to illuminate our path:
"Give us light, O all-good Lord!"
The nightmare of war does not let us sleep,
But on our teeth we have the flesh of dead animals.

Darwin not only put evolution into a form that is accessible to everyone, he also made his own special contribution to it. Now the general concept of Evolution creates a scientific basis for humanism, since it establishes the equality of all living beings,

She attaches exactly the same meaning to the killing of an animal as to the killing of a person.

This sense of the relatedness of all life forms is all that is needed not only to make evolutionary theory credible, but also to make it a source of inspiration. St. Anthony was fully prepared for the evolutionary theory when he preached to the fish, St. Francis when he called the birds “his little brothers.” Our vanity and snobbish perception of God as our earthly relative, this class division instead of the rock on which Equality was built, has led us to believe that God has created special conditions for us, placing us above other creatures. Evolution has knocked this arrogance off us; and now, when we can kill a flea without a shadow of remorse, we in any case know that we are killing our relative. It certainly shocks the flea that a creature that the almighty Heavenly Flea created solely as food for fleas kills the leaping king of nature with its huge and sharp fingernail; but not a single flea will be so stupid as to shout at all corners that, by killing fleas, Man is doing natural selection, as a result of which a flea develops, possessing such agility that no man can catch it, and such a strong constitution that insect poison has no more effect on it than strychnine on an elephant.



Interesting patient

Shaw was an ardent opponent of any experimentation on animals for scientific purposes, especially vivisection, considering it cruelty. But he was ready to provide himself as a living object. He joked with a serious look: “I had a weakness for unrecognized methods of treatment.” As soon as I learned about something “the latest” (in medicine - ed.), I immediately put forward my candidacy as a guinea pig. My fame made me an interesting patient, but my case was of no medical interest...




Will

Not only was Shaw's wedding extraordinary, but also his honeymoon. He was desperately unlucky: at first his leg hurt, he had to walk on crutches, then he “crashed down the stairs” - he broke his arm, and finally fell off his bicycle and sprained his ankle.

The recovery took a long time. Doctors, not knowing how to help him, began to blame the vegetarian diet for everything. The resilient patient himself wrote about this complication:

"Life is offered to me on the condition that I eat steak. A crying family surrounds my bed, handing me patented meat extracts. But better death than cannibalism.

My will contains instructions for my funeral procession, in which there will be no funeral carriages, but there will be herds of bulls, rams, pigs, all kinds of poultry, as well as mobile aquariums with live fish, and all the creatures accompanying the coffin will be tied white bows in memory of a man who chose to die rather than eat his own kind. Apart from the procession going to Noah's Ark, it will be the most wonderful procession that people have ever seen."

Scream Magazine, No. 4, 2001, pp. 54-56

"Many people protest against the name of this obvious farce on the grounds that the Catherine shown here is not Catherine the Great, but the Catherine love affairs which is given material for the most frivolous pages modern history. Catherine the Great, I am told, is a woman whose diplomacy, whose military campaigns and victories, whose plans for liberal reform, whose correspondence with Grimm and Voltaire allowed her to become a major figure...

A play about English society during the First World War, written, according to the author, under the influence of the works of A.P. Chekhov. An outwardly prosperous society is gradually deteriorating morally. There is not a single positive character here - every hero is either hypocritical, or simply angry, or weak in character.

The Irishman Shaw wrote a dozen plays, all about the English. The fame he achieved at the beginning of the 20th century prompted his compatriots to ask him to write a play for the Irish Literary Theater (the predecessor of the famous Abbey Theater - the Abbey Theater in Dublin). The initiative came from the Irish poet W.B. Yeats. Shaw was fascinated by the idea, and in 1904 he wrote John Bull's Other Island.

The famous playwright and novelist George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1925 "for a work marked by idealism and humanism, for sparkling satire, which is often combined with exceptional poetic beauty." Volume " Selected works" includes the plays "Pygmalion" (1912), "Saint Joan" (1923), the most famous short stories, as well as best novel"The Career of a Fighter" (1885).

The fifth volume of the Complete Plays of Bernard Shaw includes four works: "Back to Methuselah", "Saint Joan", "The Apple Cart", "Bitter But True", as well as Shaw's prefaces to the plays "Back to Methuselah", "St. John" and "Apple Cart". All prefaces have been translated into Russian for the first time.

This collection includes Shaw's short stories - the pearls of his work. The great Shaw's short stories are no less exciting and witty than the best of his famous plays. They refer to different genres and directions - from realistic to parable, from mystical to gothic. The action in them takes place in different times and eras. However, in none of them Shaw is not betrayed by the impeccability of his literary taste, deep psychologism, and the sharpness of irony.

This “light play for a small theater,” as the author called it in the subtitle, was first staged on April 19, 1911 on the stage of the Little Theater. Since then it has been performed several times by various English theaters. It was first performed in New York by actors at the Comedy Theater on September 16, 1912.

One of Bernard Shaw's most famous plays. The work reflects deep and acute social problems, which ensured its great popularity both during the author’s lifetime and today. The plot centers on a London professor of phonetics who makes a bet with his friend that in six months he can teach a simple flower girl the pronunciation and manners accepted in high society, and at a social reception passes her off as a noble lady.

Greatest English playwright late XIX- first half of the 20th century. George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) in his works appears as a master of intellectual discussion drama, built on sharp dialogues, full of paradoxical situations, destroying all traditional ideas about theater. His plays castigate political reaction, normative morality, hypocrisy, and hypocrisy. In 1925, the writer was awarded the Nobel Prize.

"Our age is the age of upstarts." Despite the fact that this phrase was said by Bernard Shaw, it has not lost its relevance today, as, in fact, the work of the great playwright itself.

Since childhood, Bernard Shaw's best friends have been books. He loved the works of Charles Dickens, W. Shakespeare, D. Bunyan, and read the Bible. The literary path began with diary notes, but the writer’s fame did not come immediately. From the age of fifteen he worked as a clerk, then as a cashier. Even then, the author knew that he wanted to make a living by nothing other than writing. But refusals from publishing houses came one after another - they stubbornly did not want to publish his works.

In 1884, Bernard Shaw joined the Fabian Society, after which he gained fame as a successful speaker and skillfully polished his literary skills. As a result, he became a world-famous playwright. In 1925, the author was awarded the Nobel Prize, which he refused to accept. In 1939, Shaw received an Oscar for his screenplay for the film Pygmalion; this work is one of the author's most successful works. To the most popular works include such as “Saint Joan”, “Man and Superman”, “Heartbreak House”, “Caesar and Cleopatra”, “Apple Cart”, etc.

Quotes by Bernard Shaw about life

A life in which many mistakes have been made is not only more noble, but also more rewarding than a life in which nothing has been done.

Reputation is a mask that a person has to wear just like trousers or a jacket.

Truly happy is the one to whom his favorite activity gives him the means to live.

Alcohol is an anesthesia that allows you to endure the operation called “life.”

There can be two tragedies in life: one is not getting what the heart longs for; the second is to get it.

Life is not about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself

Faith is purely a matter of taste.

Youth is a wonderful time. What a crime to waste it on children.

I must live for others, not for myself.

And what is life if not a chain of inspired follies?

In my youth, I was also very upset that my work was imperfect. I compared my own first steps with the last steps of others and, naturally, suffered, observing the sad difference.

Imagination is the beginning of creation. You imagine what you want; you desire what you imagine; and finally, you create what you desire.

For every minute you are angry, sixty seconds of happiness are lost.

Kings are not born, they are made thanks to a universal hallucination.

Phrases about love

There is love stronger, and dreams more wonderful than those of the hearth.

There is no love more sincere than the love of food.

Marriage is a union between a man who cannot sleep with the window closed and a woman who cannot sleep with the window open.


Love is a gross exaggeration of the difference between one person and everyone else

Love is too great a feeling to be only a personal, intimate matter for everyone!

First love requires only a little stupidity and a lot of curiosity.

Quotes about women

Women somehow immediately guess with whom we are ready to cheat on them. Sometimes even before it even occurs to us.

Every woman who has no money is looking for a husband.

A woman's greatest pleasure comes from hurting a man's ego, although greatest pleasure a man enjoys satisfying a woman’s self-importance.

Why do women always need other women's husbands? Why do horse thieves always prefer a broken horse to a wild one?

Obstinate women are easier to tolerate than calm women. True, they are sometimes killed, but they are never abandoned.


Friendship between a man and a woman is a relationship either ex-lovers, or future

A woman's job is to get married as soon as possible; a man's job is to remain unmarried as long as possible.

Women generally do not understand what kind of weak, timid creatures men are.

The house is a prison for a man and a workhouse for a woman.

No man who has to do something important in this world has the time and money for such a long and expensive hunt as the hunt for a woman.

Love men. They really need your love. Even if they never admit it. Behind every great man there is always a woman who believed in him. And she truly loved.

Intelligence, in essence, is passion, and this desire for knowledge is much more interesting and stable than, say, the erotic desire of a man for a woman.

Sayings about people

If a person does a difficult thing and does it well, he will never lose respect for himself.

Loyalty for a man is like a cage for a tiger. She is contrary to his nature.

You must realize that people have the right to think differently from you and not to do what you expect of them. They probably love you, but their love may not manifest itself in the way you want.

A healthy nation is as oblivious to its nationality as a healthy person is to its spine.


A man is only as cultured as he can understand a cat.

A person is like a brick: when burned, it hardens.

Most of all, people are interested in what does not concern them at all.

The secret to success is to outrage as many people as possible.

Rich men who lack convictions are more dangerous in modern society than poor women who lack morals.

It is easier to put chains on people than to take them off if chains bring respect.

The older and wiser man, the less he wants to sort things out. I just want to get up, wish you all the best and leave.

I thought they lost friends in quarrels, but they simply dissolved in time.

Wise phrases

The most effective way to silence a genius is to accept his ideas on faith, admit that he is a great man, and forget about him.

It's never too late to leave the crowd. Follow your dream, move towards your goal.

Learning to speak means you have grown, learning to remain silent means you have grown wiser.


Where there is no will, there is no way

Before you pour out your soul, make sure that the “vessel” is not leaking.

You'll never write a good book without writing a few bad ones first.

The most important thing is to put things in order in your soul. We follow three “don’ts”: don’t complain, don’t blame, don’t make excuses.

Activity is the only path to knowledge.

Statements on various topics

Censorship eventually comes to the point where all books are banned except those that no one reads.

Those who teach the most know the least.

The only way to learn something is to do something.

Both optimists and pessimists make their contribution to society. An optimist invented an airplane, a pessimist invented a parachute.


The greatest service a person can render to a country and humanity is, perhaps, to raise children

Books should become a monument, and if not, then it is better that the author is forgotten as quickly as possible.