From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Heiner Müller (January 9, 1929 – December 30,
1995) was a German (formerly
East
German) dramatist, poet, writer, essayist and theatre director. Described as "the
theatre's greatest living poet" since Samuel Beckett, Müller is arguably the
most important German dramatist of the 20th century after Bertolt Brecht.
His "enigmatic, fragmentary pieces" are a significant contribution
to postmodern
drama and postdramatic theatre. [1]
Biography
Müller was born in Eppendorf, Saxony. He joined the Socialist Unity Party of
Germany (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, SED) in
1947 and began serving for the German Writers' Association
(Deutscher Schriftsteller-Verband, DSV) in 1954. Müller became one
of the most important dramatists of the German
Democratic Republic and won the Heinrich Mann Prize in 1959 and the
Kleist Prize in
1990.
His relationship with the East German state began to
deteriorate, however, with his drama Die Umsiedlerin
(The Resettler Woman) which was censored in 1961 after
only one performance. Müller was banned from the Writers'
Association in the same year. The East German government remained
wary of Müller in subsequent years, preventing the premiere of
Der Bau (Construction Site) in 1965 and censoring
his Mauser in the early 1970s. Yet despite these
hardships, Müller’s work began to gain popularity both in West
Germany and internationally at this time. Many of his best-known
plays from this period were premiered in the West: this includes
Germania Death in Berlin, which was first performed in
1978 at the Munich
Kammerspiele. Heiner Müller himself directed a production
of The
Mission (Der Auftrag) in Bochum in 1982. In Paris, Jean Jourdheuil directed the world
premiere of Hamletmachine (Die
Hamletmaschine) in 1979. English translations, first by Helen
Fehervary and Marc Silberman, then by Carl Weber, introduced
Müller to the English speaking world in the mid- and late 1970s;
Müller's controversial play Mauser was first performed in
1975 in Austin,
Texas.[2]
Due to his growing worldwide fame, Müller was able to regain
acceptance in East Germany. He was admitted to the Academy of the
Arts (Akamedie der Künste) of the GDR in 1984 — only two
years before he became a member of the Academy of the Arts of West
Berlin. Despite earlier honors, Müller was not readmitted to the
East German Writers' Association until 1988, shortly before the end
of the GDR. After the fall of the Wall, Müller became president of
the East German Academy of the Arts for a short time in 1990 before
its inclusion in the West German Akademie. In 1992, he was
invited to join the directorate of the Berliner Ensemble, Brecht's former
company at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm,
as one of its five members along with Peter Zadek, Peter Palitzsch, Fritz
Marquardt and Matthias Langhoff. In 1995, shortly before his death,
Müller was appointed as the theatre’s sole artistic director.[3]
The grave of Heiner Müller at the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery in
Berlin
During the last five years of his life, Müller continued to live
in Berlin and work all over Germany and Europe, mostly directing
productions of his own works. He wrote few new dramatic texts in
this time, though, like Brecht, he did produce much poetry in his
final years. In the last half-decade of his life, Müller also
worked towards transforming the interview into a literary genre.
Müller died in Berlin of throat
cancer in 1995, acknowledged as one of the greatest living
German authors and the most important German language dramatists
since Bertolt
Brecht. Müller is buried at Berlin's famous Dorotheenstadt
Cemetery, the final resting place of some of Germany's most
important artists and philosophers: including Bertolt Brecht,
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel, Karl Friedrich Schinkel, and Heinrich Mann.
Among his better known works, other than those already
mentioned, are Der Lohndrücker (The Scab),
Wolokolamsker Chaussee (Volokolamsk Highway)
Parts I–V, Verkommenes Ufer Medeamaterial Landschaft mit
Argonauten (Despoiled Shore Medea Material Landscape with
Argonauts), Philoktet (Philoctetes),
Zement (Cement), Bildbeschreibung
(Description of a Picture aka Explosion of a
memory) and Quartett.
Legacy
Over a decade after his death, Müller continues to have an
enormous influence on European playwriting, dramaturgy, and
performance. In 1998, the journal New German Critique devoted a
special issue to his work. He is the only playwright to have ever
received such an honor.[4] In
2009, one of Europe’s leading intellectual publishing houses, Suhrkamp,
issued the final three volumes in a twelve-volume edition of
Müller's collected works. The only twentieth century German
dramatist who holds the same status is Bertolt Brecht.
Müller has also paved the way for a new generation of directors,
playwrights, and dramaturgs who regard themselves as
"samplers."[5] Müller
adopted Brecht's notion of Kopien (German for "copying"),
the practice of regarding texts by others as material to be used,
imitated, and rewritten. In regards to Brecht's own oeuvre, Müller
stated "To use Brecht without criticizing him is treason."[6] For
Müller, the work of other writers and artists was not seen as
private property; it was to be used as raw material for his own
work. Thus, Müller's work in the theater marks the beginning of a
tradition of densely poetic dramaturgy based in the logic of
association, rather than linear "dramatic" narrative.
Jonathan Kalb, theater critic for The New York Times, describes
Müller's legacy on theatre as replacing the "closed" didactical
form of the Brechtian parable with "open" dramatic forms offering
multiple meanings based, in Hans-Thies Lehmann's words, on a surreal "montage
dramaturg . . . in which the reality-level of characters and events
vacillates hazily between life and dream and the stage becomes a
hotbed of spirits and quotes outside any homogeneous notion of
space and time."[7] In
reference to Müller, Tony Kushner declares, "Write into the
void, learn to embrace isolation, in which we may commence
undistractedly our dreadful but all-important dialogue with the
dead. Forget about love and turn your face to history."[8] With
Müller’s work, theater is a forum for examining history; it is "a
dialogue with the dead."
Major
works
| The Plays of Heiner
Müller |
|
Ten Days | The
Scab | The Correction | The Resettled Woman
| The Construction Site | Oedipus |
Philoctetes | Lancelot | Prometheus |
Macbeth | Cement | The Horatian |
Mauser | Tractor | The Battle |
Germania Death in Berlin | Gundling's Life Frederick
of Prussia Lessing's Sleep Dream Scream | Hamletmachine
| The
Mission | Quartet | Despoiled Shore Medea
Material Landscape with Argonauts | the CIVIL warS | Explosion of a
Memory/Description of a Picture | Anatomy Titus Fall of
Rome A Shakespeare Commentary | Death Destruction &
Detroit II | The Road of Tanks | Mommsen's
Block | Germania 3 Ghosts at Dead Man
|
|
(Where two dates are offered below, the first gives the date of
composition, the second gives the date of the first theatrical
production.)[9]
| Title in German |
Title in English |
Dates |
Details |
| Zehn Tage, die die Welt erschütterten |
Ten Days that Shook the World |
(1957) |
[co-authored with Hagen Müller-Stahl, after John
Reed's book] |
| Der Lohndrücker |
The Scab |
(1958) |
|
| Die Korrektur |
The Correction |
(1958) |
[with Inge
Müller] |
| Die Umsiedlerin |
The Resettled Woman |
(1961) |
|
| Der Bau |
The Construction Site |
(1965 / 1980) |
|
| Sophokles: Oedipus Tyrann |
Sophocles: Oedipus the King |
(1967) |
[adaptation of Sophocles' tragedy] |
| Philoktet |
Philoctetes |
(1968) |
[an adaptation of Sophocles' tragedy as a Lehrstuck] |
| Lanzelot |
Lancelot |
(1969) |
[a libretto with Ginka
Tsholakova for opera by Paul Dessau] |
| Prometheus |
Prometheus |
(1969) |
[translation of tragedy ascribed to Aeschylus] |
| Macbeth |
Macbeth |
(1971) |
[adaptation of Shakespeare's play] |
| Zement |
Cement |
(1972 / 1973) |
|
| Der Horatier |
The Horatian |
(1968 / 1973) |
[a Lehrstuck based on the same Roman
legend that Brecht used for his The Horatians and the Curiatians] |
| Mauser |
Mauser |
(1970 / 1975) |
[a Lehrstuck that 'answers' Brecht's The Decision] |
| Traktor |
Tractor |
(1974 / 1975) |
[revision of text first written between 1955–1961] |
| Die Schlacht |
The Battle: Scenes from Germany |
(1974 / 1975) |
[revision of text first written in early 1950s; an 'answer' to
Brecht's
Fear and Misery of the
Third Reich] |
| Germania Tod in Berlin |
Germania Death in Berlin |
(1971 / 1978) |
[utilizes 'synthetic fragment' structure] |
| Leben Gundlings Friedrich von Preußen Lessings Schlaf Traum
Schrei |
Gundling's Life Frederick of Prussia Lessing's
Sleep Dream Scream: A Horror Story |
(1976 / 1979) |
|
| Die
Hamletmaschine |
Hamletmachine |
(1977 / 1979) |
|
| Der Auftrag |
The Mission |
(1979 / 1980) |
|
| Quartett |
Quartet |
(1981 / 1982) |
[based on Laclos's Dangerous Liaisons] |
| Verkommenes Ufer Medeamaterial Landschaft mit
Argonauten |
Despoiled Shore Medea Material Landscape with
Argonauts |
(1982 / 1983) |
[utilizes 'synthetic fragment' structure in version of story of
Medea] |
| [in English] |
the CIVIL warS a tree is best measured when it
is down |
(1984) |
[contribution to libretto of Robert Wilson's opera] |
| Bildbeschreibung |
Explosion of a Memory / Description of a
Picture |
(1984 / 1985) |
[dream narrative utilizing automatic writing in portions of
composition] |
| Anatomie Titus Fall of Rome Ein
Shakespearekommentar |
Anatomy Titus Fall of Rome A Shakespeare
Commentary |
(1985) |
[adaptation of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus] |
| [in English] |
Description of a Picture or Explosion of a
Memory |
(1986) |
[Prologue to Robert Wilson's Alcestis] |
| [in English] |
Death Destruction & Detroit
II |
(1987) |
[contribution to libretto of Robert Wilson's opera] |
| Wolokolamsker Chaussee |
Volokolomsk Highway |
(1984–1987 / 1988) |
[cycle of plays also known as The Road of Tanks] |
| Hamlet/Maschine |
Hamlet/Machine |
(1989 / 1990) |
[combination of translation of Shakespeare's Hamlet and Müller's own
Hamletmachine] |
| Mommsens Block |
Mommsen's Block |
(1992 / 1994) |
[a "poem / performance text"] |
| Germania 3 Gespenster am toten Mann |
Germania 3 Ghosts at Dead Man |
(1995 / 1996) |
[produced posthumously] |
Stage
productions directed by Heiner Müller
- The
Mission (Der Auftrag), Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, Berlin/GDR, 1980–1983 [German
premiere; directed with Ginka Tscholakowa] [10]
- The
Mission (Der Auftrag), Schauspielhaus Bochum, 1982 [directed with
Ginka Tscholakowa]
- Macbeth, Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, Berlin/GDR, 1982–1985 [Müller’s
translation and adaptation of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth; directed with
Ginka Tscholakowa]
- The Scab (Der Lohndrücker), Deutsches
Theater, Berlin/GDR,
1988–1991 [production also included Müller’s The Horatian
(Der Horatier) and Volokolomsk Highway IV,
Centaurs (Wolokolamsker Chaussee IV, Kentauren)]
- Hamlet/Machine (Hamlet/Maschine), Deutsches
Theater, Berlin/GDR,
1990–1993 [Müller’s translation of William Shakespeare’s Hamlet staged with the East
German premiere of Müller’s own Hamletmachine]
- Mauser, Deutsches Theater, Berlin, 1991–1993 [production also included
Müller’s Herakles 2 or the Hydra (Herakles 2 oder die
Hydra), Quartet (Quartett), and
Volokolomsk Highway V, The Foundling (Wolokolamsker
Chaussee V, Der Findling)]
- Duell Traktor Fatzer, Berliner Ensemble, Berlin 1993–1996 [the production was composed of
Müller's Volokolomsk Highway III, The Duel
(Wolokolamsker Chaussee III, Das Duell), Mommsens
Block, and Tractor (Traktor), as well as his
working of Brecht's fragmentary Downfall of the
Egotist Johann Fatzer]
- Richard
Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, Bayreuth Festspielhaus, Bayreuth 1993–1999 [conducted
by Daniel
Barenboim]
- Quartet (Quartett), Berliner
Ensemble, Berlin,
1994–1997
- Bertolt
Brecht's The Resistible Rise of
Arturo Ui (Der aufhaltsame Aufstieg des Arturo
Ui), Berliner Ensemble, Berlin, 1995–present
Literature
Primary
material
- Müller, Heiner. 1984. Hamletmachine and Other Texts for the
Stage. Ed. and trans. Carl Weber. New York:
Performing Arts Journal Publications. ISBN 0933826451.
- Müller, Heiner. 1989a. Explosion of a Memory: Writings by
Heiner Müller. Ed. and trans. Carl Weber. New York:
Performing Arts Journal Publications. ISBN 1555540414.
- Müller, Heiner. 1989b. The Battle: Plays, Prose, Poems by
Heiner Müller. Ed. and trans. Carl Weber. New York:
Performing Arts Journal Publications. ISBN 155554049X.
- Müller, Heiner. 1990. Germania. Trans. Bernard Schütze
and Caroline Schütze. Ed. Sylvère Lotringer. Semiotext(e)
Foreign Agents Ser. New York: Semiotext(e). ISBN 0936756632.
- Müller, Heiner. 1995. Theatremachine. Ed. and trans.
Marc von Henning. London and Boston: Faber. ISBN 0571175287.
- Müller, Heiner. 2001. A Heiner Müller Reader: Plays |
Poetry | Prose. Ed. and trans. Carl Weber. PAJ Books
Ser. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN
0801865786.
Secondary
material
- Banham, Martin. 1995. The Cambridge Guide to World
Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN
0521434378.
- Friedman, Dan, ed. 2003. Müller in America: American
Productions of Works by Heiner Müller Vol.1. New York:
Castillo. ISBN 0966247116.
- Kalb, Jonathan. 1998. The Theater of Heiner Müller.
2nd rev. ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. ISBN
0879109653.
- Kushner, Tony.
2001. Foreword. In A Heiner Müller Reader: Plays | Poetry |
Prose. by Heiner Müller. PAJ Books Ser. Baltimore and London:
The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801865786. p.
xi–xvii.
- Weber, Carl. 2001.
Chronology. In A Heiner Müller Reader: Plays | Poetry |
Prose by Heiner Müller. PAJ Books Ser. Baltimore and London:
The John Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801865786. p.
239–244.
- Wright,
Elizabeth. 1989. Postmodern Brecht: A Re-Presentation.
Critics of the Twentieth Century Ser. London and New York:
Routledge. ISBN 0415023307.
References
- ^ "With Beckett's death
Müller becomes the theatre's greatest living poet." Village
Voice, quoted on the backcover of Müller's
Theatremachine (1995). The phrase "enigmatic and
fragmentary pieces" comes from the article on Müller in The
Cambridge Guide to Theatre (Banham 1995, 765). Among others,
Elizabeth Wright assesses Müller's contribution to a postmodern
drama in Postmodern Brecht (1989).
- ^
The history of Müller's plays in production can be found in the
Heiner Müller Handbuch, edited by Hans-Thies Lehmann.
- ^ Weber (2001,
243–244).
- ^
http://www.thelocal.de/opinion/20090109-16655.html
- ^
http://www.goethe.de/kue/the/thm/idd/en4080155.htm
- ^
http://www.thelocal.de/opinion/20090109-16655.html
- ^
Jonathan Kalb's The Theater of Heiner Müller, p.19
- ^
Tony Kushner’s forward to A Heiner Müller Reader"
- ^ Weber (2001).
- ^
Stephan, Suschke. Müller Macht Theater: Zehn Inszenierungen und
ein Epilog. Theater der Zeit, 2003.
External
links