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José Zorrilla y Moral (21 February 1817 - 23
January 1893), was a Spanish Romantic
poet and dramatist.
He was born in Valladolid to a magistrate in whom Ferdinand VII placed special
confidence,. He was educated by the Jesuits at the Real
Seminario de Nobles in Madrid,
wrote verses when he was twelve, became an enthusiastic admirer of
Walter Scott and Chateaubriand, and took
part in the school performances of plays by Lope de Vega and Calderón de la Barca.
In 1833 he was sent to study law at the University of Toledo,
but after a year of idleness, he fled to Madrid, where he horrified
the friends of his absolutist father by making violent speeches and
by founding a newspaper which was promptly suppressed by the
government. He narrowly escaped transportation to the Philippines, and passed
the next few years in poverty.
The death of the satirist
Mariano José de Larra brought
Zorrilla into notice. His elegiac poem, read at Larra's funeral in
February 1837, introduced him to the leading men of letters. In
1837 he published a book of verses, mostly imitations of Alphonse de Lamartine and Victor Hugo, which was
so favourably received that he printed six more volumes within
three years.
After collaborating with Antonio García Gutiérrez on
the play Juán Dondolo (1839) Zorrilla began his individual
career as a dramatist with Cada cual con su razón (1840),
and during the next five years he wrote twenty-two plays, many of
them extremely successful. His Cantos del trovador (1841),
a collection of national legends written in verse, made Zorilla
second only to José de Espronceda in popular
esteem.
National legends also supply the themes of his dramas, which
Zorilla often constructed by adapting older plays that had fallen
out of fashion. For example, in El Zapatero y el Rey he
recasts El montanés Juan Pascual by Juan de la Hoz y Mota;
in La mejor Talon la espada he borrows from Agustín Moreto y Cavana's
Travesuras del estudiante Pa-atoja. His famous play Don Juan
Tenorio is a combination of elements from Tirso de
Molina's Burlador de Sevilla and from Alexandre Dumas, père's Don
Juan de Marana (which itself derives from Les dames du
purgatoire by Prosper Mérimée). However, plays like
Sancho García, El Rey loco, and El Alcalde
Ronquillo are much more original. He considered his last play,
Traidor, inconfeso y mártir (1845) his best play.
Upon the death of his mother in 1847 Zorrilla left Spain,
resided for a while at Bordeaux, and settled in Paris, where his incomplete poem
Granada was published in 1852. In a fit of depression, he
emigrated to America three years later, hoping, he
claimed, that yellow
fever or smallpox
would kill him. During eleven years in Mexico he wrote very little. He returned to
Spain in 1866, to find himself half-forgotten and considered
old-fashioned.
Friends helped Zorilla obtain a small post, but the republican
minister later abolished it. He was always poor, especially for the
12 years after 1871. The publication of his autobiography,
Recuerdos del tiempo viejo in 1880, did nothing to
alleviate his poverty. Though his plays were still being performed,
he received no money from them.
Finally, in his old age, critics began to reappraise his work,
and brought him new fame. He received a pension of 30,000 reales, a
gold medal of honor from the Spanish Academy, and, in 1889, the
title of National Laureate. He died in Madrid on 23 January
1893.
In his early years, Zorrilla was known as an extraordinarily
fast writer. He claimed he wrote El Caballo del Rey Don
Sancho in three weeks, and that he put together El Puñal
del Godo in two days. This may account for some of the
technical faults--redundancy and verbosity--in his works. His plays
often appeal to Spanish patriotic pride, and actors and audiences
have enjoyed his effective dramaturgy. Don Juan Tenorio is
his best-known work.
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