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Ronald Hayman

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Ronald Hayman

Role
  
Dramatist


Ronald Hayman wwwdoyleticscomarjlifejautjpg

Born
  
May 4, 1932 (age 91) Bournemouth, England (
1932-05-04
)

Occupation
  
Dramatist, Biographer, Critic, Writer, Director

Education
  
St Paul's School, London, Trinity Hall, Cambridge

Books
  
A life of Jung, The death and life of Sylvia Pla, Hitler + Geli, How to read a play, Nietzsche

Ronald Hayman (born 4 May 1932) is a British critic, dramatist, and writer best known for his biographies.

Contents

Early life

Ronald Hayman was born on May 4, 1932 in Bournemouth, England to John and Sadie Hayman. He was educated at St Paul's School in London and at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he earned a B.A. in 1954 and an M.A. in 1963. He served in the Royal Air Force for a one-year duty, from 1950-1951.

After reading English at Cambridge in 1954, Hayman went to Germany for two years, mainly to write. He became involved in professional theatre after playing the lead in Love's Labour's Lost with English amateurs in Berlin. He then attended drama school and acted for three years in rep and on television.

Writing career

His first play, The End of an Uncle, was staged at Wimbledon in 1959. He made his debut as a director with Jean Genet's Deathwatch at the Arts Theatre in 1960 and in 1961 was awarded an ABC Television traineeship, which took him to Northampton for a year as assistant producer. He also directed Bertolt Brecht's In the Jungle of Cities and Robin Maugham's The Servant. Hayman has directed at Theatre Royal Stratford East, Farnham, the Edinburgh Festival, Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, and Guildford, and for Open Space. His one-man show with Max Adrian as George Bernard Shaw transferred to the West End and went on a world tour.

He has been a regular contributor to the Arts page of The Times and to the New Review. He broadcasts on arts programmes and has lectured for the University of London Department of English Literature. In the 1970s he lectured on Shakespeare and the traditions of English acting for the Tufts University of London program.

His 1995 play Playing the Wife is based on August Strindberg's second marriage to the Austrian Frida Uhl.

Works

  • John Arden (1968)
  • John Osborne (1968)
  • Techniques of Acting (1969)
  • Robert Bolt (1969)
  • Arnold Wesker (1970)
  • Harold Pinter (1970)
  • Samuel Beckett (1970)
  • John Whiting (1970)
  • Tolstoy (1970)
  • John Gielgud (1971)
  • Edward Albee (1971)
  • Arguing with Walt Whitman: An Essay on His Influence on Twentieth-Century American Verse (1971)
  • Arthur Miller (1972)
  • Playback (1973)
  • The Set-up: An Anatomy of the English Theatre Today (1973)
  • Playback II (1973)
  • The First Thrust: the Chichester Festival Theatre (1975)
  • Leavis (1976)
  • Eugène Ionesco (1976)
  • The Novel Today, 1967-1975 (1976)
  • Tom Stoppard (1977)
  • How to Read a Play (1977)
  • Artaud and After (1977)
  • De Sade: A Critical Biography (1978)
  • British Theatre since 1955: A Reassessment (1979)
  • Theatre and Anti-Theatre: New Movements Since Beckett (1979)
  • Nietzsche: A Critical Life (1980)
  • Franz Kafka (1982)
  • Brecht (1983)
  • Bertolt Brecht: The Plays (1984)
  • Fassbinder: Film Maker (1984)
  • Gunter Grass (1985)
  • Secrets: Boyhood in a Jewish Hotel, 1932-1954 (1985)
  • Writing Against: A Biography Of Sartre (1986)
  • My Cambridge (1986) editor
  • Sartre : A Life (1987)
  • Proust – A Biography (1990)
  • The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath (1992)
  • Tennessee Williams: Everyone Else is an Audience (1993)
  • Thomas Mann (1995)
  • Nietzsche (1997)
  • Hitler and Geli (1998)
  • A Life of Jung (2001)
  • Marquis De Sade: The Genius of Passion (2003)
  • References

    Ronald Hayman Wikipedia