
“Each person belongs to the environment, in his own person, as himself.”
The Time of Your Life (1939)
Introduction to Absurd Drama (1965) http://www.samuel-beckett.net/AbsurdEsslin.html
Context: The "Theatre of the Absurd" has become a catch-phrase, much used and much abused. What does it stand for? And how can such a label be justified? Perhaps it will be best to attempt to answer the second question first. There is no organised movement, no school of artists, who claim the label for themselves. A good many playwrights who have been classed under this label, when asked if they belong to the Theatre of the Absurd, will indigniantly reply that they belong to no such movement — and quite rightly so. For each of the playwrights concerned seeks to express no more and no less his own personal vision of the world.
Yet critical concepts of this kind are useful when new modes of expression, new conventions of art arise.
“Each person belongs to the environment, in his own person, as himself.”
The Time of Your Life (1939)
“A playwright is someone who lets his guts hang out on the stage.”
Shoptalk: Conversations About Theater and Film with Twelve Writers, One Producer — and Tennessee Williams' Mother by Dennis Brown (1993), Ch. 6 : A Certain Amount of Spleen, p. 122
Context: Do you know what a playwright is? A playwright is someone who lets his guts hang out on the stage.
"George Jean Nathan" (1953), p. 61
Profiles (1990)
“When asked what wine he liked to drink, he replied, "That which belongs to another."”
Diogenes, 6.
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers (c. 200 A.D.), Book 6: The Cynics
From a letter to his son, as quoted in Harold Nicolson, Dwight Morrow (1935), p. 52
On calling himself a “citizen artist” in “The Artist as Leader: Luis Alfaro” https://www.uncsa.edu/kenan/artist-as-leader/luis-alfaro.aspx (Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts)
How to Be a Collector (1995).