Pirandello's love letters to Marta Abba

Bibliographic Information

Pirandello's love letters to Marta Abba

edited and translated by Benito Ortolani

Princeton University Press, 1995

  • acid-free paper

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Note

English translation of 164 letters written originally in Italian by L. Pirandello which are now in the Library, Princeton University. Cf. Editor's remarks

Includes bibliographical references (p. [339]-342) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In February 1925, the 58-year-old playwright Luigi Pirandello met Marta Abba, an unknown actress less than half his age, and fell in love with her. She was to become, until his death in December 1936, not only his confidante but also his inspiring muse and artistic collaborator, helping him in his plans to reform Italian theatre under the Fascist regime. Pirandello's love for the young actress was neither a literary infatuation nor a form of fatherly affection, but rather an unfulfilled, desperate passion that secretly consumed him during the last decade of his life. Bitterly disillusioned by the conditions of the theatrical world in Italy, Pirandello and Abba shared a dream of going abroad to earn their fortune and returning to Italy with the means to establish a national theatre dedicated to high artistic standards. In March 1929, when Marta finally yielded to family pressure and left Pirandello alone in Berlin to revive her Italian stage career and to end rumours over their involvement, he endured a devastating heartbreak and fell into a life-threatening depression - more profound and long-lasting than any of his biographers have yet imagined. The hundreds of letters Pirandello wrote to Abba during these years are the only source that reveals the true story of his relentless torment. Selected, translated, and introduced here for the first time in any language, these powerful and moving documents reward the reader with the unique experience of living in intimacy with a profound poet of human pain.

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