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Eugene Ionesco [1912-1994] French
Rank: 101
Dramatist, Playwright


Eugène Ionesco was a Romanian-French playwright who wrote mostly in French, and one of the foremost figures of the French Avant-garde theatre. 

Death, Art, Beauty, Dreams, Fear, Friendship, Religion, Society, Time, Work



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No society has been able to abolish human sadness, no political system can deliver us from the pain of living, from our fear of death, our thirst for the absolute. It is the human condition that directs the social condition, not vice versa. Death, Fear, Society
101
Ideologies separate us. Dreams and anguish bring us together. Dreams
102
It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.
103
A work of art is above all an adventure of the mind. Art, Work
104
Explanation separates us from astonishment, which is the only gateway to the incomprehensible.
105
Like all revolutions, the surrealist revolution was a reversion, a restitution, an expression of vital and indispensable spiritual needs.
106
There is no religion in which everyday life is not considered a prison; there is no philosophy or ideology that does not think that we live in alienation. Religion
107
A nose that can see is worth two that sniff.
108
We have not the time to take our time. Time
109
Beauty is a precious trace that eternity causes to appear to us and that it takes away from us. A manifestation of eternity, and a sign of death as well. Beauty, Death
110
Everything that has been will be, everything that will be is, everything that will be has been.
111
A man with a soul is not like every other man.
112
Living is abnormal.
113
I've always been suspicious of collective truths.
114
The critic should describe, and not prescribe.
115
You can only predict things after they have happened.
116
Shakespeare was the great one before us. His place was between God and despair.
117
A civil servant doesn't make jokes.
118
I was born near Bucharest, but my parents came to France a year later. We moved back to Romania when I was thirteen, and my world was shattered. I hated Bucharest, its society, and its mores - its anti-Semitism for example.
119
When I was nine, the teacher asked us to write a piece about our village fete. He read mine in class. I was encouraged and continued. I even wanted to write my memoirs at the age of ten. At twelve I wrote poetry, mostly about friendship - 'Ode to Friendship.' Then my class wanted to make a film, and one little boy suggested that I write the script. Friendship
120
Perhaps I abandoned criticism because I am full of contradictions, and when you write an essay, you are not supposed to contradict yourself. But in the theater, by inventing various characters, you can. My characters are contradictory not only in their language but in their behavior as well.
121
I have the vanity to think that every play I have written is different from the previous ones. Yet, even though they are written in a different way, they all deal with the same themes, the same preoccupations. 'Exit the King' is also 'The Bald Soprano.'
122
All theatre is absurd.
123
Woe betide the man who refuses to conform.
124
Cut off from his religious, metaphysical and transcendental roots, man is lost; all his actions become senseless, absurd, useless.
125
Culture cannot be separated from politics. The arts, philosophy and metaphysics, religion and the sciences, constitute culture. Politics are the science or art of organizing our relationships to allow for the development of life in society.
126
Politics separate men by bringing them together only superficially. Art and culture unite us in a common anguish that is our only possible fraternity, that of our existential and metaphysical community.
201
My plays have been performed before children, workers, and peasants, and they have well understood the meaning of my theatre. What is needed for people to watch my theatre is a freshness and openness of mind.
202
The artist can be above political parties, he can belong in a political party, he can act in politics.
203
Art goes beyond politics. Even if there are writers who are involved in politics, eventually, in one or two centuries, it's not their politics which is going to count, but the fact of having given life to feelings, of having created characters and made a living work of art.
204
I look out the chair while eating my pillow. I open the wall, I walk with my ears. I have ten eyes to walk with and two fingers to look with. I put my head on the floor to sit down, I put my bottom on the ceiling. After eating the music box, I spread jam on the rug for a great dessert.
205
Often, alas, the most detestable kind of bourgeois is the anti-bourgeois kind of bourgeois.
206

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