
By J.B. Priestley
John
Boynton Priestley was born in Bradford,
From
his earliest writings, Priestley may be described as a comic rationalist. “The
contradictions and absurdities of the human situation”, he wrote, “could best
be borne by a stance of ironic detachment.” This perspective is perhaps closest
to that of Priestley's predecessor, the novelist George Meredith (1828-1909).
Not surprisingly, one of the best of Priestley's early critical works is a
biography of Meredith in the English Men of Letters series (George
Meredith, 1926). Another early influence was Meredith's father-in-law, the
satirist Thomas Love Peacock, subject of another fine Priestley biography in
the same series in 1927.
About
this time Priestley achieved great popularity himself as a novelist through two
works centering on the comic interplay of people engaged in a common calling. The
Good Companions (1929) is about the joys and sorrows of the members of a
repertory company in the north of
One aspect of all of Priestley's
fiction is its theatricality—from the beginning he had a fine flair for
dialogue; in fact, soon after its success as a novel he adapted The Good
Companions into a play (1931, with
This acclaim encouraged the author to organize his own
company, for which he wrote plays of consistently high quality. Some were
comedies, such as Laburnum Grove (1933) and When We Are
Married (1938). As a dramatist Priestley was influenced by the theories of
time and recurrence propounded by the philosopher J. W. Dunne (1875-1949),
especially as developed in Experiment with Time and The Serial
Universe. Dunne's concepts are dramatized in Priestley's serious
"metaphysical" plays, such as Time and the Conway (1937), I
Have Been There Before (1938), and Johnson Over Jordan (1939).
After World War II, J. B.
Priestley took an active role in the international cultural community. He was a
To Priestley's assets of
longevity and versatility we may add flexibility—his adapting of the printed
word to newer media of communication during and after World War II. During the
war he became even more well known than before through his talks on radio;
because of his understanding of and sympathy for the average citizen he was
able to make a direct personal appeal using this medium. His film credits
include screenplays for The Foreman Went to France (1942) and Last
Holiday (1956). Back in the world of theater, he helped the novelist Iris
Murdoch translate her hit novel A Severed Head into a successful play
(1963).
Priestley had a son and
four daughters through earlier marriages; in 1953 he became part of a famous
husband-wife literary team when he married the archeologist and writer
Jacquetta Hawkes. She had also worked for UNESCO and in the film industry.
Together they wrote the play Dragon's Mouth (1952) and Journey Down a
Rainbow (1955). A stay in
Still more evidence of
this writer's versatility includes the libretto for an opera, The Olympians (1948); Delight,
a book of essays (1949); The Art of the Dramatist, criticism (1957); and
The Edwardians, social history (1970). J. B. Priestley died quietly at
his home in
*Encyclopedia of World Biography -- 2004*