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<DIV><FONT size=2><FONT face=Arial>Harold Pinter Wins Nobel Prize in Literature
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<DIV class=byline><FONT face=Arial>STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- British playwright
Harold Pinter, whose juxtaposition of the brutal and the banal dubbed an
adjective that bears his name, won the 2005 Nobel Prize in literature
Thursday.</FONT></DIV>
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<P><FONT face=Arial>The Swedish Academy said Pinter was an author ''who in his
plays uncovers the precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into
oppression's closed rooms.''</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>In its citation, the academy said the 75-year-old playwright
was one who restored the art form of writing plays. His works include ''The
Room,'' ''The Birthday Party'' and ''The Dumb Waiter'' and his breakthrough
work, ''The Caretaker.''</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>''Pinter restored theatre to its basic elements: an enclosed
space and unpredictable dialogue where people are at the mercy of each other and
pretense crumbles,'' the academy said.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Pinter is the first Briton to win the literature award since
V.S. Naipaul won it in 2001.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>The son of a Jewish dressmaker, Pinter was born in London on
Oct. 10, 1930. Pinter has said his encounters with anti-Semitism in his youth
influenced him in becoming a dramatist. The wartime bombing of London also
affected him deeply, the academy said.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>The academy's announcement came on Yom Kippur, Judaism's
most important holiday.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Dubbed the most influential British playwright of his
generation, in recent years he has turned his acerbic eye on the United States
and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Most prolific between 1957 and 1965, Pinter relished the
juxtaposition of brutality and the banal and turned the conversational pause
into an emotional minefield.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Dark and peopled with unfortunates, Pinter's idiom was so
distinctive that he got his own adjective: ''Pinteresque.''</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>His characters' internal fears and longings, their guilt and
difficult sexual drives are set against the neat lives they have constructed in
order to try to survive.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Usually enclosed in one room, they organize their lives as a
sort of grim game and their actions often contradict their words. Gradually, the
layers are peeled back to reveal the characters' nakedness.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>In addition to plays, he has written for the cinema, penning
such screenplays as ''The French Lieutenant's Woman,'' ''The Accident,'' ''The
Servant'' and ''The Go-Between.''</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Academy Permanent Secretary Horace Engdahl said Pinter was
overwhelmed when told he had won the prize.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>''He did not say many words, in fact he was very happy,'' he
said.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>Last year's winner, Austrian feminist Elfriede Jelinek, drew
such ire that a member of the academy publicly blasted his colleagues for
picking her. Knut Ahnlund, 82, who has not played an active role in the academy
since 1996, resigned Tuesday after he wrote in a signed newspaper article that
picking Jelinek had caused ''irreparable damage'' to the award's
reputation.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Arial>The academy, founded in 1786 by King Gustav III to advance
the Swedish language and its literature, has handed out the literature prize
since 1901. To date 102 men and women have received the prize, including
France's Jean-Paul Sartre, who declined the 1964
prize.</FONT></P></DIV></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>