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NY Times, August 7, 2020
Eric Bentley, Critic Who Preferred Brecht to Broadway, Dies at 103
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Mr. Bentley, who was also a playwright, was an early champion of modern 
European drama in the 1940s but had little use for American plays.

The critic, author and playwright Eric Bentley in 1976. His criticism found its 
way into classroom syllabuses and general-interest magazines. Credit... Tyrone 
Dukes/The New York Times

By Christopher Lehmann-Haupt ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/by/christopher-lehmann-haupt )

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Published Aug. 5, 2020 Updated Aug. 7, 2020, 12:34 a.m. ET

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Eric Bentley, an influential theater critic — as well as a scholar, author and 
playwright — who was an early champion of modern European drama and an 
unsparing antagonist of Broadway, died on Wednesday at his home in Manhattan. 
He was 103.

His son Philip confirmed the death.

Mr. Bentley was among that select breed of scholar who moves easily between 
academic and public spheres. His criticism found its way into classroom 
syllabuses and general-interest magazines.

And more than dissecting others’ plays, he also wrote his own and had some 
success as a director. He adapted work by many of the European playwrights he 
prized, especially Bertolt Brecht, whom he first met in Los Angeles in 1942.

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The English-born Mr. Bentley variously walked the corridors of Oxford, Harvard 
and Columbia, where he taught for many years with faculty colleagues like 
Lionel Trilling and Jacques Barzun, literary lions in their own right.

Image
Mr. Bentley teaching at Black Mountain College in North Carolina in 1943. 
Credit... via Philip Bentley

At Columbia he became engaged in leftist campus politics during the volatile 
1960s and surprised everyone when he quit — in part, he said, to experience 
life as a gay man, having divorced his second wife.

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But it was as a critic that he made his first and most enduring impression.

The critic Ronald Bryden, writing in The New York Times Book Review ( 
http://www.nytimes.com/1987/07/05/books/thinking-about-the-critic.html ) in 
1987, said that Mr. Bentley’s 1946 essay collection, “The Playwright as 
Thinker,” “did for modern drama what Edmund Wilson in ‘Axel’s Castle’ had done 
for modern poetry; it established the map of a territory previously obscured by 
opinion and rumor.”

Mr. Bentley published one admired collection of criticism after another, among 
them “In Search of Theater” (1953) “What Is Theater?” (1956) and “The Life of 
the Drama” (1964) — “the best general book on theater I have read bar none,” 
the novelist Clancy Sigal wrote in The New Republic.

Mr. Bentley’s book “Bernard Shaw” (1947) prompted Shaw himself to say that he 
considered it the best book written about him.

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Mr. Bentley argued that the great serious drama of the modern era had been 
written in Europe. He pointed to the operas of Wagner and the plays of Ibsen, 
Strindberg, Chekhov, García Lorca, Synge and Pirandello as well as Shaw. And 
great drama was still being written, he said in the 1940s, referring to Brecht, 
Jean-Paul Sartre and Sean O’Casey.

“Experimentalism in the arts always reflects historical conditions, always 
indicates profound dissatisfaction with established modes, always is a groping 
toward a new age,” he wrote in “The Playwright as Thinker.”

Image

The critic Ronald Bryden said Mr. Bentley’s 1946 essay collection, “The 
Playwright as Thinker,” “established the map of a territory previously obscured 
by opinion and rumor.” Credit... Reynal & Hitchcock

Mr. Bentley discerned a new naturalism in the modern voice. “What is it we 
notice if we pick up a modern play after reading Shakespeare or the Greeks? 
Nine times out of ten it is the dryness,” he wrote, distinguishing that from 
dullness — “the sheer modesty of the language, the sheer lack of winged words, 
even of eloquence.”

Mr. Bentley was less enthusiastic about American playwrights — even, at first, 
Eugene O’Neill.

“Where Wedekind seems silly and turns out on further inspection to be 
profound,” Mr. Bentley wrote of the German playwright Frank Wedekind in the 
notes to “The Playwright as Thinker,” “O’Neill seems profound and turns out on 
further inspection to be silly.”

As for commercialized Broadway, he judged it to be anathema to artistic 
theater, a view many readers regarded as tantamount to an attack on American 
culture. “Condescending and misanthropic,” Cue magazine said.

The drama critic Walter Kerr, writing in The New York Herald Tribune Book 
Review, said that “Mr. Bentley does not believe in a popular theater” and feels 
that “the audience is incapable of valid judgment in aesthetic matters.”

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Broadway’s defenders reminded Mr. Bentley that Sophocles, Shakespeare and Shaw 
had, above all, been popular. To which Mr. Bentley rejoined, “To be popular in 
an aristocratic culture, like ancient Greece or Elizabethan England, is quite a 
different matter from being popular in a middle-class culture.”

He eventually became more favorably inclined toward American dramatists, but he 
never let up in his goading of American theatergoers to pay more attention to 
Europeans like Brecht. For a time he even wore his hair in bangs like Brecht.

While at Columbia Mr. Bentley turned out a twin series of anthologies, “The 
Classic Theatre” and “From the Modern Repertoire,” which became standard 
reading in drama curriculums.

Image

Mr. Bentley in 1960. “Experimentalism in the arts,” he wrote, “always is a 
groping toward a new age.” Credit... via Philip Bentley

In the turmoil of the 1960s, he was a founder of the DMZ, a cabaret devoted to 
political and social satire whose subjects included the war in Vietnam, and he 
criticized Columbia’s handling of student political demonstrations on campus. 
In 1969 he quit his teaching post, shocking his friends and colleagues.

Many thought he had done so in protest, but he later said that he had simply 
realized that he wanted to be a playwright. “I always dreamed myself the author 
when I translated,” he said.

There were also personal reasons for resigning. He had decided to leave his 
second wife and live openly as a gay man, he said, and he thought his Columbia 
colleagues would not have tolerated that.

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Around the time he began moving away from academia, the theater reporter Pat 
O’Haire of The Daily News depicted him in his 12-room Riverside Drive 
apartment, its walls and shelves dense with theater memorabilia:

“Away from campus, or the confines of teaching, Bentley can only be described 
as a sort of combination establishment-guerrilla,” she wrote. “He goes barefoot 
and wears jeans, but his shirt, though colorful, is a traditional Brooks 
Brothers button-down. His hair is long and flecked with gray; he wears a beard 
that is neatly trimmed in a Captain Ahab style, with the upper lip shaved. It 
seems as if he is straddling two worlds.”

Eric Russell Bentley was born Sept. 14, 1916, in Bolton, a northern industrial 
town in Lancashire, England, to Fred and Laura Bentley. His father was a 
respected local businessman. His mother had wanted Eric to become a Baptist 
missionary.

Mr. Bentley was a scholarship student at the prestigious Bolton School, where 
he studied the piano. He then went to Oxford on a history scholarship; C.S. 
Lewis was one of his teachers. Yet as a merchant-class student surrounded by 
upper-class swells, he felt out of place.

Shaw became an early hero, Mr. Bentley told The Times in 2006 ( 
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/12/theater/a-critic-has-praise-for-a-playwright-himself.html
 ) , because he seemed to be a fellow outsider. “‘Pygmalion’ is a great classic 
in my book because it’s an Irishman’s recognition of the basics of class-ridden 
Britain,” he said.

He emigrated to the United States after receiving his bachelor’s degree from 
Oxford in 1938 (he was naturalized in 1948) and received a doctorate in 
comparative literature from Yale in 1941.

On the strength of his early books, Mr. Bentley was appointed in 1952 to 
succeed Harold Clurman as drama critic for The New Republic, a position he held 
until 1956. He also wrote for The Nation, Theatre Arts, The Times Literary 
Supplement in London and The New York Times.

When he wasn’t writing in the 1940s, he taught and directed at the University 
of California, Los Angeles; at Black Mountain College in North Carolina; and at 
the University of Minnesota. From 1948 through 1951 he traveled in Europe on a 
Guggenheim fellowship, directing plays. In 1950 he helped Brecht with his 
production of “Mother Courage and Her Children” in Munich. He also directed the 
German-language premiere of O’Neill’s play “The Iceman Cometh.”

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By then his regard for O’Neill and other American playwrights had risen. His 
earlier criteria for artistic merit, he conceded, had been “puritanic” and even 
too “Brechtian.” His celebrated book “The Playwright as Thinker,” he conceded, 
“reflects more my academic side — a certain degree of excessive authority, even 
arrogance, you could say.”

Image

Mr. Bentley in his Manhattan apartment in 2000. For all his laurels as a 
critic, he carried a nagging regret: that his plays were not appreciated as 
much as his criticism. Credit... Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times

In 1952, after his return to the United States, Mr. Bentley took over Joseph 
Wood Krutch’s course in modern drama at Columbia. The next year he was 
appointed the Brander Matthews professor of dramatic literature at Columbia, 
where he stayed until his resignation in 1969, with time off in between as the 
Charles Eliot Norton professor of poetry at Harvard in 1960-61 and as a Ford 
Foundation artist in residence in Berlin in 1964-65.

He was later the Cornell professor of theater at the State University of New 
York, Buffalo, and a professor of comparative literature at the University of 
Maryland.

Mr. Bentley was known to perform songs from the theater in nightclubs, 
accompanying himself on the harmonium.

As he concentrated more on his playwriting, he found his subjects in those who 
had rebelled against established society. He took up the causes of the left in 
“Are You Now or Have You Ever Been: The Investigation of Show Business by the 
Un-American Activities Committee, 1947-1958,” first produced in 1972; the 
astronomer Galileo in “The Recantation of Galileo Galilei: Scenes From History 
Perhaps” (1973); Oscar Wilde in “Lord Alfred’s Lover” (1979); the sexually 
inconstant in “Concord” (1982), one of a series of three plays in “The Kleist 
Variations”; and homosexuality in “Round Two” (1990), a variation on 
Schnitzler’s play “La Ronde.”

Mr. Bentley discussed his sexual orientation in 1987, in an interview ( 
http://articles.latimes.com/1987-01-25/entertainment/ca-5615_1_eric-bentley ) 
with The Los Angeles Times. “I generally avoid the word bisexual,” he said. 
“People who call themselves bisexual are being evasive. They don’t want to be 
regarded as homosexual — or they want to be regarded as supermen, who like to 
sleep with everything and everybody.

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“Nevertheless,” he went on, “if one can avoid these connotations, the word 
would be applicable to me, because I have been married twice, and neither of 
the marriages was fake; neither of them was a cover for something else; they 
were both a genuine relationship to a woman.”

Those marriages were to Maja Tschernjakow and to Joanne Davis, a 
psychotherapist. His first marriage ended in divorce, his second in separation 
(they never divorced). In addition to Ms. Davis and his son Philip, he is 
survived by another son, Eric Jr., and four grandchildren.

For all his laurels as a critic, Mr. Bentley carried a nagging regret: that his 
plays were not appreciated as much as his criticism.

“Brecht once told me that he left unpublished a lot of his poetry,” Mr. Bentley 
said in the 2006 Times interview, “because, he said: ‘If they regard me as a 
poet, they’ll say I’m not a playwright, I’m a poet. So I don’t publish the 
poems, so they’ll say I’m a playwright.’

“I feel at times that I should not have written my criticism,” Mr. Bentley 
continued, “because when I write a play, they say, ‘The critic has written a 
play.’”

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