2009. január 25., vasárnap

Eugène Ionesco

Eugène Ionesco, born Eugen Ionescu (November 26, 1909March 28, 1994), was a Romanian and French playwright and dramatist, one of the foremost playwrights of the Theatre of the Absurd. Beyond ridiculing the most banal situations, Ionesco's plays depict in a tangible way the solitude and insignificance of human existence.
He spent most of his childhood in France, and, while there, had an experience he claimed affected his perception of the world more significantly than any other. As Deborah B. Gaensbauer describes in Eugene Ionesco Revisited, "Walking in summer sunshine in a white-washed provincial village under an intense blue sky, [Ionesco] was profoundly altered by the light."[3] He was struck very suddenly with a feeling of intense luminosity, the feeling of floating off the ground and an overwhelming feeling of well-being. When he "floated" back to the ground and the "light" left him, he saw that the real world in comparison was full of decay, corruption and meaningless repetitive action. This also coincided with the revelation that death takes everyone in the end.[4]Much of his later work, reflecting this new perception, demonstrates a disgust for the tangible world, a distrust of communication, and the subtle sense that a better world lies just beyond our reach. Echoes of this experience can also be seen in references and themes in many of his important works: characters pining for an unattainable "city of lights" (The Killer, The Chairs) or perceiving a world beyond (A Stroll in the Air); characters granted the ability to fly (A Stroll in the Air, Amédée); the banality of the world which often leads to depression (the Bérenger character); ecstatic revelations of beauty within a pessimistic framework (Amédée, The Chairs, the Bérenger character); and the inevitability of death (Exit the King).
He returned to Romania with his father in 1925 after his parents divorced. There he attended Saint Sava National College, after which he studied French Literature at the University of Bucharest from 1928 to 1933 and qualified as a teacher of French. While there he met Emil Cioran and Mircea Eliade, and the three became lifelong friends.
In 1936 Ionesco married Rodica Burileanu. Together they had one daughter for whom he wrote a number of unconventional children's stories. He and his family returned to France in 1938 for him to complete his Doctoral Thesis. Caught by the outbreak of World War II in 1939, he remained there, living in Marseille during the war before moving with his family to Paris after its liberation in 1944.
Ionesco was made a member of the Académie française in 1970 [2]. He also received numerous awards including Tours Festival Prize for film, 1959; Prix Italia, 1963; Society of Authors Theatre Prize, 1966; Grand Prix National for theatre, 1969; Monaco Grand Prix, 1969; Austrian State Prize for European Literature, 1970; Jerusalem Prize, 1973; and honorary Doctoral Degrees from New York University and the Universities of Leuven, Warwick and Tel Aviv. Eugène Ionesco died at age 84 on March 29, 1994 and is buried in the Cimetière du Montparnasse in Paris. Although Ionesco wrote almost entirely in French, he is one of Romania's most honored artists.
Though best known as a playwright, plays were not his first chosen medium. He started writing poetry and criticism, publishing in several Romanian journals. Two early writings of note are Nu, a book criticizing many other writers including prominent Romanian poets, and Hugoliade, or, The grotesque and tragic life of Victor Hugo a satirical biography mocking Victor Hugo's status as a great figure in French literature. The Hugoliade includes exaggerated retellings of the most scandalous episodes in Hugo's life and contains prototypes for many of Ionesco's later themes: the ridiculous authoritarian character, the false worship of language.Like Samuel Beckett, Ionesco came to the theatre late: he did not write his first play until 1948 (La Cantatrice chauve, first performed in 1950 with the English title The Bald Soprano). At the age of 40 he decided to learn English using the Assimil method, conscientiously copying whole sentences in order to memorize them. Re-reading them, he began to feel that he was not learning English, rather he was discovering some astonishing truths such as the fact that there are seven days in a week, that the ceiling is up and the floor is down; things which he already knew, but which suddenly struck him as being as stupefying as they were indisputably true[citation needed].
This feeling only intensified with the introduction in later lessons of the characters known as "Mr. and Mrs. Smith". To his astonishment, Mrs. Smith informed her husband that they had several children, that they lived in the vicinity of London, that their name was Smith, that Mr. Smith was a clerk, that they had a servant, Mary, who was English like themselves. What was remarkable about Mrs. Smith, he thought, was her eminently methodical procedure in her quest for truth. For Ionesco, the clichés and truisms of the conversation primer disintegrated into wild caricature and parody with language itself disintegrating into disjointed fragments of words. Ionesco set about translating this experience into a play, La Cantatrice Chauve, which was performed for the first time in 1950 under the direction of Nicolas Bataille. It was far from a success and went unnoticed until a few established writers and critics, among them Jean Anouilh and Raymond Queneau, championed the play.
Ionesco's earliest works, and his most innovative, were one-act nonsense plays: La Cantatrice chauve (1950), La Leçon translated as The Lesson (1951), Les Chaises translated as The Chairs (1952), and Jacques ou la soumission translated as Jack, or The Submission (1955). These absurdist sketches, to which he gave such descriptions as "anti-play" (anti-pièce in French) express modern feelings of alienation and the impossibility and futility of communication with surreal comic force, parodying the conformism of the bourgeoisie and conventional theatrical forms. In them Ionesco rejects a conventional story-line as their basis, instead taking their dramatic structure from accelerating rhythms and/or cyclical repetitions. He disregards psychology and coherent dialogue, thereby depicting a dehumanized world with mechanical, puppet-like characters who speak in non-sequiturs. Language becomes rarefied, with words and material objects gaining a life of their own, increasingly overwhelming the characters and creating a sense of menace.
With Tueur sans gages translated as The Killer (1959; his second full-length play, the first being Amédée, ou Comment s'en débarrasser in 1954), Ionesco began to explore more sustained dramatic situations featuring more humanized characters. Notably this includes Bérenger, a central character in a number of Ionesco's plays, the last of which is Le Piéton de l'air translated as A Stroll in the Air.
Bérenger is a semi-autobiographical figure expressing Ionesco's wonderment and anguish at the strangeness of reality. He is comically naïve, engaging the audience's sympathy. In The Killer he encounters death in the figure of a serial killer. In Rhinocéros he watches his friends turning into rhinoceri one by one until he alone stands unchanged against this tide of conformism. It is in this play that Ionesco most forcefully expresses his horror of ideological conformism, inspired by the rise of the fascist Iron Guard in Romania in the 1930s. Le Roi se meurt translated as Exit the King (1962) shows him as King Bérenger 1st, an everyman figure who struggles to come to terms with his own death.
Ionesco's later work has generally received less attention. This includes La Soif et la faim translated as Hunger and Thirst (1966), Jeux de massacre (1971), Macbett (1972, a free adaptation of Shakespeare's Macbeth) and Ce formidable bordel (1973).
Apart from the libretto for the opera Maximilien Kolbe (music by Dominique Probst) which has been performed in five countries, filmed for television and recorded for release on CD, Ionesco did not write for the stage after Voyage chez les morts in 1981. However, La Cantatrice chauve is still playing at the Théâtre de la Huchette today, having moved there in 1952.
Like Shaw and Brecht, Ionesco also contributed to the theatre with his theoretical writings (Wellwarth, 33). Ionesco wrote mainly in attempts to correct critics who he felt misunderstood his work and therefore wrongly influenced his audience. In doing so, Ionesco articulated ways in which he thought contemporary theatre should be reformed (Wellwarth, 33). Notes and Counter Notes is a collection of Ionesco's writings, including musings on why he chose to write for the theatre and direct responses to his contemporary critics.
In the first section, titled "Experience of the Theatre", Ionesco claimed to have hated going to the theatre as a child because it gave him "no pleasure or feeling of participation" (Ionesco, 15). He wrote that the problem with realistic theatre is that it is less interesting than theatre that invokes an "imaginative truth", which he found to be much more interesting and freeing than the "narrow" truth presented by strict realism (Ionesco, 15). He claimed that "drama that relies on simple effects is not necessarily drama simplified" (Ionesco, 28). Notes and Counter Notes also reprints a heated war of words between Ionesco and Kenneth Tynan based on Ionesco's above stated beliefs and Ionesco's hatred for Brecht and Brechtian theatre.
Ionesco is often considered a writer of the Theatre of the Absurd. This is a label originally given to him by Martin Esslin in his book of the same name, placing Ionesco alongside such contemporary writers as Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, and Arthur Adamov. Esslin called them "absurd" based on Albert Camus' concept of the absurd, claiming that Beckett and Ionesco better captured the meaninglessness of existence in their plays than in work by Camus or Sartre. Because of this loose association, Ionesco is often mislabeled an existentialist. Ionesco claimed in Notes and Counter Notes that he was not an existentialist and often criticized existentialist figurehead Jean-Paul Sartre. Although Ionesco knew Beckett and honored his work, the French group of playwrights was far from an organized movement.
Ionesco claimed instead an affinity for ’Pataphysics and its creator Alfred Jarry. He was also a great admirer of the Dadaists and Surrealists, especially his fellow countryman Tristan Tzara. Ionesco became friends with the founder of Surrealism, André Breton, whom he revered. In Present Past, Past Present, Ionesco wrote, "Breton taught us to destroy the walls of the real that separate us from reality, to participate in being so as to live as if it were the first day of creation, a day that would every day be the first day of new creations." [5] Raymond Queneau, a former associate of Breton and a champion of Ionesco's work, was a member of the Collège de ’Pataphysique and a founder of Oulipo, two groups with which Ionesco was associated.
Eugène Ionesco (1909. november 26., Slatina, Románia1994. március 29., Párizs) román-francia származású francia író, az abszurd dráma és az abszurd színház egyik megteremtője. A Patafizikai Társaság egyik tagja.
1909. november 26-án látta meg a napvilágot az Olt megyei Slatina városában, Romániában. Apja román, míg anyja francia zsidó volt, így gyermekkorának jelentős részét Franciaországban tölthette, de a szülei válása után, 1925-ben visszatért apjával Romániába. A bukaresti egyetemen szerzett francia nyelvtanári diplomát 1933-ban, diplomamunkáját a francia irodalomról írta. Az egyetemen ismerkedett meg és lett életreszóló barátja Emil Cioran és Mircea Eliade.
1936-ban nősült meg, házasságából egy lánya született. 1938-ban családjával visszatért Franciaországba, hogy anyagot gyűjthessen a doktori cím megszerzéséhez szükséges munkájához. A II. világháború ezen gyűjtőmunka közben érte őket, ezért úgy döntöttek, hogy maradnak, Marseille-ben telepedtek le. Párizs 1944-es felszabadítása után nem sokkal azonban a tengerpartról a francia fővárosba költöztek. 1948-ban egy angol nyelvkönyv példamondatainak tanulmányozása közben döbbent rá a kispolgári lét abszurditására. Első abszurd darabját A kopasz énekesnő-t is ebben az évben írta, mely 1950-ben került színpadra, megteremtve ezzel az abszurd színház világát, ugyanis a darab színpadi rendezése is a könyvből áradó abszurditást tükrözte. (Egész addigi és azt követő életében is ódzkodott a „rendes” színházaktól). 1967-ben látogatást tett Izraelben, ezután tudomásul vette a félzsidó származását firtató pletykákat és híreszteléseket.
1970-ben az Académie française (Francia Akadémia) rendes tagjává választotta[1]. 1994. március 29-én, életének 84. évében érte a halál.
Mivel szinte kizárólag francia nyelven írt, joggal tekintik – félig román származása ellenére – francia írónak. Romániában ma az egyik legnagyobb tiszteletnek örvendő szerző.
Még életében díszdoktora lett a New York-i, a leuveni, a warwicki és a tel avivi egyetemnek, illetve számos díjat is kapott, közülük a legismertebbek:
a Tours Fesztivál filmdíja, 1959
Prix Italia, 1963
az íróközösség színházdíja, 1966
nemzeti nagydíj a színházért, 1969
monacói fődíj, 1969
osztrák állami kitüntetés az európai irodalomért tett szolgálatai elismeréséül, (1970)
Jeruzsálem-díj, 1973

2009. január 24., szombat

Friedensreich Hundertwasser

Friedensreich Regentag Dunkelbunt Hundertwasser, born Friedrich Stowasser, (December 15, 1928 – February 19, 2000) was an Austrian painter, architect and sculptor. Born in Vienna, he became one of the best-known contemporary Austrian artists, although controversial, by the end of the 20th century.
Hundertwasser's original and unruly artistic vision expressed itself in pictorial art, environmentalism, philosophy, and design of facades, postage stamps, flags, and clothing (among other areas). The common themes in his work utilised bright colours, organic forms, a reconciliation of humans with nature, and a strong individualism, rejecting straight lines. He remains sui generis, although his architectural work is comparable to Antoni Gaudí in its biomorphic forms and use of tile. He was inspired by the works of Egon Schiele from an early date, and his style was often compared to that of Gustav Klimt. He was fascinated with spirals, and called straight lines "the devil's tools". He called his theory of art "transautomatism", based on Surrealist automatism, but focusing on the experience of the viewer, rather than the artist.
His adopted surname is based on the translation of Sto (the [Slavic] word for "one hundred") into German. The name Friedensreich has a double meaning as "Peaceland" or "Peacerich" (in the sense of "peaceful"). The other names he chose for himself, Regentag and Dunkelbunt, translate to "Rainy day" and "Darkly multicoloured". His name Friedensreich Hundertwasser means, "Peace-Kingdom Hundred-Water". Although Hundertwasser first achieved notoriety for his boldly-coloured paintings, he is more widely renowned today for his revolutionary architectural designs, which incorporate natural features of the landscape, and use of irregular forms in his building design. Hundertwasserhaus, a low-income apartment block in Vienna, features undulating floors ("an uneven floor is a melody to the feet"), a roof covered with earth and grass, and large trees growing from inside the rooms, with limbs extending from windows. He took no payment for the design of Hundertwasserhaus, declaring that it was worth it, to "prevent something ugly from going up in its place".

He felt that standard architecture could not be called art, and declared that the design of any building should be influenced by the aesthetics of its eventual tenants. Hundertwasser was also known for his performance art, in which he would, for instance, appear in public in the nude promoting an ecologically friendly flush-less toilet.
On July 4, 1958 he read his celebrated and controversial Verschimmelungs-Manifest, the so-called Mould Manifesto against rationalism in architecture, in the abbey of Seckau. "A person in a rented apartment must be able to lean out of his window and scrape off the masonry within arm's reach. And he must be allowed to take a long brush and paint everything outside within arm's reach. So that it will be visible from afar to everyone in the street that someone lives there who is different from the imprisoned, enslaved, standardised man who lives next door."
In 1972 he published the manifesto Your window right — your tree duty: planting trees in an urban environments was to become obligatory: "If man walks in nature's midst, then he is nature's guest and must learn to behave as a well-brought-up guest."

His work has been used for flags, stamps, coins, posters, schools, churches, a public toilet in Kawakawa in his adopted home of New Zealand, and apartment buildings. His most famous flag is the Koru Flag; he has also designed stamps for the Cape Verde islands and for the United Nations post administration in Geneva on the occasion of the 35th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
In 1999 he started his last project named Die Grüne Zitadelle von Magdeburg. Although he never finished this work completely, the building was put up a few years later in Magdeburg, a town in central Germany, and finally opened on October 3, 2005.
An art gallery featuring his work will be established in a council building in Whangarei, New Zealand, and will bring to fruition his 1993 plans for improving the building.[1]
Hundertwasser considered New Zealand as his official home, and no matter where he went in the world, his watch was always set to New Zealand time. That finally became the place he was buried after his death at sea on the RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 in 2000.
Some Hundertwasser buildings:
Markthalle, Altenrhein, Switzerland
District Heating Plant Spittelau, Vienna, Austria
Hundertwasser House, Vienna, Austria
Hundertwasserhaus Waldspirale, Darmstadt, Germany
KunstHausWien, Vienna, Austria
Kindergarten Heddernheim, Frankfurt
Motorway Restaurant, Bad Fischau-Brunn, Austria
Hot Springs Village, Bad Blumau, Styria, Austria
Hundertwasserkirche, Baernbach, Styria, Austria
Wohnen unterm Regenturm, Plochingen, Germany
Quixote Winery, Napa Valley, (USA), 1992-1999 (his only building in the US)
Maishima Incineration Plant, Osaka (Japan), 1997-2000
Public toilet, Kawakawa (New Zealand), 1999
Hundertwasser "environmental railway station", Uelzen (Germany), 1999-2001
Die Grüne Zitadelle von Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany, 2003-2005
Ronald Mcdonald Kinder Vallei,Valkenburg, Holland
Friedensreich Regentag Dunkelbunt Hundertwasser (eredetileg Friedrich Stowasser) (Bécs, 1928. december 15.Új-Zéland közelében, 2000. február 19.)
Osztrák építész, festő és filozófus. „Sto” cseh nyelven azt jelenti: „száz”, ezt németesítette művésznevében, melynek jelentése „száz víz”. A Friedensreich jelentése béketeli, Regentag: esős nap (egyébként saját hajójának a neve is, amelyen lakott), Dunkelbunt: sötéttarka.
Építészete az organikus építészethez tartozik, melyet leginkább Antonio Gaudíéhoz lehet kötni. Jelentős filozófiai hitvallás van építészete mögött, mellyel az embert vissza akarja részben téríteni a természethez. Nagy hatással volt rá a bécsi szecesszió építészete is.
1948-1949 között tanulmányokat folytatott a bécsi Művészeti Akadémián, nevét ekkoriban változtatja meg.
1949-ben Olaszországba utazott.
1950-ben rövid időt Párizsban töltött.
1951-ben ellátogatott Marokkóba és Tunéziába.
1967-től nagy példányszámban keltek el grafikái és plakátjai.
1981-ben professzori kinevezésben részesült Bécsben (Akademie der bildenden Künste).
1991-ben Bécsben megnyílt a Hundertwassermuseum.
2000-ben, 72 éves korában, Új-Zéland közelében, szívroham következtében hunyt el a Queen Elizabeth II nevű hajón. Több levélbélyeget készített a Zöldfoki-szigeteknek, az ENSZ postahivatala (New York, Genf és Bécs) részére, az Emberi Jogok Egyetemes Nyilatkozatának 35. évfordulója alkalmából (1983), Liechtensteinnek (1993 és 2000), Luxemburgnak (1995), Franciaországnak (Európa Tanács szolgálati bélyeg, 1994) és Ausztriának (osztrák modern művészet témakör, 1975). Az Osztrák Posta további Hundertwasser-motívumokat használt fel az Európa-sorozatban (1987, modern építészet kategóriába bekerült a Hundertwasser-ház), valamint 2000-ben bekövetkezett halálát követően.
Épületei
Hundertwasserhaus (Bécs, Ausztria), 1983-1986
Rosenthal Selb (gyárépület, Németország), 1980-1982
Rupertinum Salzburg (Zungenbart), 1980-1987
Mierka Getreidesilo (Krems), 1982-1983
St.Barbara templom (Bärnbach), 1987-1988
Skanzen, Roiten, 1987-1988
Textilgyár Rueff Muntlix, 1988
Gyermekmegörző Frankfurt-Heddernheim (D), 1988-1995
Távfütő Wien/Spittelau, 1988-1997
Autópálypihenő-étterem Bad Fischau, 1989-1990
KunstHausWien, 1989-1991
Village beim Hundertwasser-KrawinaHaus Wien, 1990-1991
„In den Wiesen” Bad Soden am Taunus (D), 1990-1993
„Wohnen unterm Regenturm” Plochingen am Neckar (D), 1991-1994
Countdown 21st Century Monument for TBS Tokyo (J), 1992
Fontaines Zwettl, 1992-1994
Pavillon beim DDSG Ponton Wien, 1992-1994
Quixote Winery Napa Valley (USA), 1992-1999
SpiralflussTrinkbrunnen I Linz, 1993-1994
Hôpital (Oncologie) Graz, 1993-1994
Thermendorf Blumau, 1993-1997
SpiralflussTrinkbrunnen II Tel Aviv (IL), 1994-1996
Kid's Plaza Ōsaka (J), 1996-1997
Martin-Luther-Gymnasium Wittenberg (D), 1997-1999
Maishima Incineration Plant Ōsaka (J), 1997-2000
Darmstadt Waldspirale
Waldspirale Darmstadt (D), 1998-2000
Piac Altenrhein (CH), 1998-2001
Nyilvános WC Kawakawa (NZ), 1999
Környezetbarát pályaudvar, Hundertwasser Uelzen (D), 1999-2001
Maishima Sludge Center Ōsaka (J), 2000- -építés alatt
Grüne Zitadelle Magdeburg (D), 2004-2005
Ronald McDonald Hundertwasserhaus Essen/Grugapark (D), 2005

2009. január 18., vasárnap

Theodor Herzl

Theodor Herzl (Hebrew: בנימין זאב הרצל‎ (Binyamin Ze'ev Herzl)) (May 2, 1860–July 3, 1904) was a Hungarian Jewish journalist who was the father of modern political Zionism.
Herzl was born in Pest, the Kingdom of Hungary (today the eastern half of Budapest, then a separate city) to a Jewish family originally from Zemun, the Kingdom of Hungary (today in Serbia). When Theodor was 18 his family moved to Vienna, Austria-Hungary. There, he studied law, but he devoted himself almost exclusively to journalism and literature, working as a correspondent for the Neue Freie Presse in Paris, occasionally making special trips to London and Istanbul. Later, he became literary editor of Neue Freie Presse,and wrote several comedies and dramas for the Viennese stage.
As a young man, Herzl was engaged in a Burschenschaft association, which strove for German unity under the motto Ehre, Freiheit, Vaterland ("Honor, Freedom, Fatherland"), and his early work did not focus on Jewish life. His work was of the feuilleton order, descriptive rather than political.
As the Paris correspondent for Neue Freie Presse, Herzl followed the Dreyfus Affair, a notorious anti-Semitic incident in France in which a French Jewish army captain was falsely convicted of spying for Germany. He witnessed mass rallies in Paris following the Dreyfus trial where many chanted "Death to the Jews!" Herzl came to reject his early ideas regarding Jewish emancipation and assimilation, and to believe that the Jews must remove themselves from Europe and create their own state.[1]
In June, 1895, he wrote in his diary: "In Paris, as I have said, I achieved a freer attitude toward anti-Semitism... Above all, I recognized the emptiness and futility of trying to 'combat' anti-Semitism." In Der Judenstaat he writes:
"The Jewish question persists wherever Jews live in appreciable numbers. Wherever it does not exist, it is brought in together with Jewish immigrants. We are naturally drawn into those places where we are not persecuted, and our appearance there gives rise to persecution. This is the case, and will inevitably be so, everywhere, even in highly civilised countries—see, for instance, France—so long as the Jewish question is not solved on the political level. The unfortunate Jews are now carrying the seeds of anti-Semitism into England; they have already introduced it into America."[2]
From April, 1896, when the English translation of his Der Judenstaat (The State of the Jews) appeared, Herzl became the leading spokesman for Zionism.
Herzl complemented his writing with practical work to promote Zionism on the international stage. He visited Istanbul in April, 1896, and was hailed at Sofia, Bulgaria, by a Jewish delegation. In London, the Maccabees group received him coldly, but he was granted the mandate of leadership from the Zionists of the East End of London. Within six months this mandate had been approved throughout Zionist Jewry, and Herzl traveled constantly to draw attention to his cause. His supporters, at first few in number, worked night and day, inspired by Herzl's example.
In June 1896, he met for the first time with the Sultan of Turkey, but the Sultan refused to cede Palestine to Zionists, saying, "if one day the Islamic State falls apart then you can have Palestine for free, but as long as I am alive I would rather have my flesh be cut up than cut out Palestine from the Muslim land."[3]
In 1897, at considerable personal expense, he founded Die Welt of Vienna, Austria-Hungary and planned the First Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland. He was elected president (a position he held until his death in 1904), and in 1898 he began a series of diplomatic initiatives intended to build support for a Jewish country. He was received by the German emperor on several occasions, was again granted an audience by the Ottoman emperor in Jerusalem, and attended The Hague Peace Conference, enjoying a warm reception by many other statesmen.
In 1902–03 Herzl was invited to give evidence before the British Royal Commission on Alien Immigration. The appearance brought him into close contact with members of the British government, particularly with Joseph Chamberlain, then secretary of state for the colonies, through whom he negotiated with the Egyptian government for a charter for the settlement of the Jews in Al 'Arish, in the Sinai Peninsula, adjoining southern Palestine.
On the failure of that scheme, which took him to Cairo, he received, through L. J. Greenberg, an offer (August 1903) on the part of the British government to facilitate a large Jewish settlement, with autonomous government and under British suzerainty, in British East Africa. At the same time, the Zionist movement being threatened by the Russian government, he visited St. Petersburg and was received by Sergei Witte, then finance minister, and Viacheslav Plehve, minister of the interior, the latter of whom placed on record the attitude of his government toward the Zionist movement. On that occasion Herzl submitted proposals for the amelioration of the Jewish position in Russia. He published the Russian statement, and brought the British offer, commonly known as the "Uganda Project," before the Sixth Zionist Congress (Basel, August 1903), carrying the majority (295:178, 98 abstentions) with him on the question of investigating this offer, after the Russian delegation stormed out.
In 1905, after investigation, the Congress decided to decline the British offer and firmly committed itself to a Jewish homeland in the historic Land of Israel.
Herzl did not live to see the rejection of the Uganda plan; he died in Edlach, Lower Austria in 1904 of heart failure at age 44. His will stipulated that he should have the poorest-class funeral without speeches or flowers and he added, "I wish to be buried in the vault beside my father, and to lie there till the Jewish people shall take my remains to Palestine".[4] In 1949 his remains were moved from Vienna to be reburied on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.
Der Judenstaat (The Jewish State, 1896) written in German, was the book that announced the advent of Zionism to the world. It is a pamphlet-length political program.
His last literary work, Altneuland (in Eng. The Old New Land), is a novel devoted to Zionism. The author occupied his free time for three years in writing what he believed might be accomplished by 1923. It is less a novel, though the form is that of romance, than a serious forecasting of what could be done within one generation. The keynotes of the story are the love for Zion, the insistence upon the fact that the changes in life suggested are not utopian, but are to be brought about simply by grouping all the best efforts and ideals of every race and nation; and each such effort is quoted and referred to in such a manner as to show that Altneuland, though blossoming through the skill of the Jew, will in reality be the product of the benevolent efforts of all the members of the human family.
Herzl envisioned a Jewish state which combined both a modern Jewish culture with the best of the European heritage. Thus a Palace of Peace would be built in Jerusalem, arbitrating international disputes—but at the same time the Temple would be rebuilt, but on modern principles. He did not envision the Jewish inhabitants of the state being religious, but there is much respect for religion in the public sphere. Many languages are spoken—Hebrew is not the main tongue. Proponents of a Jewish cultural rebirth, such as Ahad Ha'am were critical of Altneuland.
In Altneuland Herzl did not foresee any conflict between Jews and Arabs. The one Arab character in Altneuland, Reshid Bey, who is one of the leaders of the "New Society", is very grateful to his Jewish neighbors for improving the economic condition of Palestine and sees no cause for conflict. All non-Jews have equal rights, and an attempt by a fanatical rabbi to disenfranchise the non-Jewish citizens of their rights fails in the election which is the center of the main political plot of the novel.
Altneuland was written primarily for the world, not for the Zionists. Herzl wanted to win over non-Jewish opinion for Zionism.[5] In his diary he wrote that land in Palestine was to be gently expropriated from the Palestinian Arabs and they were to be worked across the border "unbemerkt" (surreptitiously), e.g. by refusing them employment.[5] Herzl's draft of a charter for a Jewish-Ottoman Land Company (JOLC) gave the JOLC the right to obtain land in Palestine by giving its owners comparable land elsewhere in the Ottoman empire. According to Walid Khalidi this indicates Herzl's "bland assumption of the transfer of the Palestinian to make way for the immigrant colonist."[6]
The name of Tel Aviv is the title given to the Hebrew translation of Altneuland by the translator, Nahum Sokolov. This name, which comes from Ezekiel 3:15, means tell—an ancient mound formed when a town is built on its own debris for thousands of years—of spring. The name was later applied to the new town built outside of Jaffa, which went on to become the second-largest city in Israel. Nearby is Herzlia, named in honor of Herzl.
Herzl's grandfathers, both of whom he knew, were more closely related to traditional Judaism than his parents, yet two of his paternal grandfather's brothers and his maternal grandmother's brother exemplify complete estrangement and rejection of Judaism on the one hand, and utter loyalty and devotion to Judaism and Eretz Israel. Herzl's paternal grandfather Simon Loeb Herzl, reportedly attended the Sephardic Zionist Rabbi Judah Alkalai's synagogue in Semlin, Serbia, and the two frequently visited. Grandfather Simon Loeb Herzl "had his hands on" one of the first copies of Alkalay's 1857 work prescribing the "return of the Jews to the Holy Land and renewed glory of Jerusalem." Contemporary scholars conclude that Herzl's own implementation of modem Zionism was undoubtedly influenced by that relationship.[7] Herzl’s grandparents' graves in Semlin can still be visited.[8] Alkalai himself, was witness to the rebirth of Serbia from Ottoman rule in the early and mid 19th century, and was inspired by the Serbian uprising and subsequent re-creation of Serbia.
Jacob Herzl (1835-1902), Theodor's father, was a highly successful businessman. Herzl's mother, Jeanette (née Diamant) was a handsome and wise woman. She took pride in her son, but did not have a successful relationship with her daughter-in-law. Herzl had one sister, Pauline, a year older than he was, who died suddenly on February 7, 1878 of typhus.[9] Theodor lived with his family in a house next to the Dohány Street Synagogue (formerly known as Tabakgasse Synagogue) located in Belváros, the inner city of the historical old town of Pest, in the eastern section of Budapest[10][11]. The remains of Herzl's parents and sister were re-buried on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.
In 1889 he married Julie Naschauer, daughter of a wealthy Jewish businessman in Vienna. The marriage was unhappy, although three children were born to it. Herzl had a strong attachment to his mother, who was unable to get along with his wife. These difficulties were increased by the political activities of his later years, in which his wife took little interest.[12]
All three children died tragically.
Pauline suffered from mental illness and drug addiction. She died in 1930 at the age of 40, apparently of a morphine overdose. Hans, a converted Catholic, committed suicide (gunshot) the day of sister Pauline's funeral.[13] He was 39. In 2006 the remains of Pauline and Hans were moved from Bordeaux, France, and placed alongside their father.,[14] .[15]
The youngest daughter, Trude Margarethe, (officially Margarethe, 1893-1943) married Richard Neumann. He lost his fortune in the economic depression. He was burdened by the steep costs of hospitalizing Trude, who was mentally ill, and was finding it difficult to raise the money required to send his son Stephan, 14, to a boarding school in London. After spending many years in hospitals, Trude was taken by the Nazis to Theresienstadt where she died. Her body was burned.[13]
Trude's son (Herzl's only grandchild), Stephan Theodor Neumann (1918-1946) was sent to England, 1937-1938, for his safety, as rabid Austrian anti-Semitism grew. In England, he read extensively about his grandfather. Stephan became an ardent Zionist. He was the only immediate descendant of Herzl to be a Zionist. Anglicizing his name to Stephen Norman, during WWII, Norman enlisted in the British Army rising to the rank of Captain in the Royal Artillery. In late 1945 and early 1946, he took the opportunity to visit the British Mandate of Palestine "to see what my grandfather had started." He wrote in his diary extensively about his trip. What impressed him the most was that there was a "look of freedom" in the faces of the children, not like the sallow look of those from the concentration camps of Europe. He wrote upon leaving Palestine, "My visit to Palestine is over... It is said that to go away is to die a little. And I know that when I went away from Erez Israel, I died a little. But sure, then, to return is somehow to be reborn. And I will return."
Once discharged from the military in Britain, he took a minor position with a British Economic and Scientific mission in Washington, D.C. in Autumn 1946, where he learned that his family had been exterminated. He became deeply depressed over the fate of his family and the seemingly eternal suffering of the Jews, continuing with the survivors of the Holocaust languishing in European displaced persons camps. Unable to endure the suffering any further, he jumped from the Massachusetts Avenue Bridge in Washington, D.C. to his death. Norman was buried by the Jewish Agency in Washington, D.C. His tombstone reads simply, 'Stephen Theodore Norman, Captain Royal Artillery British Army, Grandson of Theodore Herzl, April 21, 1918 - November 26, 1946'.[16] Norman was the only member of Herzl's family to have been to Palestine. He loved the land and the people. A major Zionist effort is underway to return the last descendant and only Zionist in Herzl's family to be reburied with his family on Mt. Herzl on December 5, 2007.
Herzl Tivadar Pesten született egy Dohány utcai házban. Itt ma a Zsidó Múzeum és a nagy zsinagóga egyik fő épületszárnya van. A múzeum falán emléktábla őrzi, hogy itt született a Zsidó Állam megálmodója.
A politikus és író, a Zsidó Állam megálmodója, a cionista politika atyja, a Cionista Világszervezet megalapítója neológ zsidó légkörben nevelkedett. Középiskolai tanulmányait a Budapesti Evangélikus Gimnáziumban fejezte be.
1878-ban családjával Bécsbe költözött, ahol az egyetemen jogot és irodalmat tanult. 1884-ben szerzett jogi doktorátust. 1891-ben a Neue Freie Presse c. bécsi lap párizsi tudósítója lett.

Párizsban érte az igazi nagy megrázkódtatás: ő tudósította lapját a Dreyfus-ügyről és megtapasztalta a per kapcsán erőteljesen megnyilvánuló antiszemitizmust.
Az első cionista kongresszust, amely 1897-ben volt, Herzl Tivadar szervezte és ez később elnökévé választotta. Ezt a tisztséget haláláig viselte. Útjának elején kudarcok érték, amikor megpróbálta rávenni a leggazdagabb zsidókat, hogy támogassák a cionista elképzelések megvalósítását. A siker akkor következett be, amikor a kelet-európai zsidó tömegek felé fordult, akik igent mondtak kezdeményezésére és elfogadták őt vezetőnek.
Apja mellé temették Döblingben, de földi maradványait – végakaratának megfelelően – 1950-ben Izraelbe vitték és Jeruzsálemben temették el.
Herzl és Heltai Jenő unokatestvérek voltak.

2009. január 15., csütörtök

Harvey Keitel

Harvey Keitel (born 13 May 1939) is an Academy Award-nominated American actor whose latest work is that of Detective Lieutenant Gene Hunt on ABC's crime drama "Life on Mars". He is widely known for the "tough-guy" characters he portrays and for his memorable roles from Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, Martin Scorsese's Mean Streets and Taxi Driver, Ridley Scott's The Duellists and Thelma and Louise, Jane Campion's The Piano and Abel Ferrara's Bad Lieutenant.
Keitel was born in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, the son of Miriam and Harry Keitel, Jewish immigrants from Romania and Poland.[1][2] His parents owned and ran a luncheonette and his father also worked as a hatmaker.[1][3]
Keitel grew up in the Brighton Beach section of Brooklyn with his sister, Renee, and brother, Jerry. He attended Abraham Lincoln High School (New York). At the age of sixteen, he decided to join the United States Marine Corps, a decision that took him to Lebanon. After his return to the United States, he was a court reporter and was able to support himself before beginning his acting career.
Keitel studied under both Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg and at the HB Studio, eventually landing roles in some off-Broadway productions. During this time, Keitel met struggling filmmaker Martin Scorsese and gained a part in Scorsese's student production, Who's That Knocking at My Door. Since then, Scorsese and Keitel have worked together on numerous projects. Keitel had the starring role in Scorsese's Mean Streets but this proved to be Robert De Niro's breakthrough film. He later appeared with De Niro in Taxi Driver, playing the role of Jodie Foster's pimp.
Originally, Keitel was to have played the role of Captain Willard in Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now; however, he was fired early in the production and replaced by Martin Sheen. After this, it was many years before he would be able to get anything other than minor roles. At the end of the 1970s, Keitel was mostly working in European films for directors such as Ridley Scott, usually in sinister character parts.
Throughout the 1980s, Keitel continued to find plenty of work on both stage and screen, but was usually in the stereotypical role of a thug. This role reached its zenith when Keitel starred in Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs in 1992, where his performance as "Mr. White" relaunched his semi-slumping career. Ridley Scott also helped Keitel by casting him as the sympathetic policeman in Thelma and Louise in 1991. That same year he landed a role in Bugsy, for which he obtained an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Since then, Keitel has chosen his roles with care, seeking to change his image and show off a broader acting range. One of those roles was the title character in Bad Lieutenant, about a self-loathing police lieutenant trying to redeem himself. His decision to co-star in Jane Campion's The Piano marks the approximate beginning of this phase of Keitel's career. He played an efficient clean-up expert Winston Wolf in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. In 1996 he landed a major role in Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's film, From Dusk Till Dawn, and in 1997 he starred in the crime drama Cop Land, which also starred Sylvester Stallone, Ray Liotta, and Robert De Niro. Later roles include the fatherly Satan in Little Nicky, a wise Navy man in U-571, and diligent F.B.I. agent Sadusky in National Treasure. In 1999, Keitel was replaced by Sydney Pollack on the set of Eyes Wide Shut, due to scheduling conflicts. He has shown a willingness to help other start-up filmmakers by appearing in their first feature film. He did this not only for Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino, but also Ridley Scott (The Duellists), Paul Schrader (Blue Collar), James Toback (Fingers), and Tony Bui (Three Seasons).
He also appeared in the Steinlager Pure commercials in New Zealand in 2007. Unlike many American male actors who either never appear nude in film or only do so once, Keitel has appeared nude in several films, including full frontal nudity in Bad Lieutenant and The Piano.
In January 2008, Keitel played Jerry Springer in the New York City premiere of Jerry Springer: The Opera at Carnegie Hall.[citation needed] It was announced in July 2008 that Keitel had been cast in the role of Detective Gene Hunt in ABC's new series Life on Mars.[4]
In 2002 at the Moscow International Film Festival Keitel was honored with the Stanislavsky Award for the outstanding achievement in the career of acting and devotion to the principles of Stanislavsky's school.
Keitel was formerly in a long-term relationship to actress Lorraine Bracco. He married actress Daphna Kastner in 2001. Keitel is the father of three children: daughter Stella (born 1985) from his relationship with Bracco; son Hudson (born 2001) from his relationship with Lisa Karmazin; and son Roman (born 2003) from his marriage to Kastner. He is godfather of close friend Michael Madsen's son Max.
A Keitel családban 1939. május 13-án született meg a harmadik gyermek, akit Harveynak neveztek el. A família Brooklynban élt, a Brighton Beach-en volt egy kis lakásuk. A környéken olaszok, írek és zsidók éltek, Keitelék az utóbbi kisebbséghez tartoztak. A papa lengyel volt, kalapkészítőként dolgozott, a mama egy gyorsétkezdében volt felszolgáló. Harvey ebben a környezetben cseperedett fel, a hithű askenázi zsidók életét élte egészen addig, amíg barátaival fel nem fedezték a vidámpark nyújtotta szórakozásokat, és be nem surrantak a mozikba, hogy végignézzék a vasárnapi matinékat. Keitel gyakran emlegeti, hogy amikor Manhattanben járt, attól félt, hogy az utcákat elárasztja a láva vagy más természeti katasztrófa következik be, ahogy a moziban látta.
Aztán tizenévesen belefeledkezett a nagy férfisztárok alakításaiba, James Dean vagy Marlon Brando egyfajta ideállá váltak számára, a szülők legnagyobb megbotránkozására. Az ő világuk szűkebb volt, s Harvey ki akart törni ebből. Szakközépiskolás korában népszerű volt, osztályelnökké választották, de elégedetlen tanárnője új szavazást rendelt el, ami persze az ő szája íze szerint alakult. Keitel egy ideig dühöngött, aztán iskolát került, végül kicsapták. 16 évesen belépett a haditengerészethez. Ott szerzett barátai tülekedtek azért, hogy az ebédlőben mellé ülhessenek, ugyanis azonnal nem volt képes megszabadulni a kóser étkezési szokásoktól, és a felszolgált tejet mindig szomszédai kortyolgatták.
Leszerelés után Harvey többféle pénzkereseti lehetőséggel próbálkozott. Éveken át bírósági rajzoló volt - mivel az amerikai tárgyalótermekben tilos fényképezni -, majd női cipőket adott el, végül beiratkozott az Actor's Studióba. Stella Adler és Lee Strasberg láthatott valamit benne, akárkit nem vettek volna a szárnyaik alá. Harvey 1965-ben észrevett egy újsághirdetést, amelyben egy New York-i filmrendező keresett szereplőket első filmjéhez, a Who's That Knocking At My Door? című produkcióhoz. Az illetőt Martin Scorsesének hívták. Ez volt a kezdete Keitel és Scorsese hosszú, gyümölcsöző együttműködésének. Ám addig még meg kellett szereznie a színészi gyakorlatot. Off-off-off-Broadway kávéházakban és kisebb színpadokon lépett fel. Aztán megint Scorsesével forgatott, a rendező kevésbé ismert dokumentumfilmjében, a Street Scenes-ben tűnt fel. Harmadik közös filmjük, az Aljas utcák ismertté tette Keitelt, a kulturális örökségével küszködő amerikai olasz - Scorsese alteregója - megszemélyesítése könnyen ment a lengyel-román gyökerekkel rendelkező színésznek. Az Alice már nem lakik itt és A taxisofőr szintén lehetőséget nyújtott Harvey tehetségének demonstrálására. Sikeres lett, de ez nem jelentette azt, hogy mindent megengedhet magának.
Ugyan Francis Ford Coppola őt szemelte ki az Apokalipszis most főszerepére, Keitel összekülönbözött a rendezővel, aki a forgatás kezdete előtt elzavarta őt a Fülöp-szigetekről, és Martin Sheen vette át a szerepet. Harvey nem vette szívére a dolgot, inkább igent mondott Ridley Scott felkérésére, és a Joseph Conrad regényéből készült Párbajhősök-ben nyújtott jelentős alakítást. Ezután elkerülték a főszerepek és mintegy tíz éven át nem sikerült megint reflektorfénybe kerülnie. Húsz filmben játszott, három színdarabban lépett fel, aztán megint Scorsese következett, aki Júdás szerepére kérte fel a Krisztus utolsó megkísértése című filmjében. A mozi nagy botrányt kavart, a Jézust alakító Willem Dafoe és Keitel egyaránt értetlenül álltak a klerikális támadások kereszttüzében. Harvey viszont megint felhívta magára a figyelmet, ennek köszönhetően olyan filmekben játszott, mint a Thelma és Louise, a Bugsy és az Öldöklő vágyak. Aztán megint egy elsőfilmes direkt0orral működött együtt, Quentin Tarantino Kutyaszorítóban című filmjében nemcsak játszott, hanem társproducer is volt, s neki köszönhetően a mozi költségvetése 35 ezer dollárról 400 ezerre emelkedett. Abel Ferrara Mocskos zsaru című filmjében nyújtott alakítása kiváltotta a kritikusok elismerését is, majd Keitel azt is bebizonyította, hogy nemcsak negatív figurákat tud kiválóan életre kelteni, hanem rejtőzik benne némi romantika is. A zongoralecke-ben egy Új-Zélandon élő skót telepest játszik, aki szenvedélyesen beleszeret egy néma asszonyba. Aztán megint karakter váltott, Tarantino Ponyvaregény-ében hűvös machót alakított. A színész nem rajong a főszerepekért, számos független filmben is szerepet vállalt, amik nem hoztak annyi pénzt a konyhára, viszont művészi kihívást jelentettek számára, mint például Wayne Wang Füst-jének trafiktulajdonosa. Spike Lee Nepperek-jében ugyan főszereplő volt, ám a forgatókönyv kevés lehetőséget nyújtott számára, így improvizálással egészítette ki a figurát.
Keitel magánélete egy ideig jól alakult. 1992-ben összeköltözött Lorraine Bracco színésznővel, a kapcsolat tíz évig tartott, de nem házasodtak össze. A szakítás nem volt barátságosnak nevezhető, ugyanis nagy harc folyt a lányukért. Harvey azt állította, hogy Bracco barátja, Edward James Olmos színész molesztálta Stellát, s végül a bíróság döntése szerint Olmos csak egy másik felnőtt társaságában lehetett együtt a gyerekkel... Keitel ezután Andie McDowell-lel randevúzgatott, közelebbi kapcsolatba került Lisa Karmazin keramikussal, akitől 2001 nyarán Hudson fia született, ám 2001 szeptemberében a torontói filmfesztiválon találkozott Daphne Kastnerrel, s ez szerelem volt az első látásra. A pár három héttel később Jeruzsálemben egy titkos szertartás keretében kötött házasságot.Harvey Keitelt nemcsak filmből lehet ismerni, hanem 2000 óta reklámból is, ugyanis a színészt sikerült megnyerni a Johnny Walker kampányhoz, amelynek keretében whiskyt népszerűsít.
Keitel Szabó Istvánnal is dolgozott együtt a Szembesítés-ben, amelyben amerikai tisztet alakít, aki a híres német karmester, Wilhelm Furtwängler ügyét vizsgálja a II. világháború utáni Berlinben. A színész következő filmje a The Limit című politikai thriller lesz, amelyben angol ügyvédet alakít, aki belekeveredik a szerb föld alatti mozgalomba.

2009. január 10., szombat

Nick Carter

Nickolas Gene Carter (born January 28, 1980) is an American actor, musician, and pop singer. He is a member of the musical group The Backstreet Boys and the older brother of Aaron Carter.
Carter was born in Jamestown, New York,[1] the son of Jane E.(née Spaulding) and Robert Gene Carter. His siblings include Angel, Leslie, Bobbie Jean (nickname: BJ), and singer Aaron. He also has an older half-sister named Ginger from his father's first marriage. Carter's father, Robert Eugene Carter, is a Jewish American and his mother, Jane E. Spaulding, is a Mayflower descendant of Welsh, Irish, German, English and 1/4 Blackfoot ancestry.
Several years later, the family moved to Ruskin, Florida and managed a retirement home where they added his younger siblings to their family.[2] Carter began auditioning for acting roles in the early 1990s, and appeared in many commercials. He later made a tiny background appearance in Edward Scissorhands (1990). Look for him, he's the kid on the slip and slide. It is said that in several auditions, Nick met AJ McLean and Howie Dorough and they became friends.
Later, the three friends formed a mini-vocal group and started seeking a manager. As they found him, Lou Pearlman, he thought it most appropriate to seek for a fourth member. This was the chance for Kevin Richardson, who brought his cousin Brian with him. At the beginning, there was no success in the United States, even though the first single had been a hit on Orlando radio stations. Lou then marketed the Backstreet Boys in Europe, where they became commercially successful in 1996.
The Backstreet Boys became hugely popular in Europe and the United States in the late 1990s, and Carter gained fame, becoming known as the "heartthrob" of the group. He is the youngest, joining the group at twelve years old.
In 1999, he was ranked #1 on the list of "Hottest Teen People Under 21" by Teen People magazine and was named "The Biggest Teen Idol" by Teen People magazine. He was also named one of People magazines "50 Most Beautiful People in the World" in 2000, and voted CosmoGirl's Sexiest Man in the World" in 2002.

Carter attempted a career as a solo artist in 2002, when he released Now Or Never. The album reached #17 on Billboard 200 and was certified gold. That same year, Carter was named "The Sexiest Man in the World" in a CosmoGirl Magazine poll conducted by its readers. Carter has also returned to his acting career. He appeared opposite Kevin Zegers in the 2004 horror film, The Hollow, made two appearances on the TV show "8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter", and also appeared on "American Dreams".

Nick Carter began work on his second solo album in 2003, but the recordings were aborted when the Backstreet Boys returned to the studio. One of the tracks from the earlier recording sessions was used as the theme song to the House of Carters. "Let It Go" was written by Nick Carter, Matthew Gerrard, and Bridget Louise Benenate.[3] He is now back in the studio in Nashville, and working on his second album. Nick is working with songwriter Toby Gad responsable for the worldwide hit Big Girls Don't Cry. No release date was announced.

Carter and his siblings starred in a reality television show, House of Carters, which premiered in October 2006 on E!. The series features all five Carter siblings reuniting to live in the same house, as well as feature in-depth moments of their ups and downs.[4] The first season of HoC had 8 episodes, and Carter has since said the show will not seek another season.
Carter is currently (May 2007) filming independent movie Fast Glass with Brandon Quinn, Andrew Keegan, Natalia Cigliuti, Greg Grunberg, and Reno Wilson. The movie is directed by Kim Bass and produced by Dave Riggs and Desiree Jellerette.[5] It's slated for release in 2008.

Nick Carter was announced as the new Special Ambassador for the Year of the Dolphin (YoD) on May 17, 2007. He was to record a new song and video with all proceeds going to this project, and also make a public service announcement and appear at local schools.

Carter has dated and been linked with many famous and infamous women in the entertainment industry, including Asun Ortega, Isabell Filling, Angi Taylor, Paris Hilton, Dalene Kurtis, Lexi Marie, Kaya Jones, Julie Bornemann, and Ashlee Simpson and a long term relationship with Julia Kocanski.
On September 29, 2006, Carter claimed on The Howard Stern Show that he lost his virginity to Debra Lafave when they were classmates.[7]
On June 12, 2007, Kathy Griffin discussed her date with Nick Carter on Tyra. She jokingly alleged that he was illiterate and they showed him not being able to read the menu. However, he has been photographed reading books like The Da Vinci Code, and notes James Redfield's classic bestseller "The Celestine Prophecy" as one of his favorites.
Nicholas Gene Carter (Született: 1980. január 28), amerikai színész, zenész és pop énekes. Tagja a Backstreet Boys együttesnek, Aaron Carter bátyja.

Nick a New York állambeli Jamestownban született,[1] Jane Spaulding és Robert Gene Carter fia. Testvérei: Bobbie Jean (beceneve: BJ), Leslie, és az ikrek Aaron és Angel. Féltestvére: Ginger, édesapja első házasságából. Néhány évvel később a család a floridai Ruskinba költözött, ahol a szülők egy idősek otthonát vezettek. [2] Már kiskorában is szeretett szerepelni. Első szereplése Az operaház fantomjának főszerepe volt.[3] Megnyert néhány tehetségkutató versenyt, és énekelt a Tampa Bay Buccaneers futballjátékokon. Játszott TV reklámokban. Első filmszerepét az Ollókezű Edward című filmben kapta 1990-ben. Nemsokára találkozott AJ Mcleannel és Howie Dorough-al akikkel hamar összebarátkozott.

Később a három barát egy A capella csapatot alapított. Lou Pearlman menedzselte őket. Kis idő elteltével csatlakozott a csapathoz Kevin Richardson, aki magával hozta unokatestvérét Brian Littrellt. Kezdetben nem arattak nagy sikert az Egyesült Államokban, de menedzserük javaslatára 1996-ban Európában kezdtek koncertezni, ahol hatalmas rajóngótáboruk lett.

2002-ben szóló karrierbe kezdett és megjelent Now or Never című albuma, amely a Billboard 200-as listán a 17. helyig tornászta fel magát. Még ugyan ebben az évben elnyerte a "Legszexisebb férfi a Világon" címet a Cosmogirl magazin olvasói jóvoltából. Visszatért színészi karrierjéhez is. Kevin Zegers rendezte "The Hollow" című horror filmben játszotta Brody szerepét.

Nick belekezdett második lemeze felvételeibe, de ez félbeszakadt, mivel a Backstreet Boys újra összeállt és stúdióba vonult.

Nick és testvérei elindítottak egy valóságshow-t Carterék háza címmel, amit 2006 októberében kezdte vetíteni az amerikai E! csatorna. A show 1 évadból állt, ami 8 részt tartalmazott. Szerepet kapott a "Fast Glass" című filmben, amit 2007-ben kezdtek forgatni. Olyan neves színészekkel játszik együtt, mint Brandon Quinn, Andrew Keegan, Natalia Cigliuti, Greg Grunberg, és Reno Wilson. A filmet Kim Bass rendezte, a producerek Dave Riggs és Desiree Jellerette voltak.

Nicknek sok barátnője volt a szórakoztatóiparból, köztük Willa Ford, Asun Ortega, Paris Hilton, Dalene Curtis és Ashlee Simpson.
2006 szeptember 29-én a "The Howard Stern Show"-ban elmesélte, hogyan vesztette el szüzességét Debra LaFavé-vel, aki az osztálytársa volt.
PageRank Kereső optimalizálás
 
PageRank Kereső optimalizálás