Mikis
Theodorakis: A Man of Peace
A
Biography by Gail Holst
Mikis Theodorakis was born on the island
of Chios in 1925. He spent his childhood in various towns in the Greek
countryside, where he became familiar with folk music and the music
of the Greek Orthodox Church. In the Peloponnesian) town of Tripolis,
where he spent his teenage years, he heard his first piece of symphonic
music, Beethoven’s ninth symphony, and decided to become a composer.
In Tripolis, Theodorakis
also began his lifelong struggle for freedom. The Second World War
had begun and Tripolis was occupied by the Italians.
Youth in Tripolis
The seventeen-year old
composer took part in a massive protest on the 25th of March, the
anniversary of the Greek struggle for independence from Turkey, by
laying a wreath at the statue of the revolutionary hero Kolokotronis.
He was arrested for the first time and tortured but managed to escape
to Athens.
In Athens, Theodorakis
registered at the conservatorium of music to study composition. At
the same time he joined E.A.M., the largest of the resistance organisations
to the German occupation. For the remainder of the war he took an
active part in the resistance while continuing his studies in composition.
During the years of the
Greek Civil War (1945-48) Theodorakis continued his political activities.
He spent these years either in hiding or in prison camps. Arrested
several times and severely tortured, he struggled to continue his
musical activities. His first symphony was composed on the notorious
prison island of Makronissos. It was also during these years that
he became interested in folk music and the popular Greek music known
as rebetika.
Despite the terrible conditions
of Makronissos, where supporters of the Left were tortured and killed
for their beliefs, it was here that Theodorakis began his lifelong
struggle to effect a reconciliation between the opposing sides of
the Civil War.
Paris
Years
In 1954 Theodorakis graduated from the Athens Conservatorium, and
was awarded a scholarship to Paris. He entered the Paris Conservatoire,
studying composition with Olivier Messiaen and conducting with Eugene
Bigot. His talent was immediately recognized. He received commissions
for film scores and ballet music and in 1959 his ballet “Antigone”
was presented at Covent Garden.
The Ballet Antigone in London 59
He seemed poised for international stardom as a classical composer.
It was then that one of Greece’s leading poets, Yannis Ritsos, sent
Theodorakis a sequence of poems called “Epitafios”, poems inspired
by the death of a young tobacco worker in a strike. Theodorakis set
the poems to music in a single day making use of elements from Greek
popular, folk and ecclesiastical music. He also made up his mind to
return to Greece and immerse himself in its troubled politics.
Activism
and Music in the 1960’s
1960 marked the beginning of a very productive period for Theodorakis.
He began setting Greek poetry to music and creating a new wave of
sophisticated popular song. Other young composers were encouraged
to follow the lead an exciting new wave of Greek music began.
In 1963, Grigoris Lambrakis,
a socialist deputy of the Greek parliament, was murdered under circumstances
that left no doubt that high officials of the police, army and government
were involved. Although Theodorakis had never taken an active role
in party politics up to this point, he was convinced to stand for
election. Elected a deputy of the United Left Party in 1964, he
was also made president of the Lambrakis Youth Movement (Lambrakides).
Head of the Lambrakides
He began to struggle for democratic rights, peace and disarmament.
At the same time he was attempting to bring about a cultural renaissance,
and to institute democratic reforms within his party. It was during
these years that he established the basis of his lifelong popularity
with Greeks from all walks of life. As a parliamentary deputy, Theodorakis
travelled to Cyprus to meet Archbishop Makarios and discuss ways to
find a solution to the Cyprus problem.
In 1964 Theodorakis presented
his dream of a rapprochement between the two sides who had fought
the Civil War to the Greek public in the form of a musical play: “The
Song of the Dead Brother.” In the still-bitter aftermath of the war,
his revolutionary work was attacked by all parties.
The
Military Dictatorship (1967-74)
Theodorakis’s musical and political attempts to break down the divisions
in Greek society were interrupted by the military dictatorship that
took control of Greece in April, 1967. One of the first acts of
the new regime was to place a ban on Theodorakis’s work. Knowing
he would be an immediate target, he went underground and issued
an appeal for opposition to the regime. Soon after, he was elected
president of the first opposition organization (The Patriotic Front).
In hiding, and later in prison he continued to compose. In 1968
Theodorakis was placed under house arrest in an isolated village
in the Peloponnese. Even from there he managed to smuggle messages
of resistance and musical scores to the outside world. He also composed
a series of song cycles based on the work of Greek poets. Theodorakis
was transferred again to the prison camp of Oropos where his health
began to deteriorate alarmingly.
At the Concentration Camp of Oropos
Committees had been formed in many countries by prominent people to
secure his release: 21 members of the Academy of Arts in Berlin (Berliner
Akademie der Künste) sent a petition to the Greek minister of
Interior signed by Igor Stravinsky, Boris Blacher, Pierre Boulez,
Luigi Dallapiccola, Johann Nepomuk David, Paul Dessau, Wolfgang Fortner,
Hans Werner Henze, Giselher Klebe, Ernst Krenek, Rolf Liebermann,
Ernst Pepping, Bernd Alois Zimmermann e.a. In a U.S.A. Committee for
his liberation there were personalities such as Leonard Bernstein,
Arthur Miller, Edward Albee, Harry Belafonte, Arthur Schlesinger jr.,
e.a., and a Committee in USSR was conducted by Dmitri Shostakovitch.
International pressure
for his release mounted and he was allowed to leave for Paris in 1970.
Theodorakis immediately
began touring the world giving concerts, holding press conferences
and meetings with political leaders and other world figures in an
effort to bring about the restoration of democracy in Greece. At the
same time he tried to bring about the unification of the divided Greek
leftist parties and urged co-operation between all the opposition
forces. At his concerts he gave an opportunity for many oppressed
peoples - Kurds, Chileans and Palestinians among them - to express
their grievances. Above all he stressed the need for a solution to
the Cyprus problem.
In 1972 he toured Israel
for a month. He also visited Beirut, bringing a message from the Israeli
Prime Minister to. Mr. Arafat, in an attempt to assist peace efforts
in the area. His work “Mauthausen” based on the poetry of Iakovos
Kambanellis, a Greek interned in the concentration camp, became extremely
popular in Israel. At the same time, he responded to a Palestinian
request to compose a hymn expressing their legitimate struggle for
a homeland. Many years later, when Israeli and Palestinian leaders
met for the first time in Scandinavia, they asked Theodorakis not
only to be present at the ceremony, but to perform these two compositions
in appreciation of his contribution to the struggle for peace.
The great solidarity shown
by the Scandinavian people to the Greeks in their effort to restore
democracy to their country brought Theodorakis very close to the people
of all Scandinavian countries. Many concerts of his work took place
there with Scandinavian performers. His works like "Axion Esti", a
setting of the Nobel Prize winning poet Odysseus Elytis and "Canto
General" by another Nobel Prize winner, Pablo Neruda, became part
of the repertoire of dozens of choirs.
With Pablo Neruda in Paris 1972
In Sweden Theodorakis was
linked by personal friendship to Prime Minister, Olof Palme. It was
characteristic that when Palme was murdered, at his simple funeral
a single piece of music was played, according to his wishes: Theodorakis'
"Hymn to Freedom".
Failing in his attempt
to create a National Opposition Council to the dictatorship, Theodorakis
concluded that the only hope of bringing down the dictatorship would
be the formation of a civilian government with former conservative
leader Constantine Karamanlis as president. A year later, this solution,
which had seemed impossible at the time he suggested it, came true.
Under the pressure of its internal problems, international outcry
and above all the tragedy in Cyprus, the military regime invited Karamanlis
to return from Paris and handed over power to him in July 1974.
Post-dictatorship Greece
Theodorakis returned to a hero’s welcome in Greece, where ten thousand
people gathered at the airport to meet him.
Back in Greece
He gave his first concerts
in stadiums filled with people, many of whom wept as they listened
to his old songs and to songs composed during the dictatorship years.
Politically, this was a difficult period for Theodorakis, who was
attacked by the Left for seeming to have turned towards the Right.
In fact he realized the fragility of the new democracy and was anxious
to preserve it. At the same time, he put all his efforts into uniting
the leftist party.
In 1976 Theodorakis formed
the Movement for Culture and Peace, and toured Greece giving concerts
and holding discussions. Many young people, irrespective of their
political orientation, were organized in this movement, but it did
not last.
In 1977 in Crete Theodorakis
organized a conference with the title "Culture and Socialism" in which
such world figures as Francois Mitterrand) and Roger Garaudy participated.
Theodorakis’s differences
of opinion with the political parties on the Left, particularly the
Greek Communist Party, grew and in the 1980’s, frustrated in his efforts
to bring about reconciliation between factions, he devoted himself
to composing symphonic music.
The 1980’s and 90’s
In 1983 Theodorakis was awarded the Lenin Prize for Peace. He continued
composing symphonic and choral works and giving concerts, especially
abroad. He finished his first Opera “Kostas Kariotakis - The Metamorphosis
of Dionysus” which was performed in the Athens Opera House.
Following the accident
at the Chernobyl nuclear reactor, Theodorakis went on a European
tour giving concerts to oppose the use of atomic energy.
Among other countries,
he visited Turkey, which was facing severe problems in the abuses
of democracy and human rights. He had positive discussions with
writers, poets, musicians, and intellectuals.
The outcome was something
he had desired for a long time: two committees for Greek-Turkish
friendship were formed, one in Greece with him as the president
and one in Turkey with the participation of well-known intellectuals
and artists. During his concerts in Turkey, many of the young people
in the audience waved Turkish and Greek flags and called for an
end to the hostilities between the two countries. In Cyprus, the
two committees organized a demonstration together on the “green
line.”
With Zülfü Livaneli
Despite the fact that he was often under attack by the PASOK government
for his attempts to foster understanding between Greek and Turkey,
Theodorakis agreed to convey a message from the Greek Prime Minster
to his Turkish counterpart in 1988. He also met with other international
leaders to discuss the issue of Greek-Turkish relations.
Deeply concerned about
the corruption he saw around him during the later days of PASOK’s
administration, Theodorakis suggested that the conservative and
the leftist party combine to defeat PASOK. For the first time in
post-war Greek politics the two opposing sides of the civil war
co-operated to form a government under Tzanetakis. Theodorakis supported
the Conservative Party’s promise to reform the political life of
Greece, and when a deputy of the Party was assassinated by a Left-wing
terrorist group, he offered his support to conservative Prime Minister
Mitsotakis. He was elected as a deputy in 1989 and became a Minister
in the new cabinet.
He toured Europe giving concerts
for Human Rights and the solution of the Cyprus problem under the
auspices of Amnesty International. As a minister in the conservative
government he dealt with cultural and national issues. He visited
Turkey once more, where two leaders of the leftist party were on
trial. He attended the trial and joined Turkish democrats in the
struggle to gain their freedom. He also visited Albania to defend
for the rights of the Greek minority and to try to improve relations
between the two countries.
In this period Theodorakis
also suggested a Pan-European meeting at Delphi with the participation
of world leaders, philosophers, scientists and artists to discuss
the problem of peace, of post-industrial society and the third world
countries. He conceived the meeting at Delphi as an “Olympiad of
the Spirit,” a centre where every European country - and eventually
the countries of the rest of the world - would have a place of their
own, and where every year contests of poetry, music, theatre etc.
would be organized. This remains one of Theodorakis’s dreams, although
he did organize meetings in 1988 in Germany attended by well-known
European writers, philosophers, lawyers, politicians and artists,
where he discussed cultural and social problems within the European
community.
The Movement “Culture
for Peace” was founded following these Seminars and was inspired
by the ideas of Theodorakis.
Theodorakis also founded
a committee of intellectuals and artists to aid the Kurds, who were
facing genocide in Turkey. During the same period he sent a letter
to Arafat, condemning the terrorist actions in which Palestinians
seem to be involved, and appealing for a non-violent approach to
the Palestinian struggle. He was also a member of the committee
to free Nelson Mandela and for peace in South Africa.
In 1993, Theodorakis
took over the management of the Symphony Orchestra and Choir of
the Greek radio station. Touring with them, he was honoured by the
United States Senate for his services to culture and humanity.
In 1994, he toured Europe,
inspired by the efforts of the group “Physicians without Borders.
” He called his tour “Music Without Borders.” His third opera “Electra”
was given its world premiere in Luxembourg in 1995. In an attempt
to bring reconciliation between Greece and the Republic of Macedonia,
Theodorakis presented a concert in Skopje in 1997.
The same year he began
a tour in Europe with the Turkish composer Zülfü Livaneli,
but had to terminate the tour because of ill health. Nevertheless
a CD of the two composers called “Together” was released and distributed
throughout Europe.
In 1998 Theodorakis gave
concerts to mark the 100th anniversary of the “International Commission
for Human Rights”.
In 1999 Theodorakis made
an appeal against the NATO bombing of Serbia, which was carried
out without consultation with the United Nations.
Concert
for Peace in Kosovo, Athens 1999
He also gave a concert in Belgrade and met with Milosevic to discuss
the restoration of Peace in Kosovo. Following the disastrous earthquakes
in Turkey and Greece, he and Livaneli gave concerts in Greece and
Istanbul to benefit the victims of the quakes.
The world premiere of Theodorakis’s
opera “Antigone” was given in the Athens Concert Hall in October 1999.
With this opera he completed his trilogy based on classical tragedy.
Needless to say his opera stresses the eternal evils of civil strife
and the need for peace and reconciliation.
MIKIS
THEODORAKIS - THE CREATOR
Theodorakis
is engaged in all fields of music. His works include:
1.-
Operas:
Kostas Kariotakis - The Metamorphosis of Dionysus
Medea
Electra
Antigone
Lysistrata
2.-
Symphonic Music - Chamber Music:
3 Suites, 5 Symphonies (Symphony No.1, No.2, No.3, No.4 and No.7:
"Spring Symphony"), "Piano Concerto", "Rhapsody
for Guitar and Orchestra", " Rhapsody for Violoncello and Orchestra",
- " Elegy and Lament", "Oedip Tyrant", "Adagio", "Sinfonietta",
- "Syrtos Chaniotikos”, Trio, "Passacailles" for two Pianos,
"Preludes for Piano", "Little Suite for Piano", Sexteto,
Sonatine for Piano, 2 Sonatines for Violin and Piano, "Melos" for
Piano .
3.-
Oratorios - Cantatas - Metasymphonic Music:
"Margarita", "Axion Esti" [based on poetry of Odysseus Elytis
(Nobel Prize)], "Epifanie-Averof" [based on poetry of George Seferis
(Nobel Prize)], "State of Siege", "March of the Spirit" [based on
poetry of the great Greek poet Angelos Sikelianos], Arcadia VI",
"Arcadia VII- The Survivor", "Arcadia VIII", "Raven", "Saddoukeon
Passion", "Canto General" [based on poetry of Pablo Neruda (Nobel
Prize)], "Canto Olympico".
4.-
Sacred (Byzantine) music:
“I
Kassiani”, "Holy Mass" / "Missa Greca",
"Holy Litugy No.2: For the Children killed in wars", "Requiem".
5.-
Ballets:
"Greek Carnival", "Orpheus and Euridice", "Le feu aux poudres",
"Les Amants de Teruel", "Antigone", "Electra", "Zorba il Greco".
6.-
Music for Ancient Drama:
"Orestia" (Trilogy: "Agamemnon, "Hoifori", "Eumenides"), "Phoenician
Women", "Ajax", "Trojan Women", "Lysistrate", "Iketides", "Riders",
"Hecube", "Antigone", "Prometheus", Oedip the Tyrant", "Midea"
7.-
Music for Theater:
"The song of the dead brother", "The Hostage" [Brendan Behan],
"Kapodistrias" [Nikos Kazantzakis], "Columbus" [Nikos Kazantzakis],
"Sauspiel" [Martin Walser], "Macbeth" [Shakespeare], "Pericles"
[Shakespeare],
8.-
Music for Films:
"The barefoot batallion" (Grek Tallas), "Ill met by moonlight"
(Michael Powell), "Honeymoon"(Michael Powell), "The shadow
of the cat" (David Eady), "Phaedra" (Jules Dassin - Melina
Merkouri, Anthony Perkins, Raf Valone), "Electra" (Michael Cacoyannis
- Irene Papas), "Les amants de Teruel", " Five Miles to Midnight"
(Anatole Litvak - Sophia Loren, Anthony Perkins), "Zorba the
Greek" (Michael Cacoyannis - Anthony Quinn, Alan Bates, Irene Papas,
Lila Kedrova), "Aphrodite Island", "Une balle au coeur" (Jean Daniel
Pollet), "The day the fish came out" (Michael Cacoyannis), "The
Trojan Women" (Michael Cacoyannis - Catherine Hepburn, Vanessa Redgrave,
Irene Papas), "Biribi" (Daniel Moosman - Mouloudji), "Z" (Costa-Gavras
- Yves Montand, J.-Louis Trintignant, Jacques Perrin), Irene Papas),
""Etat de Siege" (Costa-Gavras -Yves Montand, Renato Salvatori,
O.E. Hasse),"Sutjeska-Tito" (Stipe Delic - Richard Burton, Irene
Papas), "Serpico" (Sidney Lumet - Al Pacino), "The
story of Jacob and Joseph" (Michael Cacoyannis), "Actas de
Marusia" (Miguel Littin - Gian Maria Volonte), "Iphigenia" (Michael
Cacoyannis - Irene Papas).
9.-
Cycles of Songs:
Theodorakis has written more than 1000 songs, mainly song-cycles
based on poetry of great poets, like Odysseus Elytis, George Seferis,
Angelos Sikelianos, Yannis Ritsos, Kostas Kariotakis, Pablo Neruda,
Leopold Senghor, F. G. Lorca.
Among others: “Eros ke Thanatos / Love and Death”, “O
Kyklos / The Circle”, “Les 10 Eluard / 10 songs on poems
by Paul Eluard” as cycles of lieder; "Epitaph",
"The Deserters”, "Politia", "Mauthausen",
"Epiphany", "Small Cyclades", "Romiosini",
"Romancero Gitano", "The songs of struggle",
"Sun and Time", "Mythology", "Night of
Death", "Three Negro songs", "18 little songs
of bitter Homeland", "Ballads", "Lyric songs",
"Salutations", "Radar", "Poem" (Karyotakis),
"Dionysus", "Phaedra", "Beatrice on zero
street", "Memory of stone", "Like an ancient
wind", "Poetica / Lyricotera", "Lyricotata",
as cycles of Greek songs.
.
Theodorakis
has also written more than 30 books, translated in many languages.
©
Gail Holst, 1999
Gail Holst on Theodorakis (E)
| EU on Theodorakis (E) | Chronology
(E) | Works (E)
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