Cornel Lengyel, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Cornel Lengyel

American writer and historian

Date of Birth: 02-Jan-1914

Place of Birth: Fairfield, Connecticut, United States

Date of Death: 12-Mar-2003

Profession: poet, historian

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Capricorn


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About Cornel Lengyel

  • Cornel Adam Lengyel (January 2, 1914 – March 12, 2003) was an American poet, historian, playwright and translator.
  • He received the Maxwell Anderson Award in 1950 for his play The Atom Clock. What would a writer convey through his work? His vision of life: his response to the oddity, terror, humor, beauty, pathos, or grandeur of experience.
  • He would renew our original sense of wonder at the mystery of things and speak in a human voice fittingly of man's mortal adventures amid the immortal dance of the elements. — Cornel Adam Cornel Adam (Lengyel) was born in Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1915.
  • In 1920, his family moved to Budafok, Hungary.
  • Cornel became fluent in Magyar.
  • In 1922, his family moved to Cleveland, Ohio.
  • In 1925, his family moved to Hollywood. In 1930, he won a $500 award for his prize essay on Les Miserables in an international competition.
  • In 1933, his first book of poems Thirty Pieces was published.
  • These early successes set the stage for a life of poetry and letters.
  • He said, much later in life, “The most improbable, impractical thing I can think of is being a poet.
  • Yet I am still writing poetry.
  • It's like an adolescent vice.
  • It persists through life.” In 1935, his first poetic drama The World's My Village won the Berkeley Playcrafters Production Prize and was later published in Poet Lore.
  • From 1937, as playwright for the Federal Theatre, his Bridge-Builders was performed with chorus and symphony at the Veterans' Auditorium in San Francisco.
  • In 1939 and 1940 he worked for the WPA on the History of Music in San Francisco series. During World War Two he served in several capacities: with the U.
  • S.
  • Office of Censorship, in the Uncommon Language Department, as chief examiner for a year; as shipwright in the Kaiser Shipyards, he helped build the world’s fastest constructed Liberty vessel, the Robert E.
  • Peary.
  • He was active as staff officer in the U.
  • S.
  • Merchant Marine.
  • While overseas, he won the Maritime Poetry Award, first prize in an international contest; the late William Rose Benet read his verse over CBS. In 1945, he was recipient of the Albert M.
  • Bender Literary Award for a group of two dozen short stories.
  • He worked as a fire lookout and, in July 1945, saw the refracted light from the first atomic test.
  • In 1946, he fled the city for eighty acres in the woods of El Dorado Forest near Georgetown, California.
  • In 1950, his poetic drama The Atom Clock won the Maxwell Anderson Award.
  • Selections of the play were featured in the Saturday Review of Literature.
  • In 1951 (and again in 1963), he was awarded a Resident Fellowship in Literature at the Huntington Hartford Foundation in Pacific Palisades. From 1952 to 1954 he worked as an editor for the W.H.
  • Freeman company.
  • From 1962 to 1963, he was a visiting lecturer at Sacramento State.
  • In 1967, he was a MacDowell Colony resident.
  • From 1968 to 1969, he was a writer in residence at Hamline University, St.
  • Paul.
  • In 1969, he was an Ossabaw Island Foundation fellow, and also a guest lecturer at MIT.
  • In 1969, he founded Dragon's Teeth Press and continued as executive editor, publishing works of poetry, fiction, and plays.
  • In 1971, he was awarded the Castagnola prize from the Poetry Society of America for the in-progress Latter Day Psalms.
  • In 1976, he was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship. He continued to write poetry, history, and philosophical essays.
  • He also continued to publish the works of other poets and writers in Dragon's Teeth Press.
  • He died in 2003.

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