García Lorca was born on 5 June 1898, in Fuente Vaqueros, a small town a few miles from Granada, southern Spain. His father owned a farm in the fertile vega surrounding Granada and a comfortable villa in the heart of the city. His mother was a gifted pianist. In 1909, his family moved to the city of Granada. In 1915, after graduating from secondary school, García Lorca attended Sacred Heart University. During this time his studies included law, literature, composition and piano. During 1916 and 1917, García Lorca traveled throughout Castile, Léon, and Galicia, in northern Spain, with a professor of his university, who also encouraged him to write his first book,
(Impressions and Landscapes — published 1918).
As a young writer
His time at Granada's Arts Club furnished him with influential associations that would prove useful following his move, in 1919, to the Residencia de estudiantes in Madrid. Here he would befriend Manuel de Falla, Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí and many other creative artists who were, or would become, influential across Spain. In Madrid, he met Gregorio Martínez Sierra, the Director of Madrid's Teatro Eslava. In 1919—20, at Sierra's invitation, he wrote and staged his first play,
El maleficio de la mariposa (The Butterfly's Evil Spell). It was a verse play dramatising the impossible love between a cockroach and a butterfly, with a supporting cast of other insects; it was laughed off stage by an unappreciative public after only four performances and influenced García Lorca's attitude to the theatre-going public for the rest of his career. He would later claim that
Mariana Pineda, written in 1927, was, in fact, his first play.
Early in 1922 at Granada García Lorca joined the composer Manuel de Falla in order to promote the Concurso de Cante Jondo, a festival dedicated to enhance flamenco performance. The year before Lorca had begun to write his
Poema del cante jondo (not published until 1931), so he naturally composed an essay on the art of flamenco, and began to speak publicly in support of the
Concurso. At the music festival in June he met the celebrated Manuel Torre, a flamenco cantaor. The next year in Granada he also collborated with Falla and others on the musical production of a play for children, adapted by Lorca from an Andalucian story.
Over the next few years García Lorca became increasingly involved in Spain's avant-garde. He published poetry collections including
Canciones (
Songs) and
Romancero Gitano (translated as
Gypsy Ballads, 1928), his best known book of poetry. The poem
Romance Sonámbulo (Ballad of the Sleepwalker), begins with the refrain:
Green, how I love you green.Green wind. Green branches.The ship out on the seaand the horse on the mountain.With the shade around her waistshe dreams on her balcony,green flesh, her hair green,with eyes of cold silver.Green, how I love you green[]
Verde que te quiero verde.Verde viento. Verdes ramas.El barco sobre la mary el caballo en la montaña.Con la sombra en la cinturaella sueña en su baranda,verde carne, pelo verde,con ojos de fría plata.
Verde que te quiero verde[]
His second play
Mariana Pineda, with stage settings by Salvador Dalí, opened to great acclaim in Barcelona in 1927. In 1926, García Lorca wrote the play
The Shoemaker's Prodigious Wife which would not be shown until the early 1930s. It was a farce about fantasy, based on the relationship between a flirtatious, petulant wife and a hen-pecked shoemaker.From 1925 to 1928 he was passionately involved with Dalí. The friendship with Lorca had a strong element of mutual passion, but Dalí rejected the erotic advances of the poet. Towards the end of the 1920s, García Lorca became increasingly depressed, a situation exacerbated by his anguish over his homosexuality. The success of
Romancero Gitano intensified a painful and personal dichotomy : he was trapped between the persona of the successful author, which he was forced to maintain in public, and the tortured, authentic self, which he could only acknowledge in private.
Growing estrangement between García Lorca and his closest friends reached its climax when surrealists Dalí and Luis Buñuel collaborated on their 1929 film
Un Chien Andalou (
An Andalusian Dog). García Lorca interpreted it, perhaps erroneously, as a vicious attack upon himself,[citation needed] and the film ended Lorca's affair with Dalí. At this time Dalí also met his future wife Gala. His intensely passionate but fatally one-sided affair with the sculptor Emilio Aladrén was also collapsing as the latter became involved with
his future wife. Aware of these problems (though not perhaps of their causes), García Lorca's family arranged for him to take a lengthy visit to the United States in 1929—30.
While in America, García Lorca stayed mostly in New York City, where he studied briefly at Columbia University School of General Studies. His collection
Poeta en Nueva York explores alienation and isolation through some graphically experimental poetic techniques. His Play
El Público (
The Public) was not published until the late 1970s and has never been published in its entirety (the manuscript is lost).
Lorca kept Huerta de San Vicente as his summer house in Granada from 1926 to 1936. Here he wrote, totally or in part, some of his major works, among them
When Five Years Pass (
Así que pasen cinco años) (1931),
Blood Wedding (Bodas de sangre) (1932),
Yerma (1934) and
Diván del Tamarit (1931—1936). The poet lived in the Huerta de San Vicente in the days just before his arrest and assassination in August 1936.
Although García Lorca's artwork doesn't often receive attention he was also a keen artist.
The Republic
His return to Spain in 1930 coincided with the fall of the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera and the re-establishment of the Spanish Republic. In 1931, García Lorca was appointed as director of a university student theatre company, Teatro Universitario la Barraca (The Shack). This was funded by the Second Republic's Ministry of Education, and it was charged with touring Spain's remotest rural areas in order to introduce audiences to radically modern interpretations of classic Spanish theatre. As well as directing, García Lorca also acted.
While touring with
La Barraca, he wrote his now best-known plays, the
Rural Trilogy of Bodas de Sangre (
Blood Wedding), Yerma and La Casa de Bernarda Alba (
The House of Bernarda Alba). He distilled his theories on artistic creation and performance in a famous lecture
Play and Theory of the Duende, first given in Buenos Aires in 1933. García Lorca argued that great art depends upon a vivid awareness of death, connection with a nation's soil, and an acknowledgment of the limitations of reason. The group's subsidy was cut in half by the new government in 1934, and
la Barraca's last performance was given in April 1936.
The Spanish Civil War and Lorca's death
García Lorca left Madrid for Granada only three days before the Spanish Civil War broke out (July 1936). The Spanish political and social climate had greatly intensified after the murder of prominent monarchist and anti-Popular Front spokesman José Calvo Sotelo by Republican Assault Guards (Guardia de Asalto). García Lorca was aware that he was heading towards a city held to be the most conservative in Andalusia. On 18 August (a month after the military insurrection had broken out) his brother-in-law, Manuel Fernández-Montesinos, the socialist mayor of Granada, was shot. Lorca was arrested that same afternoon.
It is thought that García Lorca was shot and killed by Nationalist militia on 19 August 1936. The writer Ian Gibson in his book
The Assassination of García Lorca states that he was shot with three others (naming Joaquin Arcollas Cabezas, Francisco Galadi Mergal and Dioscoro Galindo Gonzalez as fellow victims) at a place known as the Fuente Grande, or Fountain of Tears in Arabic, which is on the road between Viznar and Alfacar.
Significant controversy remains about the motives and details of his death. Personal, non-political motives have also been suggested. García Lorca's biographer, Stainton, states that his killers made remarks about his sexual orientation, suggesting that it played a role in his death. Ian Gibson states that García Lorca's assassination was part of a campaign of mass executions directed to eliminate all the supporters of the Popular Front. Gibson proposes that it is likely that rivalry between right wing groups was a major factor in his death; Former CEDA Parliamentary Deputy, Ramon Ruiz Alonso not only arrested García Lorca at the Rosales' home, but was also the one responsible for the original denunciation that led to the arrest warrant being issued.
It has been argued that García Lorca was apolitical and had many friends in both Republican and Nationalist camps. Gibson questions this in his 1978 book on the poet's death. He cites, for example,
Mundo Obrero's published manifesto, which Lorca later signed, indicating he was an active supporter of the (left wing) Popular Front. Lorca read this manifesto out at a banquet in honour of fellow poet Rafael Alberti on 9 February 1936.
It is beyond question that other anti-communist poets were sympathetic to Lorca or assisted him: Roy Campbell, for example, translated his work.
In the days before his arrest he found shelter in the house of the artist and leading (right wing) Falange member, Luis Ortiz Rosales. Indeed, evidence suggests that Rosales was very nearly shot as well for helping García Lorca by the Civil Governor Valdes.
The Basque poet and Communist Gabriel Celaya wrote in his memoirs that he once found García Lorca in the company of Falangist José Maria Aizpurua. Celaya wrote that Lorca dined with Falangist leader José Antonio Primo de Rivera every Friday. On 11 March 1937 an article appeared in the Falangist press criticizing the murder and lionizing García Lorca; the article opened: "The finest poet of Imperial Spain has been assassinated." There was also the 'homosexual jealousy' theory that was published by Jean-Louis Schonberg,.
The dossier on the murder, compiled at Franco's request, and referred to by Gibson and others has yet to surface.
Jan Morris describes how García Lorca foretold his own fate
"Then I realised I had been murdered.They looked for me in cafes, cemeteries and churches.... but they did not find me.They never found me?No. They never found me."