In this Catalan name, the first or paternal surname is Benet and the second or maternal family name is Jornet; both are generally joined by the conjunction "i".
Josep Maria Benet i Jornet (Catalan pronunciation:[ʒuˈzɛbməˈɾi.əβəˈnɛt]; 20 June 1940 – 6 April 2020), also known as "Papitu",[1][2] was one of the most renowned Catalan[3]playwrights, considered one of the main renewers of Catalan theater.[4][5]
Biography
He was born in a tiny Barcelona apartment in Ronda de Sant Antoni on 20 June 1940, from parents Concepció Jornet and Pere Benet.
Growing up, his love for playwriting emerged from reading comic book strips, in which he made up his own dialogues; and he also learned from popular readings and the world of radiophonic serials.
He was an active participant in the fight against the Spanish dictatorship, although he never affiliated with any political parties. He took clandestine Catalan literature lessons with Joaquim Molas, through Joan-Lluís Marfany. He majored in Literature at the University of Barcelona, and in 1962, he enrolled in Adrià Gual'sSchool of Dramatic Arts, where he came into contact with the most renowned personalities in theater of that time, such as Ricard Salvat, Maria Aurèlia Capmany, Josep Montanyès, Fabià Puigserver or Francesc Nel·lo.[6] Years later, he became a dramatic literature teacher in Barcelona's Institut del Teatre, where he taught from 1974 to 1981.
In 1963, at the age of 23, he published his first play, Una vella, coneguda olor, a breakthrough piece due to the realism in its tone, which, as it had never done before, gave an in-depth look into the contemporary Barcelona through theater.[7] This debutant piece was awarded the Premi Josep Maria de Sagarra award, and launched his playwriting career. Ever since then, the author wrote over forty theater plays, which were translated into a dozen different languages. Two of his most renowned hits, E.R. and Testament, were adapted into the big screen format by cinematographer Ventura Pons.[8] In 2010, he published his memoirs, which he titled Material d'enderroc (Edicions 62).
He was also the screenwriter for some of Catalan public broadcast channel TV3's most emblematic television soap operas, such as Poble Nou, Nissaga de Poder, or Ventdelplà.
Throughout his life, his professional trajectory was recognized with several awards, such as:
In March 2011, he publicly announced that he was donating his funds to the Library of Catalonia.[11] He was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in 2015, which his daughter Carlota Benet later made public in a tribute held in the Teatre Nacional de Catalunya celebrating his 75th birthday.[12][2] As his illness progressed, he was put under residential care in Llar Sant Josep de Lleida nursing home for the elderly, where he died from COVID-19 during the coronavirus pandemic in Spain on 6 April 2020 at the age of 79.[13][9][14][15]
In 2017, Carlota Benet published the essay "Papitu. El somriure sota el bigoti", Editorial Columna, about his father's memories.