Jon Fosse
The Nobel laureate Jon Fosse has written the libretto to the opera Asle and Alida, which has its world premiere here in Bergen March 2025
Jon Fosse (born September 1959) is widely considered one of the most important writers of our time. For over forty years he has written novels, plays, poems, stories, essays, and children’s books. His award-winning work has been translated into more than fifty languages, and his plays have been staged over a thousand times all over the world. Autumn 2023 he received the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Here you can watch, and also read the Nobel Prize lecture Jon Fosse delivered in December 2023:
The home page to The Nobel Prize (with the video, and also PDF's to the lecture in English, Norwegian and Swedish).
Fosse grew up on a small farm in Strandebarm in the Hardanger region of Norway. He went to high school in Øystese and studied literature at the University of Bergen. A full-time writer for most of his adult life, he has also worked as a journalist, taught at the Academy of Writing Skrivekunstakademiet) in Hordaland where one of his students was Karl Ove Knausgård. He has also been a literary consultant, for instance for a retranslation of the Bible into Norwegian. In 2011, the Norwegian state awarded him its honorary artist’s residence for life, The Grotto (Grotten), located in Slottsparken in Oslo, near the Royal Palace. Today, Fosse lives in Oslo, in Hainburg an der Donau, Austria, and in Frekhaug, near Bergen.
Literary debut with a short story
Fosse’s first novel, Raudt, svart (Red, Black), was published in 1983, when he was 23 years old. But he considers a short story ”Han” (”He”), published in the student newspaper Studvest in Bergen in 1981, as his actual literary debut. Already there are many characteristic features of Fosse’s writing: repetition, inner monologue, and a musical, evocative style. Fosse continued to publish prose, poetry, and children’s books through the Eighties, but his breakthrough as an author came with the 1989 novel Naustet (Boathouse).
Playwright as revelation
After having established himself as a novelist, poet, essayist, and children’s book writer, he also became a playwright. Despite having often expressed skepticism about the theater, he wrote his first play in 1992, later describing this as the greatest revelation in his writing life. Nokon kjem til å kome (Someone Is Going to Come) is the first play Fosse wrote, although Og aldri skal vi skiljast (And Never Shall We Part) was the first to be performed, at the National Theater in Bergen in February 1994, directed by Kai Johnsen.
International breakthrough
Fosse wrote plays at a furious pace during these years, quickly appearing on the most important Norwegian stages, and after only a few years his plays were also being performed abroad. His international breakthrough came in 1999, when French director Claude Régy staged Someone Is Going to Come in Nanterre outside Paris. The following year, the renowned Berlin theater Schaubühne put on Namnet (The Name) at the Salzburg Festival. These two productions helped pave the way for Fosse’s drama internationally.
Today, Jon Fosse’s plays have been performed all over the world. He has written more than 40 plays, including Namnet (The Name), Vinter (Winter), Ein sommars dag (A Summer’s Day), Draum om hausten (Dream of Autumn), Dødsvariasjonar (Death Variations), Svevn (Sleep), and Eg er vinden (I Am the Wind).
The Nordic Council's prize for the Trilogy
Although best known internationally as a playwright, Fosse has always written in other genres at an unusually high level. His novels include Melancholy I and Melancholy II, about the real Norwegian painter Lars Hertervig; Morning and Evening, about the birth of a child and the day of his death many decades later; and Trilogy, consisting of the three parts Andvake, Olavs draumar, and Kveldsvævd (Wakefulness, Olav's Dreams, Weariness). It is a beautiful and disturbing story about a fiddler, Asle, and his girlfriend, Alida, for which Fosse won the Nordic Council’s literature prize in 2015.
The new opera Asle and Alida, which will have its world premiere here in Bergen spring 2025, is based on the Trilogy (Trilogien), and Jon Fosse has also written the libretto.
Also translator
In addition to his own writing, Jon Fosse has also reviewed literature and translated many works into New Norwegian, both prose and creating his own new versions of a number of plays.
"Slow prose" in the Septology
Fosse’s longest work to date is Septology (2019–21), which he started during a break from playwrighting and after converting to Catholicism in 2013. Fosse has called his method of writing Septology ”slow prose”: a style of shifting levels, scenes, and reflections, the exact opposite of fast-paced drama. Its seven parts have been published in three volumes: The Other Name, I Is Another, and A New Name. It is a suggestive, magnificent narrative about the nature of art and God, about alcoholism, friendship, love, and the passage of time. The Septology is translated into over 20 languages and is critically acclaimed worldwide.
For the Septology, Jon Fosse has received numerous awards, including the Brage Prize and the Critics' Prize. He has also been shortlisted for the international Booker Prize and the American National Book Award.
New plays
Furthermore, the hiatus in playwriting is over; Fosse is once again writing for the theater. Since 2020, at least three new plays have premiered. Jon Fosse's most recent prose work, the novel A shining (Kvitleik), was released in spring 2023 — a narrative exploring the boundary between life and death. The play I svarte skogen inne – which has similarities with the novel A shining – had its world premiere at Det Vestnorske Teateret in Bergen in May 2023.
The new book Vaim this autumn
Vaim is the first of three books about the fictional small town of Vaim: Vaim, Vaim Hotel, and The Vaim Weekly. Each book is about different characters, and the first book will be released, according to the publisher Samlaget, autumn 2025.
Main source: the publisher Samlaget (link) – by agreement between Bergen National Opera (BNO) and Samlaget. The text is edited by BNO and updated February 2025