Lars Norén

Lars Norén
Norén photographed by Oliver Mark in 2003
BornLars Norén
(1944-04-09)9 April 1944
Stockholm, Sweden
Died26 January 2021(2021-01-26) (aged 76)
Stockholm, Sweden
NationalitySwedish
Period1963–2021
Notable works
  • Order
  • Natten är dagens mor
  • Kaos är granne med Gud
  • Personkrets 3:1
  • En dramatikers dagbok
Spouses
  • Elisabet Mörk (1970–1975)
  • Charlott Neuhauser (1993–2003)
  • Annika Hallin (2007–2013)
Children
  • Linda
  • Nelly
  • Sasha

Lars Göran Ingemar Norén (9 April 1944 – 26 January 2021) was a Swedish playwright, novelist and poet. He was a director at the Royal Dramatic Theatre, artistic director of Riksteatern 1999–2007, and artistic director of Folkteatern in Gothenburg 2009–2012. Norén is commonly acknowledged as the foremost Swedish playwright since August Strindberg, and the great contemporary Nordic playwright alongside Jon Fosse. His dramatic work has been performed widely throughout Europe as well as in China and South America.

Norén's work spans across genres and styles, and explores existential and social themes. The dramatic works are driven by a poetic dialogue, with elements of absurdity and humour. Recurring motifs are the Holocaust, nightly quarrels in bourgeois families, alcoholism, and the socially marginalised.

The prefix Norén- is used figuratively in Swedish compound words, such as Norénjul ('Norén Christmas'). It refers to common themes in Lars Norén’s work, and evokes a sense of anxiety, a bleak domestic atmosphere, bitter conflict, excessive alcohol consumption, guilt, and shame. A 'Norén Christmas' is the antithesis of the idyllic 'Bergman Christmas' depicted in Fanny and Alexander.