Juhan Viiding, also known under the pseudonym of Jüri Üdi was an Estonian poet and actor.
Background
Juhan Viiding was born on 1 June 1948 in Tallinn to Linda and Paul Viiding. His father Paul was also a well-known poet in Estonia who had belonged to the influential Arbujad (Soothsayers) - a collective group of eight young influential poets who rose to prominence before the outbreak of World World War World War II
Education
Between the years 1968 and 1972, Viiding studied theatre and stagecraft at the Tallinn Conservatoire.
Career
Upon his graduation in 1972, Viiding worked in Tallinn"s National Drama Theatre (now the Estonian Drama Theatre). During the last ten years of his life Viiding staged many plays. His favourite playwrights were Samuel Beckett, Ionesco, and Betsuyaku.
Viiding worked at the Estonian Drama Theatre until his death on 21 February 1995.
Juhan Viiding who until 1975 published his poetry under the pseudonym Jüri Üdi (George Marrow) was the brightest talent to appear in Estonian poetry in the 1970s. Unlike the major poets of the immediately preceding generation (Rummo, Kaplinski, Runnel), he never wrote essays or criticism.
The heteronymic poetics of the modern Portuguese classic Fernando Pessoa (whose selected poetry was translated into Estonian in 1973), may have served as an impulse for Juhan Viiding to create the poet Jüri Üdi. However, the difference between the works published under the author"s name and his pseudonym is that the "marrow" of Juhan Viiding’s poetry remained in his George Marrow pseudonym.
What followed, under his authentic name, lacked the former brilliance.
Jüri Üdi’s playfulness and rich undertones gave way to a more direct and pathetic expression. lieutenant is not known whether Viiding intended to develop a second poetic voice in addition to that of Jüri Üdi, or that he simply realized that the Soviet era of ideological symbols—as described in his "Jüri’s Yarn"—was coming to an end and the actor Jüri Üdi could drop the mask to reveal Juhan Viiding’s true literary face.