
Antonio Skármeta was born in Chile in 1940, the grandson of Dalmatian immigrants. Until 1973 he worked in Santiago as a literary and artistic director and a professor of literature as well as working for the press. In 1974, after the Pinochet coup, he went into exile in West Berlin. He had his internationally greatest success with Ardiente Paciencia (English: Burning Patience, 1994). At first a radio play, a stage drama and screenplay, it finally appeared as a novel in 1985. Michael Radford's film version of the novel, titled Il Postino (Engl: The Postman, 1994) won five Oscar nominations in 1994. In 1989, after the collapse of Pinochet's military dictatorship, the writer returned to Chile in order "to create political space for freedom". He produced an arts program on television which regularly attracted over a million viewers. Skármeta represented his homeland as Chilean ambassador between 2000 and 2003. For this work, he received the German Cross of Merit.


























