WARSAW, Poland (AP) Dissident playwright Slawomir Mrozek, considered by many to be one of Poland's greatest writers for the stage, was buried during a state ceremony on Tuesday.
People waited in the rain in the southern historic city of Krakow, where Mrozek's career began, to sign a condolence book. Then a hearse drawn by two black horses took the metal urn to its resting place at St. Peter and Paul church. The funeral Mass was conducted by Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, who served as a personal secretary of the late Pope John Paul II.
President Bronislaw Komorowski posthumously awarded Mrozek the Grand Cross of the Order of Poland's Rebirth, in recognition of his contribution to Poland's culture.
"We are bidding farewell to a master of wise grotesque that was filled with deep thought," Culture Minister Bogdan Zdrojewski said during the service, which was attended by other government officials and Mrozek's publishers from Poland and abroad.
Poland completed its transformation from a communist to a democratic country in 1989. Long before then, Mrozek made his name with surrealistic, satirical plays, notably the 1964 "Tango," which slyly ridiculed communism.