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1976

Footfalls

Written by Samuel Beckett

Play Details

Context

Artistic Director 
Robert Kidd & Nicholas Wright

Dates Performed

Thursday 20th May 1976
Jerwood Theatre Downstairs

Play Details

Synopsis

May, a tormented middle-aged woman, paces back and forth across a dimly lit strip of the stage, engaging in fragmented conversation with the disembodied voice of her unseen, bedridden mother. May seems trapped in rituals of caregiving and compulsively revisiting old traumas, her ceaseless footfalls becoming a metaphor for her inability to move forward from this smothering bond. At one point, a ghostly “sequel” is described, in which May’s haunting grey figure is glimpsed endlessly pacing in a church, echoing her present confinement. The play ends with no resolution, May disappearing from the strip, leaving only the lingering echoes of the mother’s voice.

Footfalls exemplifies Beckett’s avant-garde, minimalist later style through its poetic, stripped-down language, atmospheric lighting cues, and choreographed yet seemingly aimless movement. With no conventional plot or fleshed-out characters, the play instead creates a dreamlike theatrical landscape that immerses the viewer in an eerie realm of repression, guilt, and profound existential stasis. The fragmented, repetitive dialogue laden with ambiguities forces the audience to piece together the protagonists’ fraught history. Ultimately, the play offers no tidy denouement but rather invokes a disquieting vision of humans trapped by the past, relationships, and the inexorable weight of memory.

Director(s)

Samuel Beckett

Other productions

Cast & Creative

Cast

Rose Hill

Cast

Billy Whitelaw

Designer

Joceyln Herbert