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1964

Waiting for Godot

Written by Samuel Beckett

Play Details

Context

Artistic Director 
George Devine

Translated By 
Samuel Beckett

Original Language
French

Dates Performed

Wednesday 30th December 1964
Main House (Downstairs)

Play Details

Synopsis

A desolate country road with a single bare tree

Samuel Beckett’s revolutionary play Waiting for Godot centres on two tramps, Vladimir and Estragon, who wait endlessly by a lonely road for someone named Godot. As they linger, they engage in a series of seemingly meaningless conversations, routines, and encounters. Their wait is punctuated by the arrival of Pozzo, a cruel landowner, and his enslaved servant Lucky, whose appearance provides a temporary distraction from the pair’s interminable wait.

Throughout the two acts, which mirror each other in structure, Beckett explores themes of existential despair, the absurdity of human existence, and the nature of time. The play’s sparse setting and circular dialogue create a sense of stasis, while the characters’ inability to remember past events or make definitive plans highlights the futility of human endeavour. Waiting for Godot challenges traditional theatrical conventions, offering instead a tragicomic meditation on hope, faith, and the human condition. Its influence on modern drama is profound, establishing Beckett as a pioneer of the Theatre of the Absurd and forever altering the landscape of 20th-century theatre.

Director(s)

Anthony Page

Poster credit

Poster courtesy of V&A Theatre and Performance Archive

Other productions

Cast & Creative

Cast

Paul Curran

Cast

Alfred Lynch

Cast

Jack MaGowran

Cast

Kirk Martin

Cast

Nicol Williamson

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