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View Full Version : Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett



dysfunctional-h
03-09-2012, 01:49 AM
Power: 6.5 of 10

Consistency: 9 of 10

Difficulty: 7.5 of 16

Humor: 9 of 10

Waiting for Godot is a play apt to make one laugh, and then think. As with many plays, it is over before you feel it has even begun. But as one reads it, it becomes notable how Beckett’s unique voice sprawls across his canvas with some of the most memorable characters in 20th century theater: a grotesque portrait of a heartless aristocrat and his downtrodden puppy-like victim, yet another straight-man-with-idiot odd couple (one cannot ignore the resemblance to Steinbeck’s ever-resilient George and Lenny), and the strange, schizophrenic voices which haunt them in their silence. A tree looms in the corner, but they can find no rope. It begs the question: is the mad man not the one who is the most sane? Given its post-war context, such a message is not at all surprising. For all of Beckett’s alleged difficulty, Waiting for Godot is probably one of the most accessible works of the post-war generation (it was certainly an easier read than Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, but that’s for a different day), easily readable within a few hours, and a perfect introduction to the absurdist tradition for both the layperson and the classroom.

/dev/null
03-09-2012, 02:31 AM
Power: 6.5 of 10

What does that mean?

David Strugnell
03-09-2012, 07:59 AM
It's crap.

cacian
03-09-2012, 01:10 PM
It's crap.

Thanks! LOL
I was about to say something like what is the actual point of this book and then I say your post. Enough said.

dysfunctional-h
03-09-2012, 09:29 PM
LOL it means i didn't cry when i read it the way I cried when i finished Absalom, Absalom! Not that it wasn't haunting, just not really that haunting. XDDD

Charles Darnay
03-09-2012, 10:04 PM
It's one of those plays that looks much better on stage than on paper. It has been done marvelously by some great actors, including a dynamic duo of Stewart and Mckellen!

AlysonofBathe
03-10-2012, 12:17 AM
It's one of those plays that looks much better on stage than on paper. It has been done marvelously by some great actors, including a dynamic duo of Stewart and Mckellen!

Completely agree! I first read this and just didn't understand the fuss, and once I saw it on stage I absolutely adored it. Actually, I felt the same way about quite a few of Beckett's plays - Endgame, Krapp's Last Tape, Happy Days.

Cheers,
Alyson

cacian
03-10-2012, 04:03 AM
LOL it means i didn't cry when i read it the way I cried when i finished Absalom, Absalom! Not that it wasn't haunting, just not really that haunting. XDDD

A question
do you rate the writer?

/dev/null
03-10-2012, 05:11 AM
Well, I haven't seen it performed, but as far as my knowledge of drama goes I think it has to be somewhere on the 10 top plays of all time. Beckett's use of french prose is just beautiful, at the same time violent and gentle, and the way he stablishes emotionally complex situations through absurdly simple dialogs. Really crafty at worst.


LOL it means i didn't cry when i read it the way I cried when i finished Absalom, Absalom! Not that it wasn't haunting, just not really that haunting. XDDD

Ah, ok... just checking.