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A shabby man named Estragon,
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sits near a tree at dusk and struggles to remove his boot.
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He’s soon joined by his friend Vladimir,
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who reminds his anxious companion that
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they must wait here for someone called Godot.
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So begins a vexing cycle in which the two debate
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when Godot will come, why they’re waiting,
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and whether they’re even at the right tree.
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From here, Waiting for Godot only gets stranger -
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but it’s considered a play that changed
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face of modern drama.
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Written by Samuel Beckett between 1949 and 1955,
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it offers a simple but stirring question -
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what should the characters do?
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E: Don’t let's do anything. It's safer.
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V: Let’s wait and see what he says.
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E: Who?
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V: Godot.
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E: Good idea.
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Such cryptic dialogue and circular reasoning are
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key features of the Theatre of the Absurd,
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a movement which emerged after the Second World War
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and found artists struggling
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to find meaning in devastation.
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The absurdists deconstructed plot, character and language
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to question their meaning and share
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their profound uncertainty on stage.
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While this may sound grim,
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the absurd blends its hopelessness with humor.
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This is reflected in Beckett’s unique approach
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to genre in Waiting for Godot,
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which he branded “a tragicomedy in two acts.
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Tragically, the characters are locked in an
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existential conundrum: they wait in vain
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for an unknown figure to give them a sense of purpose,
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but their only sense of purpose
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comes from the act of waiting,
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While they wait, they sink into boredom,
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express religious dread and contemplate suicide.
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But comically, there is a jagged humor to their predicament,
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which comes across in their language and movements.
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Their interactions are filled with bizarre wordplay,
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repetition and double entendres,
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as well as physical clowning, singing and dancing,
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and frantically swapping their hats.
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It’s often unclear whether the audience is supposed to
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laugh or cry - or whether Beckett saw
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any difference between the two.
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Born in Dublin, Beckett studied English,
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French and Italian before moving to Paris,
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where he spent most of his life writing theatre,
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poetry and prose.
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While Beckett had a lifelong love of language,
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he also made space for silence by incorporating gaps,
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pauses and moments of emptiness into his work.
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This was a key feature of his trademark
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uneven tempo and black humor,
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which became popular throughout the Theatre of the Absurd.
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He also cultivated a mysterious persona,
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and refused to confirm or deny any speculations
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about the meaning of his work.
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This kept audiences guessing,
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increasing their fascination with his surreal worlds
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and enigmatic characters.
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The lack of any clear meaning makes Godot
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endlessly open to interpretation.
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Critics have offered countless readings of the play,
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resulting in a cycle of ambiguity and speculation
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that mirrors the plot of the drama itself.
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It's been read as an allegory of the Cold War,
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the French Resistance, and Britain’s colonization of Ireland.
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The dynamic of the two protagonists has
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also sparked intense debate.
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They’ve been read as survivors of the apocalypse,
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an aging couple, two impotent friends,
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and even as personifications of Freud’s ego and id.
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Famously, Beckett said the only thing he could
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be sure of was that Vladimir and Estragon
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were "wearing bowler hats."
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Like the critical speculation and maddening plot,
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their language often goes in circles as the two
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bicker and banter, lose their train of thought,
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and pick up right where they left off:
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V: We could start all over again perhaps
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E: That should be easy
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V: It’s the start that’s difficult
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E: You can start from anything
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V: Yes, but you have to decide.
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Beckett reminds us that just like our daily lives,
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the world onstage doesn’t always make sense.
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It can explore both reality and illusion,
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the familiar and the strange.
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And although a tidy narrative still appeals,
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the best theatre keeps us thinking – and waiting.