The famed absurdist play "Waiting for Godot" is shown in Shanghai by the East West Theater this week.
Following the success of its season opener
"Life X 3," the international group has been involved in long rehearsals to
prepare to stage Samuel Beckett's 1953 masterpiece, one of the most important
English-language plays of the 20th century.
Directed by Canadian Jonathan Geenen, it opened last night and runs through Saturday at the Shanghai Theater Academy's New Space theater.
In the two-act play, dubbed an absurdist
tragicomedy, two men wait for two days for a man named Godot, who never arrives.
The situation is absurd, their actions and dialogue are absurd, sometimes very
funny. The vision, though, is one of an absurd and meaningless human
condition.
"'Waiting for Godot' is quite simply one of the
most remarkable plays of the past half-century," says East West Theater's
producer Rosita Janbakhsh.
"Even though it's studied in almost every world
literature and theater history class, it's rarely given a professional
production outside of the West End and Broadway."
This is the ninth production by East West
Theater since it was formed in 2006. The group is the first, locally based
English-language theater ensemble in Shanghai.
Its aim is to provide a platform for
Western-style theater and to share it with the Shanghai arts and culture
community. The play will have Chinese language subtitles.
In the play, two men divert themselves while
they wait expectantly and unsuccessfully for someone named Godot to arrive. They
claim him as an acquaintance but in fact hardly know him, admitting that they
would not recognize him were they to see him. To occupy themselves, they eat,
sleep, converse, argue, sing, play games, exercise, swap hats, and contemplate
suicide - anything "to hold the terrible silence at bay."
Hangzhou Jiaoyu Science and Technology Co.LTD.
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