Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Production History of Samuel Becketts Waiting for Godot Essay
Production History of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Samuel Beckett was  forty-two years old and living in post-war Paris when he wrote Waiting for Godot as an exercise to help rid himself of the writer's block which was  hindering his work in fiction. Once he started, he became increasingly absorbed in the play, and scribbled it  almost without hesitation into a soft-cover notebook in a creative burst that lasted from October 9, 1948,  until he completed the typed manuscript on January 29, 1949. After some revision, he offered the script to  several producers, but it was refused. Although Beckett himself gave up hope with the script, his wife  was more persistent, and, acting as his agent, she continued to approach producers. Finally, she met  with actor/producer/director Roger Blin, who had produced a string of four under-funded and under-attended  productions of Synge and Strindberg. Blin was immediately delighted with the piece. Unfortunately,  money to produce the play was difficult to come by. Years passed betwee   n the writing and the actual  production of the work.     In the meanwhile, while Blin continued to search for backers, he worked with  Beckett to flesh out the play in choosing costuming (Beckett had only envisioned the bowler hats),  style, and movement. Blin never asked Beckett to analyze the play, noting that "The play struck me as  so rich and unique in its nudity that it seemed to me improper to question the author about its  meaning." Instead, Blin worked almost instinctively through the three years of sporadic rehearsals. Casting  was difficult; even though he was quite certain of his choices, contracts were only drawn up a few weeks  before opening. Of necessity he ended up playing the part ...              ...ted in  Esslin 2-3)     Ã       Although it took much of the world a little longer than these inmates to  recognize the value of   Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, there is no doubt that it is now  considered a classic. It has been   translated into numerous languages, and according to Bair, into more editions  than Beckett could recall,   far more than all his other plays combined. Waiting for Godot is the play  that will continue building his   reputation for many years to come.     Sources Cited     Bair, Deirdre. "Samuel Beckett," in British Dramatists Since World War II .  Ed. Stanley Weintraub.     Detroit: Bruccoli Clark, 1982, pp. 52-70.     Cohn, Ruby. "Growing (Up?) with Godot," in Beckett at 80/Beckett in Context .  Ed. Enoch Brater. New     York: Oxford, 1986, pp. 13-24.     Esslin, Martin.Ã   The Theatre of the Absurd . Rev. ed. Garden City:  Anchor, 1969.                      
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