In the play he wrote in 1956, during a period of post-war optimism and reconstruction in Europe, Beckett demonstrates the manipulability of historical discourse, and the irreconcilable differences between it and real history. The outside world appears to be dead; however as long as people are still acting on stage, in theatre and in life, they must keep on living – assuming one doesn’t stoically and inconsequentially characterise life itself as dying. Beckett uses gallows humour and is, as a genuine clown, to be taken seriously – even if the notion of what is serious and what is amusing doesn’t follow the traditional concepts.
Under the direction of Jan Bosse, Ulrich Matthes as Hamm and Wolfram Koch as Clov demonstrate Beckett’s ironic resistance in circumstances which appear hopeless.
Additional information
- Directed by Jan Bosse
- Set design by Stéphane Laimé
- Costumes by Kathrin Plath
- Music by Arno Kraehahn