By Samuel Beckett
The University of Redlands Theatre Arts Department presents An Evening of Beckett Shorts, five short plays by Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and playwright Samuel Beckett. Known as an existential vaudevillian, Beckett's plays study human frustration and patience with the pursuit of some higher purpose, finding humor in our most constrained circumstances.
Best known for his longer plays--Waiting for Godot, Endgame, Krapps Last Tape and Happy Days--Beckett also wrote over 20 short plays. Some of these short plays are only 35 seconds in length, yet all of them pack a fascinating theatrical wallop. If you can imagine two women and a man buried in urns up to their necks judging past infidelities, or a pair of suspended lips desperately speaking to avoid disappearance altogether, you begin to glimpse Beckett's unique theatrical world.
These works render a kind of "articulate speechlessness" about the human condition and its uncertain place in existence. These plays are less about something and are purely something in and of their selves. The famous Irish playwright, Brendan Behan, said, "I don't know what Beckett's plays are about, but I know I like them. I don't know what a swim in the ocean is about, but I know I like the rush of water over me."
Nov. 19-22
Director | Chris Beach |
Scenic Designer | Snezana Petrovic |
Costume Designer | Nephelie Andonyadis |
Lighting Designer | Trevor Norton |
Sound Designer | Heather Ingram |
Guest Designer | Renee Azenaro |
Technical Designer | Daniel Cork |
Stage Manager | Tessa Randall |
Assistant Stage Manager | Rebecca Spira |
No Actors
Flo | Kathleen McCarthy |
Vi | Valerie Williams |
Ru | Michaela Petrovich |
W1 | Allison Swift |
W2 | Casey Greenberg |
M | Jacob Froman |
V | Valerie Williams |
M | Kelly Odor |
Mouth | Michaela Petrovich |
Auditor | Daniel Strasberger |