Fülszöveg
WAITING FOR GODOT
by Samuel Beckett
". . . one of the most noble and
moving plays of our generation, a
threnody of hope deceived and
deferred but never extinguished; a
play suffused with tenderness for
the whole human perplexity; with
phrases that come like a sharp stab
of beauty and pain/'—The London
Times
"One of the most fascinating plays
of the postwar theater . . . gro-
tesquely beautiful and utterly absorbing/'—New York Post
WAITING FOR GODOT brought overnight fame to its 51-year-old Irish
author. It has been translated into Japanese, Swedish, Yugoslavian and
many other languages, and has been produced throughout the world.
Beckett was born in Dublin and lives now in Paris, where he writes
mostly in French, and prepares the English versions of his work. The
Saturday Review has called him "the most remarkable writer to emerge
since World War II" and has ranked him with Kafka and Joyce. His
latest play ENDGAME, produced off-Broadway, is also published by...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
WAITING FOR GODOT
by Samuel Beckett
". . . one of the most noble and
moving plays of our generation, a
threnody of hope deceived and
deferred but never extinguished; a
play suffused with tenderness for
the whole human perplexity; with
phrases that come like a sharp stab
of beauty and pain/'—The London
Times
"One of the most fascinating plays
of the postwar theater . . . gro-
tesquely beautiful and utterly absorbing/'—New York Post
WAITING FOR GODOT brought overnight fame to its 51-year-old Irish
author. It has been translated into Japanese, Swedish, Yugoslavian and
many other languages, and has been produced throughout the world.
Beckett was born in Dublin and lives now in Paris, where he writes
mostly in French, and prepares the English versions of his work. The
Saturday Review has called him "the most remarkable writer to emerge
since World War II" and has ranked him with Kafka and Joyce. His
latest play ENDGAME, produced off-Broadway, is also published by
Grove Press, as are his other works and his novels MOLLOY, MALONE
DIES and MURPHY.
"The reception of Samuel Beckett's new play has been precisely what
the admirers of WAITING FOR GODOT would desire. Fin de Partie
(ENDGAME) has outraged the Philistines, earned the contempt of half-
wits and filled those who are capable of telling the difference between
a theater and a bawdy house with a profound and sombre and para-
doxical joy/'—Harold Hobson in The Sunday Times
Vissza