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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Samuel Beckett
18 June 2005 - 8 January
2006
Room 31 case display
Admission free

Samuel Barclay Beckett
by Jane Bown, 1976
Samuel Barclay Beckett
by Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1964
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This display celebrates the fiftieth
anniversary of the British premiere of Waiting for Godot
by Samuel Beckett, which was performed at the Arts Theatre Club,
London in August 1955. The initial audience reaction to the play's
stark view of human existence, and its deeply unconventional
dramatic structure, was hostile. Nevertheless, such respected
critics as Kenneth Tynan and Harold Hobson were appreciative,
and within a short period the play became hugely successful.
It is now recognised as a landmark in post-war theatre, transforming
conventional ideas about plot, characterisation and language.
After Waiting for Godot,
Beckett's principal works include the plays All That Fall
(for radio, 1956), Endgame (1957), Krapp's Last Tape
(1958), Happy Days (1961) Not I (1973), and
Ohio Impromptu (1981); and the prose works Imagination
Dead Imagine (1965), The Lost Ones (1971), Worstward
Ho (1983), and Stirrings Still (1988). In 1969, Beckett
was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature: 'For his writing
which - in new forms for the novel and drama - in the destitution
of modern man acquires its elevation.' He died in 1989.
The display comprises a selection
of portraits of Beckett from the National Portrait Gallery collection,
including a remarkable series of photographs by his fellow Irishman,
John Minihan. These portraits are complemented by performance
photographs of two of Beckett's most celebrated plays: Endgame
and Krapp's Last Tape.
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