Season has now concluded.Waiting for GodotSamuel Beckett's classic "Theatre of the Absurd" play to be staged at our Elmwood Auditorium.
Performance Dates
January 22-24 & 29-31, 7.30pm
Book Now!Audience Reaction...
Hi,
Ed comment: I saw the play last night (Friday) and I agree with this correspondent. Not only were the performances superb but the lighting sound and set were absolutely spot on, you should not miss this theatre event! |
About the Play
Waiting for Godot follows two consecutive days in the lives of a pair of men who divert themselves while they wait expectantly and unsuccessfully for someone named Godot to arrive.
They claim him an acquaintance but in fact hardly know him, admitting that they would not recognise him were they to see him.
To occupy themselves, they eat, sleep, talk, argue, sing, play games, exercise, swap hats, and contemplate suicide — anything "to hold the terrible silence at bay". |
Waiting...
If it were measurable, we might just find that waiting is the nation's single biggest pastime. We all find ourselves waiting for someone or something every day of the year, from buses to helpdesk operators, in supermarket & bank queues everywhere. Almost everywhere you go, you can see people waiting.
We've all seen someone who, at the merest hint of some idle time, whips out the knitting needles and the current work-in-progress. Today it is more common to see people playing soduku or simply plugging in headphones to the flavour-of-the-month electronic device and closing off the outside world entirely.
In the age of instant gratification, is waiting a lost art?
Originally written in French by an Irishman living in Paris, Waiting for Godot takes place in a simpler time – before the advent of cellphones and the internet – but its theme is well known to us all.
It was once famously described as "a play in which nothing happens, twice", by Vivian Mercier in the Irish Times (Feb 1956).
Elmwood Players is thrilled to be presenting this classic play to round out their 60th year. Waiting for Godot was written around the same time that Elmwood Players started holding play readings and performing short sketches. Director Tom Vavasour is no stranger to the Elmwood stage, having acted and directed for the society many times over the past 17 years. He is looking forward to the challenge of making sense of the play's circularity and absurdities, and of the waiting game we all play.
Editor's note:
Script available online at:
http://samuel-beckett.net/Waiting_for_Godot_Part1.html
Cast:
Estragon |
A tramp |
Tom Vavasour |
Vladimir |
A tramp |
Stan Hood |
Pozzo |
Middle class & pompous |
Sam Fisher |
Lucky |
Pozzo's Servant |
Neil Hurst |
Boy |
Messenger from Godot |
Campbell Wright |
Want to find out about Auditions
Elmwood Players has an email list for notifying all interested actors about auditions. It is not limited to stage roles we sometimes get requests from film-makers, independent producers and tv/film students who all need actors for their projects.
Register on the Elmwood Audition list by emailing Kris: [email protected]