Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett.
Directed by Caroline Stacey OAM. Set,
costume and lighting design Véronique Benett. Sound design Kimmo
Vennonen.Movement consultant Ashlee Bye. Production Manager Neil Simpson. Stage Manager
Brittany Myers. Lighting Operator Wayne Bateup. Sound Operator Kimmo Vennonen.
Design Associate Kathleen Kershaw. Set Construction Martin Thomas. Stage
Technicians Wayne Bateup, Connor McKay, Kyle Sheedy, Nathan Sciberras.
Publicity Su Hodge. Production Photography Nathan Smith Photography. Novel
Photographic. Videography Craig Alexander. Poster Artwork Design♡Cult.
Marketing Artwork Design♡Cult. Street One. The Street. November
9-24 2024. Bookings 62471223.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
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Christopher Samuel Carroll as Vladimir
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Samuel Beckett’s literary masterpiece Waiting For Godot, currently given an
outstanding production at The Street is generally regarded as “Theatre of the
absurd”. Coined by Martin Esslin the term is explained by Esslin as “the dignity of man lies in his ability to face reality in
all its senselessness; to accept it freely, without fear, without illusions–and
to laugh at it” It embodies
the notion of free will, of man’s ability to act without the influence of a
higher power or a religion. It is therefore necessary for any production of Waiting For Godot to reflect Esslin’s definition
of absurdism and the forces, both physical and psychological that act against
free will.
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P.J. Williams as Estragon
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Director
Caroline Stacey and her cast have excelled in staging a production of Beckett’s
iconic play that lurches us along the roadway of life in all its aspects. In
the actions of Vladimir (Christopher
Samuel Carroll) and Estragon (P.J. Williams) as they wait to meet Mr. Godot we
witness the futility of their seemingly meaningless existence. The arrival of
an authoritarian Pozzo (Craig Alexander) and his servile lackey ironically
called Lucky (James Scott) exposes the cruel nature of man’s inhumanity to man.
And yet, in this illuminating production one is made poignantly aware of the
human’s capacity for resilience. Williams and Carroll epitomize this resilience
through their interdependence, their arguments and reconciliation, their
clownish antics, their games to occupy their time while waiting for Mr Godot,
who never comes.
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James Scott as Lucky. Craig Alexander as Pozzo
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Stacey
keeps the action moving with highly physical stage business recollecting
Beckett’s fascination with the clowns of the silent movie era and later the
comedy pairs like Abbott and Costello and Laurel and Hardy. In the hands of this highly professional and
accomplished company Beckett’s tragicomedy
is a shining beacon casting light on our human condition. In casting Williams and
Carroll as the two vagabonds eking out their time on a lonely country road,
Stacey has paired the two actors who offered excellent performances in The
Street’s Crime and Punishment, In Waiting for Godot they again demonstrate
their ability to move us and provoke laughter at their absurd circumstance. There
is excellent support from Alexander and Scott. Scott’s performan
ce as the
hapless servant to the domineering Pozzo in the first act is amongst the finest
interpretation of oppressed subjugation that you are ever likely to see on a
Canberra stage. Scott entirely inhabits the pathos and the pain of his
character before bursting forth with senseless diatribe, a cry for
understanding in an uncaring universe. Every performance in this production is
worthy of the highest commendation but Scott’s Lucky will remain in my memory
and my conscience for many years to come.
Designer
Véronique Benett has created a promenade setting with audience seated on either
side of the long road that rises to nowhere below a full silvery moon. A lone
tree stands on the rise and below Estragon and Vladimir wait where there is “nothing
to be done” and “ Nobody comes, Nobody goes. It’s awful” There is an
aesthetically pleasing uniformity in Benett’s design of set, costume and
lighting, accompanied by Kimmo Vennonen’s subtle sound design, punctuated by
moments of sudden alert. There is a harmony of design drawing our attention to
the action and the atmosphere in a production that is not to be missed and, I
suspect, has been informed by a careful analysis of Beckett’s profundity and playful
humour. The season is short, the seating capacity limited by the imaginative
design in the main theatre of The Street so rush to get a ticket before it is
too late to wait.