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  1. 1 de jun. de 1990 · With Lawrence Held, Bud Thorpe, Alan Mendell, Rick Cluchey. Two seemingly homeless men waiting for someone or something named Godot. Vladimir and Estragon wait near a tree on a barren stretch of road, inhabiting a drama spun from their own consciousness.

    • (44)
    • Drama
    • Samuel Beckett
    • 1990-06-01
  2. Waiting for Godot (/ ˈ ɡ ɒ d oʊ / ⓘ GOD-oh) is a play by Irish playwright Samuel Beckett in which two characters, Vladimir (Didi) and Estragon (Gogo), engage in a variety of discussions and encounters while awaiting the titular Godot, who never arrives.

    • Samuel Beckett
    • 1952
  3. Waiting for Godot, tragicomedy in two acts by Irish writer Samuel Beckett, published in 1952 in French as En attendant Godot and first produced in 1953. Waiting for Godot was a true innovation in drama and the Theatre of the Absurd’s first theatrical success.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Beckett is coming to Berlin to direct Waiting for Godot. He is no stranger at the Schiller Theater: after Endgame, Krapp's Last Tape, and Happy Days, this is his fourth visit as a director.

    • Walter D. Asmus
    • 2012
  5. In 1985, Beck­ett direct­ed three of his plays — Wait­ing for Godot, Krap­p’s Last Tape and Endgame — as part of a pro­duc­tion called “Beck­ett Directs Beck­ett.” The plays per­formed by the San Quentin Play­ers toured Europe and Asia with much fan­fare, and with Beck­ett exert­ing direc­to­r­i­al con­trol.

  6. 27 de jul. de 2020 · The theatrical and existential vision of Waiting for Godot makes it the watershed 20th-century drama—as explosive, groundbreaking, and influential a work as T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land is for modern poetry and James Joyce’s Ulysses is for modern fiction.

  7. Overview. W aiting for Godot, a play by Irish playwright Samuel Beckett, premiered in French in 1953 and later published in 1954. It is a landmark play in the Theater of the Absurd, a designation given for a group of post-World War II plays that imbued with existential and absurdist ideas.