Beckett’s ‘Waiting for Godot’ at Coal Mine is haunting, hilarious and deeply human

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By News Room 6 Min Read

The quixotic nature of faith; the slipperiness of life’s purpose; the terror of time’s progress, balanced against the uncanniness of eternal return; the consolation and alienation cradled together in every human interaction: few theatrical texts encompass the modern human condition as completely as Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot.” In it, a pair of hapless vagabonds wait endlessly for the elusive titular figure, and its irresolvable enigmas only heighten its resonance. Since its 1953 premiere — and across thousands of productions — the play (along with the famously litigious Beckett estate) has demanded that those who stage it resist interpretation and adhere strictly to its precise instructions and spartan aesthetic. As Kelli Fox, director of the stirring new production at Coal Mine Theatre, states in her program notes, “one feels compelled (…) to just get out of (Beckett’s) way.”

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