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THEATRE

OF

THE

ABSURD

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The term (now genre)Theatre of the Absurd was

coined by critic Martin Esslin to bring attention to a

group of playwrights whose plays conveyed a common

sense of anxiety, confusion and hopelessness in

reaction to an unexplainable, unpredictable and

absurd universe.

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Two major contributing factors to this genre were the

atrocities of World War II and the philosophical

questions regarding the meaning of life raised

by Existentialists.

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Within the word existentialism is the word exist.

We are thrown into existence without a choice.

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However, once we exist, we have the

freedom to choose how to exist.

We have the freedom to choose to create

meaningful, valuable lives.

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� With that freedom of choice,comes anxiety and fear. ��Anxiety that we may make the “WRONG”choices! �� Fear that we may die before we find meaning�in our lives!

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Mere existence has no purpose.

Despite the fear and anxiety,

we can choose our purpose

and define it.

Ultimately, we decide if our lives have value.

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Perhaps the best-know existentialist, Jean-Paul Sartre’s works

included essays, novels and plays such as No Exit.

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Albert Camus, wrote The Myth of Sisyphus, among other works with existential themes. Using the Greek myth to show the futility of existence, Sisyphus is eternally condemned to roll a rock up a hill and every time he reaches the top, the rock rolls back down and he has to start over. Existence seems pointless, but perhaps Sisyphus finds purpose and meaning in his eternal task by never giving up and continuing to push the rock up every time it rolls back down.

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The father of Theatre of the Absurd Samuel Beckett wrote,

among others,Waiting for Godot, Happy Days,

and Act Without Words, I

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Eugene Ionesco’s plays include The Leader , The Rhinoceros,

The Bald Soprano, Macbett, The Killing Game, and The Chairs.

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Tom Stoppard wrote, among others, Rosencrantz and

Guildenstern Are Dead, The Real Thing, Jumpers, and

he co-wrote the screenplay for Shakespeare in Love.

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Harold Pinter’s plays include The Room, The Birthday Party,

The Homecoming, and Betrayal.

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Edward Albee’s plays include The Zoo Story, Sandbox,

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, and Seascape.

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Sam Shepard’s many plays include A Lie of the Mind,

Fool for Love and his Pulitzer Prize play Buried Child.

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Sam Shepard is also a respected actor and director. He’s acted in 39 films including Black Hawk Down, The Right Stuff, Crimes of the Heart, and Steel Magnolias.

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Thornton Wilder, known

for writing Our Town

also wrote the

absurdist play

The Skin of Our Teeth.

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Christopher Durang’s many plays

include Death Comes to Us All,

Mary Agnes, ‘dentity Crisis,

The Actor’s Nightmare, Baby

and the Bathwater, and

The Marriage of Bette and Boo.

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The plays of these and other Absurdist playwrights have

common themes including the uselessness of human actions,

the failure of human communication, an illogical universe

(from fascist governments to dysfunctional families),

collective unconsciousness, menacing forces, and

feelings of alienation and hopelessness.

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However most plays of this genre are considered to be

in the tradition of tragicomedy.

We laugh at and identify with many of the characters

struggling, as we do, to make sense of our lives and the world.