Krapp's Last Tape, Barbican review - playing with the lighter side of Beckett's gloom

★★★★★ KRAPP'S LAST TAPE, BARBICAN Playing with the lighter side of Beckett's gloom

The Irish actor Stephen Rea is a silent-movie Krapp to treasure

In the Stygian darkness of a bare room, a table on a low platform with a light hanging overhead starts to emerge. Then a door briefly opens at the back of the space and the figure that has entered and sat down at the table also begins to emerge. When the stage lighting goes on, this tableau out of a Bacon painting sharpens and we can properly scrutinise the man. 

Waiting for Godot, Theatre Royal Haymarket review - humanity in high definition

★★★★★ WAITING FOR GODOT, THEATRE ROYAL HAYMARKET Brilliant revival of this key absurdist play stars Lucian Msamati and Ben Whishaw

Brilliant revival of this key absurdist play stars Lucian Msamati and Ben Whishaw

Modernism is us. Today. For the past two decades plays by Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter – which once upon a time bewildered their audiences and gave critics apoplexy – have become big West End hits. The avant-garde is now commercial. The incomprehensible is our reality.

Dance First - the travails of Samuel Beckett

★★★ DANCE FIRST Tasteful biopic of the Irish writer errs in neglecting his work

Tasteful biopic of the Irish writer errs in neglecting his work

Dance First takes its title from a line in Samuel Beckett’s most famous work Waiting for Godot. “Perhaps he could dance first and think afterwards,” says the tramp Estragon of Pozzo’s slave Lucky, who then proceeds to do both in a typically absurd Beckettian way.

Footfalls & Rockaby, Jermyn Street Theatre review - Beckett up close and personal

★★ FOOTFALLS AND ROCKABY Beckett's ferocious contemplations on the ebbing of life

Double bill finds the Irish master at his most raw

Like all great art, Samuel Beckett's works find a way to speak to you as an individual, stretching from page to stage and on, on, on into our psyches. This happens not through sentimental manipulation or cheap sensationalism, but through the accrual of impressions, the gathering of memories, the painstaking construction of meaning. Rarely far from view on the London stage, Beckett has two seminal one acts on view briefly in London before touring to Bath. 

Eimear McBride: Strange Hotel review - keycards to the heart of a woman in flight

★★★★★ EIMEAR MCBRIDE: STRANGE HOTEL A mesmeric story of life lost and found

A mesmeric story of life lost, and found, in the limbo of travel

Hotels in fiction can serve as places of desolation or discovery; as escape hatches, or else punishment blocks. In her third novel, Eimear McBride channels this ambivalence but annexes it to another sub-genre - the narrative of life on the road, with all its detours and disorientations. Captured at intervals, from her thirties to her fifties, McBride‘s protagonist picks up the tangled threads of a woman’s life.

Waiting for Godot, Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh

WAITING FOR GODOT, ROYAL LYCEUM THEATRE, EDINBURGH Magnificent Beckett from two revered Scottish actors

Magnificent Beckett from two revered Scottish actors

It’s been a turbulent few months for Edinburgh’s Lyceum Theatre, with a substantial cut in funding from Creative Scotland last October, followed by the (unrelated) announcement that Mark Thomson, artistic director since 2003, would step down at the end of the current season.

Waiting for Godot, Barbican

WAITING FOR GODOT, BARBICAN Sydney Theatre Company offers a stylish and humane take on Beckett

Sydney Theatre Company offers a stylish and humane take on Beckett

In a peculiarly Beckettian development, the creative team of this Sydney Theatre Company production spent several weeks of rehearsal waiting not for Godot, but for their director. Tamás Ascher – who spotted the casting potential of Uncle Vanya co-stars Hugo Weaving and Richard Roxburgh for the 1953 absurdist classic in which nothing happens, twice – was eventually forced to withdraw, leaving company director Andrew Upton to work within the set already developed by Ascher and designer Zsolt Khell.

Happy Days, Young Vic

HAPPY DAYS, YOUNG VIC Juliet Stevenson's performance of a lifetime as Beckett's Winnie is back. Read what we thought first time round

The great Juliet Stevenson mesmerises in Beckett's tragic-heroic role of a lifetime

For those who never saw Samuel Beckett’s favoured performer Billie Whitelaw on stage as indomitable, buried-alive Winnie, peculiarly happy days are here again with another once-in-a-generation actress facing what Dame Peggie Ashcroft called “a ‘summit’ part”, the female equivalent of Hamlet. Juliet Stevenson makes you think not so much “what a great performance” as “what a towering masterpiece of a play” – and how often do star interpretations even of the big Shakespeare roles prompt that kind of reaction?

Waiting For Godot, Arcola Theatre

WAITING FOR GODOT, ARCOLA THEATRE Totally Tom duo bring new comedy to Beckett

Totally Tom duo bring new comedy to Beckett

Waiting For Godot is one of those plays which even those who have never seen know something about. “A tragicomedy in two acts,” as Beckett's subtitle described it, in which two tramps in bowler hats blether on about boots and a bloke who never appears, and where, in Irish critic Vivian Mercer's immortal words, “nothing happens twice”. And if they know nothing else about it, they surely can quote the play's most famous line: "We give birth astride of a grave."

Not I, Footfalls, Rockaby, Royal Court Theatre

NOT I, FOOTFALLS, ROCKABY, ROYAL COURT Lisa Dwan dazzles in three Beckett shorts

Lisa Dwan dazzles in a richly dark interpretation of three Samuel Beckett short plays

In many ways, the darkness is the most memorable aspect of this production. It's so deep and all-encompassing that your eyes start to play tricks on you, seeing spots of light and shadow where there is only blackness. Because of this, when Lisa Dwan's mouth is slowly illuminated eight feet up on the stage, it's easy to dismiss it at first as just another trick of the dark. The only light in the theatre seems to emanate from the mouth itself, as it begins to gasp before tumbling into the breakneck stream of consciousness monologue that is Beckett's Not I.