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In this latest revival of Krapp’s Last Tape at the Barbican Centre, it is the silence that speaks the loudest. At times, it’s ...
The best of the rest are earnest but arid acts of homage. If you’ve never seen Krapp before, Rea’s is a serious, finely ...
The star actor returns to the theater where he started almost a half-century ago, with Samuel Beckett’s bleak one-man play.
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 ...
Krapp is the man of the moment. Sixty-seven years after Samuel Beckett’s monologue was first performed by Patrick Magee, ...
The production, running until 17 May, marks a homecoming for Oldman, who began his professional acting career at the venue ...
It wasn’t too long ago when a receiver like TCU’s Savion Williams, who the Green Bay Packers drafted in the third round last ...
The actor performs Samuel Beckett’s melancholy solo piece at the York Theatre Royal, where he made his professional debut in 1979 ...
He who takes on Krapp is on stage for just 50 minutes, gets fewer lines than the voice of the tape recording they are listening to, coughs and sighs as much as they speak and must be fascinating ...
Does Oldman impress in his first stage appearance in 37 years? Does Krapp’s Last Tape captivate the critics? Fergus Morgan rounds up the reviews... Not a huge amount happens in Krapp’s Last Tape.
Time to record that last tape, to consign life to the dustbin, like the discarded banana skins. A life that has turned to, well, krapp. Oldman, now playing an old man, is full of memories too at ...
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