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Poetry & Drama

Happy Days

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About the book

In Happy Days, Samuel Beckett pursues his relentless search for the meaning of existence, probing the tenuous relationships that bind one person to another, and each to the universe, top time past and time present. Once again, stripping theater to its barest essentials, Happy Days offers only two characters: Winnie, a woman of about fifty, and Willie, a man of about sixty.

In the first act Winnie is buried up to her waist in a mound of earth, but still has the use of her arms and few earthly possessions—toothbrush, tube of toothpaste, small mirror, revolver, handkerchief, spectacles; in the second act she is embedded up to her neck and can move only her eyes. Willie lives and moves—on all fours—behind the mound, appearing intermittently and replying only occasionally into Winnie’s long monologue, but the knowledge of his presence is a source of comfort and inspiration to her, and doubtless the prerequisite for all her “happy days.”

Editions (3)

ISBN9780802144409
PublisherGrove Atlantic
Publication Date07/16/13
Pages96

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  • psor
    psor

    5 Followers

    4.0

    A woman buried up to her waist in a mound, with nothing but a bag of things, chattering away to keep the darkness at bay, eternal optimist but still sinking in the sands of time at the edge of the abyss that is life. Bleak, funny, most of all strange. As Existentialism usually is, in my experience.

    Feb 23, 2024

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