The best books for newly retired people to read for inspiration and entertainment.
Georges Borchardt, a literary agent of cosmopolitan taste and style who found U.S. publishers for future Nobel laureates Elie Wiesel and Samuel Beckett and represented dozens of other prize-winning ...
A generation of people online just realized it’s possible to have a thought and keep it to themselves. Enter “365 buttons,” the cryptic New Year’s resolution that’s now become a meme about time, ...
Brandon J. Dirden and Michael Patrick Thornton play Pozzo and Lucky. Completing the cast of “Waiting For Godot” are Zaynn Arora and Eric Williams who share the role of “a boy” and understudies Jesse ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The latest starry revival of Samuel Beckett’s play is on Broadway, and one thing is certain: Whatever you call its elusive character, he doesn’t come.
For the 20th anniversary iPhone due in 2027, Apple is developing a solid-state button system as a wholesale replacement for the device's traditional mechanical buttons. That's the latest claim from ...
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure icons Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter recently reunited to continue being excellent to each other and delve into Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot on Broadway. But as ...
As this new revival takes center stage, it offers an ideal moment to trace the play’s journey: from Beckett’s postwar France to its polarizing first performances in Paris and London, to its absorption ...
It's a classic of theater that continues to be taken on by top actors and still resonates with audiences. “Waiting for Godot” mixes despair and comedy to raise questions about the meaning of life. Now ...
“There’s no lack of void,” Estragon tells Vladimir, in a typical bit of dryly profound wordplay in Samuel Beckett’s 1953 classic, “Waiting for Godot.” That could also describe the solid if overly ...
Of course it works. Two old friends known for their clownish escapades, always wanting to get back to somewhere they were – anywhere but here, really – all the while using ever so odd verbiage to ...