Waiting For Godot
"Nothing to be done," is one of the many
phrases that is repeated again and
again throughout Samuel Beckett’s Waiting
For Godot. Godot is an
existentialist play that reads like somewhat of a
language poem. That is to say,
Beckett is not interested in the reader
interpreting his words, but simply
listening to the words and viewing the
actions of his perfectly mismatched
characters. Beckett uses the standard
Vaudevillian style to present a play that
savors of the human condition. He
repeats phrases, ideas and actions that has
his audience come away with many
different ideas about who we are and how
beautiful our human existence is
even in our desperation. The structure of
Waiting For Godot is determined
by Beckett’s use of repetition. This is
demonstrated in the progression of
dialogue and action in each of the two acts
in Godot. The first thing an
audience may notice about Waiting For Godot is that
they are immediately set
up for a comedy. The first two characters to appear on
stage are Vladimir and
Estragon, dressed in bowler hats and boots. These
characters lend themselves
to the same body types as Abbot and Costello.
Vladimir is usually cast as
tall and thin and Estragon just the opposite. Each
character is involved in a
comedic action from the plays beginning. Estragon is
struggling with a
tightly fitting boot that he just cannot seem to take off his
foot. Vladimir
is moving around bowlegged because of a bladder problem. From
this beat on
the characters move through a what amounts to a comedy routine. A
day in the
life of two hapless companions on a country road with a single
tree.
Beckett accomplishes two things by using this style of comedy.
Comedy routines
have a beginning and an ending. For Godot the routine begins
at the opening of
the play and ends at the intermission. Once the routine is
over, it cannot
continue. The routine must be done again. This creates the
second act. The
second act, though not an exact replication, is basically the
first act
repeated. The routine is put on again for the audience. The same
chain of
events: Estragon sleeps in a ditch, Vladimir meets him at the tree,
they are
visited by Pozzo and Lucky, and a boy comes to tell them that Godot
will not be
coming but will surely be there the following day. In this way
repetition
dictates the structure of the play. There is no climax in the play
because the
only thing the plot builds to is the coming of Godot. However,
after the first
act the audience has pretty much decided that Godot will
never show up. It is
not very long into the second act before one realizes
that all they are really
doing is wasting time, "Waiting for...waiting." (50)
By making the second
act another show of the same routine, Beckett instills
in us a feeling of our
own waiting and daily routines. What is everyday for
us but another of the same
act. Surely small things will change, but overall
we seem to be living out the
same day many times over. Another effect of
repetition on the structure of Godot
is the amount of characters in the play.
As mentioned before, the play is set up
like a Vaudeville routine. In order
to maintain the integrity of the routine,
the play must be based around these
two characters. This leaves no room for
extra characters that will get in the
way of the act. To allow for the
repetition of the routine to take place the
cast must include only those
characters who are necessary it. The idea that
the two characters are simply
passing time is evident in the dialogue. The
aforementioned phrase, "Nothing
to be done," is one example of repetition in
dialogue. In the first half-dozen
pages of the play the phrase is repeated
about four times. This emphasizes the
phrase so that the audience will pick
up on it. It allows the audience to
realize that all these two characters
have is the hope that Godot will show up.
Until the time when Godot
arrives, all they can do is pass the time and wait.
The first information
we learn about the characters is how Estragon was beaten
and slept in a
ditch. We get the sense that this happens all the time. This is
nothing new
to the characters. They are used to this routine. The flow of the
play is
based around this feeling that the characters know where each day is
headed.
The audience feels that the characters go through each day with the hope
that
Godot will come and make things different. In at least three instances in
the
play characters announce that they are leaving and remain still on the
stage.
These are examples of how the units of the play are effected individually
by
repetition. Again, Becket emphasizes this for a reason. This is best shown
in
the following beat: Pozzo: I must go. Estragon: And your half-hunter?
Pozzo: I
must have left it at the manor. Silence Estragon: Then adieu.
Vladimir: Adieu.
Pozzo: Adieu. Silence. No one moves. Vladimir: Adieu.
Pozzo: Adieu. Estragon:
Adieu. Silence. Pozzo: And thank you. Vladimir:
Thank you. Pozzo: Not at all.
Estragon: Yes yes. Pozzo: No no. Vladimir:
Yes yes. Pozzo: No no. Silence. Pozzo:
I don’t seem to be able...(long
hesitation)...to depart. Estragon: Such is
life.(31) The last two pieces of
the excerpt is very literal. The idea that
going someplace is doesn’t matter,
because there is really nowhere to go. All
you can do is find someplace else
to wait. Also repeated in the beat is the
stage direction for silence.
Silence occurs in life and theater is just a
reflection of our lives. It is,
in effect, a line of dialogue. Repeated silence
outlines the awkwardness of
the beat. The repetition then creates the tone of
the beat. Many of the
play’s beats are comprised of some type of repetition.
"All I know is
that the hours are long, under these conditions, and constrain
us to beguile
them with proceedings which-how shall I say-which may at first
sight seem
reasonable, until they become a habit."(52) Here Beckett has a
character
state flat out what is happening in the play. The plot of the play is
based
around repetition. All the pieces of their lives have become habit. When
at
first they were ways to pass the days they have become repeated, and
through
this repetition they have become unreasonable. The habit that
controls our lives
is the same habit that fuels the characters in Godot. The
same habit that makes
the structure of Godot a repetition in itself. In the
first act, the goings-on
in the play may seem reasonable to the audience.
Merely a way for these two
people to pass the hours of their particular day.
By making the second act the
same routine, the tragic humor of their
situation is revealed. Estragon and
Vladimir are stuck in this way of
life. Bound to making each day more of the
same, because they can find no
other way to deal with their lives then to try to
pass the time. All the
ideas of the play and all the questions that are raised
are highlighted
through the use of repetition. Therefore, the structure of the
play is
dominated by this single characteristic of the play.