STC Waiting for Godot London Bound
Sydney Theatre Company's production of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot featuring Luke Mullins, Philip Quast, Richard Roxburgh and Hugo Weaving, directed by STC Artistic Director Andrew Upton, will tour to London’s Barbican as part of the International Beckett Season in 2015.
STC’s production, which had a paid attendance of nearly 35,000 people in Sydney at the end of 2013, will be performed at the Barbican Theatre from 4 to 13 June 2015. The engagement is STC’s second invitation to the Barbican following the success of Gross und Klein (Big and Small)in 2012.
The director and two of the actors will be particularly steeped in Beckett next year. Hugo Weaving is playing the lead role in STC’s Endgame, a later work by the master playwright, also directed by Andrew Upton, from 31 March to 9 May. Luke Mullins performs in a separate production of that play for Melbourne Theatre Company, also opening in March.
Waiting near a tree, Estragon (Roxburgh) and Vladimir (Weaving) struggle to make sense of a peculiar predicament. They are waiting, full of hope, for a man named Godot - though what exactly they are hoping this encounter might bring remains unclear. Joking, bickering and musing on the profound, their shared test of endurance is interrupted by the overbearing Pozzo (Quast) and the hapless Lucky (Mullins) in Beckett’s poetic portrait of humanity’s talent for resilience.
Andrew Upton’s Godot collaborators are Anna Lengyel (Associate Director), Zsolt Khell (Set Designer), Alice Babidge (Costume Designer), Nick Schlieper (Lighting Designer) and Max Lyandvert (Sound Designer).
STC has grown its international touring profile in recent years, alongside its year- round roster of productions in Sydney and on tour in Australia. The announcement comes hot on the heels of a highly successful tour of The Maids to New York where that show was seen by nearly 33,000 people. The Company has also presented Gross und Klein (Big and Small) in the UK, France, Austria and Germany. A History of Everything, commissioned by STC as a co-production with Belgian company Onteroend Goed, also had seasons in Chicago and in Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK. Long Day's Journey into Night played in Portland, and A Streetcar Named Desire toured to Washington and New York.
Also on the bill with Sydney Theatre Company for the Barbican’s International Beckett Season are major international artists and companies including Robert Wilson, Olwen Fouéré and Pan Pan Theatre.
Image: Hugo Weaving and Richard Roxburgh in Sydney Theatre Company’s Waiting For Godot. © Lisa Tomasetti
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