Krapp's Last Tape March 9, 10 ,11, 2012 by Samuel Beckett A tragedy in one act for a lone actor, a tape recorder, and
many, many bananas, Krapp’s Last Tape is one of Samuel Beckett’s most personal
works for the stage—a feat of great precision and tense economy. Featuring
discreet details from the writer’s own life, this dramatization of the messy
truths of memory and time illuminates the predicament we face when we become
strangers to our former selves. Reprising his role in the first play ever presented by
Olympic Theatre Arts, Rick Waites plays the titular Krapp, an embittered and
dyspeptic man who marks the occasion of his 69th birthday by revisiting his
39-year-old self. Veering from outrage to contemplation, Krapp exhibits the
ticks and tocks of a beaten man whose spirit unravels as the tapes unspool in
“all that old misery” of lost time.
Tickets are $10 and available by
calling the OTA office between 1-5 pm Mondays through Fridays. Tickets will
also be available at the door.
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