From the mid-1960s, Samuel Beckett himself directed all his major plays
in Berlin, Paris, and London. For most of these productions he
meticulously prepared notebooks for his personal use.
The theatrical notebooks of Beckett that are reproduced in facsimile
here are translated and annotated and thus offer a remarkable record of
his own involvement with the staging of his texts. They present his
solutions to practical problems but also provide a unique insight into
the ways he envisaged his plays. With additional information taken from
Beckett's own annotated and corrected copies, the editors have been able
to constitute a new revised text for each of these major plays.
Waiting for Godot shows for the first time the extensive revisions
made by Beckett during revivals of the play. This volume is in part a
facsimile, with transcription and commentary, of the notebook kept by
Beckett for Berlin's Schiller Theater production in 1975. It contains a
full set of directorial notes, and discloses, section by section, a
total system that works by repetition and analogy, musical rhythm, and
echo, establishing subtle patterns of sound, movement, and gestures.