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Written
in English in 1965, this piece has only 121 words in all. Beckett's note
to the text is almost twice as long. Three women meet in a softly lit
place. Seated on a bench facing the audience, they reminisce about old
school days. Each woman leaves the stage briefly, and during each absence
an appalling secret is whispered about the third which the audience
doesn't hear. At the end the three hold hands with the cryptic comment
'I can feel the rings', though Beckett specifies that none are apparent. 'May
we not speak of the old days? [Silence.] Of what came after? [Silence.]
Shall we hold hands in the old way?' A
graduate of University College Cork and associate director at the Donmar
Warehouse, John Crowleyis an award-winning theatre director. His play
True Lines won the Stewart Parker award
for Best New Play in 1995 and he also won the Kilkenny Cream of Ireland
Award for Performing Arts for his work on Double
Helix in 1996. His recent work includes
The Match Seller Girl (Theatre Project
Tokyo, Japan), Macbeth for Thelma
Holt Productions (Queens Theatre, West End) Juno
and the Paycock (Donmar Warehouse and Broadway) and The Turn of the Screw (Welsh National Opera). I
think Come and Go is a perfect
piece of writing. It's all of seven minutes but what he compresses into
that is three lifetimes full of sadness. Sian Phillips (Ru) has been acting since childhood and has won numerous awards for her film, TV and theatre performances including the New York Critics' Award for Goodbye Mr Chips. Films include Dune, Valmont, Clash of the Titans and The Age of Innocence.
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