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Harold Pinter’s The Dumb Waiter. Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi, 2009. Reviewed by Harry Derbyshire, University of Greenwich Small but perfectly formed, The Dumb Waiter might be considered the best of Harold Pinter’s early plays, more consistent than The Birthday Party and sharper than The Caretaker. The Dumb Waiter / The Zoo Story Study Guide – page 5 The Dumb Waiter: About the Playwright (page 1 of 1) Harold,Pinter th eonly cid f aJ w s r,bO 1 093 in Hackney, London. His passion for acting began when he was a child in grammar school and continued into his teens, when he enrolled in acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

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Jacket description.back: In all of Pinter's plays, seemingly ordinary events become charged with profound, if elusive, meaning, haunting pathos, and wild comedy. In The Caretaker, a tramp finds lodging in the derelict house of two brothers; in The Dumbwaiter, a pair of gunmen wait for the kill in a decayed lodging house. Harold Pinter gradually exposes the inner strains an..more
Published January 18th 1994 by Grove Press (first published January 18th 1960)
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Rating details

Mar 20, 2013Lit Bug rated it it was amazing
I’d read The Caretaker more than three years ago, and though I had loved it, I kept The Dumb Waiter for another time, for some stupid reason. Finally I took it up today, and wondered why I dithered so long. I adore modern drama, and Pinter is one of my favorite playwrights.
For quite some time, Pinter had been considered a different kind of absurdist dramatist. Less dark than Beckett, but just as effective. And perhaps much more lucid. While Beckett alludes to the bleakness and meaninglessness of
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Jun 27, 2014Teresa rated it really liked it · review of another edition
In Pinter's The Caretaker, there is the Pinter-room, here both a haven and a hell for the character of the old man. There are the Pinter-pauses and the Pinter-humor, both used to great effect, though the Pinter-pitch-perfect dialogue does become a bit repetitive. The play could've been shorter and still achieved the same effect, even with each of the three characters getting his own lengthy monologue, one per act.
There is also the Pinter-ambiguity. Is the older brother who has had electroshock t
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Apr 26, 2019Jim rated it really liked it · review of another edition
These two plays by Harold Pinter made me wish I had seen them performed. 'The Caretaker' is about two brothers who allow an old bum to live in the flat that one of them owns as a caretaker. The old man, called Davies, plays one brother off the other, until both of them feel they are being manipulated and send him off. In 'The Dumb Waiter' two gunmen are in the basement waiting for orders to kill someone. As they wait, strange peremptory food orders come down through the dumb waiter. Both plays a..more
May 13, 2018David Stephens rated it really liked it · review of another edition
I sometimes wonder whether certain artists purposely leave matters vague in the hope that us overly analytical readers will believe there is something profound going on if we do enough detective work. I especially can't help but wonder this when I read/watch Harold Pinter plays, but at some point, there do seem to be enough details and recurring ideas and accusations that connect to show that his writing is more than merely vague. When one character seems to fear being idle and then another char..more
Jun 27, 2017Drew rated it really liked it · review of another edition
'The Caretaker' is one of my favorite Pinter plays. 'The Dumb Waiter,' one of my least favorite. So this collection is like the best and worst of Pinter -- the first part being rich with strange tensions, weird power plays, and unexpected poignancies; the second being a little too jokey, more of a sketch then an actual drama. But even bad Pinter is better than much else. He's always got a little of the creep factor in just about everything he does to keep things interesting.
The story of The Caretaker revolves around a drifter named Davies who ends up being taken in by a man named Aston who lives in one room of a run-down house owned by his brother, Mick. After meeting each other at a pub, Aston, who once spent time in a psychiatric hospital and seems to have been lobotomized, allows Davies to come home with him and offers up a spare bed in his room.
Each brother, at different times, offers Davies the job of caretaker in this house and toward the end of the play the
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Oct 24, 2008jeremy rated it really liked it
originally staged in 1960, the caretaker confirmed pinter's renown as a playwright. with little more than three actors and a single room, the caretaker illustrates an eccentric piteousness that eventually devolves into frustration and indifference. with wry humor and idiomatic genius, pinter veers towards the inscrutable just long enough to disperse with the expectations one may have in regards to contemporary drama. there is a dissociation between pinter's characters that leaves the reader feel..more
Nov 19, 2016Lucile Barker rated it did not like it
153. The Caretaker/The Dumbwaiter by Harold Pinter
Too surreal in the case of the Caretaker and too predictable in that of The Dumbwaiter. A grubby old man, Davies, is taken home by a young man, Aston, and allowed to stay in the house, which seems to be crumbling around them. Aston has brain damage from shock treatment in a psychiatric hospital. A second young man, Mick, Aston’s brother, says he is the owner. The two brothers take turns terrorizing the old man and there is no real conclusion. Th
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*4 for Dumbwaiter, 3 for caretaker
A note on The Dumbwaiter: This is a curious case of a play, for me. For one, I knew the ending and general plot already..thanks quiz bowl giveaways.. And for another I had watched a movie that reminded me of that plot [In Bruges], which prompted me to read the book.
Pinter's works are..typical plays? They take a few moments and make them dramatic. I didn't particularly like or dislike them. Fairly short, too.
I would recommend Dumbwaiter. Godotesque, I think.
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this book was a waste of time for me, my first comment when i finsihed the first plat was: WTF, after the second play, i decided i will never read anything again by the nobel Laureate, Harold Pinter. In the Caretaker, he tortures the reader with the lack of plot, there is Nothing in the play, absloutely nothing, it could have been a play about someone who went into the supermarket to buy anything!! i read reviews about it, and the readers were astonished by the writer's ability to torture his re..more
I started off '09 with one of my unfortunate habits of reading something by an author whose obituary had just been published. I was expecting to really like Pinter's style and he delivered. Nothing more, nothing less, just lots of good, tense dialogue. I think I preferred The Dumb Waiter due to my weakness for hitmen drama.
Dec 22, 2011Paul rated it liked it · review of another edition
The Caretaker didn't really hit me, but I did like the Dumb Waiter. I mean, Pinter's good, and everything here was sharp. Dialogue was nice and snappy, funny, but overall things were somewhat absurdist and I think I'll have to give this another try another time.
Apr 24, 2012Emily rated it really liked it
I only read The Dumbwaiter in my literature textbook for my class this semester, and I really enjoyed it. I think I'm coming to find that I like reading plays more than I like reading anything else. We still have one more to read - Arcadia, by Tom Stoppard. We'll see how that goes.
The Caretaker and the Dumb Waiter by Harold Pinter (1960)
this is a play with a special atmosphere.
Aug 15, 2011Terry rated it liked it

Harold Pinter Plays

Just read The Caretaker as a way to get ready for The Imaginists' performances later this month. As usual, reading a play wasn't as satisfying as I expect the stage presentation to be.
Jul 19, 2015Muzzy rated it it was ok
Not bad, but I prefer 'Betrayal.' I need to see the Dumbwaiter performed to appreciate it fully.
Interesting plays, stylistically strong. Pinter lends credible voices to his characters, but these works seem like they would be much stronger acted out (as they are supposed to be) than read.
Sep 04, 2015Tom Romig rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Two fine examples of Pinter's often vaguely menacing world of confused people who never seem to grasp the whole picture. They are troublingly like ourselves.
Nov 23, 2012Shannon rated it liked it
Clueless. I was clueless when I started reading Harold Pinter.
Sep 06, 2014Susannah rated it liked it

The Dumb Waiter Script Pdf

The Caretaker finished on September 15, 1997; The Dumb Waiter finished on September 10, 1997, both for Modern British Drama class
Aug 19, 2008Karen rated it really liked it
I know that I had to read them both, but I don't remember anything about The Caretaker. But The Dumb Waiter-- wow! It was intense. A riveting play. Seeing it performed would be amazing.
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Harold Pinter, CH, CBE, was an English playwright, screenwriter, actor, director, political activist, and poet. He was one of the most influential playwrights of modern times. In 2005 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
After publishing poetry and acting in school plays as a teenager in London, Pinter began his professional theatrical career in 1951, touring throughout Ireland. From 1952
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More quizzes & trivia..

Comedy of menace is the body of plays written by David Campton, Nigel Dennis, N. F. Simpson, and Harold Pinter. The term was coined by drama critic Irving Wardle, who borrowed it from the subtitle of Campton's play The Lunatic View: A Comedy of Menace, in reviewing Pinter's and Campton's plays in Encore in 1958. (Campton's subtitle Comedy of Menace is a jocular play-on-words derived from comedy of mannersmenace being manners pronounced with somewhat of a Judeo-English accent.)[1]

Background[edit]

Citing Wardle's original publications in Encore magazine (1958), Susan Hollis Merritt points out that in 'Comedy of Menace' Wardle 'first applies this label to Pinter's work … describ[ing] Pinter as one of 'several playwrights who have been tentatively lumped together as the 'non-naturalists' or 'abstractionists' ' (28)' (Merritt 225). His article 'Comedy of Menace,' Merritt continues,

centers on The Birthday Party because it is the only play of Pinter's that Wardle had seen [and reviewed] at the time, yet he speculates on the basis of 'descriptions of [Pinter's] other plays, 'The Room' and 'The Dumb Waiter', [that Pinter] is a writer dogged by one image—the womb' (33). Mentioning the acknowledged 'literary influences' on Pinter's work—'Beckett, Kafka and American gangster films'—Wardle argues that ' 'The Birthday Party' exemplifies the type of comic menace which gave rise to this article.' (225)[2]

In 'Comedy of Menace', as Merritt observes, on the basis of his experience of The Birthday Party and others' accounts of the other two plays, Wardle proposes that 'Comedy enables the committed agents and victims of destruction to come on and off duty; to joke about the situation while oiling a revolver; to display absurd or endearing features behind their masks of implacable resolution; to meet … in paper hats for a game of blind man's buff'; he suggests how 'menace' in Pinter's plays 'stands for something more substantial: destiny,' and that destiny, 'handled in this way—not as an austere exercise in classicism, but as an incurable disease which one forgets about most of the time and whose lethal reminders may take the form of a joke—is an apt dramatic motif for an age of conditioned behaviour in which orthodox man is a willing collaborator in his own destruction' (Wardle, 'Comedy of Menace' 33; rpt. in The Encore Reader 91).

'Just two years later' (1960), however, Wardle retracted 'Comedy of Menace' in his review of The Caretaker, stating: 'On the strength of 'The Birthday Party' and the pair of one-acters, I rashly applied the phrase 'comedy of menace' to Pinter's writing. I now take it back' ('There's Music' 130, as qtd. in Merritt 225–26).

After Wardle's retraction of comedy of menace as he had applied it to Pinter's writing, Pinter himself also occasionally disavowed it and questioned its relevance to his work (as he also did with his own offhand but apt statement that his plays are about 'the weasel under the cocktail cabinet'). For example, in December 1971, in his interview with Pinter about Old Times, Mel Gussow recalled that 'After The Homecoming [Pinter] said that [he] 'couldn't any longer stay in the room with this bunch of people who opened doors and came in and went out. Landscape and Silence [the two short poetic memory plays that were written between The Homecoming and Old Times] are in a very different form. There isn't any menace at all.' ' Later, when Gussow asked Pinter to expand on his view that he had 'tired' of 'menace', Pinter added: 'when I said that I was tired of menace, I was using a word that I didn't coin. I never thought of menace myself. It was called 'comedy of menace' quite a long time ago [1958]. I never stuck categories on myself, or on any of us [playwrights]. But if what I understand the word menace to mean is certain elements that I have employed in the past in the shape of a particular play, then I don't think it's worthy of much more exploration' (Gussow, Conversations with Pinter 18, 24).

Despite Wardle's retraction of comedy of menace (and Pinter's later qualifications), Comedy of menace and comedies of menace caught on and have been prevalent since the late 1950s in advertisements and in critical accounts, notices, and reviews to describe Pinter's early plays and some of his later work as well.[1] As Merritt points out, among other examples of critics' usage of this and similar categories of Pinter's work, after Gussow's 1971 'conversation' with Pinter, 'Though he echoes Wardle's concept, Gussow seems to avoid using comedy of menace when reviewing the CSC Repertory Theatre's 1988 production of The Birthday Party. While still emphasizing Pinter's 'terrors' and the 'shiver beneath the laughter,' Gussow describes the play as 'a play of intrigue, with an underlying motif of betrayal' … [and] [Bernard F.] Dukore calls the play 'a comedy (of menace or otherwise)' … (Merritt 10).

Selected examples from Pinter's plays and sketches[edit]

The Birthday Party (1958)

In discussing the first production of Pinter's first full-length play, The Birthday Party (1958), which followed his first play, The Room (1957), his authorised official biographer Michael Billington points out that Wardle 'once excellently' described its setting (paraphrasing Wardle), as 'a banal living-room [which] opens up to the horrors of modern history' (Billington 86).

The Dumb Waiter (1960)

In his second one-act play, The Dumb Waiter (1960), as accentuated through the 2008 film by Martin McDonagh closely resembling and markedly influenced by it, In Bruges, 'Pinter conveys the idea of political terror through the staccato rhythms of music-hall cross-talk and the urban thriller: Hackney Empire cross-fertilises with Hemingway's The Killers [1927]' (Billington 90), one of Pinter's own acknowledged early influences, along with Franz Kafka (348–49); Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists, such as William Shakespeare, John Webster, and Cyril Tourneur, whose work his schoolmaster Joseph Brearley had introduced to him; Samuel Beckett (mostly his novels [43]); and black-and-white American movies of the 1940s and 1950s.[3]

'A near-perfect play about the testiness of a collapsing partnership and the divide-and-rule tactics of authority,' according to Billington, The Dumb Waiter focuses on two characters, Gus and Ben; Gus is 'the man who questions the agreed system and who is ultimately destroyed by his quest for meaning'; Ben, 'the man who blindly obeys orders and thereby places himself at risk. (If the system can arbitrarily dispose of his partner, why not of him?)' (92). As Pinter's The Dumb Waiter has been categorised as a 'comedy of menace,' so may be McDonagh's In Bruges, as it closely resembles it; yet, despite the comedy and the sense of threat growing out of the menace, these works of Pinter and McDonagh are, in Pinter's words to Billington, also 'doing something which can be described as political' (92). At the same time, [Pinter] had – and still [in 1996 through to the time of his death in 2008] has – an acute sense of the fragility of earthly happiness and of the terrors that haunt us even from infancy' (92).

The 'punning title' of The Dumb Waiter, Billington observes, 'carries several layers of meaning': 'It obviously refers to the antique serving-hatch that despatches [sic] ever more grotesque orders for food to these bickering gunmen'—the dumbwaiter; 'But it also applies to Gus, who, troubled by the nature of the mission [their next job as hitmen] to realise he is its chosen target; or, indeed to Ben, who, by his total obedience to a higher authority that forces him to eliminate his partner, exposes his own vulnerability' (89). As Gus 'dumbly' awaits his fate, he may be a subservient partner who awaits orders from the 'senior partner' Ben, but Ben too is subservient to The Powers That Be, a contemporary variation on Deus ex machina, manipulating both the mechanical dumbwaiter and them through its increasingly extravagant and thus comically inconvenient 'orders' for increasingly exotic dishes, unnerving both of them.

Billington adds:

This being Pinter, the play has a metaphorical openness. You can interpret it as an Absurdist comedy – a kind of Godot in Birmingham – about two men passing the time in a universe without meaning or purpose. You can see it as a cry of protest against a whimsically cruel God who treats man as His plaything – even the twelve matches that are mysteriously pushed under the door have been invested with religious significance [by critics]. But it makes much more sense if seen as a play about the dynamics of power and the nature of partnership. Ben and Gus are both victims of some unseen authority and a surrogate married couple quarrelling, testing, talking past each other and raking over old times. (90)

The comedy in this 'comedy of menace' often derives from such arguments between Gus and Ben, especially the one that occurs when 'Ben tells Gus to go and light the kettle,' a 'semantic nit-picking that is a standard part of music-hall comedy': 'All the great stage and film double acts – Jewel and Warriss, Abbott and Costello – fall into this kind of verbal worrying in which the bullying 'male' straight man issues instructions which are questioned by the more literal-minded 'female' partner' —

GUS: Light what?
BEN: The kettle.
GUS: You mean the gas.
BEN: Who does?
GUS: You do.
BEN: (his eyes narrowing): What do you mean, I mean the gas?
GUS: Well, that's what you mean, don't you? The gas.
BEN: (Powerfully): If I say go and light the kettle I mean go and light the kettle.
GUS: How can you light a kettle?

BEN: It's a figure of speech! Light the kettle. It's a figure of speech! (Qtd. in Billington 90–91)

As Billington observes further,

This kind of comic pedantry has precise echoes of the great Sid Field – ironically [since the city is the setting of this play] a Birmingham comic – who had a famous sketch in which he played a virgin of the greens being hectored by Jerry Desmonde's golf pro who would cry, in exasperation, 'When I say 'Slowly Back' I don't mean 'Slowly Back', I mean 'Slowly Back.' ' At another moment, the bullying pro would tell the hapless Sid to get behind the ball and he would vainly protest 'But it's behind all round it'. But, where in a music-hall sketch this kind of semantic by-play was its own justification, in Pinter it becomes a crucial part of the power-structure. … The pay-off comes when Gus, having dogmatically insisted that the accurate phrase is 'put on the kettle', suddenly finds an irritated Ben adopting the right usage. (91)

'Everything' in The Dumb Waiter, Billington observes, 'contributes towards a necessary end'; for, 'the image, as Pete says in [Pinter's only novel] The Dwarfs, stands in exact correspondence and relation to the idea' (91). In this example, the central image and central metaphor, the dumbwaiter, while 'despatching ever more unlikely orders,' serves as 'both a visual gag and a metaphor for manipulative authority' (91), and therein lies its menace. When Ben instructs Gus verbally, while practicing their 'routine' for killing their next victim, he leaves out the most important line, which instructs Gus to 'take out' his 'gun' (Pinter, The Dumb Waiter 114–15):

'BEN frowns and presses his forehead.
GUS. You've missed something out.
BEN. I know. What?
GUS. I haven't taken my gun out, according to you.
BEN. You take your gun out—
GUS. After I've closed the door.
BEN. After you've closed the door.
GUS. You've never missed that out before, you know that?

(Pinter, The Dumb Waiter 116)

The crucial significance of the omission becomes clear only at the very end of the play, when 'Gus enters through the door stage-right – the one marked for the intended victim – stripped of his gun and holster'; it becomes clear that he is going to be 'Ben's target' (Billington 92), as Ben's 'revolver [is] levelled at the door', though the play ends before Ben fires any shot (Pinter, The Dumb Waiter 121). Supercache 5 2 keygen torrent.

The Caretaker (1960)

In an entry on Pinter for the 1969 edition of The Encyclopedia of World Drama cited by Merritt, Wardle repeats and updates some of his first perspective on comedy of menace as he had applied it initially to Pinter's writing:

Early in his writing career Pinter admitted to three influences: Franz Kafka, American gangster films, and Samuel Beckett. . . . At that time his plays, more than those of any other plawright's [sic], were responsible for the newly coined term 'comedy of menace.' This phrase certainly makes sense when applied to The Birthday Party . . . or to The Dumb Waiter. . . . But 'menace' is hardly the word for The Caretaker, and still less for subsequent plays in which Pinter increasingly exchanged his derelict settings and down-and-out characters for environments of moneyed elegance (657–58). (Qtd. in Merritt 240)

Despite those more-recent caveats regarding applying the phrase that he himself initially coined for Pinter's writing to The Caretaker—only the second of Pinter's full-length plays produced by then and the one that launched his career as a successful playwright in 1960 (Merritt 9, 226) —and to Pinter's later plays, scenes in both acts of The Caretaker in which Mick confronts an unsuspecting Davies and scares him almost speechless (Pinter, The Caretaker 129, 146) also epitomise how comedy and menace still co-exist in Pinter's text and on Pinter's stage.

The comic aspects of this play multiply, reaching a crescendo in Mick's monologue in Act Two describing his 'deepest wishes' for decorating the attic room (161, 173) and falling with Davies, a tramp taken in out of the cold by his brother, suggesting that 'if' he can 'just get down to Sidcup' to get his 'papers' and 'sort' himself 'out' (113–16, 164), his refrain and excuse for everything (153, 175–79), he might just be able to accomplish Mick's hyperbolic pipe dream and 'decorate the attic room out for [Mick]' (164), leading Mick to accuse Davies of misrepresenting himself as 'an experienced first-class professional interior and exterior decorator' (172–74), an absurd conclusion, given the tangible evidence of the down-and-out Davies before Mick (and the audience).

Pinter's friend the late film and stage director David Jones, who directed the play for the Roundabout Theatre, in New York City, in 2003 (having previously directed Pinter's 1983 film of Betrayal, as well as other works by or featuring him), reminds his audience that Pinter himself said, in a widely quoted statement, that The Caretaker is only 'funny, up to a point' and that 'beyond that point' is why he wrote it:

There is always mischief lurking in the darkest corners. The world of The Caretaker is a bleak one, its characters damaged and lonely. But they are all going to survive. And in their dance to that end they show a frenetic vitality and a wry sense of the ridiculous that balance heartache and laughter. Funny, but not too funny. As Pinter wrote, back in 1960: 'As far as I am concerned The Caretaker IS funny, up to a point. Beyond that point, it ceases to be funny, and it is because of that point that I wrote it.' (Jones)

'Beyond the point' of the comedy (the 'funny') lies the scary territory that threatens one's very existence (Billington 92), which Wardle and others commonly have 'labeled' or 'pigeonholed' (depending on one's perspective) as 'menace' (Merritt 9–10).

Pinter's later plays

Though 'comedy of menace' is generally applied to Pinter's early work of the late 1950s through the middle of the 1960s, including The Collection (1961), The Lover (1963), Tea Party (1965, 1968), and The Homecoming (1965), even Pinter's late plays, like Ashes to Ashes (1996) and Celebration (2000), his last two full-length stage plays, exhibit his characteristic amalgam of the comic and the menacing, a sense of threat or impending doom; there is less comedy and more menace in Ashes to Ashes, in which heavy echoes of the Holocaust predominate; a more comedy than menace in Celebration, where heightened comic dialogue outweighs the frightening undercurrents of terror, the terrifying, or the terrible.

Celebration (2000)

While reviewers and other audience members describe Celebration as hilarious ('one of Pinter's funniest plays', according to Billington [404]), the nature of the relationships of two sets of diners (three couples) having dinner in an upscale restaurant (which some critics assume that Pinter modeled on The Ivy, in London's West End) – 'this is the best and most expensive restaurant in the whole of Europe' (Pinter, Celebration 364) – remains characteristically ambiguous; Billington describes one set of couples as 'a strangely rootless bunch with a depleted sense of family' (405).

One set (the two couples seated at Table One) consists of brothers Lambert and Matt and their wives, Prue and Julie, who are sisters; the second set of diners (the couple seated at Table Two) consists of a banker and his young wife, Suki, who comically turns out to have had an affair with Lambert when she was 18 (Billington 104).

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As the 'maître d'hôtel' emits platitudes geared to elevate the nouveaux riches in their own imagined esteem ('I believe the concept of this restaurant rests in that public house of my childhood' [Pinter, Celebration 371]), the 'maîtress d'hôtel' appears to dwell on a peculiar past family and sex life (373–74), while the Waiter engages in 'interjections' spinning fantasied impossible memories of a grandfather who knew writers, other artists, and various other public figures of multiple decades and geographical locations too far apart to have been experienced personally in one man's lifetime (367, 375).

Lambert and Matt reveal themselves to be rather uncouth bullies ('Teddy boys', according to some London reviews)—

Lambert's mobile phone rings.
LAMBERT Who the fuck's this?
He switches it on.
LAMBERT (cont.) Yes? What? (He listens briefly.) I said no calls! It's my fucking wedding anniversary!
He switches it off.

LAMBERT (cont.) Cunt.
(Pinter, Celebration 364)—

who describe themselves as 'consultants … Strategy consultants. … It means we don't carry guns. … We don't have to! … We're peaceful strategy consultants. … Worldwide. Keeping the peace (379). Strategy consultant could be a euphemistic catchall for warmonger, manager of terrorism, purveyor of counter-terrorism, or orderer of covert operations.

As the banker Russell interprets their explanation, peaceful strategy consultants seems vaguely menacing: 'We need more people like you. Taking responsibility. Taking charge. Keeping the peace. Enforcing the peace. Enforcing peace. We need more like you' (379). This speech stressing 'force' (in the repetitions of Enforcing) occurs after Russell has already revealed his own ilk:

Look at me. I'm basically a totally disordered personality; some people would describe me as a psychopath. (to Suki) Am I right?

SUKI Yes.
RUSSELL But when I'm sitting in this restaurant I suddenly find I have no psychopathic tendencies at all. I don't feel like killing everyone in sight, I don't feel like putting a bomb under everyone's arse. I feel something quite different, I have a sense of equilibrium, of harmony, I love my fellow diners. Now this is very unusual for me. Normally I feel—as I've just said—absoute malice and hatred towards everyone within spitting distance—but here I feel love. How do you explain it?

SUKI It's the ambience. (370–71)

Lambert and Matt are distantly reminiscent of Gus and Ben from The Dumb Waiter; but distinctly less polite while living much higher on the hog. One imagines such characters 'strategically' plotting the 'peaceful' rendition of others without any qualms while sipping Perrier and simultaneously planning their next wedding-anniversary dinner celebration (perhaps with a different set of wives) on their mobiles.

As the Waiter says in his apparently penultimate 'interjection', in which one might detect intimations of mortality:

My grandfather introduced me to the mystery of life and I'm still in the middle of it. I can't find the door to get out. My grandfather got out of it. He left it behind him and he didn't look back.
He got that absolutely right.
And I'd like to make one further interjection.
He stands still.
Slow fade.

(385)

'Apart From That' (Sketch) (2006)

Pinter mocks mobile phones comically in an ostensibly-trivial wireless conversation, while still suggesting a residual bit of menace in the unsaid, developed as his last revue sketch Apart From That (2006). As Billington observes, this dramatic sketch inspired by Pinter's strong aversion to mobile phones is 'very funny', but 'as two people trade banalities over their mobile phones[,] there is a hint of something ominous and unspoken behind the clichéd chat' (429), as illustrated in the following excerpt:

Two people on mobile phones.
GENE.
How are you?
LAKE.
Very well. And you? Are you well?
GENE.
I'm terribly well. How about you?
LAKE.
Really well. I'm really well.
GENE.
I'm so glad.
LAKE.
Apart from .. oh you know ..
GENE.
I know.
LAKE.
Apart from .. oh you know ..
GENE.
I do know. But apart from that ..?
LAKE.
How about you?
GENE.
Oh you know .. all things considered ..
LAKE.
I know. But apart from that ..?
Silence.
GENE.
Sorry. I've lost you.
[..]

('Apart From That' 5–6)

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ abSee Merritt 5, 9–10, 225–28, 240, 310, and 326, citing articles by Wardle, Gussow's Conversations with Pinter, and various performance reviews by Wardle, Gussow, and others.
  2. ^Cf. Billington 106.
  3. ^See Wardle, 'Comedy of Menace' 33, as qtd. in Merritt 225.

Works cited[edit]

Billington, Michael. Harold Pinter. 1996. Rev. ed. London: Faber and Faber, 2007. ISBN978-0-571-23476-9 (13). [Updated 2nd ed. of The Life and Work of Harold Pinter. 1996. London: Faber and Faber, 1997. ISBN0-571-17103-6 (10).]
Gussow, Mel. Conversations with Pinter. London: Nick Hern Books, 1994. ISBN1-85459-201-7. Rpt. New York: Limelight, 2004. ISBN0-87910-179-2.
Jones, David. 'Travels with Harold'. Front & Center Online ('The Online Version of Roundabout Theatre Company's Subscriber Magazine'). Roundabout Theatre Company, Fall 2003. (3 pages.) Web. 9 Oct. 2007.
Merritt, Susan Hollis. Pinter in Play: Critical Strategies and the Plays of Harold Pinter. 1990. Rpt. with a new preface. Durham and London: Duke UP, 1995. ISBN0-8223-1674-9 (10). ISBN978-0-8223-1674-9 (13).
Pinter, Harold. 'Apart From That'. Areté 20 (Spring/Summer 2006): 5–8.
–––. The Birthday Party, The Caretaker, and Celebration. In The Essential Pinter. New York: Grove Press, 2006. ISBN0-8021-4269-9 (10). ISBN978-0-8021-4269-6. (Parenthetical references to this edition of the three plays appear in the text.)
–––. The Caretaker and The Dumb Waiter: Two Plays by Harold Pinter. 1960. New York: Grove Press, 1988. ISBN0-8021-5087-X (10). ISBN978-0-8021-5087-5 (13). (Parenthetical citations to The Dumb Waiter in the text are from this ed. of the play, which is accessible online via Google Books 'limited preview'. It was reissued again with a new cover after Pinter won the 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature.)
Wardle, Irving. 'The Birthday Party'. Encore 5 (July–Aug. 1958): 39–40. Rpt. in The Encore Reader: A Chronicle of the New Drama. Ed. Charles Marowitz, Tom Milne, and Owen Hale. London: Methuen, 1965. 76–78. (Reissued as: New Theatre Voices of the Fifties and Sixties. London: Eyre Methuen, 1981.)
–––. 'Comedy of Menace'. Encore 5 (Sept. – Oct. 1958): 28–33. Rpt. in The Encore Reader and New Theatre Voices 86–91.
–––. 'There's Music in That Room'. Encore 7 (July–Aug. 1960): 32–34. Rpt. in The Encore Reader and New Theatre Voices 129–32.

External links[edit]

  • 'Plays by Harold Pinter' at HaroldPinter.org: The Official Website of the International Playwright Harold Pinter (Index of Harold Pinter's plays; includes dates of composition and productions).
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