Betrayal

by Harold Pinter

Paperback, 1994

Status

Available

Call number

822.914

Collection

Publication

Grove Press (1994), Edition: unknown, 144 pages

Description

'Betrayal is a new departure and a bold one . . . Pinter has found a way of making memory active and dramatic, giving an audience the experience of the mind's accelerating momentum as it pieces together the past with a combination of curiosity and regret. He shows man betrayed not only by man, but by time - a recurring theme which has found its proper scenic correlative . . . Pinter captures the psyche's sly manoeuvres for self-respect with a sardonic forgiveness . . . a master craftsman honouring his talent by setting it new, difficult tasks' New Society 'There is hardly a line into which desire, pain, alarm, sorrow, rage or some kind of blend of feelings has not been compressed, like volatile gas in a cylinder less stable than it looks . . . Pinter's narrative method takes "what's next?" out of the spectator's and replaces it with the rather deeper "how?" and "why?" Why did love pass? How did these people cope with the lies, the evasions, the sudden dangers, panic and the contradictory feelings behind their own deftly engineered masks? The play's subject is not sex, not even adultery, but the politics of betrayal and the damage it inflicts on all involved.' The Times First staged at the National Theatre in 1978, Betrayal was revived at the Almeida Theatre, London, in 1991. Twenty years after its first showing, it returned to the National in 1998.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member riverwillow
I studied Pinter years ago at school and fell in love with his plays. I was prompted to re-read Betrayal because of an imminent trip to see a theatre production and I had forgotten just how good a play this is. The dialogue is sparse and deceptively simple, but is sharp and cuts like a knife to the
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core of the play, 'I don't need to think about you.' The simple device of telling the story of an affair backwards enables Pinter to expose the complexities of the affair, enabling this play to transcend the mundane, and, as Samuel Beckett commented to Pinter, 'wrings the heart'.
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LibraryThing member Devil_llama
An interesting twist on a familiar tale of infidelity - Pinter tells the story backwards. He begins at the end, and ends at the beginning, so you already sort of know how it's going to "end", but you stick around because he has hooked you by the peculiar twist. Without that gimmick, it might be
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just another familiar story with nothing to keep you in your seat. The dialogue is stark and nearly barren, but that can be misleading. It isn't so much the words the characters say as the interplay between the characters, what the words mean rather than strictly what they say.
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LibraryThing member LARA335
One of a few plays I am happy to reread/rewatch. Harold Pinter's inspiration for this was his long-term affair with Joan Bakewell, and he has said how he felt betrayed when he learnt that Joan's husband had known about the affair for a long time and not confronted him. And a wonderful exposure of
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human nature in the first scene when Jerry says, having heard talk that his ex-lover is seeing another man that he felt irritation that no one gossiped about us like that. Funny and painful, sparse mundane dialogue and plenty of pauses that speak a thousand thoughts. And an arresting back-to-front structure, so the audience know more than the characters as the play progresses. Wonderfully thought-provoking about relationships and what we remember about ourselves.
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LibraryThing member thorold
A three-hander first performed in 1978, with Penelope Wilton, Michael Gambon and Daniel Massey appearing in Peter Hall's original NT production. Jerry and Robert are best friends who studied together, play squash together, and both ended up working as publishers. They are both married and have
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children, but Jerry has had a seven-year-long affair with Robert's wife Emma. In a sequence of short, ambiguous scenes full of fragmented dialogue that never quite means what it says, Pinter digs back in time to explore different meanings of "betrayal", with each stage that we dig back into the characters' memories revealing another level of their dishonesty to each other and to themselves.

About as serious a take as it's possible to have on the banal topic of bourgeois adultery.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

144 p.; 8 inches

ISBN

0802130801 / 9780802130808
Page: 0.1264 seconds