LANDSCAPE (PLAY)
Landscape is a one act play published by playwright Harold Pinter in 1967.
The play is largely a social commentary on the difficulties of communication between two people in a marriage. This is illustrated thought the two characters who appear to be talking to one another yet neither one actually heres the other person or at least does not response to there word. It is a dialogue that resembles closely to that of two independent monologues where the characters seem to speak through each other rather than to each other.
The play is often studied, read, and even acted out along side "silence" another one act play published soon after Landscape. Both plays mark a change in the focus of Harold Pinter. In both plays nothing happens, the action of the plays are brought to a holt putting an added emphasis to the role of the dialogues and monologues that take place. As one critic put it "nothing happens but much is explored". [1]
The set is minimalist in nature, consisting of merely of a few kitchen appliances and a "kitchen" table. The kitchen table is elongated in an exaggerated manner measuring eight feet wide, in which the characters often sit on opposite ends of each other adding a sense of distance between the characters wheres accentuate the distance felt in the dialogue (or lack their of) between the two characters.
There is virtually no plot to the play. Indeed it has been characterized as a play where "nothing happens". The focus being on the interactions, or the distant relationship between the two characters. If any plot can be considered it is only external plot, that exist in the stories that are told by the characters, yet nothing that could be considered plot actually takes place and acted out on the set itself.
The play is largely a social commentary on the difficulties of communication between two people in a marriage. This is illustrated thought the two characters who appear to be talking to one another yet neither one actually heres the other person or at least does not response to there word. It is a dialogue that resembles closely to that of two independent monologues where the characters seem to speak through each other rather than to each other.
The play is often studied, read, and even acted out along side "silence" another one act play published soon after Landscape. Both plays mark a change in the focus of Harold Pinter. In both plays nothing happens, the action of the plays are brought to a holt putting an added emphasis to the role of the dialogues and monologues that take place. As one critic put it "nothing happens but much is explored". [1]
| Contents |
| Set |
| Plot |
Set
The set is minimalist in nature, consisting of merely of a few kitchen appliances and a "kitchen" table. The kitchen table is elongated in an exaggerated manner measuring eight feet wide, in which the characters often sit on opposite ends of each other adding a sense of distance between the characters wheres accentuate the distance felt in the dialogue (or lack their of) between the two characters.
Plot
There is virtually no plot to the play. Indeed it has been characterized as a play where "nothing happens". The focus being on the interactions, or the distant relationship between the two characters. If any plot can be considered it is only external plot, that exist in the stories that are told by the characters, yet nothing that could be considered plot actually takes place and acted out on the set itself.
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
| Dancing Moon Travel | |
| Alpine Interface Inc. |
Newest Companies
Landscape (play) Travel Deals

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español