The ''Festival d'Avignon'' was founded by Jean Vilar in 1947. He was invited to present his first great successful play –
Murder in the Cathedral by
T. S. Eliot in the Palace of the Popes. At the same moment and at the same place, an exhibition of contemporary paintings and sculptures was organized by Christian Zervos, an art critic and collector, and by René Char, the poet. Vilar initially refused the invitation, as for him the Cour d'Honneur of the Pope's Palace was too vast and "shapeless" and he also lost the performance rights of the play. However, he proposed three creations: Shakespeare's Richard II, one of Bard's plays that was little known at the time in France; Paul Claudel's
Tobie et Sara ('Tobie and Sara'), and Maurice Clavel's second play,
La Terrasse de Midi ('The Midday Terrace'). The first ''Festival d'Avignon'' in September 1947 set the scene as a showcase for unknown work and modern scripts. On the other hand, Vilar's conception of the theatre remained conservative with respect to competing conceptions developed especially in the course of the 1960s. On the crest of the wave of contemporary tendencies to revolutionize theatrical practices, in 1966 Avignon's Théâtre des Carmes, co-founded by André Benedetto and Bertrand Hurault, staged a festival "Off", unofficial and independent. The following year, Benedetto's theatre was joined by other kindred theatrical companies. In response to the "Off" challenge, in 1967 Jean Vilar gave rise to the festival of ''La Cour d'honneur du Palais des papes'' ("Court of Honor of the Popes' Palace"). Thenceforth, numerous further sites will be chosen to stage the festival's theatrical representations. Vilar directed the festival until his death in 1971. In that year, Vilar's "In" festival included thirty-eight shows. In 1991, two years after
Samuel Beckett’s death, a French judge ruled that productions of
Waiting for Godot with female casts would not cause excessive damage to Beckett's legacy, and allowed the play to be performed by the all-female cast of the Brut de Beton theater company at the festival, although an objection by Beckett's representative had to be read before each performance.
2020 edition and COVID-19 pandemic The 2020 edition was cancelled because of the
COVID-19 pandemic. ==Strikes during the Festival==