Genre Ionesco described the play as a "tragic farce".
Philosophical basis The play addresses the philosophical idea of
"the Absurd", referring to the conflict between the human tendency to seek meaning in life and the inability to find it. Ionesco suggests that "life is essentially meaningless, progress an illusion and the totality of our experience nothing but a piece of incomprehensible gobbledegook.". The one fundamental proposition held in common by Sartre on the one hand, and by Beckett, Genet, Arrabal and Ionesco on the other, is that, at the root of consciousness, and indeed of all Being, there is a Void – un Néant – and that this Void is the point of departure for all lucidity, all experience, all 'personality' and all truth.
Themes The most fundamental concern in
The Chairs is nothingness, or the ontological void. The last moment of the play expresses this, according to Ionesco: The chairs remain empty because there’s no one there. And at the end, the curtain falls to the accompanying noises of a crowd, while all there is on the stage is empty chairs, curtains fluttering in the wind, etc... and there's nothing. The world doesn't really exist. The subject of the play was nothingness, not failure. It was total absence, chairs without people. The world does not exist because in the future it will stop being, everything dies, you know. Yet the Old Man and the Old Woman are lonely where they have no right to be: in a social situation. They are trapped, and death is their only escape route. "
The Chairs may also be viewed as a self-conscious work, dealing with the situation of the dramatist and the nature of the theatrical experience itself." The Old Woman has been told the same story every night for 75 years, but forgets and starts again each evening with a fresh mind. Relationships evolve in strange permutations: the Old Woman is both wife and mother; her husband is both old man and baby. Ionesco's aim is "to create a living version of ‘reality’, sufficiently broad to encompass rational and irrational at the same time".
Language Like
Beckett, Ionesco wrote in French but was not a native French speaker. This slight alienation of thought and language developed into a primary element in his philosophy. "Language itself is an intrinsic manifestation of the absurd." "For the purpose of demonstrating in dramatic terms the absurdity of language, Ionesco’s favourite weapon is the platitude." To reveal their absurdity, Ionesco's platitudes contradict each other, garble themselves, maintain sound but discard sense. Words seem to promise everything, but the promise in unfulfilled. The inarticulate orator takes this idea to its extreme. In the play, the Old Man calls the Old Woman
Semiramis, the name of a semi-mythical ancient Assyrian queen. This may refer to her association with the
Tower of Babel.
Style "The basic tone of
The Chairs is that of
bathos. The accelerating rhythm with which the guests arrive creates a sense of expectation that is deflated by the Orator’s muteness and the incomprehensibility of his written message." The play contains many comic elements. For example, while trying to "imitate February", Ionesco's stage directions indicate that the Old Man "scratches his head like
Stan Laurel". However, the play's meaninglessness only becomes meaningful if frivolity is "given a dimension of seriousness and farce one of tragedy". ==Productions==