Plays within this group are absurd in that they focus not on logical acts, realistic occurrences, or traditional character development; they, instead, focus on human beings trapped in an incomprehensible world subject to any occurrence, no matter how illogical. The theme of incomprehensibility is coupled with the inadequacy of language to form meaningful human connections. Absurdist drama asks its viewer to "draw his own conclusions, make his own errors". Though Theatre of the Absurd may be seen as nonsense, they have something to say and can be understood". Esslin makes a distinction between the dictionary definition of
absurd ("out of harmony" in the musical sense) and drama's understanding of the absurd: "Absurd is that which is devoid of purpose... Cut off from his religious, metaphysical, and transcendental roots, man is lost; all his actions become senseless, absurd, useless."
Characters The characters in absurdist drama are lost and floating in an incomprehensible universe and they abandon rational devices and discursive thought because these approaches are inadequate. Many characters appear as automatons stuck in routines speaking only in cliché (Ionesco called the Old Man and Old Woman in
The Chairs "
übermarionettes"). Characters are frequently stereotypical,
archetypal, or flat character types as in Commedia dell'arte. The more complex characters are in crisis because the world around them is incomprehensible. In
Friedrich Dürrenmatt's
The Visit, the main character, Alfred, is menaced by Claire Zachanassian; Claire, richest woman in the world, with a decaying body and multiple husbands throughout the play, has guaranteed a payout for anyone in the town willing to kill Alfred. Characters in absurdist drama may also face the chaos of a world that science and logic have abandoned. Ionesco's recurring character Berenger, for example, faces a killer without motivation in
The Killer, and Berenger's logical arguments fail to convince the killer that killing is wrong. In
Rhinocéros, Berenger remains the only human on Earth who has not turned into a rhinoceros and must decide whether or not to conform. Characters may find themselves trapped in a routine, or in a metafictional conceit, trapped in a story; the title characters in Stoppard's
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead, for example, find themselves in a story (
Hamlet) in which the outcome has already been written. The plots of many absurdist plays feature characters in interdependent pairs, commonly either two males or a male and a female. Some Beckett scholars call this the "pseudocouple". The two characters may be roughly equal or have a begrudging interdependence (like Vladimir and Estragon in
Waiting for Godot or in many of Albee's plays,
The Zoo Story for example).
Language Despite its reputation for nonsense language, much of the dialogue in absurdist plays is naturalistic. The moments when characters resort to nonsense language or clichés—when words appear to have lost their denotative function, thus creating misunderstanding among the characters—make the theatre of the absurd distinctive. Language frequently gains a certain phonetic, rhythmical, almost musical quality, opening up a wide range of often comedic playfulness. Tardieu, for example, in the series of short pieces
Theatre de Chambre arranged the language as one arranges music. Distinctively absurdist language ranges from meaningless clichés to vaudeville-style word play to meaningless nonsense.
The Bald Soprano, for example, was inspired by a language book in which characters would exchange empty clichés that never ultimately amounted to true communication or true connection. Likewise, the characters in
The Bald Soprano—like many other absurdist characters—go through routine dialogue full of clichés without actually communicating anything substantive or making a human connection. In other cases, the dialogue is purposefully elliptical; the language of absurdist theater becomes secondary to the poetry of the concrete and objectified images of the stage. Many of Beckett's plays devalue language for the sake of the striking tableau. Harold Pinter—famous for his "Pinter pause"—presents more subtly elliptical dialogue; often the primary things characters should address are replaced by ellipsis or dashes. The following exchange between Aston and Davies in
The Caretaker is typical of Pinter: :Aston: More or less exactly what you... :Davies: That's it … that's what I'm getting at is … I mean, what sort of jobs … (
Pause.) :Aston: Well, there's things like the stairs … and the … the bells … :Davies: But it'd be a matter … wouldn't it … it'd be a matter of a broom … isn't it? Much of the dialogue in absurdist drama (especially in Beckett's and Albee's plays) reflects this kind of evasiveness and inability to make a connection. Nonsense may also be used abusively, as in Pinter's
The Birthday Party when Goldberg and McCann torture Stanley with apparently nonsensical questions and
non-sequiturs: :Goldberg: What do you use for pajamas? :Stanley: Nothing. :Goldberg: You verminate the sheet of your birth. :Mccann: What about the Albigensenist heresy? :Goldberg: Who watered the wicket in Melbourne? :Mccann: What about the blessed Oliver Plunkett? :Goldberg: Speak up Webber. Why did the chicken cross the road? As in the above examples, nonsense in absurdist theatre may be also used to demonstrate the limits of language while questioning or parodying the determinism of science and the knowability of truth. In Ionesco's
The Lesson, a professor tries to force a pupil to understand his nonsensical philology lesson: :Professor: … In Spanish: the roses of my grandmother are as yellow as my grandfather who is Asiatic; in Latin: the roses of my grandmother are as yellow as my grandfather who is Asiatic. Do you detect the difference? Translate this into … Romanian :Pupil: The … how do you say "roses" in Romanian? :Professor: But "roses", what else? … "roses" is a translation in Oriental of the French word "roses", in Spanish "roses", do you get it? In Sardanapali, "roses"...
Plot Traditional plot structures are rarely a consideration in the theatre of the absurd. Plots can consist of the absurd repetition of cliché and routine, as in
Godot or
The Bald Soprano. Often there is a menacing outside force that remains a mystery; in
The Birthday Party, for example, Goldberg and McCann confront Stanley, torture him with absurd questions, and drag him off at the end, but it is never revealed why. In later Pinter plays, such as
The Caretaker and
The Homecoming, the menace is no longer entering from the outside but exists within the confined space. Other absurdists use this kind of plot, as in Albee's
A Delicate Balance: Harry and Edna take refuge at the home of their friends, Agnes and Tobias, because they suddenly become frightened. They have difficulty explaining what has frightened them: :Harry: There was nothing … but we were very scared. :Edna: We … were … terrified. :Harry: We were scared. It was like being lost: very young again, with the dark, and lost. There was no … thing … to be … frightened of, but … :Edna: We were frightened … and there was nothing. Absence, emptiness, nothingness, and unresolved mysteries are central features in many absurdist plots: for example, in
The Chairs, an old couple welcomes a large number of guests to their home, but these guests are invisible, so all we see are empty chairs, a representation of their absence. Likewise, the action of
Godot is centered around the absence of a man named Godot, for whom the characters perpetually wait. In many of Beckett's later plays, most features are stripped away and what's left is a minimalistic tableau: a woman walking slowly back and forth in
Footfalls, for example, or in
Breath only a junk heap on stage and the sounds of breathing. The plot may also revolve around an unexplained metamorphosis, a supernatural change, or a shift in the laws of physics. For example, in Ionesco's
Amédée, or How to Get Rid of It, a couple must deal with a corpse that is steadily growing larger and larger; Ionesco never fully reveals the identity of the corpse, how this person died, or why it is continually growing, but the corpse ultimately – and, again, without explanation – floats away. In Tardieu's "The Keyhole" a lover watches a woman through a keyhole as she removes her clothes and then her flesh. Like Pirandello, many absurdists use meta-theatrical techniques to explore role fulfillment, fate, and the theatricality of theatre. This is true for many of Genet's plays: for example, in
The Maids, two maids pretend to be their mistress; in
The Balcony brothel patrons take on elevated positions in role-playing games, but the line between theatre and reality starts to blur. Another complex example of this is
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead: it is a play about two minor characters in
Hamlet; these characters, in turn, have various encounters with the players who perform
The Mousetrap, the play-within-the-play in
Hamlet. In Stoppard's
Travesties, James Joyce and Tristan Tzara slip in and out of the plot of
The Importance of Being Earnest. Plots are frequently cyclical: – at the beginning of the play, Clov says, "Finished, it's finished, nearly finished, it must be nearly finished" – and themes of cycle, routine, and repetition are explored throughout. == References ==