Today in Chicago
Tuesday
03.16.10
Mostly Cloudy
46.0ºF

Your Messages and MailPersonals and MatchmakerJobs and CareersDance Music 24/7ShopProfilesProfilesProfilesProfiles
Join the Community! (free) or Login:     Password:    
View cart | Checkout


Lt. Dan Choi 
3/15/2010

Suzanne Westenhoefer 
3/10/2010

Shirely Jones 
3/3/2010

Joan Rivers 
3/3/2010

Steven Petrow 
2/24/2010

Patti LuPone 
2/17/2010

Sandra Bernhard 
2/10/2010

More Interviews

Books Music DVD Movies
  Search type

Keyword

Inventory

 

   
You have no items in your shopping cart




Look Back in Anger (Plays, Penguin)
Penguin (Non-Classics)
$12.00



Titus Andronicus (Arden Shakespeare: Third Series)
Arden Shakespeare
$17.00



Sam Shepard : Seven Plays (Buried Child, Curse of the Starving Class, The Tooth of Crime, La Turista, Tongues, Savage Love, True West)
Dial Press Trade Paperback
$16.00



A Doll's House (Dover Thrift Editions)
Dover Publications
$1.50



Cloud 9
Theatre Communications Group
$12.95



Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
NAL Trade
$14.00


  
The Homecoming
by Harold Pinter

List Price: $13.00
Price: $9.36 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
You Save: $3.64 (28%)

Add this item to your shopping cart

Paperback
Publisher: Grove Press

  • ISBN13: 9780802151056
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

  • When Teddy, a professor in an American university, brings his wife Ruth to visit London and his family, he finds himself prey to old conflicts. But now it is Ruth who becomes the focus of the family's struggle for supremacy. The playwright's other works include "The Birthday Party" and "Old Times".


    Customer Reviews:
     
    All good
    Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
    Book came nicely shrink wrapped and (for some reason) in two envelopes. Excellent condition. Very kindly they sent US MAIL to Hawai'i. Media mail can take up to two months (it really does come by boat!)


    About what we fear deep down
    Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
    The homecoming has been described as a Jewish family play, though this is a little patronising for it illuminates single truths. The action takes place in a single room. It is tense, taught, claustrophobic in the extreme. Teddy, a successful academic and his beautiful wife return to his family home in North London, a male only household. His brothers have not achieved as he has, instead they operate on the murky fringes of working class society. Lenny, in particular is a sly and dangerous man. He is well aware of the unspoken masculine power dynamics at play, and pulls the strings with devious and malevolent effect. The play becomes tighter and tenser as the action progresses. Eventually, rips occur - tears in the fabric of the surface of close family life. Surreal and astonishing things happen. Characters behave according to their true natures. Personalities are laid bare in their essence. Pinter shows us what we fear deep down in our relations with others, but are afraid to face head on.



    Whorecoming
    Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 


    At first this play seems like a good absurd/kitchen sink 60s
    English play, with the usual dysfunctional family characters. It
    is that but with the character of Ruth, things get really weird-even
    for this group of people. They're a pretty perverted bunch, but I still
    enjoyed the play. Though Ruth stills seems like something pretty
    unexpected, but that's what the theatre is sometimes all about. If
    I were Ruth I'd get back to the USA ASAP.

    Pinter and the Theater of the Absurd
    Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
    This Harold Pinter play belongs to the theater of the absurd tradition. It does not seek to portray life as it is authentically or realistically but gives us a view of life through a crazed mirror image. It is life seen as an absurd concoction in which desire is realized and the abnormal replaces the normal. The setting is deceiving: a realistic seedy London living room, but the family who dwell therein veer off the track into the world of the absurd.
    We get to know a great deal about the pasts of these characters: an old man, his brother Sam, his three grown sons, and the wife of one of the sons. She and her husband are visiting from America where he is a philosophy professor. They have left their three little sons at home. We see a large slice of the ordinary lives of these six people. But people in real life don't act this way, theatergoers say. Of course they don't. Why go to the theater to see the commonplace, the ordinary? Why not see what would happen when libidos take over?
    I saw an insightful production of this play on Broadway on January12, 2008. It featured Ian McShane as Max, the nasty father, Raul Esparza as Lenny, the pimp. Eve Best played the enigmatic sexual tease Ruth, and three other fine actors rounded out the cast. The play was full of menace, irony, and shock, but with many bits that drew laughter. The father and his two stay-at-home sons have a low opinion of women, and Ruth certainly reinforces that view. Lenny talks about his violence toward women. Teddy, the philosophy teacher, an ersatz intellectual, acquiesces to his wife staying with the family as a tart stoically and unfeelingly.
    The father knows his sons' and his brother's weaknesses, and he cruelly exploits them. Everything seems sinister and threatening. Lenny blows his stack over trivial matters: his brother Teddy has deliberately eaten the cheese sandwich he was saving for himself while Teddy blithely accepts that his wife is deserting him and staying with his family to become a hooker. The trivial becomes earthshaking, and crucial matters become trivial. She does not do what a real person would do, but what a woman might do if she let her deeper, darker nature take over. The father's brother Sam ineffectual and impotent. Early on Max says to Same that he should get married and bring his wife home to live in the family manse so everyone can "enjoy" her.
    The readers or the audience squirm in their seats and don't get it. Since this play was written forty-two years ago, the audiences have lost their understanding of the absurdist traditions and have slipped back into their state of undemanding, timid and risk-free theatergoing. Nobel prize winner Pinter blazed new ground for them, and they are right back where they started from.


    It creeps up on you, it does.
    Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 
    Harold Pinter, The Homecoming (Grove, 1965)

    I spent the first act of this effort from our most recent Nobel Prize winner for literature thinking "my, this is all well and good, but what is it about this play that had everyone telling me this needs to be the first Pinter I read?" Then came act two, and I understood it.

    The Homecoming starts off (as you might expect given that first paragraph) unassumingly enough; a man and his wife of six years return to his ancestral home. His brothers, uncle, and father live there, and are meeting his wife for the first time; the brothers, roustabouts both of them, act a bit oddly (well, actually, a bit naturally) around the wife at first, but there's nothing terribly out of the ordinary. In fact, there's a surprising lack of family tension; the normally prickly father welcomes his wayward son home with open arms.

    Then, of course, everything goes to pot in the most entertaining manner possible. I have spent years reading thousands of volumes wondering why it is that everyone has to over-emote; The Homecoming is the absolute, perfect antithesis, and I spent the entire second act wishing that these characters inhabited at least half the novels I've read in the past decade. They're deliciously perverse, and so very deadpan about it. Now, while Pinter is busy creating these characters and putting them into interesting situations (and the situations are interesting enough that the entire play can take place in a single room), he's offering some excellent satire on the family dynamic, but Pinter is talented enough to let the satire speak for itself while he concentrates on the story at hand, the mark of a man who knows how to write.

    This is very good stuff, and I'll definitely be diving farther into Pinter in the coming years. *** ½





    Login | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Media Assets | Webmasters / RSS | Advertise

    Sponsorship or Partnerships | Contact the Editor | Email the President | Press Inquiries | Contact Us

    Become a fan of ChicagoPride.Com on FacebookBecome our friend on MySpaceBecome our friend on MyPrideBecome our friend on Twitter
    Serving Boystown and Gay Chicago since 1995
    © Copyright 1995-2010 All rights reserved. Info on this site is strictly for entertainment purposes.



    03/16/2010 08:44P