The Birthday Party was the first full-length offering from British playwright Harold Pinter, who is now widely regarded as the theatre’s master of enigma and menace. The play takes us to a godforsaken seaside guest house run by Meg and her husband Petey. The only guest is Stanley, a former pianist with a shady past, upon whom Meg dotes. Into this uneasy family come two additional guests, a pair of suspiciously underworldly types who seem to have some unfinished business with Stanley. The style of The Birthday Party swings from the broadly comic to the deeply unnerving, with a nod to the absurd along the way. It’s easy to see why The Sunday Times critic Harold Hobson, responding to the first production of The Birthday Party, wrote that “Pinter, on the evidence of this work, possesses the most original, disturbing and arresting talent in theatrical London.” Union Station’s H&R Block City Stage.
Videos
Daisy
Hillbarn Theatre (1/23 - 2/9) | ||
Voctave: The Corner of Broadway & Main Street
San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall (1/21 - 1/22) | ||
KIM’S CONVENIENCE
Toni Rembe Theater (9/18 - 10/19) | ||
The Cher Show (Non-Equity)
San Jose Center for the Performing Arts (3/18 - 3/23) | ||
The Mousetrap
City Lights Theater Company (3/13 - 4/6) | ||
KODO: One Earth Tour 2025 - Warabe
Cal Performances' Zellerbach Hall (1/25 - 1/26) | ||
& Juliet
Orpheum Theatre San Francisco (7/1 - 7/27) | ||
Clue On Stage
Paper Wing Theatre (1/31 - 2/23) | ||
Monday Night PlayGround: The Shakespeare Sequels
The David Brower Center (1/27 - 1/27) | ||
VIEW SHOWS ADD A SHOW |
Recommended For You