Krapp’s Last Tape / Godot’s To Do List

1 Review

A bleakly comic Samuel Beckett short, Krapp’s Last Tape follows a man listening back to the diary recordings of his life as he reflects on his past behavior. It stars and is directed by living legend Gary Oldman, who joins an illustrious line-up of great Krapps including Stephen Rea, John Hurt, Michael Gambon, and Patrick Magee. Thrillingly, this performance sees Oldman’s return to the London stage after 37 years. Audiences watch as a weary man sits at his desk on his 69th birthday, with the ghostly voice of his past for company. Prepare for a very Beckettian meditation on aging, memory, and regret.

Opening the performance each night is Godot’s To-Do List, a new Beckett-inspired short by 19-year-old Leo Simpe-Asante. By pairing this teenage take on Godot against the aging man, the Royal Court upholds its mission to produce bold new writing alongside the revival of a classic.

 

Dates Icon
Dates

From: May 13th, 2026
Until: May 30th, 2026

Category
  • Theatre
What our culture curators are saying
Sarah Hyde
london
rating:

Is existentialism having a moment? It certainly felt like it at the Royal Court for this thought-provoking double bill. Godot's To-Do List sent a chill through the audience as we recognized the inner voice—or perhaps even more frighteningly, an outer...

Share a commentWe’d love to hear your thoughts

RECENTLY REVIEWED

What We Did Before Our Moth Days
New York

“Remember when plays had language? Dense, murky language, cerebrally and passionately expressed by idiosyncratically human characters? Following the remarkable double-header of Wallace Shawn's What We Did Before Our Moth Days and The Fever, I don't want plays to be anything but walls of text ever again. The two plays — Moth Days, a four-hander and The Fever a monologue performed by Shawn himself — both grapple with painful questions of human behavior. Moth Days is more focused on the pain we can inflict on one another, while The Fever eviscerates the capitalist system which governs the pain inflicted by and upon us. Both had almost no staging: just people, sitting in chairs, talking to us — really to us — about something true. ”

Krapp’s Last Tape / Godot’s To Do List
London

“Is existentialism having a moment? It certainly felt like it at the Royal Court for this thought-provoking double bill. Godot's To-Do List sent a chill through the audience as we recognized the inner voice—or perhaps even more frighteningly, an outer AI or social media one—endlessly controlling our lives but stopping us from doing what we really want to do. Both curtain raisers were two sides of the same coin, and this wonderful piece of contemporary writing was paired with Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape. Directed and performed by Gary Oldman, this was the spectacle the pumped audience was here to devour. Enter Gary Oldman on the second night of his first live stage performance in London for 35 years. Firstly, he mastered his audience with significant aplomb, although he actually used a banana! Once he had us, he carefully led us through the process of Krapp's last tapes, meeting his younger self in the form of a voice recording which was laid down as a birthday ritual. Beckett's magnificent script and a very clever use of lighting did the rest, and the audience were spellbound throughout. Of course, Beckett is a matter of taste; it’s grown up, like a martini. My own preference is surgically cold and very dry, without even the tiniest (and perhaps irresistible) twist of sentimentality.”