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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Feb. 10, 2005
CONTACT: Clive Elliott, (515) 271-4598, clive.elliott@drake.edu
Lisa Lacher, (515) 271-3119, lisa.lacher@drake.edu
DRAKE THEATRE TO PRESENT SARTRE'S 'NO EXIT'
On Thursday, Feb. 24, Drake University Theatre will open its production of Jean-Paul
Sartre's existential drama "No Exit."
Director Clive Elliott describes the play as intense and thought provoking for
it poses many questions: Is the greatest pain imaginable the result of whips
and thumbscrews, or is it the lies we inflict on ourselves? Can we freely invent
ourselves, or would we rather exist in darkness than face the consequences of
our actions?
Garcin, Estelle and Inez have an eternity to find out, Elliott said. "Trapped
in a poorly decorated room for all time, the characters have nothing to do but
torture each other," he added. "Each of them needs something the others
are unwilling to give. Each of them has the means of escape, but first they
have to free themselves from the hell that is other people – from the
power the others possess when they are allowed to dictate the individual's sense
of self."
Sartre, a professor of philosophy in France, was one of the most important philosophers
of the 20th century. He was one of the pioneers of existentialism, a philosophy
asserting the freedom and responsibility of the individual. He was imprisoned
by the Nazis during World War II and his first play, "Les Mouches"
("The Flies"), was produced during the German occupation of France.
"No Exit" was the first play to be produced after the liberation of
Paris in 1944. The play is just 90 minutes long with no intermission because
Sartre had to limit its length so that audience members could get home without
violating curfew laws.
Although Sartre wrote important philosophical texts and novels, he believed
that drama was a superior medium for spreading his ideas. After the war, he
turned to writing full time. In 1964 he declined the Nobel Prize for Literature
in protest of the values of bourgeois society.
Performances start at 8 p.m. Feb. 24, 25 and 26 and at 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 27,
in Studio 55 of the Harmon Fine Arts Center, 25th Street and Carpenter Avenue.
Tickets are $5 for the general public, $3 for students and senior citizens and
$1 for those with a Drake ID. Reservations are required due to limited seating.
For reservations, call the Drake Fine Arts Box Office at (515) 271-3841.
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