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One of Nakai's modified Porsches with an RWB signature double wing. Akira Nakai (Japanese: 中井 啓, Hepburn: Nakai Akira) is a Japanese automotive tuner, founder of Porsche aftermarket tuning company RAUH-Welt BEGRIFF (RWB), who specializes in the design and installation of custom wide-body kits for classic and modern Porsche models.
Rough for Radio I is a short radio play by Samuel Beckett, written in French in 1961 and first published in Minuit 5 in September 1973 as Esquisse radiophonique.Its first English publication as Sketch for Radio Play was in Stereo Headphones 7 (spring 1976), and first appeared under its current title in Ends and Odds (Grove 1976, Faber 1977).
Hugh Kenner calls it "Beckett’s most difficult work" and yet maintains that the piece "coheres to perfection," [6] John Pilling disagrees, remarking that Embers "is the first of Beckett’s dramatic works that seems to lack a real centre," [7] whereas Richard N. Coe considers the play "not only minor, but one of [Beckett’s] very few failures."
Rough for Theatre II (also known simply as Theatre II) is a short play by Samuel Beckett. "Although this discarded piece of theatre is dated 'circa 1960' in End and Odds, a manuscript from two years earlier exists in Trinity College, Dublin, Library.
Words are a function of listening for Beckett, listening within a silence of being where the world is effaced." [29] For Beckett, writing can be equated to seeing, it is a visual art that aspires to the ideal status of music: "music is the idea itself, unaware of the world of phenomena", [30] "the ultimate imageless language of emotion."
Quad is a television play by Samuel Beckett, written and first produced and broadcast in 1981.It first appeared in print in 1984 (Faber and Faber) where the work is described as "[a] piece for four players, light and percussion" [1] and has also been called a "ballet for four people."
The play begins with a voice issuing forth from a dimly lit megaphone: "We are the last five." [1] Only four characters appear throughout the performance however, Bam, Bom, Bim, and Bem (an echo of Rimbaud's sonnet, "Voyelles") but the voice does not belong to a putative [2] Bum, rather it is the "Voice of Bam". [3]
Rockaby is a short one-woman play by Samuel Beckett.It was written in English in 1980, at the request of Daniel Labeille, who produced it on behalf of Programs in the Arts, State University of New York, for a festival and symposium in commemoration of Beckett's 75th birthday.
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