News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Review: KRAPP’S LAST TAPE at 21ten Theatre

This must-see production runs through January 19.

By: Jan. 07, 2025
Review: KRAPP’S LAST TAPE at 21ten Theatre  Image
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

KRAPP’S LAST TAPE, Samuel Beckett's meditation on time, memory, and regret, now running at 21ten Theatre starring Bruce Burkhartsmeier, is a masterful production that cuts straight to the bone. In the one-act monologue, which is supposedly one of Beckett’s most autobiographical works, Krapp marks his 69th birthday by listening to a tape he recorded about his life 30 years prior. Through Burkhartsmeier's unflinching performance, this simple act becomes a profound and painful exploration of the human condition.

The younger Krapp was optimistic, feeling like he was “on the crest of a wave.” The older one is lonely, isolated, and a disappointment to himself. He’s like Scrooge, but haunted by himself and without even the false promise of wealth to comfort him. He moves through his small world, eating bananas and drinking too much, his only company being his own taped voice reminding him of paths not taken.  

Especially in the tiny theatre space (extra seats have been added to fit roughly 40 audience members), watching Burkhartsmeier inhabit Krapp as he confronts the ghost of his past self feels almost invasive, as if you’ve stumbled into a place you’re not supposed to be and onto a private moment you’re not meant to witness.

As we begin a new year, this show serves not just as a shattering portrait of despair but also a call to action. Krapp’s annual ritual of recording and listening to tapes of his life is a powerful reminder that while we can’t escape time’s passage, we can choose how we face it.

Directed by Victoria Parker-Pohl, this production of KRAPP’S LAST TAPE is theatre at its most essential – devastating, transformative, and absolutely unmissable. It runs through January 19. Details and tickets here.




Reader Reviews

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos