The Play Podcast - 006 - Betrayal - Harold Pinter
Episode 006: Betrayal by Harold Pinter Host: Douglas Schatz Guest: Mark Taylor-Batty, senior lecturer in Theatre Studies at the University of Leeds. Welcome to The Play Podcast where we explore the greatest new and classic plays. Each episode we choose a single play, which we talk about it in more depth than you will find in the reviews of any one production. We’ll discuss the play’s origins, its themes, characters, structure and impact. For us the play is the thing. Pinter’s modern classic dissects the dynamics of betrayal in marriage, friendship and work. The ambiguities of the adulterous affair that is the core of the play are made all the more unsettling by the innovative chronology of the narrative: the play famously opens with the end of the affair and works backwards to its inception. Joining us to mine the depths of Pinter’s compressed masterpiece is Mark Taylor-Batty, senior lecturer in Theatre Studies at the University of Leeds and author of The Theatre of Harold Pinter (Bloomsbury 2014). Our conversation was recorded via video link during the Coronavirus lockdown.

Fran Lebowitz on smoking, Trump and today's young people being another species

The Play Podcast - 007 - Lungs - Duncan Macmillan

Betrayal - Harold Pinter part I

Michael Billington interviews Harold Pinter

Growing Up With My Serial Killer Cousin, Ted Bundy

Does reading make you a better person? | Dominic Sandbrook | The New Society

Britain Sold Palestine to Pay Its WWI Debt. The Balfour Declaration Was a Banking Deal!

The only drama I love: "Betrayal" by Harold Pinter (audio) - Saturday Drama on BBC Radio 4 (2012)

Why East of Eden Still Ruins People

How to Write Strikingly Well (Lee Child Interview)

The Collection, Harold Pinter, 1976, with Malcolm McDowell-Alan Bates-Helen Mirren-Laurence Olivier

The Most Dangerous Aristocrats in England: The Mitford Sisters

PINTER'S THE BIRTHDAY PARTY Part 1 of 4

The Homecoming by Harold Pinter, Act Two -- Caedmon Records (1973)

Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

The French Do Not Care About Work

The Fate of Hermann Göring’s Family After the Fall of Nazi Germany

2014.02.27 Betrayal Performance Arnold

Slavoj Žižek: Trump is a liberal fetish

