Most Remarkable Writer During The World War II
The playwright of Waiting for Godot is Samuel Beckett. Beckett is a “Post-Modern Man” because of his utilization of language and the complexities of it to write plays that were not typical to the traditional plays. He used his being multi-lingual in exploring the world of playwriting. He had proven his mastery on his craft when he set a record as a student. He was a student at the Portora Royal School in County Fermanagh. He also studied at Trinity College in Dublin. From the latter institution he earned the Bachelor of Arts in French and Italian in 1927 and the M.A. in 1931.
Whoroscope was Beckett’s first published work. This appeared in 1930 and for which he won a prize. He was once called as “the most remarkable writer to emerge since World War II.” Of those writers who have created the theater of the absurd, Beckett is probably the best known, and Waiting for Godot is his most famous play.