'The work of our best living playwright in its command of the
language and its power to erect a coherent structure in a twilight
zone of confusion and dismay.' The Times Do Hirst and Spooner
really know each other, or are they performing an elaborate
charade? The ambiguity - and the comedy - intensify with the
arrival of Briggs and Foster. All four inhabit a no-man's-land
between time present and a time remembered, between reality and
imagination. No Man's Land was first presented at the National
Theatre at the Old Vic, London, in 1975, revived at the Almeida
Theatre, London, with Harold Pinter as Hirst and revived by the
National Theatre, directed by Harold Pinter, in 2001.
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