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No Exit

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No Exit
Cover of the Vintage edition
Written byJean-Paul Sartre
Characters
  • Joseph Garcin
  • Inèz Serrano
  • Estelle Rigault
  • Valet

No Exit (French: Huis clos, pronounced [ɥi klo]) is a 1944 existentialist French play by Jean-Paul Sartre. The play was first performed at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier in May 1944.[1] The play begins with three characters who find themselves waiting in a mysterious room. It is a depiction of the afterlife in which three deceased characters are punished by being locked into a room together for eternity. It is the source of Sartre's especially famous phrase "L'enfer, c'est les autres" or "Hell is other people", a reference to Sartre's ideas about the look and the perpetual ontological struggle of being caused to see oneself as an object from the view of another consciousness.[2]

English translations have also been performed under the titles In Camera, No Way Out, Vicious Circle, Behind Closed Doors, and Dead End. The original title, Huis clos ('closed door'), is the French equivalent of the legal term in camera (from Latin, 'in a chamber'), referring to a private discussion behind closed doors.

Plot

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Three damned souls, Joseph Garcin, Inèz Serrano, and Estelle Rigault, are brought to the same room in Hell and locked inside by a mysterious valet. They had all expected torture devices to punish them for eternity, but instead, find a plain room furnished in the style of the French "Second Empire". At first, none of them will admit the reason for their damnation: Garcin says that he was executed for being an outspoken pacifist, while Estelle insists that a mistake has been made; Inèz, however, is the only one to demand that they all stop lying to themselves and confess to their moral crimes. She refuses to believe that they have all ended up in the room by accident and soon realizes that they have been placed together to make each other miserable. She deduces that they are to be one another's torturers.

Garcin suggests that they try to leave each other alone and to be silent, but Inèz starts to sing about execution and Estelle vainly wants to find a mirror to check on her appearance. Inèz tries to seduce Estelle by offering to be her "mirror" by telling her everything she sees but ends up frightening her instead. It is soon clear that Inèz is attracted to Estelle, Estelle is attracted to Garcin, and Garcin is not attracted to either of the two women.

After arguing, they decide to confess to their crimes so they know what to expect from each other. Garcin cheated on and mistreated his wife, and was executed by firing squad for desertion; Inèz is a manipulative sadist who seduced her cousin's wife, Florence, while living with them and convinced her to leave her husband—the cousin was later hit and killed by a tram and Florence asphyxiated herself and Inèz by flooding the room with gas while they slept—and Estelle had an affair and then killed the resulting child, prompting the child's father to commit suicide. Despite their revelations, they continue to get on each other's nerves. Garcin finally begins giving in to the lascivious Estelle's escalating attempts to seduce him, which drives Inèz crazy. Garcin is constantly interrupted by his own guilt, however, and begs Estelle to tell him that he is not a coward for attempting to flee his country during wartime. While she complies, Inèz mockingly tells him that Estelle is just feigning attraction to him so that she can be with a man—any man.

This causes Garcin to abruptly attempt an escape. After he repeatedly tries to open the door, it suddenly and inexplicably opens, but he is unable to bring himself to leave. The others remain as well. He says that he will not be saved until he can convince Inèz that he is not cowardly. She refuses to be persuaded, observing that he is obviously a coward and promising to make him miserable forever. Garcin concludes that, rather than torture devices or physical punishment, "hell is other people." Estelle tries to persevere in her seduction of Garcin, but he says that he cannot make love while Inèz is watching. Estelle, infuriated, picks up a paper knife and repeatedly stabs Inèz. Inèz chides Estelle, saying that they are all already dead, and even furiously stabs herself to prove that point. As Estelle begins to laugh hysterically at the idea of them being dead and trapped together forever, the others join in a prolonged fit of laughter before Garcin finally concludes, "Eh bien, continuons..." ("Well then, let's get on with it...").

Characters

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Joseph Garcin – He is a journalist who lived in the barracks in Rio and died after refusing to fight in an unnamed war. His cowardice and callousness caused his young wife to die "of grief" after his execution. He was unfaithful to his wife – he even recalls, without any sympathy, bringing home another woman one night, and his wife bringing them their morning coffee after hearing their engagement all night. Initially, he hates Inèz because she understands his weakness, and wants Estelle because he feels that if she treats him as a man he will become manly. However, by the end of the play he understands that because Inèz understands the meaning of cowardice and wickedness, only absolution at her hands can redeem him (if indeed redemption is possible). In a later translation and adaptation of the play by American translator Paul Bowles, Garcin is renamed Vincent Cradeau.

Inèz Serrano – Inèz is the second character to enter the room. A lesbian postal clerk, she turned a wife against her husband, twisting the wife's perception of her spouse and the subsequent death of the man who is also her cousin. Inèz seems to be the only character who understands the power of opinion, manipulating Estelle's and Garcin's opinions of themselves and of each other throughout the play. She is honest about the evil deeds she, Garcin, and Estelle have done. She frankly acknowledges the fact that she is a cruel person.

Estelle Rigault – Estelle is a high-society woman, who married an older man for his money and had an affair with a younger man. To her, the affair is merely an insignificant fling, but her lover becomes emotionally attached to her and she bears him a child. She drowns the child by throwing it off the balcony of a hotel into the sea, which drives her lover to commit suicide. Throughout the play she tries to get at Garcin, seeking to define herself as a woman in relation to a man. Her sins are deceit and murder (which also motivated a suicide). She lusts over "manly men", which Garcin himself strives to be.

Valet – The Valet enters the room with each character, but his only real dialogue is with Garcin. We learn little about him, except that his uncle is the head valet, and that his eyelids are atrophied because he does not blink.

Critical reception

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The play was widely praised when it was first performed. Upon its 1946 American premiere at the Biltmore Theatre, critic Stark Young described the play as "a phenomenon of the modern theatre – played all over the continent already", in The New Republic, and wrote that "It should be seen whether you like it or not."[3]

Adaptations

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Audio

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Film

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Television

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  • In 1964 the BBC broadcast "In Camera", an adaptation with Harold Pinter as Garcin broadcast as part of its The Wednesday Play anthology series. It was adapted and directed by Philip Saville.[4]
  • In 1985 the BBC broadcast "Vicious Circle", a translation by Frank Hauser directed by Kenneth Ives with Omar Sharif as Garcin, Jeanne Moreau as Ines, Cherie Lunghi as Estelle and Nickolas Grace as the Waiter.[5]
  • In a 2019 episode of Mr. Robot, Mr. Robot showed off a "No Exit" book while the main protagonist was trapped in a "honeypot" in a Manhattan apartment.[6]
  • Mike Schur has compared his show The Good Place, which involves a demon trying to design a novel type of hell in which the inhabitants create one another's torments, to Sartre's play.[7]

Theatre

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Opera

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A one-act chamber opera based on the play was created by composer Andy Vores. The production had its world premiere on April 25, 2008, at the Boston Conservatory's Zack Theatre.[15] Vores' opera premiered in Chicago in October 2009 by Chicago Opera Vanguard.

Parodies

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Talk Show from Hell, a modern parody by Jean-Noel Fenwick, was produced by the Open Fist Theatre in Los Angeles, California, in 2000.[16]

References

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  1. ^ Wallace Fowlie, Dionysus in Paris (New York: Meridian Books, inc., 1960), page 173.
  2. ^ Danto, Arthur (1975). "Chapter 4: Shame, or, The Problem of Other Minds". Jean-Paul Sartre.
  3. ^ Young, Stark. (9 December 1946). "Weaknesses". The New Republic, pp. 764.
  4. ^ "In Camera · British Universities Film & Video Council".
  5. ^ "Vicious Circle – BBC – Radio Times". 1985-04-28.
  6. ^ "Mr. Robot".Season 4, Episode 1, Elliot gets into an 'HoneyPot', book can be seen along with Joseph Garcin's signature on the book "'No Exit' Reference shot".
  7. ^ "The Good Place: The Podcast Chapter One". June 1, 2018.
  8. ^ Galster, Ingrid, ed. (2016-07-12), "Alain Laubreaux : Le Petit Parisien, 3 juin 1944", Sartre devant la presse d’Occupation : Le dossier critique des Mouches et Huis clos, Interférences, Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, pp. 194–195, ISBN 978-2-7535-4643-1, retrieved 2022-06-02
  9. ^ League, The Broadway. "No Exit – Broadway Play – Original - IBDB". ibdb.com.
  10. ^ "Production of Vicious Circle - Theatricalia". theatricalia.com.
  11. ^ Lamarre, Hazel L. (October 8, 1953). "All the World's a Stage". Los Angeles Sentinel. p. B2. ProQuest 562417035. 'NO EXIT'—Currently staging at Nick and Edna Stewart's Ebony Showcase is a MUST on the schedule of every discriminating theatre-goer. The two-act, two-scene fantasy by French writer Jean-Paul Sartre is brilliantly acted by James Edwards, Maidie Norman and Juanita Moore and masterfully directed by Roy Budd.
  12. ^ "No Exit". www.iobdb.com. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
  13. ^ "No Exit / The Little Private World of Arthur Fenwick". www.iobdb.com. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
  14. ^ "No Exit - Performance". Kickstarter.
  15. ^ "On (and off) track".
  16. ^ Foley, F. Kathleen (April 14, 2000). "In the Lively Sartre Parody 'Talk Show,' Hell Isn't Half Bad". Los Angeles Times.
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