The Bald Soprano Themes

The Bald Soprano Themes

Philosophical Viewpoints: The Absurd

The plays of Ionesco, along with the work of Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, and Arthur Adamov, became the foundation for the theatrical movement known as the Theatre of the Absurd. This movement was d...

Language and Communication

This is a major theme in The Bald Soprano, as well as many of Ionesco's other plays. There was actually a famous debate over this theme in Ionesco's work. Kenneth Tynan, a critic for the London Obs...

Time

The theme of "Time" is a pretty big deal in The Bald Soprano. Throughout the play, there are hints that time is all kinds of messed up. We're never quite sure what exactly is going on with it. Is i...

Memory and the Past

The characters in the play have seriously awful memories. They can't remember whether friends are alive or dead. Sometimes they even forget what their own spouses look like. When they try to recoun...

Versions of Reality

Reality is constantly mutating in The Bald Soprano. We're never quite sure where we stand. The play opens with what seems to be a totally normal couple sitting in a totally normal living room. By t...

Society and Class

The Bald Soprano is often said to be a satire of the English middle class. Ionesco admitted that the play was definitely intended to skewer the emptiness of bourgeois (middle-class) lifestyle. The...

Isolation

The characters of The Bald Soprano are isolated in many ways. Throughout the play, we constantly get the impression that the characters are totally alone, but are just too empty and frivolous to kn...