If you engage people on a vital, important level, they will respond.
Edward Bond
Violence is hidden within democratic structures because they are not radically democratic - Western democracy is merely a domestic convenience of consumerism.
We are still living in the aftershock of Hiroshima, people are still the scars of history.
I think there is no world without theatre.
The human mind is a dramatic structure in itself and our society is absolutely saturated with drama.
When humanness is lost the radical difference between the bodies in the pit and people walking on the street is lost.
You have to go to the ultimate situation in drama.
Religion enabled society to organise itself to debate goodness, just as Greek drama had once done.
The one overall structure in my plays is language.
Auschwitz is a place in which tragedy cannot occur.
It seems to me that we are profoundly ignorant of ourselves.
The English sent all their bores abroad, and acquired the Empire as a punishment.
Whatever the economy needs to maintain itself, the government will do it.
Now, drama is quite useful at helping us to understand what our position is and, conversely, we might then understand why our theatre is being destroyed.
Humanity's become a product and when humanity is a product, you get Auschwitz and you get Chair.
Art is the close scrutiny of reality and therefore I put on the stage only those things that I know happen in our society.
First there was the theatre of people and animals, then of people and the devil. Now we need the theatre of people and people.
All you now do is pursue your private objectives within society. Instead of us being a community, everybody is asked to seek their own personal ends. It's called competition. And competition is antagonism.
Shakespeare has no answers for us at all.
You have to learn the language of Hamlet.
I don't think it's the job of theatre at the moment to provide political propaganda; that would be simplistic. We have to explore our situation further before we will understand it.
What I try to do in a play is put a problem on stage, head-on, without evasion.
In the end I think theatre has only one subject: justice.
The truth has got to appear plausible on the stage.
Violence is never a solution in my plays, just as ultimately violence is never a solution in human affairs.
But we are not in the world to be good but to change it.
I'm interested in the real world.
I'm not interested in an imaginary world.
It's wonderful to be able to sit down and write a play.
I write plays not to make money, but to stop myself from going mad. Because it's my way of making the world rational to me.
It's insulting to ask a dramatist what his view of his play is. I have no opinion.
At the turn of the century theatre does not have to be prescriptive.
Fifteen years ago I walked out of a production of one of my plays at the RSC because I decided it was a waste of time.
The Greeks said very, very extreme things in their tragedies.
It's politely assumed that democracy is a means of containing and restraining violence. But violence comes not from genes but from ideas.
In the past goodness was always a collective experience. Then goodness became privatised.
Our unconscious is not more animal than our conscious, it is often even more human.
The theatre, our theatre, comes from the Greeks.
We may seem competent, but by the end of next century there will be new deserts, new ruins.
What Shakespeare and the Greeks were able to do was radically question what it meant to be a human being.