This dramatic sketch is a duologue between a married couple "in their forties" (54). As they "sit with coffee" (54), they reminisce about when they first met and fell in love during their youth. The tone of the sketch is both gently comic and wistful, as Pinter exposes some present emotional disjunction between the characters through their dialogue about their past, which they remember differently. They have at least one child, as the wife thinks she "heard a child crying, […] a child, waking up" in their house, whereas the husband responds, "There was no sound. […] The house is silent" (57).
Productions
Night was among the sketches included in Sketches II, the second of a two-part programme, produced on 8 (I) and 11 February 2002 (II), at the Lyttelton Theatre, Royal National Theatre, in London ("Sketches", haroldpinter.org).[2]
Alastair Macaulay, chief dance critic for the New York Times, reviewed the National Theatre production while still drama critic for the London Financial Times; in this portion of his review of the whole program reprinted on Pinter's official website, he writes:
[Pinter's] 1969 Night is beautifully acted by Douglas Hodge and Catherine McCormack. He recalls that the first time he held her was on a bridge; he recalls holding her breasts in his hands. She recalls no bridge, she recalls a different place, she recalls how he took her hand and gently stroked it. Has anyone ever caught more finely the differences between male and female feelings about heterosexual love than Pinter? Here, their differences of memory become almost a tragic divide. These two live together in what they call love, and yet on the memories of their initial and most intimate moments there is this unchangeable discrepancy. This hairline crack could become an abyss - at times it seems very large, but they live with it calmly. Pinter, now in his 70s, can still seem the most modern playwright alive, but again and again he puts himself at the end of long traditions. He is, it often seems, the last modernist, the last classicist, and, in plays like Night, the last romantic.[3]
It was first published with Pinter's two one-act plays Landscape (1968) and Silence (1969), by Methuen, in London, in 1969, and by Grove Press, in New York, in 1970.
Notes
^Parenthetical page references throughout are to the Grove Press ed. See also Night as listed among Pinter's works in "HAROLD PINTER (1930 - 2008)". Doollee.com: The Playwrights' Database. Doollee, n.d. Web. 22 April 2009. ("Plays" as listed include plays, dramatic sketches, and screenplays, with some production and publication details).
^"But only in the second half does the cast calm down and let the audience listen, observe, ponder … Victoria Station comes off fine — and Night pretty well too. " Nightingale, Benedict (3 February 2007). "Pinter's People". Times Online. London: The Times. Retrieved 16 June 2009.
–––. Night. 53–61 in Landscape and Silence. Evergreen Original series, E-555, New York: Grove Press, 1970. ISBN0-394-17289-2. (Parenthetical page references are to this edition.)