Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter Reunite on Broadway for a Bold Revival of Waiting for Godot

The “Bill & Ted” duo return — not for another excellent adventure, but for something deeper, stranger, and timeless.

It’s been 36 years since Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure made Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter the unlikeliest pair of cultural icons — two airheaded time travelers whose friendship defined a generation of cinematic optimism. Now, three decades later, the duo returns not through a phone booth or a sequel, but onto the Broadway stage, stepping into Samuel Beckett’s haunting existential masterpiece, Waiting for Godot.

Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter Talk Revival of 'Waiting for Godot'

“It came to me from the universe,” Keanu laughs, recalling how the idea first sparked. “About three and a half years ago, I just had this vision — this feeling that Alex and I needed to work together again. I called him and said, ‘Hey, you want to do this?’ and he said yes before I even knew what I was asking.”

For Alex Winter, who spent much of his youth performing in New York theater, the return feels almost like destiny. “I grew up on Broadway,” he says. “It’s been a long time, but theater was my first home. So when Keanu called, it felt like the right kind of full circle.”

The two laugh as they look at an old photo from their Bill & Ted audition — the floppy hair, the thrift-store shirts, the goofy charm still visible decades later. “I remember that ratty green T-shirt,” Keanu grins. “I don’t know what I was thinking.”

'A very intimate play': Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter in revival of 'Waiting  for Godot'

But beneath the humor, there’s something poetic about their reunion. Beckett’s Waiting for Godot is a play about friendship, repetition, and the absurd meaning of existence — themes that strangely echo the heart of Bill & Ted. “The play is about two characters who’ve known each other for decades,” Winter explains. “They’ve probably performed together, dreamed together, failed together. There are similarities — though there’s also a lot that’s not similar at all.”

For Reeves, the play offers an emotional and philosophical challenge that aligns with his quiet, introspective persona. “It’s about waiting — and what that waiting means,” he says. “About faith, about purpose, about trying to find something bigger than yourself.”

And yes, for those wondering — the correct pronunciation is “Guh-DOH.” (Though even Beckett himself reportedly said you can pronounce it however you like.)

Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter go on a new excellent adventure: 'Waiting for  Godot' | Iowa Public Radio

Outside the theater, Keanu continues to stretch creatively. He recently played a “lower-order angel” in Aziz Ansari’s upcoming film Good Fortune, alongside Seth Rogen. “I try to save him,” Keanu explains with a grin, “but I kind of mess it up, lose my wings, and end up human.”

Before the interview ends, the conversation turns to technology — specifically, the AI-generated photo that went viral earlier this year, showing Reeves and his longtime girlfriend “married.” The image, of course, was fake. “I hadn’t even seen it until someone from the show showed me,” he says with a shrug. “We’re in that world now. It’s not a lot of fun.”

Still, there’s a sense that Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter have found something real amid the digital noise — a return to the tangible, the live, the human. Waiting for Godot is not just a reunion of friends; it’s a reminder that even in a world of artificial everything, nothing beats the raw intimacy of two people on stage, searching for meaning together.

As Winter puts it, smiling at his lifelong friend, “After all these years, we’re still waiting — and still laughing.”