Edward Albee |
Edward Albee
disappeared from sight a few years ago, only to make a comeback with a vengeance. Within two years, three of his plays premiered in
New York, plus one revival, and two were introduced to London. His new play The Play
about the Baby,enjoyed a good run in New York, and two new ones opened: The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? and The
Occupant. Tiny Alice, was
revived off Broadway and London welcomed the U.K. premiere of two of his one-acts, Finding
the Sun and Marriage Play. The history of Albees early life is as well
known as that of Oliver Twist, for critics see the persistence of a baby, real or
fictional, as a reflection of his abandonment by his natural parents immediately after his
birt on March 12, 1928. Two weeks later,
Edward was adopted by the wealthy Albees of Larchmont, New York. Reid Albee, like his father, Edward, for whom the
playwright is named, headed a chain of profitable vaudeville theaters. Albee has said that Three Tall Women
is about his mother, Frances, and Mommy, Daddy, and Grandma in The American Dream
may have been inspired by his family as well. A rebellious youngster, Albee was expelled from
three expensive prep schools and a military academy, finally attending and graduating from
Choate in Connecticut, where his writing was encouraged and published in the schools
literary magazine. After a year and a half at
Trinity College in Connecticut, he was asked to leave at the age of twenty-one. He left home as well, never to return. Although he had a
monthly income from a trust fund established by his grandmother, he worked at a number of
odd jobs, and in 1958, as, he says, a sort of thirtieth birthday present to myself,
he wrote The Zoo Story in three weeks, on a battered typewriter in his
Greenwich Village walk-up, on paper borrowed from the Western Union office where he was
working as a messenger. New York producers
rejected it, so it was first produced in Berlin at the Schiller Theater, on a double bill
with Becketts Krapps Last Tape. Since then The Zoo Story,
has been presented all over the world. In Central Park near the zoo, two men meet and
contest their right to a bench. Buttoned-up
Peter is from the affluent East Side: A man in his early forties, neither fat nor
gaunt, neither handsome nor homely. He
acts as a foil for unkempt, talkative Jerry, from the West Side, whose monologue suggests
that he is emotionally and mentally in crisis. As
their confrontation mounts to conflict, Jerry tells his story. Abandoned and buffeted by
life, ignored, he is planning an act that will bring him recognition. Their verbal conflict becomes physical: Jerry produces a knife, which Peter takes to
defend himself. As he holds it before him,
Jerry impales himself upon it. I was
always delivering telegrams to people living in rooming houses, Albee explains. I met all those people in the play in rooming
houses. Jerry, the hero, is still around. He changes his shape from year to year.
In The American Dream(1960), wealthy
Mommy and Daddy have lost a son, and the Young Man who arrives might be a replacement, or
he might be their fictionalized van man who materializes to take Grandma away. The same characters turn up in the fourteen-minute
The Sandbox in a situation different than, but related to, their
predicament in the longer play, explains Albee. They seem happy out of doors.
. . and I hope they will
not be distressed back in a stuffy apartment in The American Dream.but
retained the tune. The award-winning film version (1966) starred
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, directed by Mike Nichols. A mature couple, Martha and George, a college
professor, are visited by a novice professor Nick and his wife Honey after a faculty
party. Somewhat drunk and certainly
uninhibited, Martha taunts George, he returns her insults, and the young couple are drawn
into a game-playing conflict. Revealed in
the bitter exchanges between George and Martha is the information that they once had a
baby, who died. Albee says the baby is fictitious, but that the one in The Play
about the Baby is real. This work is like a distillation of Whos
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? It is even
stronger, being more abstract, as if honed down to become sharper in its effect. A mature couple, Man and Woman, arrive as a young
couple, Boy and Girl, are joyously celebrating the arrival of their baby. The older couple (Marian Seldes and Brian Murray
in the New York premiere) are well-dressed, urbane, and witty. It soon becomes clear that although they are
entertaining, they are not to be trusted, for they admit to lying, and the Man is given to
addressing the audience (Pay attention to this. Whats true and what isnt
is a tricky business, no?). They announce that they have come for the baby. The
attractive, frolicsome young couple have no defenses against the older, experienced ones
who have weathered the trials of the world. Although the young ones plead for more time,
the Man declares, Times up. They take the baby. The Man unrolls its
blanket to reveal that it is empty, and the young pair must console themselves that the
baby never existed, although it is heard crying at the end. Tiny Alice mystified critics and
audiences alike when it opened on Broadway in December 1964. When it was revived off
Broadway in the 2000-01 season, it was welcomed. The first producers of Tiny Alice arranged a press conference
for Albee to explain the play, and his remarks were published. I suppose Tiny
Alice is an examination of how much false illusion we need to get through life,
stated the playwright It is also an examination of the difference between the
abstraction of God and the god we make in our own image, the personification. . . .Its
an examination of the relationship between sexual hysteria and religious ecstasy. Julian is a lay brother who has not become a priest
because he cannot reconcile his idea of God with that of others who create the god
we make in our own image. Sent by his cardinal to negotiate a huge donation from
Miss Alice, who lives in a castle, he is met by her butler and her lawyer, as worldly as
the cardinal. The furnishings include an exact replica of the castle itself, even down to
the lighted areas and movements observed. In the most extraordinary example (so far) of
Albees theme of innocence defeated by experience, Julian marries the seductive Miss
Alice only to discover, as he dies, that he has married her replica, Tiny Alice, who
resides in the duplicate castle. The play suggests another constant theme in Albees
works, that of illusion versus reality. Finding the Sun (1983) is a dark comedy
about couples on a sunny Long Island beach peopled by the privileged. Daniel and Benjamin
were once lovers who still long to be together, although they are now married to Abigail
and Cordelia. Neither marriage is going well. One wife is on edge, aware of her husbands
former homosexual attachment, and the other complacently accepting the situation. Just as
the sun suddenly disappears, so does an engaging teenager, Albees recurrent lost
son, giving the plays title a double meaning. In the impressive Royal National
Theatre production of the 1987 Marriage Play, Jack (Bill Peterson) and Gillian
(Sheila Gish) have been married thirty years, despite various infidelities. When Jack
enters one evening after work to announce he is leaving, Gillian fails to make the desired
response, so he repeats the entrance and announcement again and again. Their witty
exchanges mount to blows and a resolution that marriage suits them better than the
alternative. In 1996 a revival of A Delicate Balance(1966)
won three Tony awards. In this Pinteresque work, friends Edna and Harry arrive at the home
of Agnes and Tobias and gradually assume control of the household, displacing their
daughter Julia. Julias (lost) brother had died in their childhood, and she is
insecure and unstable. Finally snapping at the thought that Edna and Harry have usurped
her place in her parents affections, she takes her fathers pistol and repeats
over and over, get them out of here. The fear that motivated their friends
visit spreads, but the delicate balance, fed by illusions, is preserved in the marriage of
Agnes and Tobias. A Delicate Balance, which won a
Pulitzer Prize, was revived recently in the West End in London with Maggie Smith and
Eileen Atkins as the female leads. Anthony Page, who directed, also directed the Albee
one-acts at the National Theatre. There is an excellent film of this play, made in 1973,
directed by Tony Richardson, with an all-star cast: Katharine Hepburn, Paul Scofield, Kate
Reid, Joseph Cotten, Lee Remick, and Betsy Blair. Albees
second Pulitzer Prize was awarded to Seascape, a story about a retired couple
on vacation who meet a pair of sea lizards at the beach. Nancy and Charlie have just
finished their picnic, and are discussing how they will spend their time now their
children are grown. Nancy, the optimist, wants to travel and see everything. Charlie just
wants to relax. Suddenly they encounter two anthropomorphic sea lizards, Sarah and Leslie.
Charlie is defensive; Sarah beckons. Soon the couples are conversing and explaining their
lives to each other; despite conflict, they finally come to understand one another. The Lady from Dubuque(1980) is a fable
in which the title character represents death, another of Albees recurrent themes. An earlier play, All Over(1971)
concerns a dying man and those who gather around his bed waiting for him to expire. In
The Lady, dying Jo and her husband Sam are the central couple, compared and
contrasted to their friends who gather for an evening of game-playing: Fred and Carol,
Lucinda and Edgar, and Elizabeth and Oscar, who could be messengers of death, come for Jo.
Although she dies physically, the others are living spiritually dead, wasted lives. "Three Tall Women (1991) which Albee
says is based on his mother, combines a deep understanding of its characters -- who may be
the same woman at three different stages of her life -- a gift for pointed and witty
dialogue, and a plot that implies as much as is stated, all characteristic of Albee at his
best. It earned the New York Drama Critics award for Best Play, as well as a third
Pulitzer Prize for the playwright, a number equaled only by Eugene ONeill. Albee
states that his plays confront being alive and how to behave with the awareness of
death. Every one of my plays is an act of optimism because I make the assumption that it
is possible to communicate with other people. The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia with Bill Pullman and Mercedes Ruehl, concerns a successful fifty-year-old architect who is faced with the dilemma of admitting to his wife and son that he is involved in an extra-marital relationship that could ruin his marriage, his career, and his life. |