World's Greatest Classic Books Feature: Edward Albee |
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Born: March 12, 1928, in
Washington, DC, United States Edward Albee was born in Washington, DC, on March 12, 1928. When he was two weeks old, baby Edward was adopted by millionaire couple Reed and Frances Albee. The Albees named their son for his paternal grandfather, Edward Franklin Albee, a powerful Vaudeville producer who had made the family fortune as a partner in the Keith-Albee Theater Circuit. Young Edward was raised by his adoptive parents in Westchester, New York. Because of his father and grandfather's involvement in the theatre business, Edward was exposed to theatre and well-known Vaudeville personalities throughout his childhood. Despite his financial success, Reed Albee is believed to have been dominated by his younger, more athletic wife. From the first, Edward's mother Frances tried to groom her son into a respectable member of New York society. The Albees affluence meant that Edward's childhood was filled with servants and tutors. The family Rolls Royce took him to afternoon matinees, and he took riding lessons. The family vacationed in Miami in the winter, and young Edward learned to sail on Long Island Sound in the summer. In 1940, twelve-year-old Edward entered Lawrenceville School, a prestigious boys preparatory school. During his high school days, he shocked school officials by writing a three-act sex farce entitled Aliqueen. At the age of fifteen, Lawrenceville School dismissed Edward for cutting classes. Hoping to inspire some discipline in his wayward son, Reed Albee enrolled Edward in Valley Forge Military Academy. Within a year, Valley Forge had dismissed Edward as well. Ultimately, Edward attended Choate from 1944 to 1946. Even as a teenager, Edward was a prolific writer. In 1945, his poem "Eighteen" was published in the Texas literary magazine Kaleidoscope. His senior year at Choate, Edward's first published play Schism appeared in the school literary magazine. After graduating from Choate, Edward enrolled at Trinity College, a small liberal arts school in Hartford, Connecticut. Already, Edward irked his mother by associating with artists and intellectuals whom she found objectionable. During his days at Trinity College, Edward gained a modicum of theatre experience � although it was onstage, as an actor, rather than as a writer. During his sophomore year, in 1947, nineteen-year-old Edward was dismissed from yet another school. This time, Trinity College claimed that he had failed to attend Chapel and certain classes. Despite his mother's objections, Edward moved to New York City's artsy Greenwich Village at the age of twenty. He supported himself by writing music programming for WNYC radio. In 1953, young Albee met playwright Thornton Wilder. Later, he credited Wilder with inspiring him to become a playwright � advice he did not follow for a few more years. Over the next decade, Albee lived on the proceeds of his grandmother's trust fund and held jobs as an office boy, record salesman, and Western Union messenger. In 1958, Albee wrote his first major play, a one-act entitled The Zoo Story. When no New York producer would agree to stage it, Albee sent the play to an old friend in New York. The play was first produced in Berlin. After its success abroad, American theatre producer Alan Schneider agreed to produce The Zoo Story off-Broadway in a double bill with Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape. This early association with Beckett served to cement Albee's connection to the Theatre of the Absurd. In fact, The Zoo Story was at the time of its production hailed as the birth of American absurdist drama. Immediately, Albee became perceived as a leader of a new theatrical movement in America. His success was in part predicated on his ability to straddle the two divergent traditions of American theatre � the traditional and the avant garde, combining the realistic with the surreal . Thus, critics of Albee can rightfully see him as a successor to American playwrights Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, and Eugene O'Neill while at the same time unmistakably influenced by European playwrights like Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter. Albee has also called Ring Lardner, James Thurber, and Jean Genet important influences on his writing. Throughout the following years, Albee strengthened his reputation with a series of one-act plays, including The Death of Bessie Smith and The Sandbox, which he dedicated to his beloved grandmother, in 1960. In 1961, The American Dream dealt with themes that would be drawn upon in Albee's later career. That same year, Albee adapted an unsuccessful production of Melville's short story Bartleby with his friend William Flanagan. Despite the success of his original work, Albee's adaptations � Carson McCuller's The Ballad of the Sad Caf� in 1963 and James Purdy's Malcolm in 1965 � have not been critically or popularly successful. Critics described them as being static representations of literary works, simply transplanting existing scenes from the books to the stage. Albee's real successes have always come from his original and absurdist dramas. His first three-act drama and the play for which he is best known, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, was produced in New York in 1962. Immediately, it was popular and controversial. When its nomination for a Pulitzer was not accepted unanimously by the prize committee, two members of the Pulitzer Prize committee resigned. Nonetheless, the play received the Tony Award and New York Drama Critics Circle Award. After the failed McCullers adaptation in 1963, Albee's original drama, a dream play called Tiny Alice, opened in New York. That same year, Albee joined with two friends in creating an absurdist group called "Theater 1964," which produced, among other things, Beckett's Play and Pinter's The Lover at Cherry Lane Theatre. After Malcolm closed after only five days, Albee rebounded with the success of A Delicate Balance in 1966. For this play, he received the Pulitzer Prize. Albee continued to write plays throughout the 1960's and '70's. Everything in the Garden, adapted from a play by Giles Cooper, was produced in 1967, followed by the original plays Box and Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung in 1968, All Over in 1971, and Seascape in 1975. For Seascape, Albee was awarded a second Pulitzer Prize. Counting the Ways and Listening which initially debuted as a radio play in England was staged in New York in 1977. Throughout the '80's, Albee's playwriting career failed to produce as substantial commercial hit. Plays from this period include The Lady from Dubuque (1980), an adaptation of Lolita (1981), The Man Who Had Three Arms (1983), Finding the Sun (1985), and Marriage Play (1987). During this time, Albee also taught courses as various universities and maintained his residence in New York. In 1994, Albee experienced a much-awaited success with the play Three Tall Women. That play earned Albee his third Pulitzer Prize and his first commercial hit in over a decade. Three Tall Women also won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award and the Outer Critics Circle Award. Albee's most recent productions have been Lorca Play in 1993 and Fragments: A Concerto Grosso in 1995. Edward Albee is a member of the Dramatists Guild Council and the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He teaches courses in playwriting every spring at the University of Houston, the venue where Lorca Play was initially staged. Albee himself sums up his career thusly: "I have been both overpraised and underpraised. I assume by the time I finish writing � and I plan to go on writing until I'm ninety or gaga � it will all equal itself out! You can't involve yourself with the vicissitudes of fashion or critical response." |
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"THE FINEST THEATRICAL BIOGRAPHY OF THE YEAR." -Sheridan Morley, London Sunday Times "Gussow, with a light and generous touch, shows us the strengths of an artist whose core of resilience ultimately insured his survival." - The New Yorker "Mel Gussow brings extraordinary rectitude and insight to the project of
synthesizing Albee's life and work. 'Edward Albee: A Singular Journey' is a thoroughly
absorbing book that functions not only as a biography, but as a criticism, social history
and psychological allegory . . ." "Inherently important, automatically definitive... and a must for all lovers of drama. [It] raises the curtain mroe than it ever has been raised on Albee and the impulses that fire his dramatic art." - Everett Evans, Houston Chronicle "A riveting biography... we see Albee today, culturally born again... up there in the same theatrical pantheon with Eugene O'Neill, Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams." - Lawrence DeVine, The NY Times Book Review "Consistently cogent and perceptive, one of the best books of 1999." - Clifford A. Ridley, The Philadelphia Inquirer A New York Times Notable Book MEL GUSSOW, critic and author, is a cultural writer for The New York Times. He has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism. He has previously written books on Samuel Beckett, Tom Stoppard and Harold Pinter. For APPLAUSE, he has also written THEATRE ON THE EDGE: NEW VISIONS, NEW VOICES. |