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Modern American Theatre

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Title: Modern American Theatre


1
Modern American Theatre
  • Alexander Gorrin
  • Intro to Theatre
  • Dec 11, 2008

2
Ingredients
  • By the beginning of the 1950s the vitality of
    American theatre was acknowledged around the
    world. The international reputation of Eugene
    ONeill was complemented by two potent young
    dramatists Arhtur Miller, who turned the
    ordinary man into a figure of tragic stature in
    Death of a Salesman (1949) and drew a parallel
    between U.S. Sen. Jospeh R McCarthys
    anti-Communist crusade of the 1950s and the
    Salem witch trials of 1692 in The Crucible
    (1953), and Tennessee Williams, who created a
    world festering with passion and sensuality in
    plays such as A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) and
    Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1954).

3
Ingredients
  • At the same time, the director Lee Strasberg,
    together with Elia Kazan, was codifying the
    teachings of Stanislavsky into the Method,
    which generated both controversy and
    misunderstanding. Although the Actors Studio,
    founded by Kazan in 1947, produced many fine
    actors, including Marlon Brando, Geraldine Page,
    and Paul Newman, the Method proved inadequate as
    an approach to acting in classical plays it was
    best suited to the realism of the new American
    plays and films.

4
Arthur Miller
  • Arthur Miller (October 17, 1915 February 10,
    2005) was a playwright and essayist. He was a
    prominent figure in American theatre and cinema
    for over 61 years, writing a wide variety of
    dramas, including celebrated plays such asThe
    Crucible, A View from the Bridge, All My Sons,
    and Death of a Salesman, which are studied and
    performed worldwide. Miller was often in the
    public eye, most famously for refusing to give
    evidence against others to the House Un-American
    Activities Committee, being the recipient of the
    Pulitzer Prize for Drama among countless other
    awards, and for his marriage to Marilyn Monroe.
    Miller is considered by audiences and scholars as
    one of America's greatest playwrights and his
    plays are lauded throughout the world.

5
Arthur Miller
  • Death of a Salesman (1949), Miller's most famous
    work, addresses the painful conflicts within one
    family, but it also tackles larger issues
    regarding American national values. The play
    examines the cost of blind faith in the American
    Dream. In this respect, it offers a postwar
    American reading of personal tragedy in the
    tradition of Sophocles' Oedipus Cycle. Miller
    charges America with selling a false myth
    constructed around a capitalist materialism
    nurtured by the postwar economy, a materialism
    that obscured the personal truth and moral vision
    of the original American Dream described by the
    country's founders.

6
Arthur Miller
  • The Crucible (1953) was based on the witchcraft
    trials in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692, a period
    Miller considered relevant to the 1950s, when
    investigation of subversive activities was
    widespread. In 1956, when Miller was called
    before the House Un-American Activities
    Committee, he refused to name people he had seen
    10 years earlier at an alleged communist writers
    meeting. He was convicted of contempt but
    appealed and won.

7
Tennessee Williams
  • Tennessee Williams was born Thomas Lanier
    Williams III in Columbus, Mississippi, in 1911.
    His friends began calling him Tennessee in
    college, in honor of his Southern accent and his
    father's home state. Williams's father, C.C.
    Williams, was a traveling salesman and a heavy
    drinker. Williams's mother, Edwina, was a
    Mississippi clergyman's daughter prone to
    hysterical attacks.
  • Tennessees plays reveal a world of human
    frustration in which sex and violence underlie an
    atmosphere of romantic gentility.
  • Williams died in 1983 when he choked on a
    medicine-bottle cap in an alcohol-related
    incident at the Elysee Hotel in New York City. He
    was one month short of his seventy-second
    birthday. In his long career he wrote twenty-five
    full-length plays (five made into movies), five
    screenplays, over seventy one-act plays, hundreds
    of short stories, two novels, poetry, and a
    memoir. The mark he left on the tradition of
    realism in American drama is indelible.

8
Tennessee Williams
  • His first recognition came when American Blues
    (1939), a group of one-act plays, won a Group
    Theatre award. Williams, however, continued to
    work at jobs ranging from theatre usher to
    Hollywood scriptwriter until success came with
    The Glass Menagerie (1944). In it, Williams
    portrayed a declassed Southern family living in a
    tenement. The play is about the failure of a
    domineering mother, Amanda, living upon her
    delusions of a romantic past, and her cynical
    son, Tom, to secure a suitor for Toms crippled
    and painfully shy sister, Laura, who lives in a
    fantasy world with a collection of glass animals.
  • Williams next major play, A Streetcar Named
    Desire (1947), won a Pulitzer Prize. It is a
    study of the mental and moral ruin of Blanche Du
    Bois, another former Southern belle, whose
    genteel pretensions are no match for the harsh
    realities symbolized by her brutish
    brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski. The play opened
    on Broadway on December 3, 1947 and closed on
    December 17, 1949 in the Ethel Barrymore Theatre.
    The Broadway production was directed by Elia
    Kazan and starred Marlon Brando, Jessica Tandy,
    Kim Hunter, and Karl Malden.

9
Tennessee Williams
  • Tennessees Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955) was
    awarded a Pulitzer Prize and was successfully
    filmed. ""Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"" is the story of
    a Southern family in crisis, focusing on the
    turbulent relationship of a wife and husband,
    Maggie "The Cat" and Brick Pollitt, and their
    interaction with Brick's family over the course
    of one evening gathering at the family estate in
    Mississippi, ostensibly to celebrate the birthday
    of patriarch and tycoon "Big Daddy" Pollitt.
    Maggie, through wit and beauty, has escaped a
    childhood of desperate poverty to marry into the
    wealthy Pollitt family, but finds herself
    suffering in an unfulfilling marriage. Brick, an
    aging football hero, has neglected his wife and
    further infuriates her by ignoring his brother's
    attempts to gain control of the family fortune.
    Brick's indifference and his near-continuous
    drinking date back to the recent suicide of his
    friend Skipper. Big Daddy is unaware that he has
    cancer and will not live to see another birthday
    his doctors and his family have conspired to keep
    this information from him and his wife. His
    relatives are in attendance and attempt to
    present themselves in the best possible light,
    hoping to receive the definitive share of Big
    Daddy's enormous wealth.

10
Edward Albee
  • Edward Franklin Albee III (born March 12, 1928)
    is a three time Pulitzer Prize winning playwright
    known for works including Who's Afraid of
    Virginia Woolf?, The Zoo Story, The Sandbox, The
    Delicate Balance and The American Dream. His
    works are considered well-crafted and often
    unsympathetic examinations of the modern
    condition. His early works reflect a mastery and
    Americanization of the Theatre of the Absurd that
    found its peak in works by European playwrights
    such as Jean Genet, Samuel Beckett, and Eugene
    Ionesco. Younger American playwrights, such as
    Pulitzer Prize-winner Paula Vogel, credit Albee's
    daring mix of theatricalism and biting dialogue
    with helping to reinvent the post-war American
    theatre in the early 1960s. Albee's dedication to
    continuing to evolve his voice as evidenced in
    later productions such as The Goat or, Who Is
    Sylvia? (2002) also routinely marks him as
    distinct from other American playwrights of his
    era.

11
Edward Albee
  • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is a play by
    Edward Albee that opened on Broadway at the Billy
    Rose Theater on October 13, 1962. The original
    cast featured Uta Hagen as Martha, Arthur Hill as
    George, Melinda Dillon as Honey and George
    Grizzard as Nick. It was directed by Alan
    Schneider. Subsequent cast members included
    Henderson Forsythe, Eileen Fulton, and Mercedes
    McCambridge, and Elaine Stritch.
  • In this play a middle-aged professor, his wife,
    and a younger couple engage one night in an
    unrestrained drinking bout that is filled with
    malicious games, insults, humiliations,
    betrayals, savage witticisms, and painful,
    self-revealing confrontations.
  • A film adaptation of the play was released in
    1966. It was directed by Mike Nichols and starred
    Elizabeth Taylor as Martha, Richard Burton as
    George, George Segal as Nick and Sandy Dennis as
    Honey.

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