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In "Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" we are confronted with four characters on the deck of an ocean liner (again, we are dealing with minimalist set design). Mao Tse-Tung walks around the stage and indeed the entire theater, spouting actual quotations, most of which critique American imperialism (Albee instructs that the actor playing Mao should be oriental or else should wear a Mao mask). The audience also has to contend with an Old Woman who recites "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse," a poem by Will Carlton. Ignoring this pair are the other two characters in the play, a Long-Winded Lady who tells all about her troubles and her sex life to a Minister, who says nothing in response to her rambling confession. However, he does nod a lot. Of course these things run together in point and counterpoint to each other. Again, this performance piece loses something on the printed page, where the total effect of the sounds, not to mention the words, is buried. Consequently, "Box/Mao" should ideally be read by those interested in having the two pieces performed, because that is where they really come alive.
Performance Notes: "Box" and "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" are separate plays, but Edward Albee feels "they are more effective performed enmeshed." Albee's ideal performance would be "Box," followed by "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung," followed by "Box," all without intermission. The playwright has also suggested that if "Box" is performed by itself, it should be played two or three times in a row--which is why the voice in "Box" is usually recorded--with lighting changes deemed appropriate by the director. "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" can be performed without "Box," but it requires the removal of excerpts from "Box" which are included in the preferred joint performance.
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by Foster Hirsch
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Albee was adopted by a wealthy, yet emotionless set of parents. His father, Reed, was absent, and his mother, Frankie, was cool and detached. This upbringing, where he was seen more as a possession than a family member, would of course affect his writings. Constantly kicked out of schools, and never graduating from college, Albee turned to writing, his first success being "Zoo Story."
"Zoo Story," a short play about a fateful meeting of two men in a park, received mixed notices from assorted playwrights and critics. Here, biographer Gussow overextends his protection of his subject too much. He dismisses the honest critiques of two playwriting giants- Thornton Wilder and William Inge, because they did not understand or like Albee's works. However, a bland positive response by Samuel Beckett is treated like a Dead Sea Scroll, to be picked apart and treasured. I have read "Zoo Story," and it is wordy and preachy.
Albee's next big success was "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?," which was turned into a powerhouse film by Mike Nichols. Again, Gussow is flagrant in his criticism of someone involved with the film in order to placate Albee, and here, Nichols. The film's screenwriter, Ernest Lehman, is harshly criticized for opening the play slightly, yet just copying Albee's play. The bio's author, and Albee, make a point of needling Lehman's screenwriting credit on the film. Yet, Elaine May copied the French film "La Cage Aux Folles" word for word, adding what could be described as copious scenes at best, then took a big giant screenwriting credit for Nichols' "The Birdcage." Watch both films back to back sometime, it is eye opening.
Gussow also fumbles in his outline of Albee's life. In Albee's less successful years, he is writing weird experimental plays with subjects like a man with three arms, and one play where two of the characters are sea creatures. After mounting all of these failures, Albee is defended endlessly by Gussow, who suddenly contributes an entire chapter about Albee's alcoholism. The alcohol is both a reason his plays were not celebrated, and a defense of the brilliant man.
The entire beginning of the book chronicles the complete lack of love Albee's parents had for him, yet the death of Albee's father is glossed over, barely mentioned. I had to reread the sentence a few times, since no followup is made about Albee's reaction. A whole chapter is devoted to his mother's demise, and her revenge on her own son in her will. More is written about one of his former lovers and honest critics, a frustrated musician. This "A Star is Born" redux is written about nicely.
Gussow does do well in describing Albee's assorted forays into theater, as playwright and director. Dirt about Donald Sutherland and Frank Langella is dished around. The bio's author is honest in Albee's lacking skills as a director, coming to the theater as a playwright and not an actor.
Albee, who prefers to be called a writer who is gay, as opposed to a gay writer, also has kind words for his longtime partner of over twenty years. Albee says a gay writer writes about being gay, whether the work is good or not is moot, since the writer knows the subject and is putting in the final word. A writer who is gay is not tied down to just homosexual topics, and is free to explore society without audiences looking for gay subtexts that do not exist. "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is a seering look at two heterosexual couples, the sexuality of the playwright is nonessential in light of his characters and their actions.
Gussow wisely keeps talk of Albee's lesser known plays, and the ones readers probably have not read anyway, to a minimum. Albee's triumphant comeback play, "Three Tall Women," is covered extensively. The play is about his mother, and so much more.
Reading this biography will make you curious to seek out some of Albee's other plays, just to see what makes him tick. Over seventy now, he is definitely an interesting man, and Gussow does catch that fact better than anything.
I recommend this book to theater lovers, and any writer who needs a little inspiration.
Gussow has assembled excellent materials and extensively interviewed his subject (between 1994 and 1999), but I did not come away from his biography with a sharp or abiding sense of the playwright. Strangely, secondary figures such as composer William Flanagan and director Alan Schneider emerge as more luminous than Edward Albee.
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Yet it isn't a bad play. It deals with familial strife beautifully and treats most of its characters with the fairness and harsh reality for which Albee is famous. All the characters are named according to their social roles (i.e. The Wife, The Mistress, The Daughter, etc.), and his reasoning is apparent. By dealing with them in this way, Albee can explore how those relationships change, yet stay the same, without ever over-personalizing them.
So what exactly is this unusual play about? Well, a rather famous person--who is of course unidentified--is about to die. Surrounding him are his family, including his Mistress, and his lifelong Doctor with his Nurse. Each of the children is well into their mid-life, while the Mistress and Wife are both over sixty. What marks this play as unique is that both of these latter ladies are able to maintain an amiable kindness with one another, because of their shared love for this unseen man. The Daughter, whose character seems to be both the weakest and the strongest at times, is constantly fighting the presence of the older women, and finding out they have more strength than they let on.
The sweetness of the play is that it knows its subject. It knows death, and it knows the strain that death can put on people. At times it is predictable, but then, so is death. It comes for us all, as the old adage says. And it comes in this play, bag and baggage unloaded on a cast of characters unable to make room for it, but unable to make it leave.
A sharp, sometimes disappointing, but always engaging text, Albee's "All Over" may not be his best, but it is a testamony to his remarkable skill in rendering human emotion on paper.
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In "Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" we are confronted with four characters on the deck of an ocean liner (again, we are dealing with minimalist set design). Mao Tse-Tung walks around the stage and indeed the entire theater, spouting actual quotations, most of which critique American imperialism (Albee instructs that the actor playing Mao should be oriental or else should wear a Mao mask). The audience also has to contend with an Old Woman who recites "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse," a poem by Will Carlton. Ignoring this pair are the other two characters in the play, a Long-Winded Lady who tells all about her troubles and her sex life to a Minister, who says nothing in response to her rambling confession. However, he does nod a lot. Of course these things run together in point and counterpoint to each other. Again, this performance piece loses something on the printed page, where the total effect of the sounds, not to mention the words, is buried. Consequently, "Box/Mao" should ideally be read by those interested in having the two pieces performed, because that is where they really come alive.
Performance Notes: "Box" and "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" are separate plays, but Edward Albee feels "they are more effective performed enmeshed." Albee's ideal performance would be "Box," followed by "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung," followed by "Box," all without intermission. The playwright has also suggested that if "Box" is performed by itself, it should be played two or three times in a row--which is why the voice in "Box" is usually recorded--with lighting changes deemed appropriate by the director. "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" can be performed without "Box," but it requires the removal of excerpts from "Box" which are included in the preferred joint performance.