Navigation Salon Salon Books email print
Arts & Entertainment
.Books
Comics
Health & Body
Media
Mothers Who Think
News
People
Politics2000
Technology
- Free Software Project
Travel & Food
_______
Columnists

 

Current
Wire Stories

Click here to read the latest stories from the wires.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Also Today

For a full list of today's Salon Books stories, go to the Books home page.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Search Salon


  
Advanced Search  |  Help

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Recently in Salon Books

Dear Mr. Blue
If he really loved you ...
My friends tell me I shouldn't let my boyfriend go to Alaska without me. Am I being naive by trusting him?

By Garrison Keillor
[08/24/99]

Book Bag
What children know
The editor of the Threepenny Review selects her five favorite novels about childhood.

By Wendy Lesser
[08/23/99]

Ivory Tower
Make black the night
Was planning a march against violence against women an inherently racist undertaking?

By Tanya Shaffer
[08/23/99]

Reviews
"The Boy on the Green Bicycle"
A writer remembers the horror of her brother's death when she was 9 -- and the pain and growth that came of it.

By John Freeman
[08/23/99]


"To my executors"
Witnessing the furor over posthumously published books by Ernest Hemingway and Ralph Ellison, a novelist engineers his own literary legacy.

By Ken Kalfus
[08/20/99]

Complete archives for Books

- - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -




____E d w a r d   A l b e e : A   S i n g u l a r   J o u r n e y

Book cover


BY MEL GUSSOW

SIMON & SCHUSTER

NONFICTION

448 PAGES

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Steve Vineberg

August 24, 1999 | Edward Albee's first produced play, the canny, eruptive two-character drama "The Zoo Story," reinvented Off Broadway as the locus of experimental theater at almost the moment the '50s flickered into the '60s. Three years later, Albee became the first American playwright nurtured on the work of Samuel Beckett and the other absurdists to open a show on Broadway -- and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?," though it shocked and upset some of New York's more conventional critics, provoked much comparison, just or unjust, to Eugene O'Neill and Tennessee Williams.

But slowly at first, then with increasing speed, Albee lost his foothold. The plays that followed "Virginia Woolf" baffled and alienated audiences and many critics (though two of them won Pulitzer Prizes), and a mere decade after the fireworks over "Virginia Woolf" he was already thought of as a has-been. By the time he wrote what would be his comeback drama, "Three Tall Women," in 1991, he had disappeared so effectively from the cultural consciousness that it took him three years to get the play produced in Manhattan.

I'm not drawn to the Albee plays between "The Zoo Story" and "Three Tall Women," despite having enjoyed the theatrics in Mike Nichols' 1966 movie version of "Virginia Woolf" and the high comedy in Gerald Gutierrez's 1996 Broadway revival of "A Delicate Balance." So I approached Mel Gussow's biography, "Edward Albee: A Singular Journey," hoping it might bring me closer to the playwright, or at least show me what I've missed and why I shouldn't dismiss the lion's share of his work as rhetorical rather than dramatic, ostentatious rather than probing.




bn.com

 

But I came away from the book without much additional insight. Gussow is a longtime champion of Albee's work, and he's known Albee for more than three and a half decades -- which makes him the playwright's logical first biographer but not, perhaps, his most perspicacious one. He rarely offers a negative response to any of the plays, and his attempts to accord the worst duds some value can make your eyes glaze over. Here he is (quoting his own radio review) on 1980's "The Lady from Dubuque": "Mr. Albee contemplates the appearance of truth, man's need for an identity even if assumed. In this game we can choose our own roles to play ..." Based on that assessment, would you buy a ticket?

In Gussow's scheme, Albee's "singular journey" from initial stardom and promise to the triumph of "Three Tall Women" parallels his growth into self-knowledge (and sobriety). It's not a terribly original idea, and it's persuasive only in the most generalized way: Presumably any artist who's spent his life reflecting on the elements that have shaped him -- Albee's work has always been infused with details from his own life, particularly his unhappy childhood -- would attain some degree of self-understanding by the time he reached 63 (his age when he wrote "Three Tall Women"). But the conceit does give the book some shape and some forward drive.

Gussow isn't a compelling stylist:

[Writing a play] is, one might suggest, something like the birth of a baby, and as Beckett said, it can be "a difficult birth." The baby -- the play -- emerges intact. It would not be a reach of the metaphor to add that some "children" are healthier than others, but that Albee, as mother and father, loves them all.

And his puzzlement over how best to assemble the information he's gathered about the influence of Albee's personal life on his plays keeps leading him back to the same points.

Moreover, Gussow's affection for Albee causes him to shy away from a gossipy tone even in his report on Albee's youth in Greenwich Village, when he became part of a hard-drinking gay crowd presided over by his mentor and first partner, composer William Flanagan. You may respect Gussow's reluctance to dish, but the humorlessness with which he renders Albee's relationship with the wealthy, unloving Westchester WASPs who adopted him, Reed and Frances Albee, weighs down the book. Frankie Albee was, by all accounts, a character and a half: elegant, aristocratic, bigoted, self-willed, domineering, perverse -- and given, in her later years (when she and Edward, who left home at 21, had effected a fragile reconciliation), to repeating extraordinary stories about her sex life with Reed. A less reverential biographer would have a lot more fun with her.

Gussow supplies a handful of good theatrical tales -- Donald Sutherland's outrageous behavior during rehearsals for Albee's disastrous dramatization of "Lolita" in 1981; a 1978 dinner party at Gussow's where a sozzled Albee took on Joseph Papp. And he's sharp at locating Albee's dramaturgical sources: not only Strindberg, Pirandello and the absurdists but also "The Iceman Cometh," "Suddenly, Last Summer" and, surprisingly, James Thurber.

"Edward Albee: A Singular Journey" is worthy -- too worthy, finally, to make Albee's journey seem convincingly singular.
salon.com | August 24, 1999

 

- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer
Steve Vineberg teaches theater and film at Holy Cross College and writes regularly about both for the Threepenny Review.

Sound off
Send us a Letter to the Editor

Send e-mail to Steve Vineberg

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Print this story  Get a printer-friendly version

Email this story  E-mail a friend about this article

Backflip This Story  Backflip this article to find it again

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Search Salon


  
Advanced Search  |  Help

 

Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.