Cocktails with George and Martha
Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, and the making of 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'
From its debut in 1962, Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? was a wild success and a cultural lightning rod. The play transpires over one long, boozy night, laying bare the lies, compromises, and scalding love that have sustained a middle-aged couple through decades of marriage. It scandalised critics but magnetised audiences.
Then, Hollywood took a colossal gamble on Albee's sophisticated play and won. Co-starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, the sensational 1966 film won five Oscars. How this scorching play became a movie classic-surviving censorship attempts, its creators' inexperience, and its stars' own tumultuous marriage, is one of the most riveting stories in all of cinema.
Acclaimed author Philip Gefter traces Woolf from its hushed origins in Greenwich Village, through its tormented production process, to its explosion onto screens and permanent place in the canon of cinematic marriages. He explores how two couples - one fictional, one all too real - brought to light our most deeply held myths about relationships, sex, family, and, against all odds, love.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
April 4, 2024 -
Formats
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781804186749
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781804186749
- File size: 1160 KB
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Accessibility
No publisher statement provided -
Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
December 11, 2023
This erudite study from photography critic Gefter (What Becomes a Legend Most) explores the genesis and impact of Edward Albee’s 1962 play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and its 1966 film adaptation. The play’s disquieting vision of domestic discord, Gefter suggests, was inspired by the “dissonance experienced throughout his emotionally barren childhood in a household of abundant material luxury.” Recounting the drama that plagued the making of Mike Nichols’s film version, Gefter notes that the first-time director sparred with original cinematographer and industry veteran Harry Stradling, whom Nichols claimed undermined his creative vision and eventually replaced with Haskell Wexler. During heated squabbles between married costars Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, other personnel on set were unsure “if they were witnessing the actors getting into character or simply watching the husband-and-wife dynamics of the Burtons’ real-life marriage.” The trivia entertains (Gefter contends the real-life sources for Albee’s embittered married protagonists were a Wagner College faculty couple whose notorious fights were also the subject of Andy Warhol’s 1965 verité documentary, Bitch), and Gefter persuasively credits the film with setting the template for more bracing Hollywood depictions of love after romance’s first blush. This will renew readers’ admiration for the classic film and its source material. Agent: Adam Eaglin, Cheney Agency.
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