Edward Albee
Edward Franklin Albee III (born 1928-03-12) is an American playwright , known for works including Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, The Zoo Story, The Sandbox and The American Dream.
Sourced
- What I wanted to get at is the value difference between pornographic playing-cards when you're a kid, and pornographic playing-cards when you're older. It's that when you're a kid you use the cards as a substitute for a real experience, and when you're older you use real experience as a substitute for the fantasy.
- The Zoo Story (1959).
- I have a fine sense of the ridiculous, but no sense of humour.
- Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1961)
- The gods too are fond of a joke.
- Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1961)
- You gotta have a swine to show you where the truffles are.
- Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1961)
- One must let the play happen to one; one must let the mind loose to respond as it will, to receive impressions, to sense rather than know, to gather rather than immediately understand.
- On his play Tiny Alice, in National Observer (5 April 1965)
- I'm not suggesting that the play is without fault; all of my plays are imperfect, I'm rather happy to say — it leaves me something to do.
- On his play Tiny Alice, in National Observer (5 April 1965)
- Good writers define reality; bad ones merely restate it. A good writer turns fact into truth; a bad writer will, more often than not, accomplish the opposite.
- Saturday Review (4 May 1966)
- A play is fiction — and fiction is fact distilled into truth.
- The New York Times (18 September 1966)
- Your source material is the people you know, not those you don't know, [but] every character is an extension of the author's own personality.
- The New York Times (18 September 1966)
- What people really want in the theater is fantasy involvement and not reality involvement.
- Quote (4 June 1967)
- American critics are like American universities. They both have dull and half-dead faculties.
- Address to New York Cultural League (6 May 1969)
Unsourced
- A playwright is someone who lets his guts hang out on the stage.
- 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.
- If Attila the Hun were alive today, he'd be a drama critic.
- The difference between critics and audiences is that one is a group of humans and one is not.
- Remember one thing about democracy. We can have anything we want and at the same time, we always end up with exactly what we deserve.
- Sometimes a person has to go a very long distance out of his way to come back a short distance correctly.
- The only time I'll get good reviews is if I kill myself.
Criticism
- It is three and a half hours long, four characters wide and a cesspool deep.
- John Chapman on Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? in The New York Daily News (15 October 1962)