Albee, Edward
Related Category: American Literature: Biographies
(ăl´bē), 1928, American playwright, one of the leading dramatists of his generation, b. Washington, D.C. Much of his most characteristic work constitutes an absurdist commentary on American life.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf (1962, film 1966), a Tony Awardwinner that is generally regarded as his finest play, presents an all-night drinking bout in which a middle-aged professor and his wife verbally lacerate each other in brilliant colloquial language. His major early plays include
The Zoo Story (1959),
The Death of Bessie Smith (1960),
The Sandbox (1960),
The Ballad of the Sad Cafe (1963), adapted from the novel by Carson
McCullers, and
Tiny Alice (1965). Albee won the Pulitzer Prize for
A Delicate Balance (1967),
Seascape (1975), and
Three Tall Women (1994). Other later plays include
The Lady from Dubuque (1980),
Marriage Play (1987), and
The Play about the Baby (1998). In 2002 two new Albee plays debuted,
The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?, a Tony Awardwinning family tragicomedy, and
Occupant, a portrait of the artist Louise
Nevelson.
See P. C. Kolin, Conversations with Edward Albee (1987); biography by M. Gussow (1999); studies by A. Paolucci (1972) and R. E. Amacher (1982).