Many of the plays that were developed as part of the movement remain iconic and relevant in world theatre today, and they are frequently revived and reexamined in a contemporary context. His adoptive parents were distant and domineering-by many accounts, even cruel-and their stodgy, stuffy “old American” values, ties to the Revolutionary War, and upper-class lifestyle ultimately pushed Albee to rebel against the traditional path laid out for him.Įdward Albee’s The American Dream is part of the post-World War II movement called “Theatre of the Absurd.” Meant to highlight the staggering inequities and absurdities in global society, plays associated with this artistic movement use hyperreal (or surreal) settings, characters, and situations to examine the breakdown of human society. The play is a cautionary tale against the romanticizing of constructed “American” values, but it’s also a deeply personal story-the disjointed family the absent, mutilated child at the heart of the story and the character of The Young Man buckling under pressure to embody ideals of youth, virility, and patriotism while privately dealing with unspeakable emotional turmoil all point to Albee’s painful childhood and adolescence. The American Dream throws into relief the dangers of obsession with youth, conformity, and perfection in the American nuclear family, showing how dangerous the pursuit of an imagined American ideal-one that did not actually exist-would be. In the post-World War II landscape, America was more prosperous than ever before-but at the same time, the destruction of the war and the ushering-in of nuclear warfare had left the country shaken by its own power.
#THE SANDBOX BY EDWARD ALBEE PLOT SUMMARY SERIES#
In the early 1960s, the world was on the verge of great upheaval, poised on the brink of a series of sexual and social revolutions that would reverberate from New York and San Francisco to London and Paris. With lifetime achievement awards from the Lambda Literary Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, the Drama Desk Awards, and the Tony Awards, Albee remains, indisputably, one of the seminal and foundational voices in modern American theater. Albee died in 2016 in his home in Montauk, NY.
His best-known works include the 1962 play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, which has endured as a hallmark of contemporary American theater, as well as The Zoo Story, Three Tall Women, and The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? Albee was the winner of numerous awards including the 19 Tony Awards for Best Play, the 1967, 1975, and 1994 Pulitzer Prizes for Drama, and a 1996 National Medal of Arts. Albee, though openly homosexual, never considered himself a gay writer but rather “a writer who happen to be gay.” Nevertheless, his plays often exposed and lampooned the dark side of traditional heterosexual unions and the simmering unrest just below the surface of the idyllic American family. Albee moved to New York’s Greenwich Village, a bohemian epicenter of arts and culture, where he began composing plays which criticized American society. He ultimately graduated from the prestigious high school Choate Rosemary Hall, but at Trinity College in Connecticut, he was expelled again. As he bounced from school to school throughout his teens, racking up expulsions from military academies and private schools around the country, he struggled against authority. Born in Virginia and adopted shortly thereafter into the wealthy Albee family, Edward Albee never felt fully at home in his adoptive family.