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Other authors named Edward:
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Author's popularity: 3
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Popularity: 1 Vote:  | A play is fiction-and fiction is fact distilled into truth. |
Popularity: 0 Vote:  | American critics are like American universities. They both have dull and half-dead faculties. |
Popularity: 4 Vote:  | 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. |
Popularity: -3 Vote:  | I have a fine sense of the ridiculous, but no sense of humor. |
Popularity: -3 Vote:  | I swear, if you existed I'd divorce you. |
Popularity: -2 Vote:  | 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. |
Popularity: 1 Vote:  | Oh, Mother, you go home too early! |
Popularity: 2 Vote:  | 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. |
Popularity: -5 Vote:  | 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. |
Popularity: 4 Vote:  | What people really want in the theater is fantasy involvement and not reality involvement. |
Popularity: -2 Vote:  | 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. |
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Biography
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Edward Franklin Albee III (born March 12, 1928) is a leading American playwright, for many the most important one alive. He was a distinguished professor at the University of Houston from 1989 to 2003.
He was born in Washington, DC and was adopted two weeks later and taken to Westchester County, New York. Albee's adopted father owned a chain of theatres, where Edward would hang out as a child.
Albee left home when he was in his late teens, later saying in an interview, "They weren't very good at being parents, and I wasn't very good at being a son."
Edward Albee's plays are decidedly unique; one of his main influences has been Samuel Beckett and he is credited with being one of the first American playwrights of the school of thought known as Absurdism. His style is not as surreal as many Absurdists, but Albee's plays reflect the philosophy that life is inherently absurd.
Albee is a member of the Dramatists Guild Council, and President of the Edward F. Albee Foundation, Inc. He received the Gold Medal in Drama from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters in 1980, and in 1996 the Kennedy Center Honors and the National Medal of Arts.
Albee has received three Pulitzer Prizes for drama — for A Delicate Balance (1966), Seascape (1974), Three Tall Women (1990-91).
Albee received a Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2005.
Albee graduated from Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pennsylvania in 1945. He attended Trinity College (Connecticut) for a year and a half before being expelled for skipping classes and refusing to attend compulsory chapel.
His partner, Jonathan Thomas, a sculptor, died on 2 May 2005, the result of a two year long battle with bladder cancer.
Albee is the President of the Edward F. Albee Foundation, Inc. which maintains the William Flanagan Creative Persons Center (a writers and artists colony in Montauk, NY.)
Plays * The Zoo Story (1958) * The Death of Bessie Smith (1959) * The Sandbox (1959) * Fam and Yam (1959) * The American Dream (play) (1960) * Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1961-62, Tony Award) * The Ballad of the Sad Cafe (1963) (adapted from the novel by Carson McCullers) * Tiny Alice (1964) * Malcolm (1965) (adapted from the novel by James Purdy) * A Delicate Balance (1966) * Everything in the Garden (1967) (adapted from a play by British playwright Giles Cooper) * Box (play) and Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung (1968) * All Over (1971) * Seascape (1974) * Listening (play) (1975) * Counting the Ways (1976) * The Lady From Dubuque (1977-79) * Lolita (adapted from the novel by Vladimir Nabokov) * The Man Who Had Three Arms (1981) * Finding the Sun (1982) * Marriage Play (1986-87) * Three Tall Women (1990-91) * The Lorca Play (1992) * Fragments (1993) * The Play About the Baby (1996) * The Goat, or Who is Sylvia? (2000, Tony Award) * Occupant (play) (2001) * Peter & Jerry (Act One: Homelife. Act Two: The Zoo Story) (2004)
...(more on Wikipedia)
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Edward Albee".
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