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August: Osage County certainly has its moments, but it's never particularly innovative or impressive. During this time, skeletons come out of closets, and drama ensues. Letts seems to be under the impression that the way to go here is to create as many irreconcilable issues as he can and then not resolve any of them. Balancing all these characters is something Letts does particularly well, and this is especially highlighted when there are two and three conversations going on simultaneously.Very few of these characters are the least bit sympathetic.
August: Osage County is Tracy Letts' Pulitzer Prize-winning play, which debuted in 2007. I, for one, am hard-pressed to understand just what about the play was Pulitzer-worthy. Some people may think that makes good drama; others will rightly ask, "so what." and "what's the point.". It is typically billed as a dark comedy or tragicomedy.
Most of them spend most of their time hashing out their problems in nasty, unpleasant ways. It deals with the reunion of a family in rural Oklahoma after the death of its patriarch. The play features 13 characters, and most of them get a substantial amount of attention from the author.
By far one of the best plays I've read in a long time, maybe even since my love affair with 'Angels in America.' Bitingly funny and horribly tragic, I've yet to find one disappointed fellow reader of Letts' masterpiece.
Yes, Mr. You simply cannot miss seeing this play if you're in NYC. Three girls. You want more. I saw this play in previews here in NYC and told a friend: This play is going to win the Pulitzer, the Tony, everything.
The set is spectacular. Absent father emotionally. The entire evening from beginning to end was the best time I've had on Broadway in my life. If you do you'll regret it. Letts has read my mind and put it into a play. The actors are brilliant in each part.
And I was right. I was fortunate to see Letts father in the lead role before he passed away a few months later. The play is 3 1/2 hours long but the hours go by so fast you can't believe it's over when the curtain comes down. The play shocked me on a personal level because so much of what he wrote about this family was MY family. The acting was beyond mesmerizing. The cousin who was a brother was, in my life, a brother who was a cousin.
Mother who had problems. I don't know how many times I have said over the past 40 years, "If we knew the future, we wouldn't get out of bed." When those words came out of a character's mouth on stage, my mouth flew open in shock.The Native American in the play also echoed my life.
It has received something like 7 Toni awards on Broadway this year. Tracy Letts writes so personally and developes his characters so you feel connected to them immediately. I had the opportunity to actually see this play in Chicago. As one would expect after seeing such a great play. August is one of the finest plays written in this century. What a fantastic play. Well written, well acted and will be a classic.
None of the young victims of the twisted adults are at all edifying. or of Awake and Sing or Hamlet. For all the passion and screaming, other than the father who dies in the first scene, you will not care at all about any of the characters in this play.Consider what holds you, in the great plays about angst, from O'Neill's to Albee, Clifford Odets, Hellman, Osborne and Ibsen -- even Strindberg and Beckett -- you somehow care about at least one person in the play, or learn something about how they ended up as they did, or learn something from how they attempt to cope with their situation.
Most simpering of all are the disguised characterizations of what must be the author-as-victim. Well, you won't have that feeling when this thing is over. Remember how you somehow felt renewed at the end of Long Day's Journey or of Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf.
What a disappointing play this was. It is all just banality. You will just be glad it IS over.It is because there are no lessons in this play for anyone.
You get none of that in this pointless screamfest. None of the adults have even the slightest enriching qualities of life or language to lift them up as characters or people.
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