His best stuff will live for a long time...
1 posted on
09/16/2016 5:56:09 PM PDT by
Borges
To: Borges
His best stuff will live for a long time...Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolfe is a great more, and an ordeal at the same time. Dark.
If you watched the movie and drank liquor every time someone did in the movie, you'd be in a coma by the end of it...
2 posted on
09/16/2016 6:08:24 PM PDT by
sargon
(Anyone AWOL in the battle against Hillary is not a patriot. It's that simple.)
To: Borges
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is an exhausting experience. RIP
3 posted on
09/16/2016 6:10:05 PM PDT by
fhayek
To: Borges
He introduced himself suddenly and with a bang, in 1959, when his first produced play, The Zoo Story,opened in Berlin on a double bill with Samuel Becketts Krapps Last Tape. "Krapp's Last Tape" is a masterpiece, written by an artist at the zenith of his maturity
It's interesting that the callow Albee (at that time) would be double-billed with this stunning Beckett work.
7 posted on
09/16/2016 6:30:28 PM PDT by
Flycatcher
(God speaks to us, through the supernal lightness of birds, in a special type of poetry.)
To: Borges
To: Borges
One of the finest playwrights of our era. Sorry to hear this.
13 posted on
09/16/2016 8:46:47 PM PDT by
TBP
(0bama lies, Granny dies.)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson