The soul ache this superlative staging leaves behind is accompanied by a feeling far more emotionally enriching: the exhilaration of a fresh encounter with a great work of theater revitalized anew. This Steppenwolf Theater production, the first neces...
Critics' Reviews
Taking No Prisoners in Boozy, Brutal Head Games
STAGE REVIEW Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
It's been exactly 50 years since Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? first brayed its way onto Broadway, but Edward Albee's four-person drama has lost none of its searing psychological power over the years...Letts, better known as the playwright behind t...
Review: Astonishing revival of 'Who's Afraid?'
MacKinnon, who recently brilliantly directed 'Clybourne Park' and has worked closely with Albee ever since she directed the premiere of his 'The Play About the Baby' in 2001, proves again that she is a master at pacing and getting the best out of her...
But fabrication, delusion and manipulation are integral to the play. Like Beckett and his existentialist comic nightmares, Albee mines a pitch-black absurdism. Fifty years on, and he’s still one step ahead of Broadway.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: Theater Review
This superlative 50th anniversary revival shows that Edward Albee's marital-warfare masterwork remains in a class of its own.
Chicago-style 'Virginia Woolf' cuts deep on Broadway
MacKinnon's production, which essentially re-claims the work from its post-Hollywood identity — of a vehicle for a diva dangling on the edge and her handsome, self-loathing husband — is an ideal way to pay tribute to Albee. It banishes the image ...
'Virginia Woolf' turns 50, with potent new revival
Letts relays this dark-horse quality as powerfully as any performer this critic has seen in the role. From his masterfully acerbic rebuttals to Martha's initial barrage of insults, this George proves that he isn't the mere simp his wife describes but...
Broadway review: 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'
Witty, sarcastic, cruel, clownish, with the timing of a stand-up comic, Letts makes George a very funny, scarily driven man, the quicksilver center of the evening. You can see the stakes rise in the color of his face, which turns bright red as his an...
Edward Albee's 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf' packs a surprising punch
From the opening moments, the Steppenwolf Theatre Company's brilliantly cast and justly celebrated production, which opened Saturday on the masterwork's 50th anniversary, gives off a voltage of the new and the giddy-making confidence that comes from ...
Boozy Betrayals Spark Chaos in Brilliant ‘Woolf’: Review
“Virginia Woolf” is that rarity, a three-act, two- intermission drama that grabs you and never lets go. George and Martha will remain together, but hardly on a note of hope. Credit MacKinnon and her perfectly synchronized quartet for executing th...
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