Current:Home > MarketsDishy-yet-earnest, 'Cocktails' revisits the making of 'Virginia Woolf' -NextFrontier Finance
Dishy-yet-earnest, 'Cocktails' revisits the making of 'Virginia Woolf'
View
Date:2025-04-13 20:41:58
There are some titles that stick in your head forever. One of the most indelible is Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, a witticism that Edward Albee saw scrawled on the mirror of a Greenwich Village bar and appropriated for his groundbreaking 1962 play. Albee couldn't have dreamed that, 60 years on, people would use the title as a shorthand to describe fractious marriages, boozy arguments and parties gone terribly wrong.
Albee's play – and the 1966 movie adaptation with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton – are the subject of Philip Gefter's dishy-yet-earnest new book, Cocktails with George and Martha: Movies, Marriage, and the Making of Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? Moving from the origins of the play in Albee's unhappy childhood to the shark tank that was the film's production – with Taylor, Burton and director Mike Nichols all flashing their teeth – Gefter shows why Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? hit the '60s like a torpedo. His book got me thinking about how the film looks in 2024.
You may know that Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? portrays a late night battle royal between a floundering professor, George, and his frustrated wife Martha, the daughter of the university president. Martha has invited over for drinks an ambitious young professor, Nick, and his dippy wife, Honey. Over two-plus hours of industrial-level boozing, the loud-mouthed Martha and venomously witty George go after one another – and their unlucky guests – with stinging barbs and cruel revelations.
As Gefter makes clear, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? took aim at post-war America's idealized vision of marriage, in which fathers knew best and wives just loved being mothers and helpmeets. Albee depicted marital unhappiness in all its rancor and often perverse fantasy – like George and Martha's imaginary child – that hold people together. Its ferocious candor shifted the cultural terrain, paving the way for everything from Ingmar Bergman's Scenes from a Marriage to Tony and Carmela Soprano.
Yet if you view Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? now, it feels dated and almost innocent. George and Martha were shocking creations in their day because Albee was showing audiences what Broadway and Hollywood kept hidden. These days nothing's hidden. Real life couples sign up to flaunt their toxicity in TV series from The Real Housewives to Keeping Up With the Kardashians. Where Albee searched for meaning inside his characters' sensationally bad behavior, reality TV settles for the sensational – who cares what it might mean?
What feels most contemporary about Virginia Woolf is the way it piggybacked on celebrity. Liz and Dick, as they were known, landed the lead movie roles, even though she had to put on 20 pounds and 20 years to play Martha. No matter. Ever since their affair on the set of Cleopatra, they were hot, a paparazzi magnet who jetted from posh Parisian hotels off to Mexico – they made Puerto Vallarta famous. The world knew about their drinking, their passionate sex (she called him her "little Welsh stallion") and their rip-roaring fights. Naturally, their fame, willfulness and self-absorption made them hard to handle on the set. Their stardom also made the movie a hit.
In the end, Burton gave a terrific performance and Taylor did better than expected – even winning an Oscar. Still, it's eerie watching them today. Their roles seem to predict the future in which they became the target of jokes, the once legendary beauty being mocked as a chubby, chicken-scarfing fool by John Belushi in drag, while Burton sank ever deeper into the persona of a drunken, self-hating cautionary tale about wasting one's talent.
Sad to say, we live in a culture bored by ordinary people. Liz and Dick were the prototypes of the parade of celebrity couples who now dominate public consciousness. Their stardom heightens the movie's profile the way Princess Di and Charles elevated the dreary British monarchy. Even the Super Bowl had a special tang this year because of Travis Kelce's relationship with another talented Taylor.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is a great play and Gefter's a good writer. But if the movie had cast its original Broadway stars, Uta Hagen and Arthur Hill, I wouldn't be here talking about it.
veryGood! (67724)
Related
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- EU plan aimed at fighting climate change to go to final votes, even if watered down
- As olive oil's popularity rises over perceived health benefits, so do prices. Here's why.
- What Biden's executive order on AI does and means
- Carolinas bracing for second landfall from Tropical Storm Debby: Live updates
- Donald Trump Jr. to be defense's first witness in New York fraud trial
- Alaska judge upholds Biden administration’s approval of the massive Willow oil-drilling project
- Class-action lawsuit alleges unsafe conditions at migrant detention facility in New Mexico
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Alabama sets date to attempt nation's first nitrogen gas execution of death row inmate
Ranking
- Organizers cancel Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna over fears of an attack
- Tracy Chapman wins CMA award for Fast Car 35 years after it was released with Luke Combs cover
- Taylor Swift’s Argentina concert takes political turn as presidential election nears
- 131 World War II vets die each day, on average; here is how their stories are being preserved.
- Connie Chiume, South African 'Black Panther' actress, dies at 72
- Bears vs. Panthers Thursday Night Football highlights: Chicago holds on for third win
- Liberation Pavilion seeks to serve as a reminder of the horrors of WWII and the Holocaust
- 100,000 marijuana convictions expunged in Missouri, year after recreational use legalized
Recommendation
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
'Women Tell All' brings 'Golden Bachelor' confessions: But first, who did Gerry send home?
Wendy's is giving away free chicken nuggets every Wednesday for the rest of the year
Federal judge declines to push back Trump’s classified documents trial but postpones other deadlines
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Media watchdog says it was just ‘raising questions’ with insinuations about photographers and Hamas
US 'drowning in mass shootings': Judge denies bail to Cornell student Patrick Dai
From loons to a Lab.: Minnesota's state flag submissions do not disappoint