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Edward Albee
© Nancy Crampton
EDWARD ALBEE
The Art of Theater No. 4
Interviewed by William Flanagan
Issue 39, Fall 1966
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From the Interview
INTERVIEWER
Incidentally, when did the title Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? occur to you?

ALBEE
There was a saloon—it’s changed its name now—on Tenth Street, between Greenwich Avenue and Waverly Place . . . and they had a big mirror on the downstairs bar in this saloon where people used to scrawl graffiti. At one point back in about 1953 . . . 1954 I think it was—long before any of us started doing much of anything—I was in there having a beer one night, and I saw “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” scrawled in soap, I suppose, on this mirror. When I started to write the play it cropped up in my mind again. And of course, who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf means who’s afraid of the big bad wolf . . . who’s afraid of living life without false illusions. And it did strike me as being a rather typical university intellectual joke.

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Winter 2009
INTERVIEW
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FICTION
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MEMOIR
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POETRY
Marianne Boruch, Robert Hass, Dorothea Tanning
PHOTOGRAPHS
Massimo Vitali
Authors Mentioned
Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, Harold Pinter, Susan Sontag, James Thurber, Tennessee Williams, Bertolt Brecht, Noël Coward, Elia Kazan, Marcel Proust, James Purdy, Sophocles
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