Chicago – Amy Morton says she’s afraid of Virginia Woolf, but she’s actually terrorized violently – and masterfully – by her stage husband, Tracy Letts. Even if you dive into Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre blind to the fact that local playwright and actor Tracy Letts won a Pulitzer Prize for Steppenwolf’s “August: Osage County,” you’d quickly discern in the first act that you’re witnessing a legend.
Play Rating: 4.5/5.0
But while the content of this play is challenging enough, it’s delivered by ensemble members Tracy Letts and co-lead Amy Morton for theatergoers who aren’t faint of heart. The story, which is set inside the living room of a home on the campus of a small New England college, centers around a fanatic love/hate relationship of one married couple (Letts and Morton).
Left to right: Carrie Coon,...
Play Rating: 4.5/5.0
But while the content of this play is challenging enough, it’s delivered by ensemble members Tracy Letts and co-lead Amy Morton for theatergoers who aren’t faint of heart. The story, which is set inside the living room of a home on the campus of a small New England college, centers around a fanatic love/hate relationship of one married couple (Letts and Morton).
Left to right: Carrie Coon,...
- 12/21/2010
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
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