The Watering Place
Written byLyle Kessler
Date premieredMar 12, 1969
Place premieredMusic Box Theatre
Original languageEnglish
GenreDrama, Anti-War, Magic Realism
SettingA house on the edge of an American City

The Watering Place is a play written by Lyle Kessler.[1] His first full length,[1] it debuted on Broadway, starring Shirley Knight and William Devane[1]

Michael Langham, the initial director of the play, and future director at Juilliard, came to its producer Eugene Persson, and begged him to let him direct it. "Langham is known to be choosy and usually Producers hunt him down" an article in New York Magazine said at the time.[2]

On February 17, 1969, Alan Schneider took over the role as director for The Watering Place.[3] The opening was delayed until March 6.[4]

The play closed the first day it opened, but Kessler believed the reason for its lack of success on Broadway had more to do with other variables than the merit of the play itself. "....there were a lot of problems" Kessler said in an interview in 1990, "We'd had a change of directors, some of the casting wasn't right. And at the time, people didn't want to see anything about Vietnam."

Kessler, who went on to write Orphans, won a Rockefeller Foundation grant for The Watering Place.[5] The play has had segments published in a number of anthologies including Best Plays of 1969-1970 and Monologues--women: 50 speeches from the contemporary theatre, Volume 1[6] and memorabilia from the Broadway production are sold on eBay as collectors items. Current used copies of The Watering Place go for as much as 130 dollars online.

Lengham said The Watering Place is one of the most significant plays about America he has "ever read"[1]

Plot

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Funke, Lewis. "In Place of a Sun" NY Times , Sept 29, 1968 , p. D1.
  2. New York Magazine Jan 20, 1969, p. 59
  3. New York Times February 18th 1968,
  4. New York Times February 18, 1968,
  5. The president's five year review and annual report 1968 p. 111
  6. Emerson, Robert. Monologues--women: 50 speeches from the contemporary theatre, Volume 1, 1976 , p. 21
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.