We accept PayPal, Visa & Mastercard
through our secure checkout.
|
The Young Man From Atlanta
The Young Man From Atlanta
|
Author: Horton Foote Publisher: Dramatists Play Service Format: Softcover # of Pages: 54 Pub. Date: 1995 ISBN-10: 0822214830 ISBN-13: 9780822214830 Cast Size: 4 women, 5 men
|
About the Play:
Winner of the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
The Young Man from Atlanta is a full-length mystery-drama
by Horton Foote. In 1950s Houston, an affluent couple is
transformed by tragedy when their son dies under mysterious
circumstances and the husband loses his job of 40 years.
The Young Man from Atlanta tells
the story of a couple living in Houston in 1950, suffering the
aftershocks of the mysterious death of their son. In her review of
the play, Marian Burkhart explains the story: "In The Young
Man from Atlanta, a kind of elected ignorance has skewed the past
and narrowed the future, for the Kidders, Lily Dale and Will. The two
are attempting to cope with the death of their only son, Bill, who,
unable to swim, walked into a lake in Florida and drowned. Lily Dale
takes refuge in religion. She persuades herself that Bill's death, in
spite of its circumstances, was an accident. At the prompting of
Randy, the 'Young Man from Atlanta,' who, though he never appears, is
nonetheless the catalyst of the play's action, believes as well that
her son lived in the faith she herself professes. Will is made of
tougher stuff. He acknowledges his son's suicide and wants none of
Lily Dale's pseudo-comfort. But he has his own illusions, a belief
that a hard-working, competitive, optimistic all-American go-getter
like himself can triumph by achieving 'the best and the biggest,' and
that the best and the biggest house in Houston, into which he has
sunk his savings, can paper over the bitterness of Bill's death. But
he discovers that his job, the center of his life and his pride, is
no longer his and that his kind of competitiveness cannot get him the
bank loan he needs to start his own business. He discovers that his
wife has not only communicated with the Young Man, as he has
forbidden her to do, but has given Randy some $50,000 to 'tide him
over.' This discovery only intensifies the pain of a previous
realization that his son gave the Young Man money also. And he
discovers the strength and endurance of his own body, which he has
trusted as he has trusted his wife, has let him down, too, for he
suffers a heart attack. This shattering of his life's facade compels
him to realize that his life's core is an illusion. His single-minded
pursuit of the American dream has left his wife not only childish but
lonely, and it has denied him his son. Will chooses not to ask the
Young Man why his son gave him the money. He does not want to know.
Will and Lily Dale are reconciled. She will teach music. He will work
at the lesser job his former boss offers him, and she will obey him,
he hopes, even though she will cling to Randy, who for her, no matter
what she now knows, is 'the sweet boy' who comforted her. 'Everything
will be all right,' Will tells his wife. He will settle for what is
merely 'all right' because the 'the best and the biggest' is as empty
as the Young Man's lies."
The Young Man From Atlanta premiered in 1995 at the Signature Theatre Company, the tiny
Off-Off-Broadway house that had
devoted an entire season to a four play series of Horton Foote's
work, and won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize. Since
then the play had regional premieres at the Alley Theatre in Houston in 1996
and, in early 1997, at both Chicago's Goodman Theatre and Broadway's
Longacre Theatre, and has been mounted by colleges and community
theatres. Cast: 4 women, 5 men
What people say:
"Here is a simple, immensely
satisfying play, crafted with elegance, alive with feeling, holding a
mirror up if not to nature, at least to the next best thing, our
concept of nature. Not to be missed." — New York
Post
"The shimmering pleasures of
The Young Man from Atlanta sneaks up on you…[the
play] seduces us with rich accumulation of textures…Foote…ladles
on character and period nuances with a density unparalleled in any
living playwright." — New York Newsday
"The Young Man from Atlanta
doesn't soothe or lift any hearts. It's tough, one of Mr. Foote's
most serious and scathing works." — New York Times
"Horton Foote is
an American original…[a] longtime chronicler of comings and going
in fictional Harrison, Texas. Sometimes maddening, this is…a
beautifully wrought and very moving play." — Variety
About the Playwright:
Horton Foote (1916-2009) was a prolific American
playwright and screenwriter with an ear for the resilient spirit of
daily life in the small-town southern US states. Known as a writer's
writer, he switched readily from the stage to television and film. He
received Academy Awards for his screenplay adaptation of To Kill a
Mockingbird and his original screenplay Tender Mercies. During the
Golden Age of television, he authored numerous notable live
television dramas. For his 1997 television adaptation of William
Faulkner's "Old Man," he won an Emmy Award for Outstanding
Writing of a Miniseries. He received the 1995 Pulitzer Prize and his
first Tony nomination for his play, The Young Man From Atlanta.
|
|
|
|