Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? [NEW]
(1962) is a landmark three-act play by Edward Albee that serves as a brutal exposé of the "American Dream" and the fragile boundary between truth and illusion. Set on a New England college campus, it depicts a single night of "fun and games" between a middle-aged couple, George and Martha, and their younger guests, Nick and Honey. Meaning of the Title
The title is a pun on the song from Disney's The Three Little Pigs . Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
To be "afraid of Virginia Woolf" is to be afraid of living without false illusions . Virginia Woolf’s own literary style—peeling back layers of pretense to find emotional truth—mirrors the play’s final act where all comforting lies are stripped away. Core Themes (1962) is a landmark three-act play by Edward
Albee reportedly saw the phrase scrawled on a mirror in a New York bar and felt it captured a "university intellectual joke". To be "afraid of Virginia Woolf" is to