Cocktails with George and Martha Movies, marriage, and the making of Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Philip Gefter

Book - 2024

An award-winning author presents the history and impact of both the theatrical and cinematic versions of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and how it forced audiences to confront deeply-held concepts about relationships, sex and family.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 791.4372/Who's (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Bloomsbury Publishing 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Philip Gefter (author)
Physical Description
xvii, 346 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 292-325) and index.
ISBN
9781635579628
  • Prologue
  • 1. The College of Complexes
  • 2. Marquee Dreams
  • 3. Wild Applause
  • 4. Hollywood Bound
  • 5. If You Give Me Chocolate, I'll Give You Flowers
  • 6. Flies in the Ointment
  • 7. The Most Famous Couple in the World
  • 8. The Art of Filmmaking
  • 9. Those Damned Guests
  • 10. The Producer's Other Cheek
  • 11. Getting to the Marrow
  • 12. Labor Pains
  • 13. Edward Albee and Mike Nichols Dance the Watusi
  • Marriage in Relief: An Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Image Credits
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Writer/producer Philip Gefter offers an entertaining, well-researched account of perhaps the most controversial play and film of the early 1960s, Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? So explosive that the Pulitzer Prize committee preferred to give no play award when it appeared, this portrait of a toxic marriage is examined in light of changing values, most notably in areas of frankness, strong language, and sexuality. Gefter focuses on the making of the film version, directed by Mike Nichols and starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor as the battling middle-aged couple. The stars had only recently carried on a scandalous front-page love affair that led to both divorcing their spouses to marry, adding an extra dimension to the highly charged movie and public reactions to it. The artistic battles between producer Ernest Lehman and Nichols during the film's development add off-stage drama to Gefter's account. Albee's attention to contemporary domestic mores is ultimately presented as a watershed moment in cultural views on marriage, a topic he usefully explores in the book's epilogue. Marred only by editing issues and a sketchy index, Cocktails with George and Martha is an important contribution to film and theater studies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals; general readers. --James Fisher, emeritus, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This erudite study from photography critic Gefter (What Becomes a Legend Most) explores the genesis and impact of Edward Albee's 1962 play Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and its 1966 film adaptation. The play's disquieting vision of domestic discord, Gefter suggests, was inspired by the "dissonance experienced throughout his emotionally barren childhood in a household of abundant material luxury." Recounting the drama that plagued the making of Mike Nichols's film version, Gefter notes that the first-time director sparred with original cinematographer and industry veteran Harry Stradling, whom Nichols claimed undermined his creative vision and eventually replaced with Haskell Wexler. During heated squabbles between married costars Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, other personnel on set were unsure "if they were witnessing the actors getting into character or simply watching the husband-and-wife dynamics of the Burtons' real-life marriage." The trivia entertains (Gefter contends the real-life sources for Albee's embittered married protagonists were a Wagner College faculty couple whose notorious fights were also the subject of Andy Warhol's 1965 verité documentary, Bitch), and Gefter persuasively credits the film with setting the template for more bracing Hollywood depictions of love after romance's first blush. This will renew readers' admiration for the classic film and its source material. Agent: Adam Eaglin, Cheney Agency. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Gefter (Wagstaff: Before and After Mapplethorpe) skillfully assesses how Edward Albee's 1962 play Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? became the 1966 Mike Nichols film that challenged many white, middle-class, Western cultural assumptions of the mid-20th century. The film is about family, deception, marriage, and loyalty, and audiences often had trouble distinguishing between the marital woes (different though they were) of the pedestrian characters George and Martha and of the glamorous stars Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. Gefter relives the film's taunts, dares, and one-liners, which helped end the film industry's Hays Code. Gefter offers vignettes of all the major players: actors Taylor, Burton, George Segal, and Sandy Dennis and producer Ernest Lehman. He delves into the verbal and conduct codes and the campy worlds of gay New York and Hollywood, which inform much of the book. Its insights include that George's and Martha's names are derived from the first First Couple of the United States. The book also reveals how Lehman cut the three-and-a-half-hour play by an hour for the movie adaptation. VERDICT Multilayered and eminently revisitable (like the play and the film), Gefter's wonderful book helps readers reevaluate vis-à-vis values prevalent half a century later.--Frederick J. Augustyn Jr.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A cinematic history of an explosive portrayal of marriage. When he was 15, biographer and photography critic Gefter saw Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and was fascinated. The film, he recalls, "put its finger on the rumbling beneath the polite surface" of suburban marriages--like his parents'--and laid bare "tensions that I felt but that were left unacknowledged." Deeming the movie "my standard against which all movies about marriage are measured," he takes a deep dive into the genesis, making, and reception of the movie, from its 1962 beginnings on Broadway (the first three-acter for playwright Edward Albee) to its transformation into the acclaimed movie starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. The play, with Uta Hagen as Martha and Arthur Hill as George, was a hit, burnishing Albee's reputation and garnering several Tony awards. Warner Brothers paid generously for the film rights, handing the 3.5-hour play to screenwriter Ernest Lehman to be condensed into two hours. Mike Nichols, a well-regarded Broadway director, agreed to take on his first movie. Taylor and Burton, recently married after a notorious affair on the set of Cleopatra, were signed as the stars. Gefter chronicles a spate of conflicts, shifting alliances, and emotional outbursts that erupted on the set. Nichols argued with Warner over whether to film in black and white, as Nichols insisted, or color; actors and staff balked at Nichols' impatience and arrogance; Burton goaded Taylor. The result, nevertheless, was a critical and financial success, praised by the New York Times as "a magnificent triumph of determined audacity." Gefter offers a close reading of the movie to support his assessment of it as "era-defining." Revealing the emotional struggles and challenges at the core of any marriage, the movie was "both a product of the 1960s and a catalytic influence that came to define that decade." A penetrating examination of a bold film. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.