The American Dream (1)
Edward Albee depicts the "struggle for survival"; on a bench, somewhere in a park. The chance life-and-death encounter of two people.
Two men, one cultured middle class, perhaps a book publisher, the other relegated, perhaps an intellectual Hartz IV recipient? They meet in a public park, but can't agree on who should own the bench on which each wants to sit - but alone.
Pierre & Gilles, Gilbert & George, unforgettable male couple icons, send their regards.
The first work of the famous American playwright Edward Albee "The Zoo Story" was premiered in 1959 - not in America (!) - but in Germany, at the Berlin Schillertheater. And Friedrich Luft, the pope of critics in West German theatre at the time, wrote: "A thirty-year-old has taken his knowledge of Beckett, Poe and Kafka, Freud and Hollywood's deep-beat technique and mixed a piece of gruesome drama of the super-smart kind: death-wish in blue jeans, Götterdämmerung from the gutter."
A stunning, unjustly forgotten masterpiece of world literature!
Directed by Willy Praml
with: Jakob Gail, Michael Weber.
Text source and more information about this event: http://www.theater-willypraml.de/theater/programm/edward-albee-die-zoogeschichte/