Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Albee, Edward (Vol. 86) - John Lahr (review date 16 May 1994)
Albee, Edward (Vol. 86) - John Lahr (review date 16 May 1994)
John Lahr (review date 16 May 1994)
SOURCE: "Sons and Mothers," in The New Yorker, Vol. LXX, No. 13, May 16, 1994, pp. 102-05.
Greg Evans on Albee's use of characterization in Three Tall Women:
[In Three Tall Women Albee provides] each "character" with all the dignity and indignity of their respective ages. Youth is both charmingly dreamy and maddeningly disdainful; the 52-year-old, while boasting that middle age is "the only time you get a 360-degree view," doesn't like what she sees on either side: and the old woman is by terms resigned to and anguished by her disintegration.
Greg Evans, in a review of Three Tall Women, in Variety, 14 February 1994.
[Lahr is an award-winning American critic, nonfiction writer, playwright, novelist, biographer, and editor. In the following excerpt, he lauds Three Tall Women as "a wary act...
[The entire page is 2203 words long]
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Criticism
- Jeane Luere (review date May 1992)
- Ben Brantley (review date 14 February 1994)
- Stefan Kanfer (review date 14-28 February 1994)
- Michael Feingold (review date 1 March 1994)
- Tim Appelo (review date 14 March 1994)
- Robert Brustein (review date 4 April 1994)
- David Richards (essay date 13 April 1994)
- John Lahr (review date 16 May 1994)
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