Earning a Pulitzer and three Best Play awards for 1994, Edward Albee
has, in "ThreeTall Women" created a masterwork of modern theater. As an
imperious, acerbic old woman lies dying, she is tended by two other
women and visited by a young man. Albee's frank dialogue about
everything from incontinence to infidelity portrays aging without
sentimentality. His scenes are charged with wit, pain, and laughter, and
his observations tells us about forgiveness, reconciliation, and our own
fates. But it is his probing portrait of the three women that reveals
Albee's genius. Seperate characters on stage in the first act, yet
actually the same "everywoman" at different ages in the second act,
these "tall women" lay bare the truths of our lives - how we live, how
we love, what we settle for, and how we die. Edward Albee has given
theatergoers, critics, and students of drama reason to rejoice.