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Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
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Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: Necessary
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The sequence of establishing shots of Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf? opens with a
full moon framed by trees in early autumn defoliation. It is 2 A.M. in a black-and-white
world. It is the start of a new academic year at a small proprietary college in New
Carthage, New England (modeled after Williams College, in Williamstown, MA). The camera
descends and focuses slowly in on a middle-aged married couple, George (Richard Burton), a
history professor, and his wife Martha (Elizabeth Taylor), Georges wife and the
proprietor/presidents daughter. They are strolling arm-in-arm across campus toward
home after a party at the presidents residence, the ritual introduction of new
faculty to the campus community.
Arriving
home to their messy and book-strew home, the real party begins. Unbeknownst to George,
Martha has invited a new faculty member Nick (played by an impossibly young and lithe
George Segal) and his astonishingly invisible church-mouse wife Honey (Sandy Dennis) over
for drinks. The
promise in the over-the-top word play of the films title goes from zero-to-sixty in
a nanosecond. Once
safely at home, Martha casts off her cocktail-party facade and lets her sadomasochistic
side (natural or alcoholism-induced?) rip loose on her husband. Marthas opening
volley, Taylors memorable deadly camp delivery of the Bette Davis line, What a
dump!, escalates a tiff over identifying the film (it is Beyond the Forest) into a no-holds-barred
battle.
The film version of Whos
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is based on Edward Albees highly successful stage play
(perhaps Albees most multifaceted autobiographical work). Screenwriter Ernest Lehman
and director Mike Nichols create a noir
universe (in the words of Bosley Crowthers 1966 review) enveloped in a Twilight Zone-like darkness, silence, and
doom--part nightmare, part psychotherapy, part docudrama, part cultural
meta-narrative, part transcendent myth. The film collaboration may well rival the original
play in much the same way that MGMs The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland, has
rivaled the original L. Frank Baum childrens novel.
In both cases, its about the journey, not the destination. Like
Nick and Honey, the audience is jolted awake in the bowels of a cinematic hell. And, like
Nick and Honey, the viewer is unable to break the mesmerizing spell cast by the gaze of
evil from the silver screen.
Critics have most commonly interpreted this film as a
psychodramaof a childless couple for whom alcoholism and verbal sadomasochism are
symptoms of their failure as a procreative family unit; of an alcoholic relationship in
which procreative barrenness is the cause and verbal abuse a symptom; or of a sadomasochistic marriage symptomatic of the
hidden and unspoken reality of modern marriage, typically a result of the lives of quiet
desperation post-World War II Americans were allegedly leading.
Another frequent interpretation, staunchly denied by Albee, has been
that George and Martha are a homosexual male couple, thinly veiled as an unnecessarily
cruel and heterophobic portrayal of traditional marriage. Critics point to the imaginary
child and to the dominant/submissive power play of their relationship. The bitchy dialog,
pregnant with references to camp films, actresses, and classic lines of dialog, and the
apparent underlying self-loathing of both individuals, have been read as typical of male
homosexuals. (The dynamics were made explicit in another successful stage play (1968) and
film (1970) of the era, Matt Crowleys The Boys
in the Band.) While
not necessarily about gay men, the film
demonstrates common ground where spousal relationships of every sexual orientation may
converge, and how academic life can be a cruel imitation of Real Life.
Significantly undervalued is Albees choice of setting and
characters. On a very literal level, the film is about a bored, middle-aged academic couple. They are more permanently caged in
daddys academic compound (George, who is in
the History Department--as opposed to being the
History Department) than trapped in a failed marriage. On the contrary, George
and Martha seem Platonic soul-mates, perfectly suited to one another. Emblematic
of the death cult of modern society, they have descended into a folie a deux, locked in a sadomasochistic
love-hate relationship, which neither of them can live without.
The original play is divided into three actsFun and
Games, Walpurgisnacht, and The Exorcism. Strongly suggesting
Goethes Faust I,
George and Marthas richly subtextured Walpurgisnacht resembles the monkish and
naive scholar Fausts foray into the Real World--of flesh, desire, emotions, and
human interactions and their consequences: the Devils playground. When George the
historian casts Nick the biologist as the mortal enemy, Albee presents a philosophical
treatise about the battle between traditional humanistic values and the modern
technological world, between knowledge and experience, between good and evil. Had she been
invited, what would Hannah Arendt have made of the banality of evil parlor games?
- Les Wright