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Of the new young playwrights who have emerged in the past decade, Rebecca Gilman is unique in that she has embraced a kind of drama that most of her contemporaries have rejected: the social problem play. Her plays are not linguistically inventive, nor do they consciously violate traditional chronology, nor employ other experimental techniques. No, their social milieus are precisely set, often in the lowest social stratum, and realistically presented. Harking back to the more than a century old tradition of the thesis drama (such as Eugene Brieux's 1902 play about syphilis, Damaged Goods), Gilman focuses upon pressing social problems which she aims to elucidate by good reporting and engaging dramaturgy.
New York, April 24, 2002
- Gerald Rabkin