Today is the 94th birthday of the playwright Edward Albee. There is a teleplay of A Delicate Balance done in the 70s with Katharine Hepburn, Paul Scofield, Lee Remick, Joseph Cotten and Kate Reid that is absolute perfection. I found a copy of it and attached it below. The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the los that he has left.

NAME: Edward Albee
OCCUPATION: Playwright
BIRTH DATE: March 12, 1928
DEATH DATE: September 16, 2016
EDUCATION: Trinity College
PLACE OF BIRTH: Virginia
PLACE OF DEATH: Montauk, New York
ACADEMY OF ACHIEVEMENT (2005)
PULITZER PRIZE for Drama 1967 for A Delicate Balance
PULITZER PRIZE for Drama 1975 for Seascape
PULITZER PRIZE for Drama 1994 for Three Tall Women
KENNEDY CENTER HONOR 1996
TONY 2002
NATIONAL MEDAL OF ARTS 1996
Mother: Louise Harvey (biological mother)
Father: Reed Albee (adoptive)
Mother: Frances Cotter (“Frankie”, adoptive)
Boyfriend: William Flanagan (together 1952-59)
Boyfriend: Terrence McNally (playwright, together 1959-63)
Boyfriend: Jonathan Thomas (together 1971-)
BEST KNOWN FOR: Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright Edward Albee was considered one of the greatest American playwrights of his generation for his plays including ‘The Zoo Story,’ ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,’ ‘A Delicate Balance’ and ‘Three Tall Women.’
Edward Franklin Albee was born Edward Harvey in Virginia on March 12, 1928. His mother was Louise Harvey and little is known about his father. He was adopted at 18 days old by Reed and Francis Albee, who gave him their family name. His parents owned and showed saddle horses, and for a time his father helped to run a chain of successful family-owned vaudeville theaters. Although he had a privileged childhood, Edward felt alienated from his conservative parents, with whom he felt little connection.
After bouncing around various private schools and attending a military academy, he enrolled at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut for a time before eventually breaking away from his adoptive family in the late 1940s and finding a community in the vibrant artists circle living in Greenwich Village. In a television interview with Charlie Rose, Albee spoke about the break with his family: “I think they wanted somebody who would be a corporate thug of some sort, or perhaps a doctor or lawyer or something respectable,” he said. “They didn’t want a writer on their hands. Good God, no.”
Albee worked a variety of jobs and lived off some inheritance money while he began experimenting with various writing styles. In the 1950s, he became friends with fellow writers, painters and musicians including playwright William Inge and composers David Diamond, Aaron Copland and William Flanagan, who became his lover in the 1950s.
You gotta have a swine to show you where the truffles are.
Albee wrote short stories, poetry and an unpublished novel, but didn’t find his voice until he wrote plays. Critics and audience took notice of his work with the debut of his existential one-act play The Zoo Story, which he wrote on a typewriter from the Western Union office where he worked, according to the biography Edward Albee: A Singular Journey by Mel Gussow.
The play about an intense encounter between two strangers on a park bench in New York City had its premiere in Berlin, Germany in 1959, where it was well-received. It opened at the Provincetown Playhouse in Greenwich Village in 1960, and energized the Off Broadway theater community. Albee said he wanted to challenge audiences to feel uncomfortable. “I want the audience to run out of the theater — but to come back and see the play again,” he said.
He wrote three more one-act plays that were well-received Off-Broadway: The Sandbox (1959), The Death of Bessie Smith (1959) and The American Dream (1961).
A play is fiction — and fiction is fact distilled into truth.
Albee made his Broadway debut in 1962 with Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, an over three-hour long play about the existentially fraught relationship between a middle-aged professor George and his wife Martha, who pull a couple of invited guests into their dysfunction in a night of alcohol-fueled confrontations. Some critics were horrified by the raw emotions on stage, others found it revelatory. The production was a major hit, winning the Tony Award for Best Play. A jury also awarded it the Pulitzer Prize, but the Pulitzer advisory board rejected their recommendation.
The play found another life when it was adapted for the screen in a 1966 film starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, who won an Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance.
Decades later, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is considered a modern theater classic. Various award-winning Broadway revivals have been staged including a 1976 production starring Colleen Dewhurst and Ben Gazarra; a 2005 production starring Kathleen Turner and Bill Irwin; and a 2010 production starring Amy Morton and Tracy Letts.

Over five decades, Albee crafted more than two dozen plays, including adaptations of other authors’ work including The Ballad of the Sad Cafe (1963), based on a Carson McCullers’ novella: Malcolm (1965), based on a James Purdy novel; and Lolita (1981), based on the Vladimir Nabokov classic.
Albee is the recipient of three Pulitzer Prizes, having won the award in 1967 for A Delicate Balance, a dark comedy about an unhappy affluent family, and in 1975 for Seascape, an existential meeting of an elderly couple and two evolved anthropomorphic lizards. (A Delicate Balance became another work brought to the big screen in a 1973 film starring Katharine Hepburn and Paul Scofield.)
For a period Albee struggled with alcoholism and did not write a successful play for many years. His plays, including The Lady from Dubuque (1980) and The Man Who Had Three Arms (1983), were flops.
Albee returned to critical acclaim in the 1990s with his play Three Tall Women, an exploration of his feelings about his mother through three women portrayed at different stages of their life. In 1994, he received his third Pulitzer Prize for the play.
He continued to write into the 2000s with works including The Goat, Or Who Is Sylvia? (2002) about a marriage that falls apart when the husband falls in love with a goat; Occupant (2001) a postmortem interview with sculptor Louise Nevelson; and Me, Myself, & I (2007) an absurdist take on a mother’s relationship with her twin sons.
The playwright spoke about his body of work in a 1991 interview in the New York Times: “All of my plays are about people missing the boat, closing down too young, coming to the end of their lives with regret at things not done, as opposed to things done,” he said. “I find most people spend too much time living as if they’re never going to die.”
Albee said he knew he was gay by the time he was 8 years old. After his relationship with William Flanagan, he became involved with fellow playwright Terrence McNally for more than six years in the 1960s. In 1971, he began a decades-long relationship with sculptor Jonathan Thomas. Thomas died from cancer in 2005
In 1967, the playwright established the Edward F. Albee Foundation, which allows writers and visual artists to have a retreat in Montauk on Long Island in New York. Albee received an array of honors for his work including being the recipient of Kennedy Honors (1996), the National Medal of the Arts (1996) and a Tony Lifetime Achievement Award (2005).
After suffering a short illness, Albee died at his home in Montauk, New York, on September 16, 2016 at the age of 88. He was remembered as one of the foremost playwrights of his generation, known for his distinctive use of language while challenging audiences to examine the suffering caused by conventional, artificial social traditions. “He invented a new language — the first authentically new voice in theater since Tennessee Williams,” Terrence McNally told the Los Angeles Times after Albee’s death. “He created a sound world. He was a sculptor of words.”
The New York Times critic Ben Brantley once wrote about Albee’s contribution to the theater world: “Mr. Albee has unsparingly considered subjects outside the average theatergoer’s comfort zone: the capacity for sadism and violence within American society; the fluidness of human identity; the dangerous irrationality of sexual attraction and, always, the irrefutable presence of death.”
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Making the Boys (18-Jul-2009) · Himself
Is the subject of books:
Edward Albee, 1969, BY: Richard Amacher
Wrote plays:
The Zoo Story (1959, one act)
The American Dream (1959, one act)
The Death of Bessie Smith (1959, one act)
The Sandbox (1959, one act)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf (1962)
Tiny Alice (1964)
Malcolm (1966)
A Delicate Balance (1966)
All Over (1971)
Seascape (1975)
Listening (1975)
Counting the Ways (1976)
The Lady from Dubuque (1979)
Another Part of the Zoo (1981)
The Man Who Had Three Arms (1982)
Marriage Play (1987)
Three Tall Women (1991)
Fragments (1993)
The Play About the Baby (1997)
The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? (2000)