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Reading the Plays of Wendy Wasserstein
by Jan Balakian

Published: 2010-01-01
Paperback : 244 pages
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Playwright Wendy Wasserstein is, above all, a social historian. Balancing drama and comedy to write about social class in Manhattan and about Jewish-American identity, she drew inspiration from Chekhov and the comedies of S. Behrman, Moss Hart, and Noel Coward. The ideas of Betty Friedan, Germaine ...
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Introduction

Playwright Wendy Wasserstein is, above all, a social historian. Balancing drama and comedy to write about social class in Manhattan and about Jewish-American identity, she drew inspiration from Chekhov and the comedies of S. Behrman, Moss Hart, and Noel Coward. The ideas of Betty Friedan, Germaine Greer, Gloria Steinem, and Susan Faludi also inform Wasserstein's work, which chronicles the rise and the eventual collapse of both feminism and liberalism between the late 1960s and the earliest years of the 21st century. From the first waves of feminism to the post-feminist generation, Jan Balakian's essays place Wendy Wasserstein's seven major plays, including the Pulitzer Prize winning The Heidi Chronicles, in a historical context, showing a connection between the evolution of the women's movement in America and the conflicts within her plays. Balakian's interviews with the playwright before her death in 2006, and conversations with Wasserstein's close friends, playwright Chris Durang and director Dan Sullivan, all lend further insight into Wasserstein's political concerns. Balakian's access to handwritten pages from Wasserstein's notebooks at the Wasserstein archives at Mount Holyoke also provides readers a window into the playwright's creative process. This book features 50 black-and-white illustrations, including handwritten pages from Wendy Wasserstein's notebooks.

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Discussion Questions

Suggested by Members

Topic: Popular cultural definitions of generations
Can ANY person "have it all" according to the definition of all being: perfect job, love, kids, body, leisure?
by KimberHM (see profile) 05/09/12

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Book Club Recommendations

Feed the discussion w/ pop culture definitions of various Generations
by KimberHM (see profile) 05/09/12
Our discussion was far ranging, but one of the fun things was defining the various generations we are w/in our group and those we have contact with outside our group. We could have gone so many places with that discussion, that we wish we'd had another hour. In fact, we've decided to read the Wasserstein bio, _Wendy and the Lost Boys_, to continue the theme. Another idea: having each member bring a song that s/he believes defines an era or generation, play an exerpt or read lyrics, and do a tie-in. The original production of "the Heidi chronicles" used songs as time markers, and lyrics often come into the dialog.

Member Reviews

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  "Discussing Heidi Chronicles Was Great for Us"by Kimber H. M. (see profile) 05/09/12

This play is iconic of an age, and well worth any group's time to explore.
Wasserstein's insights into this age group are clear, and because of the short format, the readers don't have to w
... (read more)

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