The Sandbox (play)

This article is about the play. For other uses, see Sandbox (disambiguation).

The Sandbox is a play written by Edward Albee in 1959.

Productions

The first performance was on April 15, 1960 in the Jazz Gallery in New York City.

The play was produced Off-Broadway at the Cherry Lane Theatre in February 1962, in repertory with other Albee plays, in a Theatre of the Absurd series.[1]

The play had several regional productions, including the Dallas Theatre Center in January 1963 and the Los Angeles Theatre Company (season 1967-68). The play ran Off-Broadway, produced by The Acting Company, at the Public Theatre in March 1984, with 8 modern one-act plays, titled Pieces of Eight, directed by Alan Schneider.[2][3]

The play was produced Off-Broadway by the Signature Theatre Company in a triple bill of one-act plays by Albee: Sand, The Sandbox and Finding the Sun. The plays ran from February 4, 1994 to March 6, 1994. Directed by Albee, the cast was Peggy Consgrave (Mommy), Jane Hoffman (Grandma), Edward Seamon (Daddy), Aisha Benoir (Cellist), and Earl Nash (Young Man).[4]

The play was performed Off-Broadway at the Cherry Lane Theatre in March 2008, in a double bill with The American Dream. Directed by Albee, the cast featured Judith Ivey (Mommy), George Bartenieff (Daddy), Lois Markle (Grandma), Jesse Williams (Young Man) and Daniel Shevlin (Musician).[5][6][7]

The play was produced Off-Broadway by the Signature Theatre Company in a triple bill of one-act plays by Edward Albee, Maria Irene Fornes, and Adrienne Kennedy. The plays ran from May 3, 2016 to June 19, 2016. Directed by Lila Neugebauer, the cast was Alison Fraser (Mommy), Phyllis Somerville (Grandma), Frank Wood (Daddy), Melody Giron (Cellist), and Ryan-James Hatanaka (Young Man).

The play is approximately 15 minutes long[5] and involves direct address by the actors to the audience, their acknowledgment that they are performers in a play, and the offering of cues to the musician.[8]

Characters

Plot synopsis

Beginning with brightest day, the Young Man is performing calisthenics (which he continues to do until the very end of the play) near a sandbox (or sandpit) at the beach. Mommy and Daddy have brought Grandma all the way out from the city and place her in the sandbox. As Mommy and Daddy wait nearby in some chairs, the Musician plays off and on, according to what the other characters instruct him to do. Throughout the play, the Young Man is very pleasant, greeting the other characters with a smile as he says, "Hi!". As Mommy and Daddy cease to acknowledge Grandma while they wait, Grandma reverts from her childish behavior and begins to speak coherently to the audience. Grandma and the Young Man begin to converse with each other. Grandma feels comfortable talking with the Young Man as he treats her like a human being (whereas Mommy and Daddy imply through their actions and dialogue that she is more of a chore that they must take care of). While still talking with the Young Man, she reminds someone off-stage that it should be nighttime by now. Once brightest day has become deepest night, Mommy and Daddy hear on-stage rumbling. Acknowledging that the sounds are literally coming from off-stage and not from thunder or breaking waves, Mommy knows that Grandma's death is here. As daylight resumes, Mommy briefly weeps by the sandbox before quickly exiting with Daddy. Although Grandma, who is lying down half buried in sand, has continued to mock the mourning of Mommy and Daddy, she soon realizes that she can no longer move. It is at this moment that the Young Man finally stops performing his calisthenics and approaches Grandma and the sandbox. As he directs her to be still, he reveals that he is the angel of death and says, "...I am come for you." Even though he says his line like a real amateur, Grandma compliments him and closes her eyes with a smile.

Critical response

The play received an almost universally negative reception, as critics attacked the confusing, absurdist plot.

However, Ben Brantley, in his review of the 2008 Off-Broadway production in The New York Times, wrote that The Sandbox was a better play than The American Dream, which it was paired with. Brantley wrote that The Sandbox "remains a harrowingly effective chamber piece."[6] Joe Dziemianowicz, in his review of the 2008 double bill for The New York Daily News wrote: "...these satires on the storybook family deliver swift comic kicks and a piercing sting. They also contain the absurdism, acrobatic language and provocative thoughts on marriage and children that define Albee's long, illustrious career....The production [The Sandbox] benefits from snappy design, Albee's smart direction, and solid acting, though Markle, a last-minute replacement, seems too hearty for her role. On the other hand, Ivey is an ideal Mommy. Her acidly funny performance is enough for me to urge seeing this double bill double-quick."[9]

Notes

  1. "History, 1950-1974" cherrylanetheatre.org, accessed November 22, 2015
  2. Horn, Barbara Lee. "'The Sandbox'", Edward Albee: A Research and Production Sourcebook, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, ISBN 0313311412, p. 58
  3. Pieces of Eight lortel.org, accessed November 22, 2015
  4. Sand, The Sandbox and Finding the Sun lortel.org, accessed November 21, 2015
  5. 1 2 Wittenberg, Polly. The American Dream/The Sandbox newyorktheatreguide.com, accessed November 21, 2015
  6. 1 2 Brantley, Ben. "Review. A Double Bill of Plays, Both Heavy on the Bile" New York Times, April 2, 2008
  7. Bacalzo, Dan. "Lois Markle to Replace Myra Carter in Albee One-Acts" theatermania.com, March 13, 2008
  8. Stenz, Anita Maria. "'The Sandbox'", Edward Albee: The Poet of Loss, Walter de Gruyter, 1978, ISBN 902797764X, pp. 34-36
  9. Dziemianowicz, Joe. "Edward Albee's plays are a marriage of humor & acid satire" New York Daily News. April 2, 2008

References

External links


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