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Examples
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In 1958, during Edward Albee's first play, The Zoo Story, Peter and Jerry met on a bench in Central Park.
George Heymont: The Old Lady and the Book George Heymont 2011
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In 1958, during Edward Albee's first play, The Zoo Story, Peter and Jerry met on a bench in Central Park.
George Heymont: The Old Lady and the Book George Heymont 2011
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Confined to a Brooklyn living room, soon their polite, constrained behavior gives way to verbal and physical violence a la Edward Albee's masterpiece, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf -- plus the famous projectile vomit.
Regina Weinreich: Roman Polanski's Carnage Opens the New York Film Festival: Where Is God? Regina Weinreich 2011
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In 1958, during Edward Albee's first play, The Zoo Story, Peter and Jerry met on a bench in Central Park.
George Heymont: The Old Lady and the Book George Heymont 2011
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Confined to a Brooklyn living room, soon their polite, constrained behavior gives way to verbal and physical violence a la Edward Albee's masterpiece, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf -- plus the famous projectile vomit.
Regina Weinreich: Roman Polanski's Carnage Opens the New York Film Festival: Where Is God? Regina Weinreich 2011
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Even if that was playwright Edward Albee's intention, it surely has little to do with anything the actress did while reciting his lines.
Women's Liz Clare McHugh 2012
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An often agonizing, hilariously warped study of marital dysfunction, "Woolf" was the brainchild of first-time director Mike Nichols and Ernest Lehman, who adapted Albee's scabrous work.
John Farr: Elizabeth Taylor: Star John Farr 2011
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But, though Goldman's marital slugfest has echoes of Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, to a contemporary audience it has little relevance.
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An often agonizing, hilariously warped study of marital dysfunction, "Woolf" was the brainchild of first-time director Mike Nichols and Ernest Lehman, who adapted Albee's scabrous work.
John Farr: Elizabeth Taylor: Star John Farr 2011
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Confined to a Brooklyn living room, soon their polite, constrained behavior gives way to verbal and physical violence a la Edward Albee's masterpiece, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf -- plus the famous projectile vomit.
Regina Weinreich: Roman Polanski's Carnage Opens the New York Film Festival: Where Is God? Regina Weinreich 2011
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