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From: Sunday News Lancaster, PA
Date: 20050814
Author:James Buescher
James Buescher Correspondent When it comes to the Cold War, history will remember only a few precious theater pieces for the entire era.
Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" is one; Sam Shepard's disturbing "The Unseen Hand" is certainly another.
And there's always "Chess," the Tim Rice/ABBA musical about a grandmaster showdown in Bangkok at the dawn of perestroika.
But perhaps the most famous piece of Cold War literature is Edward Albee's dark and sophisticated "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" The story of disintegrating marriages in a chaotic American dream was voted but failed to receive the ...
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