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Word: wesker (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...people in love can, and inevitably will, be each other's heaven and hell. So argues Arnold Wesker in his latest play, The Four Seasons, which opened, off-Broadway last week. Love buds in spring rain, blossoms in summer ardor, withers and stales in autumnal tiffs and recriminations, and turns to icy death in a winter of unfeeling. The play is intimate and perceptive, though it lacks dramatic vigor. The language that might have lifted it to poetry is too often absent. Yet the playwright's intent is aspiring and his subject compels attention...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: The Four Seasons | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

...Wesker's two lovers-symbolically named Adam (Paul Roebling) and Beatrice (Barbara Hayes)-begin in winter. They are weary, wary, and thirtyish. Their minds are haunted by the ghosts of mangled marriages and past lovers, betrayed and betraying. Having died several times from the internal wounds of love, they do not want to start "all that again." But Eros is a bully boy, and they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: The Four Seasons | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

Seasons is fundamentally static, and it seems to move more from conclusion to conclusion than from scene to scene. Wesker is good at suggesting how a couple in love becomes the most exclusive club in the world. He registers the fierce chemistry of passion by which the Other Woman swiftly becomes the Only Woman. Where Wesker is strongest he is also weakest, since the language of love is finite and, in his prosaic words, even banal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: The Four Seasons | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

...love means to give, and notwithstanding Wesker's pedestrian imagery, the play rates a Q.E.D. on its major proposition. The fact that it was written by a kitchen-sink realist like Wesker is added evidence that the generation of British playwrights that began by looking back in social anger is now looking forward in private anguish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: The Four Seasons | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

John Osborne's Look Back in Anger sent crowds of inspired Britishers to their typewriters. Osborne invented the Angry Young Man: his Jimmy Porter rants about the evil in everybody--especially the upper class. Arnold Wesker takes up the topic of class conflict in Chips With Everything. He pushes a well-meaning aristocrat into a group of peasants and concludes that amalgamation isn't possible. The hero of Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs has Jimmy Porter-like qualities -- he knocks the Establishment, he bruises his dearest friends, he demands to be idolized...

Author: By Joel Demott, | Title: Little Malcolm, etc. | 12/12/1967 | See Source »

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