Adapted by Norman CorwinDramatic ComedyCharacters: 2 male, 1 female
Simple Set
Carl Sandburg's works, adapted by Norman Corwin, as first
performed by Bette Davis and Lief Erickson, and a host of others in
New York and on tour. The best of the Pulitzer Prize-winner's
verse, including some previously unpublished; and prose, including
the biography of Lincoln; and interspersed with optional American
folk songs from his songbag.
"Playful and serious, childlike and wise, commonplace and fresh,
homespun and poetic, distinctively American and daringly
boundless...Dry in its wit, like a prairie philosopher, and
passionate in its convictions like one of the Lord's prophets." -
The New York Times
"The snappers that mark the endings of so many Sandburg
aphorisms are unfailingly comic, impudently infected. 'Some day
they'll give a war and nobody'll come' pops out at you with
innocence and ease, and becomes devastating thereby. The
'goofyisms' that give the evening a gay and idiot shrug in its
final few moments are read with the soft shoe elan of an unretired
vaudevillian."-The New York Herald Tribune
General
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