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A Delicate Balance is a three-act play by Edward Albee, written in 1965 and 1966. [1] Premiered in 1966, it won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1967, the first of three he received for his work.
A Delicate Balance is a 1973 American-Canadian-British drama film directed by Tony Richardson and starring Katharine Hepburn, Paul Scofield, Lee Remick, Kate Reid, Joseph Cotten, and Betsy Blair. The screenplay by Edward Albee is based on his 1966 Pulitzer Prize -winning play of the same name .
Allison Adato of Entertainment Weekly wrote of the play, "Edward Albee's Three Tall Women, in which a nonagenarian revisits events of her life refracted through both her own dementia and the differing recollections of her younger selves, is a not-quite-memory play filled with regret, resentment, entitlement, various bodily indignities".
His work with The Heiress and A Delicate Balance was said to be (by Playbill) as "near perfect representations of those plays". [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Of The Heiress , the Variety reviewer wrote: "Although Gerald Gutierrez’s direction can’t be undervalued, The Heiress is not by any stretch “director’s theater.”...
"A Delicate Balance" (Touched by an Angel episode) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title A Delicate Balance .
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He announces to the audience, "White, a blank page or canvas. The challenge: bring order to the whole, through design, composition, tension, balance, light and harmony." He conjures up the painting's setting, a small suburban park on an island, and retains some control of his surroundings as he draws them.
A Delicate Truth is a 2013 spy novel by British writer John le Carré. Set in 2008 and 2011, the book features a British-American covert mission in Gibraltar and the subsequent consequences for two British civil servants. [1] Le Carré describes this as not only his most British novel but also his most autobiographical work in years. [2]