'''Love Letters''' is a play by
A. R. Gurney.
Nominated for the
Pulitzer Prize for Drama, it centers on just two characters, Melissa Gardner and Andrew Makepiece Ladd III. Using the
epistolary form sometimes found in
novels, they sit side by side at tables and read the correspondence - in which they discuss their hopes and ambitions, dreams and disappointments, victories and defeats - that has passed between them throughout their separated lives. It is only at the sad ending that they realize they were really love letters all along.
The play is a performance favorite for busy name actors, for it requires little preparation, and lines should not be memorized.
It was first performed in 1988 at the
Long Wharf Theatre in
New Haven, Connecticut with
Joanna Gleason and
John Rubinstein.
Directed by
John Tillinger, it opened with
Kathleen Turner and Rubinstein on
March 27,
1989 at the
off-Broadway Promenade Theatre, where it ran for 64 performances. The play was performed only on Sunday and Monday evenings and changed its cast weekly. Among those who appeared in it were
Barbara Barrie,
Philip Bosco,
Stephen Collins,
Victor Garber,
Julie Harris,
George Grizzard,
Anthony Heald,
George Hearn,
Richard Kiley,
Dana Ivey,
William Hurt,
Marsha Mason,
Christopher Reeve,
Holland Taylor,
George Segal,
Christopher Walken,
Joan Van Ark,
Treat Williams, and
Frances Sternhagen.
On
October 31 that same year, a
Broadway production opened at the
Edison Theatre, where it ran for 96 performances. It opened with
Colleen Dewhurst and
Jason Robards. Other performers paired in the Broadway production included
Lynn Redgrave and
John Clark,
Stockard Channing and
John Rubinstein,
Jane Curtin and
Edward Hermann,
Kate Nelligan and
David Dukes,
Polly Bergen and
Robert Vaughan,
Timothy Hutton and
Elizabeth McGovern,
Swoosie Kurtz and
Richard Thomas,
Elaine Stritch and
Cliff Robertson,
Nancy Marchand and
Fritz Weaver, and
Robert Foxworth and
Elizabeth Montgomery.
In 1999, Gurney adapted ''Love Letters'' for a
television movie, directed by
Stanley Donen, that dramatized scenes and portrayed characters merely described in the play.
Laura Linney and
Steven Weber starred.
External Links
★
Off Broadway listing, Lortel site
★
Internet Broadway Database listing
★
Internet Movie Database listing