august: osage county
Opening Night: December 4, 2007
Closing: June 28, 2009
Theater: Music Box Theatre
When the patriarch vanishes, all of the Westons must return to the family home in rural Oklahoma to care for their afflicted (and mistress-of-manipulation) mother. With rich insight and brilliant humor, Letts paints a vivid portrait of a Midwestern family at a turning point.
BUY TICKETSREAD THE REVIEWS:
July 16, 2008
It’s really not a good idea to mess with Violet Weston, the fire-breathing dragon lady of Pawhuska, Okla., who presides over a feast of family combat in “August: Osage County.” As all who have seen Tracy Letts’s celebrated comedy-drama on Broadway no doubt vividly recall, Violet does not brook much interference when it comes to indulging her favorite pastimes.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
Tracy Letts’ ripping, riveting new play, August: Osage County, the new Broadway season’s first must-see offering and arguably the best new American play since Albee’s The Goat.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
Ferociously entertaining August: Osage County, the American dysfunctional family drama comes roaring into the 21st century with eyes blazing, nostrils flaring and fangs bared, laced with corrosive humor so darkly delicious and ghastly that you’re squirming in your seat even as you’re doubled over laughing.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
Letts’ perspective is bracingly fresh. He lets fly so many original and diabolically funny ideas about fear, yearning and relationships that he reinvigorates the family drama and brings it up to date. While he’s at it, you’re laughing hysterically one minute and appalled the next as the 3 1/2 -hour play flies by.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
In much of his work, the forty-two-year-old Oklahoman playwright Tracy Letts beautifully captures the puritan streak in the American grain. Like the filmmaker Sam Peckinpah and the Southern novelist and short-story writer Flannery O’Connor, Letts is an artist who creates drama by pitting violence against our banal sense of decency.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
Eugene O’Neill wrote a drama about family life in 2007, what would it look like? Take a look at Tracy Letts’ August: Osage County, a kind of contemporary mix of Long Day’s Journey Into Night and The Little Foxes that is superb in its own right.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
Clocking in at three hours and twenty minutes, Tracy Letts’ superb new play, August: Osage County, is not exactly a light evening in the theater. It is, however, richly rewarding. Steppenwolf Theatre Company has assembled an excellent ensemble cast — nearly all of whom originated their roles in the work’s acclaimed Chicago run — under the sharp and incisive direction of Anna D. Shapiro.
READ THE REVIEWApril 22, 2014
The #1 Play of the Year! This original and corrosive black comedy deserves a seat at the dinner table with the great American family plays.
READ THE REVIEW