Collect A Life Of William Inge: The Strains Of Triumph Articulated By Ralph F. Voss Issued As Textbook

the spring ofone of the country's most successful dramatists, William Inge, ran out of reasons to think he was any good.
He went into his garage one night and shut the door, seated himself behind
Collect A Life Of William Inge: The Strains Of Triumph Articulated By Ralph F. Voss  Issued As Textbook
the wheel of his new car, and turned the key.
By morning he was dead, "Death makes us all innocent," Inge had written, "and weaves all our private hurts and griefs and wrongs into the fabric of time, and makes them a part of eternity.
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But William Inge had it made, or so it seemed in, He had written an unprecedented string of Broadway hits: Picnic, Bus Stop, The Dark at the Top of the Stairs, and Come Back, Little Sheba.
All four plays had become successful films featuring top Hollywood, Inge had received a Pulitzer Prize for Picnic and an Academy Award for his screenplay, Splendor in the Grass.
Even his longtime friend and mentor, Tennessee Williams, was envious of his success,

Privately, Inge was miserable, His long struggle with alcoholism and profound shame over his homosexuality plagued him before, during, and after his decade of great success.
As criticism of his work intensified, Inge responded with increasingly frantic attempts to please by "modernizing" his writing.
He abandoned the smalltown characters and settings he knew in favor of more lurid, urban subject matter.
In the end, his characters lost their authentic voices, and neither critics nor audiences found his later work believable.


In this first booklength literary biography of Inge, Ralph Voss peels back the veneer of public success and lays bare the private pain and isolation of the man who was called America's first authentic midwestern playwright.
He draws upon interviews, memoirs, and unpublished manuscripts, letters, and papers to show how Inge's unhappy life fueled the struggles his plays depict.
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