Sexual Perversity in Chicago - Wikipedia

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Sexual Perversity in Chicago


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Main page Sexual Perversity in Chicago is a play written by David Mamet that examines the sex lives of two men and two women in the 1970s. The play is filled with profanity and regional jargon that reflects the working-class
Sexual Perversity in Chicago
Contents language of Chicago. The characters' relationships come to be hindered by the caustic nature of their words, as much of the dialogue includes insults and arguments. The play presents "intimate relationships [as]
Current events Written by David Mamet
minefields of buried fears and misunderstandings".[1]
Random article Date premiered 1974
About Wikipedia The play has been adapted for film twice: as the 1986 film About Last Night and the 2014 film About Last Night. Place premiered Organic Theater Company
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Original language English
Donate Contents [hide]
Genre Drama, comedy
1 Characters and plot
Contribute Setting Chicago
2 Production history
Help 2.1 Blancs-Manteaux Theatre
Learn to edit
2.2 West End Theatre
Community portal
2.3 Činoherní klub
Recent changes
Upload file 3 Film adaptations
4 References
Tools
5 External links
What links here
Related changes
Special pages Characters and plot [ edit ]
Permanent link
Page information Dan Shapiro: An urban male in his late twenties
Cite this page Bernard Litko: Dan's friend and associate
Wikidata item Deborah Soloman: A woman in her late twenties

Print/export
Joan Webber: Deborah's friend and roommate

Download as PDF Scene: Various spots around the North Side of Chicago, a Big City on a Lake.
Printable version Time: Approximately nine weeks one summer.[2]

Languages Danny and Bernie balance their mundane office jobs with sexual banter, particularly their experiences and preferences in the bedroom. Likewise, Joan and Deborah frequently discuss the shortcomings of men while at their apartment.
Dansk The main plot point is Danny and Deborah's relationship, perpetuating much of the dialogue about men and women. Their romance is quickly established by sexual attraction, but as the play progresses and Deborah moves into Danny's apartment, they are unable
Deutsch to talk with each other seriously. Danny complains in frustration, "Everything's fine. Sex, talk, life, everything. Until you want to get 'closer', to get 'better'. Do you know what the fuck you want?"[2] Eventually, the couple breaks up while Danny and Bernie revert to their
Edit links
usual talk about "broads" and what is wrong with the world.

Joan says,

I don't know anything, Deborah, I swear to God, the older I get the less I know. (pause) It's a puzzle. Our efforts at coming to grips with ourselves...in an attempt to become "more human" (which, in itself, is an interesting concept). It has to do with an
increased ability to recognize clues...and the control of energy in the form of lust...and desire (And also in the form of hope)... But a finite puzzle. Whose true solution lies, perhaps, in transcending the rules themselves... (pause) ...and pounding of the
fucking pieces into places where they do not fit at all.[2]

Production history [ edit ]

An early version of Sexual Perversity in Chicago was first produced at Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont by the members of St. Nicholas Theater. The production was directed by Mamet.

The play was a series of blackouts showing various people (waitresses, policemen, investment bankers) having discussions about sex. It featured:

William H. Macy
Steven Schachter
Alison Zucker
Mary Tibbetts
Madeleine Dammers
Peter Vincent

The play was subsequently reworked by Mamet with director Stuart Gordon into the four character structure that made it famous and established David Mamet as a playwright. An earlier Mamet play, Danny Shapiro and his Search for the Mystery Princess, was
combined with Sexual Perversity, adding the characters of Bernie Litko and Joan Webber. It was produced and performed by Organic Theater Company in Chicago in June 1974 in a production directed by Stuart Gordon. The cast featured:

Warren Casey as Bernie Litko


Eric Loeb as Danny Shapiro
Carolyn Purdy Gordon as Deborah Soloman
Roberta Custer as Joan Webber

In December 1975, the play was mounted off-off Broadway at the St. Clements Theatre in New York. An off-Broadway production directed by Albert Takazauckas opened on a double bill with the playwright's The Duck Variations on June 16, 1976 at the Cherry Lane
Theatre in Greenwich Village and ran for 273 performances. The cast included F. Murray Abraham and Peter Riegert. Subsequent cast members included Jeff Zinn.

Jake Johannsen first thought of being a comedian when trying out for the Iowa State production of Sexual Perversity in Chicago in the early 1980s.[3]

Blancs-Manteaux Theatre [ edit ]

In 1980, the play was mounted at the Blancs-Manteaux Theatre in Paris, with Daniel Russo and Nathalie Courval.[4]

West End Theatre [ edit ]

In 2003, Matthew Perry made his stage debut in a West End production co-starring Minnie Driver, Hank Azaria, and Kelly Reilly.

Činoherní klub [ edit ]

Directed by Ondřej Sokol. The play had premiered on 18 March 2004 in The Drama Club, Prague.

Bernard Litko .... Jaromír Dulava


Joan Weber .... Ivana Chýlková
Dan Shapiro .... Marek Taclík
Deborah Solomon .... Lucie Pernetová

Film adaptations [ edit ]

David De Silva bought the motion picture rights to Sexual Perversity In Chicago and went with David Mamet on Mamet's first trip to Hollywood, to meet with Michael Eisner, head of Paramount Pictures, regarding doing a film version of the play. Eisner was very
enthusiastic about the project, but Mamet ultimately was not able to deliver an acceptable screenplay to the studio. Years later, De Silva sold the film rights to a Chicago producer, Stuart Oken. Oken produced the 1986 film, About Last Night, directed by Edward
Zwick, with Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Jim Belushi and Elizabeth Perkins in the cast. The screenplay was written by Tim Kazurinsky and Denise Declue.[5] The title change resulted from many newspapers refusing to advertise a movie with the original title.

Mamet disavowed the movie, ruefully recalling that "as a callow youth with hay sticking out of my ears, I sold both the play and the screenplay for about $12 and a mess of porridge...."[6]

A second film adaptation, also based on the 1986 film and again titled About Last Night, was released in 2014. This film had an African-American cast and was set in Los Angeles. The film starred Kevin Hart, Michael Ealy, Regina Hall and Joy Bryant.[7][8][9]

References [ edit ]

1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-11-21. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
2. ^ a b c Mamet, Sexual Perversity in Chicago, Grove Press, Inc., 1974
[permanent dead link]
3. ^ http://desmoines.metromix.com/events/article/there-is-comedy-in/2242053/content
4. ^ "Duos sans canapé" (Tribulations sexuelles à Chicago, by David Mamet), Jean-Pierre Thiollet, Le Quotidien de Paris, 1 January 1981.
5. ^ David De Silva
6. ^ "MAMET REVIVED The perversity of Hollywood" . Retrieved 2008-04-08.[dead link]
7. ^ "Rodriguez thinking 'About Last Night' " . Variety. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
8. ^ "Kevin Hart in Early Red Band Trailer for Steve Pink's 'About Last Night' " . First Showing. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
9. ^ "About Last Night (2014)" . Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 5 March 2014.

External links [ edit ]

Sexual Perversity in Chicago at the Internet Off-Broadway Database

· · David Mamet [hide]

The Duck Variations · Sexual Perversity in Chicago · Squirrels · American Buffalo · Reunion · The Water Engine · A Life in the Theatre · The Woods · Lakeboat · Edmond · The Frog Prince · Glengarry Glen Ross · Vint · The Shawl · Speed-the-Plow · Bobby Gould in Hell ·
Plays written
Oleanna · The Cryptogram · Boston Marriage · Faustus · Romance · November · Race · The Anarchist · China Doll · The Penitent · Bitter Wheat · The Christopher Boy's Communion
A Life in the Theatre (1979) · The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981) · The Verdict (1982) · The Untouchables (1987) · We're No Angels (1989) · Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) · Hoffa (1992) · The Water Engine (1992) · A Life in the Theatre (1993) · American Buffalo (1996) ·
Films written only
The Edge (1997) · Wag the Dog (1997) · Ronin (1998) · Lansky (1999) · Lakeboat (2000) · Hannibal (2001) · Edmond (2005)

Films written House of Games (1987) · Things Change (1988) · Homicide (1991) · Oleanna (1994) · The Spanish Prisoner (1997) · The Winslow Boy (1999) · State and Main (2000) · Heist (2001) · Spartan (2004) · Redbelt (2008) · Lost Masterpieces of Pornography (2010) · Phil Spector
and directed (2013)

Family Rebecca Pidgeon · Lindsay Crouse · Zosia Mamet · Clara Mamet · Lynn Mamet

Categories: 1974 plays American plays adapted into films Plays by David Mamet Plays set in Chicago

This page was last edited on 12 April 2020, at 04:28 (UTC).

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