Legendary playwright Edward Albee rarely attends Broadway productions because much of what gets produced is "usually junk," he tells Tracy Smith in an interview with CBS SUNDAY MORNING WITH Charles Osgood to be broadcast Jan. 27 (9:00 AM, ET). He also says he lies on his Tony ballots, too.
"It's all about not doing the best plays but doing the ones that will sell the most tickets," says Albee, the creator of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf." Asked what the result is, he says, "usually junk."Because of the commercialism, Albee tells Smith, he "very seldom" goes to see Broadway productions. "I used to go see more since I'm one of the voters for the stuff," Albee says of his role as a voter for the prized Tony Awards. "Now I just lie."Albee has written 30 plays and won his first Tony for "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" in 1963. He's also won three Pulitzer Prizes for Drama. "Virginia Woolf," a drama about the relationship between a history professor and his hard-drinking wife, who is the daughter of the college president, remains, his best-known work. The play led to a film version in 1966 starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. "I've always liked the movie less than the play," Albee says. "In part, I was very fond of both Richard and Elizabeth - I didn't think they were the right cast for the play."Follow CBS Sunday Morning on Twitter and Facebook.
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