One of the most famous stage comedies in American history, Neil Simon's "The Odd Couple," closes at the Norris Center for the Performing Arts February 13. The hit comedy about mismatched roommates premiered on Broadway over 40 years ago, became an instant success, and won the 1965 Tony Award for Best Play.
"The Odd Couple" tells the story of Felix Ungar, a neurotic, neat freak news writer in the midst of a failing marriage, who moves in with his messy, poker playing pal, Oscar Madison. In an attempt to liberate his troubled friend from the confines of marriage, Oscar plans a double date for him and Felix. However, silly competition and comedic mayhem combine to change the course of their friendship.
After its long run on Broadway, "The Odd Couple" was turned into a successful film starring Jack Lemon and Walter Matthau, and then became a popular television series which ran for five seasons. As a result, the characters of Oscar Madison and Felix Unger have become a part of American culture - their very names becoming identifiable terms for excessive sloppiness and neatness.
Neil Simon is America's most prolific and popular playwright. He has written 28 plays and has had more hits in the theater than any other American playwright. Simon has won four Tony Awards, two Emmys, numerous Screen Writers Guild Awards and the Pulitzer Prize for drama. He has been showered with more Academy Award and Tony
Award nominations than any other writer, and is the only playwright to have four Broadway productions running simultaneously. Some of Neil Simon's best-known plays include, "Plaza Suite," "The Out of Towners," "Rumors," "Lost in Yonkers" and "The Goodbye Girl."
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