I have recently stared work on our final production, William Inge's
Picnic. While preparing my season I read the original 1953 version that was published by Grove Press called William Inge Four Plays (
Come Back Little Sheba, Picnic, Bus Stop, The Dark at the Top of the Stairs).
I fell in love with the script. So I went to Dramatists to apply for the nonprofessional rights and ordered 15 scripts for myself, crew, and cast. While reading the script in the read-through for the first rehearsal, we all noticed that the original script is very different than the one Dramatists gives out. The scripts we received were updated in 1981, and 1983 (10 years after Inge had passed).
This new version attempts to be more relevant to contemporary audiences (I am assuming) in that several period details and idioms have been changed or omitted. Also, entire scenes have been virtually re-written (and not for the better).
My students are disappointed and want to produce the original script because they feel the poetry of the words, and the characters are more defined than the new script.
So here are my concerns and questions, and I would love feedback.
How can you "update" a pulitzer prize winning play without the playwright's permission after they are dead? Why add paint to the Mona Lisa?
Dramatists has nothing on their website about this revised edition, so when you order the script you believe you are getting the original version. WHY??!?!?!
Has anyone produced
Picnic and encountered the same struggle and what did you do?
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Brian Gehrlein
Theatre Director
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