Synopsis
The Author's Voice
Published by Dramatists Play Service
2 Male 1 Female
But while she is captivated by the writer's good looks and laid-back, low-key manner, she begins, increasingly, to wonder (to the audience) at the emptiness - even banality - of his conversation
In fact the only time he isn't boring is when he is quoting poetic passages from his novel in progress
The reason is soon apparent - the real author is a poor misshapen, Quasimodo-like creature whose physical ugliness has forced him to remain closeted, while his literary brilliance is credited to another (whose main contribution is, in fact, his striking jacket photograph)
The revelation of this "Beauty and the Beast" phenomenon is, as might be expected in the cynical publishing business, received with more diffidence than dismay but, thanks to some clever and very funny twists and turns of plot, everyone does, in the end, get exactly what he or she deserves
A highly sophisticated, brilliantly perceptive and scathingly funny send-up of the world of "big-time" publishing by one of our theatre's most resourceful and distinctive writers
First produced to critical and popular acclaim as part of New York's Ensemble Studio Theater's 10th annual marathon of one-act plays
" ... a delicious satire of contemporary book publishing" ~ NY Daily News
" ... a funny and suspenseful drama about a would-be author and the slave who actually does his writing for him very convincing and very, very funny" ~ NY Post