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Speed-the-Plow

Speed-the-Plow is a 1988 play by David Mamet that is a satirical dissection of the American movie business. As stated in The Producer's Perspective, "this is a theme Mamet would revisit in his later films Wag the Dog (1997) and State and Main (2000)".[1] As quoted in The Producer's Perspective, Jack Kroll of Newsweek described Speed-the-Plow as "another tone poem by our nation's foremost master of the language of moral epilepsy."[1]

Speed-the-Plow
Poster for the 1988 Broadway introduction of the play
Written byDavid Mamet
Directed byGregory Mosher
Characters
  • Bobby Gould
  • Charlie Fox
  • Karen
Date premiered1988
Place premieredRoyale Theatre, New York City
Original languageEnglish
GenreDrama

The play sets its context with an epigraph (not to be recited in performance) by William Makepeace Thackeray, from his novel Pendennis, contained in a frontispiece: It starts: "Which is the most reasonable, and does his duty best: he who stands aloof from the struggle of life, calmly contemplating it, or he who descends to the ground, and takes his part in the contest?"[2] The character of Bobby Gould finds himself on both sides of this dilemma, and at times in the play he "stands aloof", and at other times he "takes part" in life's contest, with its moral strictures.[citation needed]

Plot summary

Act I

The play begins in the office of Bobby Gould, who has recently been promoted to head of production at a major Hollywood studio. His job is to find suitable scripts to bring to studio head Richard Ross to be made into big Hollywood movies. His longtime associate, Charlie Fox, has arrived with important news: movie star Doug Brown came to his house that morning interested in making a movie Fox had sent his way some time ago. Gould immediately arranges a meeting with Ross, wanting to deliver the news personally that such a big star, who usually works with a different studio, is keen to make a movie with them and that such a movie is sure to be a financial success.

Gould thanks Fox for bringing the project to him when he could have gone "across the street" to another studio. Fox says he is loyal to Gould on account of the many years he has worked for him. Word comes back that Ross is flying to New York City for the day, so they will have to meet with him tomorrow, which could present a problem because Brown wants an answer by 10 o'clock the next morning. Gould assures Fox that it will work out.

Fox is beside himself about the big break he has gotten, which could finally make him both rich and a player in Hollywood after years of toiling in obscurity. He requests coffee and Gould asks his secretary to get some. As they wait, Gould tells Fox about a book he has been asked to give a "courtesy read" to, meaning that it is not seriously being considered to be made into a film because the author is "an Eastern sissy writer". Gould's secretary, Karen, arrives with the coffee and the two men ebulliently chat with her about the movie business and their experiences related to it. Karen is only temporarily filling in for Gould's regular secretary and is new to Hollywood. Gould asks her to make lunch reservations for them and she leaves.

After she's gone, Fox comments on Karen, teasing him about trying to seduce her. He thinks that Karen is neither a "floozy" nor an ambitious girl trying to sleep her way up the Hollywood ladder, so it would be hard for Gould to bed her. Gould thinks he can and the two make a five hundred dollar wager to that effect. Fox leaves, soon to be seeing Gould at their lunch appointment.

Karen returns to discuss the lunch reservation. Gould asks her to sit and begins to tell her about the movie business. He tells her about the book he has been giving a "courtesy read". Uncorrupted and naïve, she asks why he is so sure there is no hope for the book. Gould offers Karen a chance to take part in the process by reading the book and delivering to him her opinion of it to him that night at his home. As she leaves, Gould asks her to tell Fox that "he owes me five hundred bucks".

Act II

That night, at Gould's apartment, Karen delivers a glowing report on the book, a story about the apocalyptic effects of radiation. As he is seducing her, Gould speaks warmly toward her, offering to bring her under his wing at the studio. Karen says she wants to work on the film adaptation of the book. Gould says that even if the book is good, it won't make a successful Hollywood movie. Karen admonishes him for simply perpetuating the standard Hollywood formula instead of taking a creative risk. When Gould protests, Karen says that she knows Gould invited her to his place in order to sleep with her and aggressively starts to seduce him into taking her to bed, and into pitching the book instead of the Doug Brown film.

Act III

The next morning Fox is back in Gould's office, excited about their upcoming meeting with Ross. Gould surprises Fox with news that instead he is going to be pitching the book, without him. The passive Fox initially takes the news with good humor, but gradually becomes more and more aggressive. He chides Gould for preparing to throw both of their careers away by pushing a movie the studio will never agree to make. Gould says that he has been awake all night and feels the call to "do something which is right". Fox suspects that Gould spent the night with Karen and that is the reason for his delirium. Gould denies this, but an increasingly enraged Fox physically attacks him and continues his verbal assault until Gould tells him to go.

Fox agrees to leave, but only after he gets the chance to ask Karen a question. Karen enters and eventually admits to being intimate with Gould the night before. Gould and Karen continue to stand together as a team until Fox gets her to admit that she would not have slept with Gould had he not agreed to green light a movie based on the book. With this, Karen's ambitious motives are revealed and Gould is in shock. She tries to hold on to the plans they had made but Fox will not allow it, telling her to leave the studio lot and never come back. As she leaves, Fox throws the book out the door after her. The play ends with Gould straightened out and ready to pitch the Doug Brown film to Ross.

Origin and meaning of the title

The Secret Middle Ages (ISBN 0-7509-2685-6) by Malcolm Jones discusses the origin of the phrase "God Speed the Plow" in a celebration known as Plow Monday and a 14th-century poem:

God spede the plow
And send us all corne enow
Our purpose for to mak
At crow of cok
Of the plwlete of Sygate
Be mery and glade
Wat Goodale this work mad

There is an 18th-century English play by Thomas Morton called Speed the Plough, which introduced the character of the prudish Mrs. Grundy.

In George Meredith's novel The Ordeal of Richard Feverel, the young protagonist, running away from home, encounters two peasants discussing their experiences, the Tinker and Speed-the-Plow. Describing them to a relative, he says, "Next, there's a tinker and a ploughman, who think that God is always fighting with the Devil which shall command the kingdoms of the earth. The tinker's for God, and the ploughman—"

In an interview in the Chicago Tribune, Mamet explained the title as follows:

I remembered the saying that you see on a lot of old plates and mugs: "Industry produces wealth, God speed the plow." This, I knew, was a play about work and about the end of the world, so "Speed-the-Plow" was perfect because not only did it mean work, it meant having to plow under and start over again.[3]

Productions

Broadway

Speed-the-Plow premiered on Broadway at the Royale Theatre in a production by the Lincoln Center Theater, opening on May 3, 1988 and closing on December 31, 1988 after 279 performances. The cast featured Joe Mantegna (Gould), Ron Silver (Fox) and Madonna (Karen). The play was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Play and Best Direction of a Play (Gregory Mosher). Silver won a Tony Award for Best Actor (Play).

The first Broadway revival of Speed-the-Plow, directed by Atlantic Theatre Company artistic director Neil Pepe, began previews at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on October 3, 2008, with an opening on October 23 in a limited engagement, closing on February 22, 2009. The cast featured Jeremy Piven as Bobby Gould, Raúl Esparza as Charlie Fox, and Elisabeth Moss as Karen. However, Piven left the production over medical issues on December 17.[4] The role of Bobby was played by Norbert Leo Butz (from December 23 through January 11, 2009) and William H. Macy (from January 13 through February 22, 2009).[5] Raul Esparza was nominated for the 2009 Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play.[6] Reviews were positive.[7][8]

Regional

It has been produced countless times in regional theaters and schools across the country.

The play was presented at the Remains Theater in 1987 starring William Peterson, the Geffen Playhouse, Los Angeles, in February and March 2007. Directed by Geffen artistic director Randall Arney, the cast starred Alicia Silverstone as Karen, Greg Germann as Charlie Fox and Jon Tenney as Bobby Gould.[9]

London

Sydney

Hong Kong

  • In 2017, the production is produced by Dionysus Contemporary Theatre at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts Lyric Theatre. It is directed by Olivia Yan, with the cast of Anthony Wong (Bobby Gould), Jan Lamb (Fox) and Rosa Maria Velasco (Karen), produced by Joyce Cheung. It will be the first time ever that the play has been translated into Chinese and performed in Cantonese.

Norway

  • In 2002, Speed The Plow was produced by Det Norske Teatret, Norway's leading state-funded theatre in nynorsk. It is directed by Odd Christian Hagen, with the cast of Reidar Sørensen (Bobby Gould), Nina Woxholt (Fox) and Ingrid Jørgensen (Karen). It was the first time ever that the play was translated to this language. Mamet's brother attended the opening night, bringing his brother's greetings to the cast and crew. The music was composed and performed live by Ole Kristian Wetten.

Reception

Reviews for Madonna's acting ranged from mixed to negative.[16][17] Her appearance in the play helped box-office sales; Speed-the-Plow sold a record number of advance tickets and made more than $1 million.[17]

Related works

Bobby Gould's story is continued in Mamet's one act play Bobby Gould in Hell.[18][19]

In a review of Arthur Kopit's 1989 play Bone-the-Fish, New York Times theater critic Mel Gussow wrote that it "could be regarded as Mr. Kopit's response to David Mamet's Speed-the-Plow. In fact, the plays share much more than two hyphens. Mr. Kopit asks how far a film director will go in demeaning himself in quest of work."[20]

Mamet's short story "The Bridge", which is the basis for the novel of the same name in the play, was published in the literary magazine Granta in 1985.[21][22]

David Ives' one-act play Speed the Play, first produced in 1992 by the Chicago, Illinois-based Strawdog Theatre Company, is a parody of Speed-the-Plow.[23]

Awards and nominations

Original Broadway production

2008 Broadway Revival

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2009 Drama Desk Awards Outstanding Actor in a Play Raúl Esparza Nominated
Tony Award Best Actor in a Play Nominated

References

  1. ^ a b Davenport, Kent. "Speed-the-Plow". The Producer's Perspective. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  2. ^ Thackeray, William Makepeace (1910) [1848–1850]. "Frontispiece". Pendennis. Volume 2. Everyman's Library No. 426. London; New York: J. M. Dent & Sons; E. P. Dutton & Co. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  3. ^ Christiansen, Richard (February 19, 1989). "The 'Plow' Boy". Chicago Tribune. Arts Page 18 Section 13. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  4. ^ Gans, Andrew (December 17, 2008). . Playbill. Archived from the original on December 20, 2008.
  5. ^ Gans, Andrew (December 18, 2008). "Macy and Butz Will Succeed Piven in Speed-the-Plow Revival". Playbill.
  6. ^ "The Tony Award Nominees - TonyAwards.com - The American Theatre Wing's Tony Awards® - Official Website by IBM". TonyAwards.com. June 7, 2015. Retrieved March 2, 2016.
  7. ^ Als, Hilton (November 3, 2008). "The Theatre: Fever Pitch". The New Yorker. Vol. 84, no. 35. pp. 116–118. Retrieved April 17, 2009.
  8. ^ Scott, Rachel (November 10, 2009). "Speed the Plow: the dark hollywood dilemma". PLANK Magazine. Retrieved March 2, 2016.
  9. ^ Hernandez, Ernio (February 7, 2007). "Silverstone, Germann and Tenney Open in L.A. 'Speed-the-Plow' Feb. 7". Playbill. New York City: Playbill, Inc.
  10. ^ "Stones Upends Plow at Duke of York's, 21 Aug". whatsonstage.com. July 26, 2000.
  11. ^ Dalglish, Darren (July 6, 2000). "Review. 'Speed the Plow'". londontheatrearchive.co.uk.
  12. ^ Billington, Michael (February 13, 2008). "Speed-The-Plow". The Guardian. London, England: Guardian Media Group. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  13. ^ Benedict, David (October 3, 2014). "Theater Review: 'Speed-the-Plow' Starring Lindsay Lohan". Variety. Los Angeles, California: Penske Media Corporation.
  14. ^ Wiegand, Chris (October 3, 2014). "Lindsay Lohan in Speed-the-Plow: What the critics said". The Guardian. London, England: Guardian Media Group. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  15. ^ "Speed-the-Plow".
  16. ^ Sexton, Adam (1993). 4. Step into the Spotlight. Desperately Seeking Madonna: in search of the meaning of the world's most famous woman. Delta. p. 8. ISBN 0385306881. Retrieved August 29, 2022 – via Archive.org.
  17. ^ a b Koopmans, Andy (2002). Troubles and Triumphs. Madonna: People in the News. New York City: Lucent Books. p. 69. ISBN 1590181387. Retrieved February 4, 2022 – via Archive.org.
  18. ^ Simon, John (December 18, 1989). "Beelzebubee". New York. Vol. 22, no. 50. New York City: New York Media. p. 105. ISSN 0028-7369.
  19. ^ Mamet, David. Bobby Gould In Hell. New York City: Samuel French. ISBN 9780573692543. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  20. ^ Gussow, Mel (April 5, 1989). "Review/Theater; A 3-Day Immersion in New Plays". The New York Times. New York City: The New York Times Company.
  21. ^ Brantley, Ben (October 24, 2008). "Theater Review. Do You Speak Hollywood?". The New York Times. New York City: The New York Times Company.
  22. ^ Mamet, David (1985). "'The Bridge". Granta. No. 16. London, England: The Book Service. pp. 167–173. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  23. ^ Langer, Adam (July 30, 1992). "Speed the Play". The Chicago Reader. Chicago, Illinois: Sun-Times Media Group. Retrieved June 26, 2022.

External links

  • Internet Broadway Database listing, 1988 production
  • Internet Broadway Database listing, 2008 production

speed, plow, this, article, about, mamet, 1988, play, morton, 1798, play, speed, plough, 1988, play, david, mamet, that, satirical, dissection, american, movie, business, stated, producer, perspective, this, theme, mamet, would, revisit, later, films, 1997, st. This article is about Mamet s 1988 play For Morton s 1798 play see Speed the Plough Speed the Plow is a 1988 play by David Mamet that is a satirical dissection of the American movie business As stated in The Producer s Perspective this is a theme Mamet would revisit in his later films Wag the Dog 1997 and State and Main 2000 1 As quoted in The Producer s Perspective Jack Kroll of Newsweek described Speed the Plow as another tone poem by our nation s foremost master of the language of moral epilepsy 1 Speed the PlowPoster for the 1988 Broadway introduction of the playWritten byDavid MametDirected byGregory MosherCharactersBobby Gould Charlie Fox KarenDate premiered1988Place premieredRoyale Theatre New York CityOriginal languageEnglishGenreDramaThe play sets its context with an epigraph not to be recited in performance by William Makepeace Thackeray from his novel Pendennis contained in a frontispiece It starts Which is the most reasonable and does his duty best he who stands aloof from the struggle of life calmly contemplating it or he who descends to the ground and takes his part in the contest 2 The character of Bobby Gould finds himself on both sides of this dilemma and at times in the play he stands aloof and at other times he takes part in life s contest with its moral strictures citation needed Contents 1 Plot summary 1 1 Act I 1 2 Act II 1 3 Act III 2 Origin and meaning of the title 3 Productions 3 1 Broadway 3 2 Regional 3 3 London 3 4 Sydney 3 5 Hong Kong 3 6 Norway 4 Reception 5 Related works 6 Awards and nominations 6 1 Original Broadway production 6 2 2008 Broadway Revival 7 References 8 External linksPlot summary EditAct I Edit The play begins in the office of Bobby Gould who has recently been promoted to head of production at a major Hollywood studio His job is to find suitable scripts to bring to studio head Richard Ross to be made into big Hollywood movies His longtime associate Charlie Fox has arrived with important news movie star Doug Brown came to his house that morning interested in making a movie Fox had sent his way some time ago Gould immediately arranges a meeting with Ross wanting to deliver the news personally that such a big star who usually works with a different studio is keen to make a movie with them and that such a movie is sure to be a financial success Gould thanks Fox for bringing the project to him when he could have gone across the street to another studio Fox says he is loyal to Gould on account of the many years he has worked for him Word comes back that Ross is flying to New York City for the day so they will have to meet with him tomorrow which could present a problem because Brown wants an answer by 10 o clock the next morning Gould assures Fox that it will work out Fox is beside himself about the big break he has gotten which could finally make him both rich and a player in Hollywood after years of toiling in obscurity He requests coffee and Gould asks his secretary to get some As they wait Gould tells Fox about a book he has been asked to give a courtesy read to meaning that it is not seriously being considered to be made into a film because the author is an Eastern sissy writer Gould s secretary Karen arrives with the coffee and the two men ebulliently chat with her about the movie business and their experiences related to it Karen is only temporarily filling in for Gould s regular secretary and is new to Hollywood Gould asks her to make lunch reservations for them and she leaves After she s gone Fox comments on Karen teasing him about trying to seduce her He thinks that Karen is neither a floozy nor an ambitious girl trying to sleep her way up the Hollywood ladder so it would be hard for Gould to bed her Gould thinks he can and the two make a five hundred dollar wager to that effect Fox leaves soon to be seeing Gould at their lunch appointment Karen returns to discuss the lunch reservation Gould asks her to sit and begins to tell her about the movie business He tells her about the book he has been giving a courtesy read Uncorrupted and naive she asks why he is so sure there is no hope for the book Gould offers Karen a chance to take part in the process by reading the book and delivering to him her opinion of it to him that night at his home As she leaves Gould asks her to tell Fox that he owes me five hundred bucks Act II Edit That night at Gould s apartment Karen delivers a glowing report on the book a story about the apocalyptic effects of radiation As he is seducing her Gould speaks warmly toward her offering to bring her under his wing at the studio Karen says she wants to work on the film adaptation of the book Gould says that even if the book is good it won t make a successful Hollywood movie Karen admonishes him for simply perpetuating the standard Hollywood formula instead of taking a creative risk When Gould protests Karen says that she knows Gould invited her to his place in order to sleep with her and aggressively starts to seduce him into taking her to bed and into pitching the book instead of the Doug Brown film Act III Edit The next morning Fox is back in Gould s office excited about their upcoming meeting with Ross Gould surprises Fox with news that instead he is going to be pitching the book without him The passive Fox initially takes the news with good humor but gradually becomes more and more aggressive He chides Gould for preparing to throw both of their careers away by pushing a movie the studio will never agree to make Gould says that he has been awake all night and feels the call to do something which is right Fox suspects that Gould spent the night with Karen and that is the reason for his delirium Gould denies this but an increasingly enraged Fox physically attacks him and continues his verbal assault until Gould tells him to go Fox agrees to leave but only after he gets the chance to ask Karen a question Karen enters and eventually admits to being intimate with Gould the night before Gould and Karen continue to stand together as a team until Fox gets her to admit that she would not have slept with Gould had he not agreed to green light a movie based on the book With this Karen s ambitious motives are revealed and Gould is in shock She tries to hold on to the plans they had made but Fox will not allow it telling her to leave the studio lot and never come back As she leaves Fox throws the book out the door after her The play ends with Gould straightened out and ready to pitch the Doug Brown film to Ross Origin and meaning of the title EditThe Secret Middle Ages ISBN 0 7509 2685 6 by Malcolm Jones discusses the origin of the phrase God Speed the Plow in a celebration known as Plow Monday and a 14th century poem God spede the plow And send us all corne enow Our purpose for to mak At crow of cok Of the plwlete of Sygate Be mery and glade Wat Goodale this work mad There is an 18th century English play by Thomas Morton called Speed the Plough which introduced the character of the prudish Mrs Grundy In George Meredith s novel The Ordeal of Richard Feverel the young protagonist running away from home encounters two peasants discussing their experiences the Tinker and Speed the Plow Describing them to a relative he says Next there s a tinker and a ploughman who think that God is always fighting with the Devil which shall command the kingdoms of the earth The tinker s for God and the ploughman In an interview in the Chicago Tribune Mamet explained the title as follows I remembered the saying that you see on a lot of old plates and mugs Industry produces wealth God speed the plow This I knew was a play about work and about the end of the world so Speed the Plow was perfect because not only did it mean work it meant having to plow under and start over again 3 Productions EditBroadway Edit Speed the Plow premiered on Broadway at the Royale Theatre in a production by the Lincoln Center Theater opening on May 3 1988 and closing on December 31 1988 after 279 performances The cast featured Joe Mantegna Gould Ron Silver Fox and Madonna Karen The play was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Play and Best Direction of a Play Gregory Mosher Silver won a Tony Award for Best Actor Play The first Broadway revival of Speed the Plow directed by Atlantic Theatre Company artistic director Neil Pepe began previews at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on October 3 2008 with an opening on October 23 in a limited engagement closing on February 22 2009 The cast featured Jeremy Piven as Bobby Gould Raul Esparza as Charlie Fox and Elisabeth Moss as Karen However Piven left the production over medical issues on December 17 4 The role of Bobby was played by Norbert Leo Butz from December 23 through January 11 2009 and William H Macy from January 13 through February 22 2009 5 Raul Esparza was nominated for the 2009 Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play 6 Reviews were positive 7 8 Regional Edit It has been produced countless times in regional theaters and schools across the country The play was presented at the Remains Theater in 1987 starring William Peterson the Geffen Playhouse Los Angeles in February and March 2007 Directed by Geffen artistic director Randall Arney the cast starred Alicia Silverstone as Karen Greg Germann as Charlie Fox and Jon Tenney as Bobby Gould 9 London Edit In 1989 it was produced at the National Theatre directed by Gregory Mosher with Colin Stinton Alfred Molina and Rebecca Pidgeon In 2000 the play was produced at the New Ambassadors Theatre with Mark Strong Kimberly Williams and playwright Patrick Marber in his stage debut and then transferred to the Duke of York s Theatre with a new cast of Nathaniel Parker Bobby Gould Neil Morrissey Fox and Gina Bellman Karen and a new director Rupert Goold 10 11 In 2008 it was revived at the Old Vic Theatre starring artistic director Kevin Spacey as Fox Jeff Goldblum as Gould and Laura Michelle Kelly as Karen 12 In September 2014 it was performed in the West End at the Playhouse Theatre and was directed by Lindsay Posner with Nigel Lindsay as Fox Richard Schiff as Gould and Lindsay Lohan as Karen 13 It received mixed reviews 14 Sydney Edit In 2016 a production was produced by the Sydney Theatre Company at the Roslyn Packer Theatre It was directed by Andrew Upton and featured Damon Herriman as Bobby Lachy Hulme as Charlie and Rose Byrne as Karen It ran from November 8 to December 17 2016 15 Hong Kong Edit In 2017 the production is produced by Dionysus Contemporary Theatre at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts Lyric Theatre It is directed by Olivia Yan with the cast of Anthony Wong Bobby Gould Jan Lamb Fox and Rosa Maria Velasco Karen produced by Joyce Cheung It will be the first time ever that the play has been translated into Chinese and performed in Cantonese Norway Edit In 2002 Speed The Plow was produced by Det Norske Teatret Norway s leading state funded theatre in nynorsk It is directed by Odd Christian Hagen with the cast of Reidar Sorensen Bobby Gould Nina Woxholt Fox and Ingrid Jorgensen Karen It was the first time ever that the play was translated to this language Mamet s brother attended the opening night bringing his brother s greetings to the cast and crew The music was composed and performed live by Ole Kristian Wetten Reception EditReviews for Madonna s acting ranged from mixed to negative 16 17 Her appearance in the play helped box office sales Speed the Plow sold a record number of advance tickets and made more than 1 million 17 Related works EditBobby Gould s story is continued in Mamet s one act play Bobby Gould in Hell 18 19 In a review of Arthur Kopit s 1989 play Bone the Fish New York Times theater critic Mel Gussow wrote that it could be regarded as Mr Kopit s response to David Mamet s Speed the Plow In fact the plays share much more than two hyphens Mr Kopit asks how far a film director will go in demeaning himself in quest of work 20 Mamet s short story The Bridge which is the basis for the novel of the same name in the play was published in the literary magazine Granta in 1985 21 22 David Ives one act play Speed the Play first produced in 1992 by the Chicago Illinois based Strawdog Theatre Company is a parody of Speed the Plow 23 Awards and nominations EditOriginal Broadway production Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result1988 Drama Desk Awards Outstanding Play David Mamet NominatedOutstanding Director of a Play Gregory Mosher NominatedOutstanding Actor in a Play Ron Silver WonJoe Mantegna NominatedTony Awards Best Play David Mamet NominatedBest Direction of a Play Gregory Mosher NominatedBest Actor in a Play Ron Silver Won2008 Broadway Revival Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result2009 Drama Desk Awards Outstanding Actor in a Play Raul Esparza NominatedTony Award Best Actor in a Play NominatedReferences Edit a b Davenport Kent Speed the Plow The Producer s Perspective Retrieved January 28 2019 Thackeray William Makepeace 1910 1848 1850 Frontispiece Pendennis Volume 2 Everyman s Library No 426 London New York J M Dent amp Sons E P Dutton amp Co Retrieved January 28 2019 Christiansen Richard February 19 1989 The Plow Boy Chicago Tribune Arts Page 18 Section 13 Retrieved January 28 2019 Gans Andrew December 17 2008 Jeremy Piven Abruptly Departs Broadway s Speed the Plow Butz Steps In Playbill Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Gans Andrew December 18 2008 Macy and Butz Will Succeed Piven in Speed the Plow Revival Playbill The Tony Award Nominees TonyAwards com The American Theatre Wing s Tony Awards Official Website by IBM TonyAwards com June 7 2015 Retrieved March 2 2016 Als Hilton November 3 2008 The Theatre Fever Pitch The New Yorker Vol 84 no 35 pp 116 118 Retrieved April 17 2009 Scott Rachel November 10 2009 Speed the Plow the dark hollywood dilemma PLANK Magazine Retrieved March 2 2016 Hernandez Ernio February 7 2007 Silverstone Germann and Tenney Open in L A Speed the Plow Feb 7 Playbill New York City Playbill Inc Stones Upends Plow at Duke of York s 21 Aug whatsonstage com July 26 2000 Dalglish Darren July 6 2000 Review Speed the Plow londontheatrearchive co uk Billington Michael February 13 2008 Speed The Plow The Guardian London England Guardian Media Group Retrieved January 28 2019 Benedict David October 3 2014 Theater Review Speed the Plow Starring Lindsay Lohan Variety Los Angeles California Penske Media Corporation Wiegand Chris October 3 2014 Lindsay Lohan in Speed the Plow What the critics said The Guardian London England Guardian Media Group Retrieved June 30 2020 Speed the Plow Sexton Adam 1993 4 Step into the Spotlight Desperately Seeking Madonna in search of the meaning of the world s most famous woman Delta p 8 ISBN 0385306881 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Archive org a b Koopmans Andy 2002 Troubles and Triumphs Madonna People in the News New York City Lucent Books p 69 ISBN 1590181387 Retrieved February 4 2022 via Archive org Simon John December 18 1989 Beelzebubee New York Vol 22 no 50 New York City New York Media p 105 ISSN 0028 7369 Mamet David Bobby Gould In Hell New York City Samuel French ISBN 9780573692543 Retrieved October 25 2015 Gussow Mel April 5 1989 Review Theater A 3 Day Immersion in New Plays The New York Times New York City The New York Times Company Brantley Ben October 24 2008 Theater Review Do You Speak Hollywood The New York Times New York City The New York Times Company Mamet David 1985 The Bridge Granta No 16 London England The Book Service pp 167 173 Retrieved October 25 2015 Langer Adam July 30 1992 Speed the Play The Chicago Reader Chicago Illinois Sun Times Media Group Retrieved June 26 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Speed the Plow Internet Broadway Database listing 1988 production Internet Broadway Database listing 2008 production Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Speed the Plow amp oldid 1124919665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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