

Picnic
William Inge
Awards & Recognition
Nominee: 1960 Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play (Warren Beatty)
What readers are saying
Readers have mixed opinions about the play. While some appreciate its emotional depth and exploration of difficult themes, others find it lacking and criticize its portrayal of women. Many enjoy the poignant storytelling, but a few feel it falls short compared to the author's other works.
THE STORY: As told by Chapman: The setting...is a modest bungalow in a small town near Kansas City, and here lives Miss Field, a widow, and her twenty-one-year-old son...The time is 1933--the Depression--and they are lucky to have jobs, she as a hospita
"Inge’s three person dynamic is wonderfully played out with the richly drawn characters."
— Chicago Critic
"Recognizably an Inge drama, and it's interesting for that reason."
— New York Times
| Character |
|---|
| Kenny Her son, 21. |
| Geoffrey Beamis A neighborhood friend of Kenny. |
| Lila Green A small-time tent-show actress. Early thirties. |
| Ronny Cavendish An aging juvenile actor. |
| Olga St. Valentine A tent-show actress. About fifty. |
| Ricky Powers A tent-show actor. Around Lila’s age. |
| Mrs. Mulvaney A young mother. |
| Helen Baird A woman in her forties. |
Austin Pendleton Discusses A Loss Of Roses
A Loss Of Roses is a American play written by William Inge and published by Dramatists Play Service (1998).
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