

The Dog Problem
David Rabe
Longing and confusion.
Hearts pounding, time ticking away.
Early 1960s in a Midwestern town.
Danny Mueller’s working class life is one of fierce loyalty to childhood friends, Jake and Terry.
But the bigger world is stirring once he meets Karen, back from college in the east and alluring because of what she knows, and unsettling for that same reason.
The grip of Danny's past is intensified by his father, a German immigrant mourning a vanished world of lost prestige.
For Pop the question is how to let go of a son and life he never quite had now that the future has shrunk to almost nothing.
While Danny hopes to change without betraying the bonds that have sustained him, Karen, a whirl of brilliance, looks to J.D.
Salinger for answers and to Danny for a simplicity he does not possess.
To fall in love, to have a destiny, to know what it is.
That’s what they all want, even Benji hanging onto Pop, and Shirley, too, adrift in a way she could not have foreseen.
old look backward and the young look ahead, while we watch from the future they long to inhabit.
And it’s all about to burn in the heat of whatever's coming.
The way it always does.
Click here to read an interview with David Rabe by TDF Stages.
"Combustible quality...beautifully captures both the age of the characters and of the country they belong to. Their glazed but rapturous expressions summons an eternal chapter of youth....Portraits of friendship...Testosterone-pumping friction...A tumultuous work...touchingly earnest anger and confusion."
— The New York Times
"FOUR STARS...sharp...smoldering...make[s] the past a fine place to be."
— TimeOut NY
"Suspenseful...an emotional roller-coaster of a party...humorous moments...Rabe creates memorable characters, moments of volatility and warmth, and phrases that stick in your mind."
— Associated Press
"David Rabe's autobiographically-inspired new play…beautifully captures a specific moment in history in the early 1960s...The language is simple and natural...Scenes fly by with an epic sweep...Like the hit TV series Mad Men, it also acts as a time capsule of sorts that lets us measure our own lives and our society's progress."
— Theatermania
"Attention must be paid. A perceptive play."
— New York Observer
| Character |
|---|
| Pop |
| Shirley |
| Karen |
| Terry |
| Jake |
| Benji |
| Danny |
Beyond Broadway interview with cast of An Early History of Fire
An Early History of Fire is a comedy play written by David Rabe and published by Samuel French .
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