The phenomenal success of Love Letters by A.R. Gurney, a touching romance written with old-fashioned pen and paper which became a Pulitzer Prize finalist, is one of the great triumphs of American theatre. According to the records, when Gurney first set out to create Love Letters, he initially intended to write a book. Optimistically, he sent the script to The New Yorker, who promptly returned it with the terse reply that they didn’t publish plays. Taking the magazine’s advice, Gurney decided to try rewriting it as a two-person play, where both actors read letters back and forth to one another. What the playwright now needed was a venue where he could try out his experiment. He hit upon a location by sheer chance.
Gurney was scheduled to give a speech at the New York Public Library — but instead, armed with his friend and collaborator, actress Holland Taylor and a pile of papers, the pair read Love Letters to the crowd. “We started at 4:00,” he said to a friend later, “and I put in an arbitrary intermission at 5:00, saying, ‘Well, I’m sure a lot of you have to go,’” Gurney recalled. “And nobody wanted to leave! So I figured we had something.” It was a humble beginning and after that the playwright never looked back.
Gurney had his admirers one of whom was John Tillinger, literary consultant for the Long Wharf Theatre who fell in love with the play and offered to direct the premiere at the New Haven, CT theatre company. In his conversation with others he said Love Letters was theatre down to its most simple level — the spoken word. He, however, laid down two rules. The two actors must not look at each other, and they must not memorise their lines but must read each epistle. This was something that was assiduously followed whenever and wherever the play was performed.
A.R. Gurney’s Love Letters made a humble beginning, after which the playwright never looked back
Love Letters has been a favourite selection for actors with busy schedules, for it doesn’t really require much preparation or extravagant scenery. Choreographers don’t have to spend sleepless nights worrying about whether or not they can find somebody who can match the curtains with the sofas and the carpets. Also, the fact that the performers didn’t have to memorise their lines made it easy for an actor who had a couple of days off from a location shooting to breeze in and out to read his lines.