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Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Poster

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

You are cordially invited to George and Martha's for an evening of fun and games
1966 | 131m | English

(83158 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Mike Nichols
Writer: Ernest Lehman
Staring:
Details

A history professor and his wife entertain a young couple who are new to the university's faculty. As the drinks flow, secrets come to light, and the middle-aged couple unload onto their guests the full force of the bitterness, dysfunction, and animosity that defines their marriage.
Release Date: Jun 22, 1966
Director: Mike Nichols
Writer: Ernest Lehman
Genres: Drama
Keywords adultery, professor, married couple, black humor, guest, campus, dysfunctional marriage, based on play or musical, alcohol abuse, new england, cuckold, one night, henpecked husband, house guest, college professor, marital tensions, academia, dead son, impotent husband, nasty wife, cuckolded husband, nagging wife, hysterical drunks, bickering couple, shattered reality, openly flirtatious wife, acerbic couple, alcoholic couple
Production Companies Warner Bros. Pictures, Chenault Productions
Box Office Revenue: $33,736,689
Budget: $7,500,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Elizabeth Taylor Martha
Richard Burton George
George Segal Nick
Sandy Dennis Honey
Agnes Flanagan Roadhouse Waitress (uncredited)
Frank Flanagan Roadhouse Manager (uncredited)
Name Job
Mike Nichols Director
Haskell Wexler Director of Photography
Sam O'Steen Editor
Irene Sharaff Costume Design
Sydney Guilaroff Hairstylist
Herbert Ross Choreographer
Ernest Lehman Screenplay
Harold Michelson Storyboard
Meta Rebner Script Supervisor
Richard Sylbert Production Design
Alex North Original Music Composer
Craig Binkley Set Dressing Artist
Robert Willoughby Still Photographer
Michael A. Jones Rigging Gaffer
Ralph Gerling Camera Operator
George James Hopkins Set Decoration
George Groves Sound Recordist
M.A. Merrick Sound Designer
Ron Berkeley Makeup Artist
Jean Burt Reilly Hairstylist
Frank Flanagan Gaffer
Gordon Bau Makeup Artist
Edward Albee Theatre Play
Hal W. Polaire Producer's Assistant
T.J. Healy II Production Assistant
Name Title
Ernest Lehman Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Director Mike Nichols Nominated
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Actress Lauren Elizabeth Taylor Nominated
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actress Mary Badham Won
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actress Elizabeth Taylor Won
Venice Film Festival Best Supporting Actress George Segal Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Never mind Virginia Woolf, she's a lightweight compared to "Martha" (Elizabeth Taylor) as "Nick" (George Segal) and his wife "Honey" (Sandy Dennis) are about to discover for themselves. They've already been at a faculty do with her and husband "George" (Richard Burton) and have gone round after for ... a nightcap. That's their first mistake as a vitriolic battle of sarcastic and venomous wits is just getting started between their hosts. Initially they are sympathetically embarrassed but then that morphs into something a little more participative as the brandy and the bourbon starts to take effect on everyone. In vino vertitas has never been more true as it emerges that the older couple have a son, the other bugger, and it's clear from early on that something on that front is not right. The younger couple are not immune from the prevailing toxicity and before long they are also starting to question some of what underpins their own relationship. As tempers flare, things become even more unpleasant - even violent, as there are no holds barred and psychological cruelty becomes the benchmark for just about all of them. I saw this on stage and loved it. On the big screen, Mike Nicholls has used his cinematic advantages to make it even more potent. By using the cast together, splitting them off into pairs, changing the location from their increasingly small living room, occasionally involving an innocent bystander to temporarily lessen the stress levels and even pouring some coffee into them, we tell a remarkably hard-hitting story of grief. A festering, poisonous emotion that when not dealt with can grow to throttle just about any relationship - especially if the vintner is on it, too. Taylor and Burton excel, there's no other word for it. Her performance makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up and is perfectly foiled by the more understated but just as brutal characterisation of "George" by a Burton rather benignly bedecked in his middle-aged cardigan - but don't be fooled. Though the plot doesn't focus so much on the others at the start, both Segal and a strong effort from Dennis come into their own too as the ghastliness of their new friends proves contagious and noxious. It's also directed as if we were watching from various points in the room, which adds extra impact as we see things from differing perspectives - but always with a horribly natural flow. It often comes across as a continuous stream of filming akin to how it would be presented live on a stage. This is cinema at it's most visceral with compelling characterisations and dialogue that really does hurt. Maybe don't watch if you've just had a row, or a few drinks, or both? No remakes, please.

Jan 10, 2025