
The Guys
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Narrated by:
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Swoosie Kurtz
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Bill Irwin
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By:
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Anne Nelson
First performed in a hit off-off-Broadway production, and soon to be a film starring Sigourney Weaver and Anthony LaPaglia, The Guys is a timeless drama about the surprising truths people can discover in ordinary lives, and the connections we make with others and ourselves in times of tragedy. Paralyzed by grief and unable to put his thoughts into words, Nick, a fire captain, seeks out the help of a writer to compose eulogies for the colleagues and friends he lost in the catastrophic events of September 11, 2001. As Joan, an editor by trade, draws Nick out about “the guys,” powerful profiles emerge, revealing vivid personalities and the substance and meaning that lie beneath the surface of seemingly unremarkable people. As the individual talents and enthusiasms of the people within the small firehouse community are realized, we come to understand the uniqueness and value of what each person has to contribute. And Nick and Joan, two people who under normal circumstances never would have met, jump the well-defined tracks of their own lives, and so learn about themselves, about life, and about the healing power of human connection, through talking about the guys.
©2002 Anne Nelson (P)2002 Random House, Inc.One passage of the play, "The Science of Pain," was adapted from the book Listening to Prozac, by Peter D. Kramer
Original jacket photograph courtesy of Content Film
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Critic reviews
“The Guys cannot but hit home.”—New York magazine
“A stark and simple, potent and poignant play, brimming with edgy humanity.”—New York Post
“The Guys is not an ordinary night in the theater....What comes through is that humanity can be exalted by expression as well as the other way around.”—The New York Times
Extraordinary
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Be prepared to cry…
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I am also grateful to Ms. Nelson for her real life ministry to that FDNY captain and to the countless fire houses she visited, assisting the grieving firefighters of the city of New York in managing the avalanche of media attention they received.
The next time you see an engine or ladder on the road, pull your car over and say "Thank you" for men and women who are dedicated to running into burning buildings. Remember that approximately 90% of the firefighters in the USA are not paid for doing so. They are also every bit as professional as the guys who are paid.
Thank you, Anne Nelson
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There are two characters - the editor and the fire captain. I thought some of the material the editor includes about herself was good and to the point. For example, the anecdote about how she comes to contact her husband who can see the towers out his window. Also her thoughts that other NYers shared that she wanted to do something significant after the tragedy.
But there was a little much about her, I would cut 30% of her parts. And it seemed to end suddenly, like she didn't do enough of the firefighter portraits to satisfy. As I understand, this was written as a play, and written very rapidly. Maybe other later versions will be improved?
Still, very interesting, the dialog was good, worth listening.
good treatment
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Karin from Dresden
touching listening
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too melodramatic?
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