Terribly Terribly
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Terribly Terribly is a 1967 Australian play by Alan Hopgood. It was different from his typical work, being an "intellectual comedy thriller" rather than a comedy. It made its debut in America in 1967 at the University of California, where Hopgood had a connection through the Union Rep in Melbourne. It was his fourth play and was written before Private Yuk Objects.[2][3]
| Terribly Terrible | |
|---|---|
| Written by | Alan Hopgood |
| Directed by | Douglas McDermott |
| Date premiered | March 2, 1967[1] |
| Place premiered | Professional Resident Theatre, University of California |
| Original language | English |
| Subject | murder |
| Genre | thriller |
Hopgood said the play was inspired by Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and him wondering what George and Martha would do if they decided to commit murder.[4]
The Sacramento Bee called it "clever, amusing and steadily interesting" though also "odd... because it mixes comedy with murder."[5] The San Francisco Examiner called it "trivial and rather silly".[6]
The play did not premiere in Australia until 1974. The Age called it "a thin and unrewarding play."[7]
Premise
A bored married couple decide to commit murder.