
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


David Mamet is one of the most celebrated American playwrights of the last century: Sexual Perversity in Chicago, Speed-the-Plow, American Buffalo, and Glengarry Glen Ross— which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1983 and remains timely today. Our conversation unfolds, fittingly, in three acts.
Act I: the inspiration behind his new novel about education, Some Recollections of St. Ives (5:38), weathering the ‘emotional hurricane’ of his childhood in Chicago (18:22), and how the drama of those early years materialized in his 1994 play The Cryptogram and beyond (27:00).
In Act II, Mamet talks writing dialogue for the stage and screen (29:16), his disdain for psychoanalysis and the Actors Studio (32:32), and the philosophy that guided both his first theatre company (33:24) and subsequent plays (38:01).
In the closing act, we wrestle with Mamet’s rightward shift: his views on DEI (41:48), late-stage capitalism (51:33), ‘Constitutional Conservatism’ as it relates to the 2020 election (1:01:48), his latest book The Disenlightenment: Politics, Horror, and Entertainment (1:07:06), and what he believes a ‘peaceful and patriotic’ protest should look like (1:10:12).
Watch this conversation on our new YouTube channel.
Thoughts or future guest ideas? Email us at [email protected].
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Lemonada Media4.8
12961,296 ratings
David Mamet is one of the most celebrated American playwrights of the last century: Sexual Perversity in Chicago, Speed-the-Plow, American Buffalo, and Glengarry Glen Ross— which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1983 and remains timely today. Our conversation unfolds, fittingly, in three acts.
Act I: the inspiration behind his new novel about education, Some Recollections of St. Ives (5:38), weathering the ‘emotional hurricane’ of his childhood in Chicago (18:22), and how the drama of those early years materialized in his 1994 play The Cryptogram and beyond (27:00).
In Act II, Mamet talks writing dialogue for the stage and screen (29:16), his disdain for psychoanalysis and the Actors Studio (32:32), and the philosophy that guided both his first theatre company (33:24) and subsequent plays (38:01).
In the closing act, we wrestle with Mamet’s rightward shift: his views on DEI (41:48), late-stage capitalism (51:33), ‘Constitutional Conservatism’ as it relates to the 2020 election (1:01:48), his latest book The Disenlightenment: Politics, Horror, and Entertainment (1:07:06), and what he believes a ‘peaceful and patriotic’ protest should look like (1:10:12).
Watch this conversation on our new YouTube channel.
Thoughts or future guest ideas? Email us at [email protected].
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

38,481 Listeners

6,835 Listeners

29,094 Listeners

3,954 Listeners

612 Listeners

7,720 Listeners

111 Listeners

102 Listeners

1,077 Listeners

394 Listeners

319 Listeners

4,878 Listeners

5,122 Listeners

760 Listeners

597 Listeners

3,473 Listeners

388 Listeners

244 Listeners

88 Listeners

119 Listeners

1,591 Listeners

1,895 Listeners

11,368 Listeners

1,187 Listeners

623 Listeners

643 Listeners

87 Listeners

951 Listeners

447 Listeners

46 Listeners

149 Listeners

65 Listeners

22 Listeners

158 Listeners