This article is about the play. For the film adaptation, see Same Time, Next Year.
Same Time Next Year may also refer to the short story by Neal Shusterman about time travel.
Same Time, Next Year
is 1975 comedy play by Bernard Slade. The plot focuses on two people, married to others, who meet for a romantic tryst once a year for two dozen years.
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SAME TIME, NEXT YEAR TICKETS
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Plot synopsis
New Jersey accountant George and
Oakland, California housewife Doris meet at a
Northern California inn in February 1951. They have an
affair, then agree to meet once a year, despite the fact both are married to others and have six children between them.
Over the course of the next 24 years, they develop an emotional intimacy deeper than what one would expect to find between two people meeting for a clandestine relationship just once a year. During the time they spend with each other, they discuss the births, deaths, and marital problems each is experiencing at home, while they adapt themselves to the social changes affecting their lives.
Production
The
Broadway production was directed by
Gene Saks. After four previews, it opened on March 14, 1975 at the
Brooks Atkinson Theatre with
Ellen Burstyn as Doris and
Charles Grodin as George. It transferred to the
Ambassador Theatre on May 16, 1978 and remained there until it closed on September 3 the same year. It played a total of 1,453 performances during its run.
Cast replacements over the years included
Sandy Dennis,
Hope Lange,
Betsy Palmer,
Loretta Swit, and
Joyce Van Patten as Doris and
Ted Bessell,
Conrad Janis,
Monte Markham, and
Don Murray as George.
Awards and nominations
The play was nominated for the
Tony Award for Best Play and won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New American Play. Ellen Burstyn won both the
Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play and the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play. Charles Grodin was nominated for the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actor in a Play, and Gene Saks was nominated for the
Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play and the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director of a Play.
Film adaptations
A
1978 film adaptation directed by
Robert Mulligan starred
Ellen Burstyn and
Alan Alda. The play also served as the basis for
I Will Wait for You
, a 1994 film directed by
Hong Kong filmmaker
Clifton Ko.