Laughter on the 23rd Floor By Neil Simon

April 12 - HELD OVER THROUGH May 19, 1996

Gainesville Sun ReviewAlligator Review
A few pages from the Laughter ... Playbill

From America's favorite playwright, Neil Simon, Laughter on the 23rd Floor is a "screamingly funny" (Philadelphia Inquirer) Broadway hit about a team of comedy writers in television's Golden Age.

Set in 1953, Neil Simon's "flat-out funniest play in years" (Dennis Cunningham, CBS- TV) re-creates the mayhem, neuroses, nonstop gags, and constant one-upmanship of a team of brilliantly funny social misfits as they write The Max Prince Show, a weekly variety program. Among the crew are Milt, the insult artist; Ira, the hypochondriac whose dream is to have a virus named after him; and Val, a Russian emigre‚ who takes a Berlitz course so he can curse without an accent. They are devoted to their boss, Max, a comic genius, a tyrant, and a paranoiac with a heart of gold. But his penchant for tippling and popping too many pills is growing under the pressures of a rising McCarthyism, network executives, and sponsors who want him to cut back his "too-smart" show and staff so that they can chase after the Leave It to Beaver and Father Knows Best audience.

Broadway's funniest playwright writing about a team of comedy writers? It's no wonder Laughter on the 23rd Floor is "the funniest comedy on Broadway in years" (Variety).

Here's what critics say:

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