I love the '50s and grew up loving works from that time period and from those great playwrights.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I love '50s music, all that stuff from the '50s.
I love old movies. The '40s theatre pace is fantastic.
I used to love the '20s.
I think that I recall the nostalgic '50s: the start of early television and rock-and-roll, and I think everything seemed to get very generic. Not much has changed.
I think the thing's that perhaps sad really is that younger people haven't come in and I think it must have been absolutely fantastic to have worked in the 50's when you had all of the great Broadway composers and when West Side Story didn't win the Tony Award.
The '50s was a pretty wonderful time for people, it was hopeful.
I was trained in the '50s as a New Critic. I remember what literature was like before the New Critics, when people stood up and talked about Shelley's soul and such things.
People in their early 20s are not often considered the target demographic for new plays; musicals have had much more success in exploring that coming-of-age period of life.
The world loves the 1950s.
I never thought I wanted to write about the '50s, because I thought it was the most boring and bland decade to grow up in, and I never wanted to go back there.