Robert Anderson, 'Tea and Sympathy' author, dies
By MICHAEL KUCHWARA

NEW YORK - Playwright Robert Anderson, author of such Broadway hits as 
"Tea and Sympathy" and "You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's 
Running," has died at age 91.

His stepdaughter, Mary-Kelly Busch, said Anderson died Monday of 
pneumonia at his Manhattan home and had Alzheimer's disease for the last 
few years.

Anderson also wrote Hollywood screenplays, TV scripts and several 
novels, but it was his stage work that brought him the most fame.

He's best known for "Tea and Sympathy," a drama about the relationship 
between the wife of a headmaster at a New England prep school and a 
student suspected of being gay.

The play, which opened on Broadway in 1953, starred Deborah Kerr as the 
wife and John Kerr as the young man. Both actors repeated their roles in 
the 1956 film version, which featured a screenplay by Anderson and was 
directed by Vincent Minnelli.

Anderson's script contained an often quoted line, uttered by the wife to 
the student about their affair: "Years from now, when you talk of this _ 
and you will _ be kind."

His other big Broadway success was "You Know I Can't Hear You When the 
Water's Running," a collection of four one-act comedies, mostly about 
marriage, that opened in New York in 1967 and ran for more than 700 
performances. Featured in the cast were Martin Balsam, George Grizzard, 
Eileen Heckart and Melinda Dillon.

Anderson's other major Broadway productions included "Silent Night, Holy 
Night" (1959), which starred Henry Fonda and Barbara Bel Geddes, and "I 
Never Sang for My Father" (1968) about a contentious father-son 
relationship. The cast included Hal Holbrook, Lillian Gish and Alan Webb.

His work in Hollywood included screenplays for "Until They Sail" (1957), 
"The Nun's Story (1959), for which he received an Academy Award 
nomination, and "The Sand Pebbles" (1966), a Steve McQueen epic set in 
1920s China.

In 1970s, Anderson turned to writing novels: "After" (1973) and "Getting 
Up and Going Home" (1978), and he also wrote extensively for television.

Born April 28, 1917, in New York, Anderson went to Harvard. He served as 
a lieutenant in the Navy in the Pacific during World War II. After the 
war, he studied with John Gassner at the New School's Dramatic Workshop. 
Anderson's first Broadway effort was contributing to a short-lived revue 
"Dance Me a Song" (1950), whose cast included Wally Cox and Bob Fosse.

After his first wife, Phyllis Stohl, died in 1956, Anderson married 
actress Teresa Wright in 1959. Though they divorced in 1978, the couple 
remained close friends until her death in 2005.

A memorial service is planned for Friday.

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