Edward Albee's play, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, premiered in 1963 and was later adapted into a film version in 1966. The play/film utilizes Woolf's name as a musical punch-line for a joke that replaces "the big bad wolf" in the song "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?" with "Virginia Woolf". The play and film have nothing to do with the author or her life.
Dam you wikipedia
i was going to say something smart here...but forgot.....
um-
i think who's afraid of virgina woolf and a room of one's own have many interelated or corresponding theme- e.g. truth and illusion
martha: truth and illusion george you don't know the difference
and in a room of one's own, virginia (through mary beton/seton) tries to sort out truth and illusion between the genders- as albees play also does this- this is a pretty strong link.
also existentialism- the (religious-kinda) movement exploring the sense of self is a strong theme throughout both albees absurdist drama and woolfs extended essay.....
strong personal and social contexts are chared by both authors.
both authors wrote their respective works post-world war in an economic boom time.
both authors were trying to shatter the current social/culture 'illusions' of the time-
albee shattering the 'american dream' and woolf shattering the apparent gender dysphoria of the time- the year woolfs work was written and published was the year all women in britain got the vote....
um- there are other things of course...