MELISSA BLOCK, host:
This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Melissa Block.
ROBERT SIEGEL, host:
And I'm Robert Siegel.
Two months ago on this program, we interviewed an actor playing a retired Oklahoma college professor. The character knows that he's dying of cancer. In late December, I asked Dennis Letts what it was like being in the Broadway play "August: Osage County," written by his son Tracy.
Mr. DENNIS LETTS (Actor): It's very interesting because, of course, I'm a retired college professor - as is the character. I'm just not the alcoholic, and I haven't disappeared, yet. So...
SIEGEL: On Friday, at age 73, Dennis Letts succumbed to the cancer that he learned he had only after he started in the role, and just after he learned the play was bound for Broadway. It had opened in Chicago. In "August: Osage County," Dennis Letts played the patriarch of a large, dysfunctional family, which was only marginally different, he told me, than the one he led in real life.
Mr. LETTS: I have presided over a small, dysfunctional family.
(Soundbite of laughter)
SIEGEL: Of which Tracy is the product.
Mr. LETTS: Tracy is a part of it.
SIEGEL: Actor Dennis Letts last December. He died on Friday at age 73. He made his Broadway debut in "August; Osage County" in the production that won rave reviews last year.
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