After an interruption, a character in this play resumes telling a story about eating crumb cake in a woman’s kitchen, but disappointingly reveals that the cake was store-bought. This play’s second act opens with a character remarking that people in school told him about “numbers of such magnitude that multiplying them by two made no difference.” To aid a colleague, a character in this play pretends to be trying to get to his wife’s birthday party in Kenilworth. That character in this play is involved in selling material to Jerry Graff. Some productions of this play remove dialogue in which characters suggest that anyone named Patel is a cheapskate, some of which is spoken in a booth in a Chinese restaurant. For 10 points, the unseen bosses Mitch and Murray set up a sales contest in what David Mamet play about real estate agents? ■END■
ANSWER: Glengarry Glen Ross
<American Literature>
= Average correct buzz position