A strong play conveying three times in the life of Frank Lloyd Wright plus a wonderful discussion among the author, actor, and an interviewer. I generally avoid writings about Wright because I find him very unpleasant but I am pleased to have found this one on audio. The author does not hide the despicable aspects of Wright's life. The actor said it was much more fun to play Wright than a more pleasant person because he spends his own life trying to be a good guy and this gives him a chance to say things he would never say otherwise -- the actor was very witty.
I liked the second act in which the perspective is from his son who worked for his father and felt the pain of his father's perfidy. In a manner surprising like a high ranking person of today, Wright set up a school, charged the students enormous fees, provided no training but had his students work on the rebuilding of Taliesen.
The synthesis of the work provided by Goodreads is excellent. I am attempting to not parrot that work but encourage readers to use it as a source. I would also encourage listening to the work as it is very well done.