You almost want to see a prequel now — call it Glengarry Glen Ross: The Old Days.
But in Glengarry Glen Ross, it brings up the rear.
In 1982 David Mamet wrote Glengarry Glen Ross, a play about salesmen based on his own experiences as an office manager for a shady Chicago real estate company in the 1970s.
The most well-known scene — certainly the most frequently quoted — in Glengarry Glen Ross was not in the original stage version, the version that won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1984.