American Buffalo, two-act play by David Mamet, produced in 1975 and published in 1976. With sparse action and vivid dialogue, it examines mistrust and dishonesty among the conspirators in an aborted burglary.
Don Dubrow, the owner of a junk shop where the action takes place, decides to steal a customer’s coin collection when he feels that he has been bested in a transaction involving a buffalo nickel. He enlists the help of a young junkie named Bobby but is later convinced by a manipulative friend that Bobby is incompetent. Unable to trust either, Don invites a third person to join him. Bobby becomes a scapegoat as the burglary plot unravels and tensions build into suspicion, anger, and violence.