Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Time is essence
Simple
Also, can I say that the stage manager is awesome? He was just so chill through the whole deal, and was just so natural. I also really liked how he filled in for other characters which amused me, and then became a character himself. He just seemed to flow and make the whole thing work. He also came off as a nice guy which is always a plus. He was down to earth, chill, and helpful. he was definitely my favorite hands down.
There's something way down deep that's eternal about every human being.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Time is of the essence
Monday, December 5, 2011
Our Town
Victims of Time
I loved the role of the stage manager as he played the time keeper, but reached out the audience every chance he could. I also liked how the play was separated in three acts according to stages in life: daily life, love and marriage, and death.
Wilder capitalized on two important things: relationships and time. Already discussing how time can rob us of life, it also shows how all people take it for granted. After reading this, I was intensely nostalgic. As for relationships, every character formed one with another character. Be it neighborly friends, marriage, friends, school mates, or the milkman; their whole lives depended on the companionship of one another and to maintain that friendship.
At the end of reading, I bet everyone can agree that there is just something so timeless about this whole play.
Wilder's Wake Up Call.
Out Town
I found Our Town to be a very interesting an intriguing read. I found that there were so many themes within the plot that caught my attention. There were many instances where I found myself analyzing the relationship between the characters and the message that the playwright is striving to portray. I think that one of the most important motifs mentioned is the importance of relationships between humanity. Even from the beginning of the play, the Stage Manager seeks to establish a relationship with the audience. The play’s titles assess the importance of community and companionship. I loved the fact that Wilder does uses the theatre in a realistic manner. Many of the scenes portrayed in the play are moments that would occur in real life: a milk man delivers milk, a family breakfast, two people fall in love. However, I found it interesting that the author sought to disconnect the audience from the theatre so that the message of the play would be ore prevalent.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
"Top" boys.....
Top Guys?
Glengarry Glen Rose blog
I feel as if his play would be easier to watch than it was to read. Just like the last two plays we read I guess this play can be considered Epic theatre because I definitely did not make any types of connections with any of the characters. Though, I was confused while reading it I can state that some of it reminded me of Top Girls. The idea of doing whatever it takes to be at the top. Capitalism fosters greed in this play just as it did in Top Girls. It is interesting to see it from a man’s perspective versus a female’s perspective as in Top Girls. I am pretty sure the men in the class will have a lot of comments to make on this subject.
Monday, November 28, 2011
A Confusing play
I thought that the entire play was a negative commentary on the effects of capitalism and greed. I felt that the Author of this play, Mamet paid close attention to human behavior which made the play very believable but still confusing.
And that's our life. That's it. Where is the moment?
However, the plot (if you can find it) left much to be desired. Essentially, four salesmen hate the company that they work for and are either trying to outsell one another or plot the downfall of the company. While such loathing of one’s employers is an easily relatable topic, I am afraid it cannot constitute an entire storyline, and if it can, Mamet does a terrible job of trying. The play does not seem to be isolationist theatre, however it is impossible to feel anything towards any of the characters. Moss and Roma are simultaneously obnoxious and oily; Levene is desperate; Lingk and Aronow are naïve and pitiful; Williamson and Baylen are (for lack of a better term) assholes. A majority of the dialogue, specifically when Moss or Roma speak, is repetitive or, worse, altogether pointless. The first act was conveniently to the point in setting up the characters, albeit Scene 3 was ridiculously difficult to read, but the second act, which was almost twice as long, was truly boring. In all honesty, I have no idea how it all ends, except that Roma is still self-deluded and intolerable. Overall, I prefer to think Mamet must have better work than this to have earned the reputation that precedes him.
Not Bad
Talking the talk
The characters were equally interesting because you could clearly tell who were the strong salesmen, the weak salesmen, and the people they resented. Levene just reeked of desperation and I pitied him the most. It was sad to see that he had a great career but then lost it from the bad streak and robbing the office. Moss was fun to read just because he was so good with his wording to back Aaronnow into possibly robbing the bank. Roma was also fun to follow. He was my favorite because of his elaborate sale to Lingk and how he improvised the whole Dr. Ray Morton out of air to make Lingk believe that he was actually doing something important instead of avoiding the whole situation.
The basic messages I got out of this play were the importance of how to talk and success versus failure in the business world. The importance of talking involves how to talk to people to persuade them that they need what the salesman is selling. That essentially determines the success or failure of the salesmen. If they can’t give a good speech or out-wit a person, they won’t be able to make a sale.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Costs of being "on top".
Top Girls
Monday, November 14, 2011
Not a top Play
Top ladies, not mennnnn
Freud would have a field day with this one.
That being said in concerns to the subject matter itself, let me turn attention to her pretentiously specific speech patterns. I have never seen a playwright make such a deal out of overlapping dialogue as Churchill did in this. I can only think that this was saying that women are too busy speaking over one another to listen and get anything accomplished. Considering she was a successful female herself, I have to imagine this was a poor attempt at self-satire and not truly a social commentary on the inadequacies of women.
TOP GIRLS!
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
FamILY
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Picasso's in town, isn't that incredible?
Monday, November 7, 2011
True West
A Deeper Meaning
The apple never really falls to far from the tree
In the past few plays we have read they all have involved “The American Dream”. I should say they involved “The American Nightmare”. These plays portray the image of everyone trying to achieve the American Dream because it is what is culturally acceptable, but in the end everything turns out all wrong. If I did not get any other message from reading these plays I have definitely learned that “Being you” and living within your means is what will truly make you happy. We cannot worry about trying to please our neighbors because in reality they are trying to please us.
True west was an interesting read. Some scenes were amusing but others puzzling. It was very funny when Lee returned home with a stolen television and he told Saul Kimmer that he “just got Austin’s color T.V. back from the shop.” Both of the boys later become drunk and everything becomes a competition to the two of them. They do some pretty hilarious drunken acts but it began to seem like they were acting a bit crazy. Austin started to express that he was tired of his boring life and would like to live free like Lee does but Lee only denies that Austin would be able to last trying to live like Lee. It was so funny when Austin tried to prove he can be bad and steals a bunch of toasters. Austin and Lee switched roles mid-play. Austin became the uncontrollable drunk and Lee the more mature acting one. Lee was just trying to write his own screen play and Austin was acting like a fool. There were very emotional times, the brothers were constantly fighting and yelling at each other. They were drunk and winey as well. I wondered about the mother, if she was crazy or not. She returned home to a destroyed house and had very little to say about it, her plants were dead, she thought Picasso was alive and at a museum giving out autographs, and her sons were killing each other and all the time she remained calm and tranquil. I found it all strange but amusing at the same time.
Normal People
What is the TRUE west?
Sunday, November 6, 2011
What the desert heat can do to a man
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Im afraid of MarthAAAAA!
Who's Afraid of Edward Albee?
Monday, October 31, 2011
Relationships
Crazy attracts Crazy
Martha and George both came from unstable childhoods so I would expect nothing less from them. They never dealt with or seeked help for the issues of their past so they operate the only way they know how.
In all honesty, Albee hit the nail right on the spot. This play was set in the 1960’s and we are in the 2011 dealing with some of the same issues. It is still true to today’s society. So many people continue to have unhealthy relationships because they are scared of what the next person may think of them.
Who's afraid of Martha and George?
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf
Martha is affraid...
The fun and games of Virginia Woolf
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Marxist Madness
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
The horrors of a war
Monday, October 24, 2011
Die Unglaubliche Mutter Courage!
The Incredible Mother Courage!
Mother Courage is a beyond incredible play. This is one of my favorites by far. I truly love how Bertolt Brecht captures the war in his play. This play gives such an amazing view of war and what it was like to live in the time of the war. “Mother Courage” may seem like a character without feelings and completely obsessed with earning money but I see that there is more to her than that. Brecht originally wrote the part for his own wife so I feel that he identifies with it more than it seems. His wife may be an actress but I feel that he wrote the part with many more motherly aspects because he probably had inspiration from his own wife’s motherly abilities. Yes, “Mother Courage” should have just gotten away from the war and saved her and her children’s lives but she didn’t therefore, she had to display courage in the way that she had to accept her children’s deaths quicker than most and move on with life. To some this may seem insensitive but it is really a courageous quality because she was hiding her pain and in the event of such tragedies it is probably one of the hardest things to ever do. I personally believe that Brecht created “Mother Courage” to be a courageous character and not the opposite.