The Center for the Living Arts is a small building in the downtown district in Rock Island. The district was dead except for the small line outside of a locked door. The 1989 movie Heathers had a cult following, people today have the same passion for Heathers: The Musical. I had first heard of the musical from people online raving about how good it was and how catchy the songs are. After I had sat though Davenport West’s spring play Seussical, I needed something to get the bad taste out of my mouth. This play defiantly helped with that.…
Kristallnacht, 1938- Nazi's in Germany smash the windows of Jewish shops and set alight synagogues following the assassination of a German diplomat, Ernst Vom Rath. At the same time a Jewish mother and wife living in Brooklyn loses her ability to walk. I believe Arthur Miller uses the play to examine how situations, exploitation and her paralysed state to be a reflection of each other, with Sylvia Gellburg in her wheelchair representative of the paralysis felt by the Jewish community following this event. Phillip Gellburg also born into the Jewish religion would, you’d expect show compassion and sympathy to those affected. In my essay i will argue how instead Gellburg distances himself from the community as a whole revealing his Jewish heritage not to be something to honoured or respected but in fact a catalyst for his humiliation; In a similar way Sylvia is abashed by his response. It is easy to draw negative conclusions about Gellburg not only in the opening few pages but in the play as a whole not only by our response but due to the other character reactions to him. While we can draw independent conclusions about characters, our understanding through the perception of others such as Margaret Hyman describing him to be “a miserable pisser” and a “dictator” are highly persuasive.…
I worked very hard on this essay. I picked one of my favorite sculptors and told all that I found about him. I spent about 4-5 hours researching about this sculptor. It is what I spent most of my time doing, I was so interested in the sculptor I chose.…
Plot synopsis: This play focuses on the life of Troy Maxson during pre-civil rights movement times. Troy is really trying to break through the racial barrier at his job. He works as a garbage collector and he wants to drive the trucks instead of picking up the garbage. He works this job with his friend Bono, who he became friends with during his time in prison. Troy is married to Rose, a woman who loves him very much and almost worships him. His son, Lyon, who is always trying to get his dad to share money with him, also visits Troy. Troy also has a child with Rose, who’s name is Cory. Cory is a very skilled football player with aspirations to play in college. Gabriel is Troy’s brother who came back from World War 2 with a head injury that causes him to believe that he is the Archangel Gabriel from the bible.…
GREEN MEANS GO is a character-driven stage play that deals with the emotional themes of grief, loss, healing and forgiven. The play has one location and it’s an appealing location – a funeral home. The cast is contained. The play presents with a solid hook with the concept of two grieving families, who blames each other for the death of their loved ones and due to a scheduling error, both families show up at the funeral home at the same time. It’s a terrific hook for conflict and humor as well as character growth. Each family has an external goal…
The play is set in a fictional town in Indiana called Jackson. It is centered on a girl's life from age five to age twenty-six named Elisabeth. This girl has a disability called cerebral palsy and is unable to move her legs, so she is confined to a wheelchair. The play shows the audience scenes from her life and those having to do with her life. These scenes include her consciousness, acted out by an ensemble of characters; other children's interactions with her and conversations about her; situations that her parents are faced with; and townspeople's thoughts and conversations about her plight.…
In this literary analysis piece I will be breaking down the popular play by Arthur Miller, Death of a Salesman. Death of a Salesman, is a very riveting story that follows Willy Loman, a retiree-aged working class business man living in New York. Who deals with troublesome denial, and uses the events of the past to deal with his problems of the present, this begins to create more problems for Willy as he becomes unable to separate past events with current events. Along with intense financial strain as an ageing business man in a new era of business. Willy feels pressured to be very financially successful and well liked person by himself, and the people around him like his brother, Ben, and his neighbor, Charley, who has a very successful son who is a lawyer. Willy, along with many people in the real world, suffers…
For my first play, I attended “The Brothers Size”, written by Tarell Alvin McCraney, at The Old Globe Theatre, on Friday February 8, 2013 at 8 pm. As I was looking online for plays to attend to, this one in particular caught my interest because of how detailed the summary was of it. It reminded me of what you would read on the back of a dvd or a book and think to yourself, “I have to see this.” or “I have to read this.” “The Brothers Size” is about the individual's…
The play is presented at Hemsley Theatre , known as the black box, which forms an intimate…
The audience will also engage in the play because of the modern relevance that I will convey. The death of Willy is not only physical but it is also the death of the American capitalism, the ideals that Willy adheres to. This is applicable to the 21st century, as American suffers from an economic recession. However, at a personal level, the processes that lead to the death of capitalism such as overwhelming pressure to succeed, can also relate to the audience.…
life and his parentage. Arthur Miller's play, The Death of a Salesman, tells of a tragic character so wrapped up in his delusional world that reality and illusion fuse causing an internal explosion that leads to his undoing. Each play enacts the strugg…
In Japan, short poems have a long history. The earliest Japanese poetry such as that of the Manyoshu, written in 759 A.D., includes stirring narrative, dramatic and short lyrical poems which scholars believe were originally written as part of the pre-Buddhist or early Shinto ceremonial rituals (Haiku). This anthology includes anonymous songs and prayers designed to celebrate and pacify the gods, prayers for safe voyages, formal eulogies on the death of an Emperor or Empress and courting, marriage, planting and harvesting rituals. <br><br>The 5 syllable, 7 syllable, 5 syllable haiku has evolved and been reinvented many times over the centuries. One such form is the 31 syllable waka composed of five 5-7-5-7-7 syllable phrases. Developed as the early imperial court of the late eighth century consolidated cultural, social and political forms, the waka took its place as one of the important regularized poetic forms of the period. Within imperial circles, minor officials and scribes gained recognition as poem-providers and word specialists due to their ability to compose waka (Haiku). <br><br>Nevertheless, early Japanese poetry went beyond official usage. In the 14th century, an intellectual game developed where one person would write the first half <br><br>of a waka-like poem, and another would complete it, adding the two 7-syllable stanzas.As many as four people took part in composing such poetry in what developed as a serious poetic form, with many complicated rules to ensure that the elegant court-poetry diction and aesthetic ideals were maintained. <br><br>However, in large social gatherings where Japanese rice wine, or sake, was often served, participants became inebriated and started writing haikai, comic linked verse, which ignored many of the rules and allowed any subject matter at all, from the truly crude and erotic to pure slapstick, daffy comedy. <br><br>According to Dr. Kerkham, it was this lower-level poetic form which Matsunaga Teitoku, haikai master,…
The play, “Our Town”, as a whole is remarkably interesting, the characters, the story manger always stopping the story at random times because he feels like that is all the reader needs to know. I really like the metaphor that is being used throughout the play. The morning meaning birth in Act I, the wedding that shows how life moves along in Act II, and the night meaning death at the end of Act III.…
If the theater department at Newberry College was looking for a play to perform, I would prefer them to perform “Andre’s Mother.” This a short play that has only a few characters which were his friend Cal, his dad Arthur, his sister Penny, and his mother which the author refer to as ‘Andre’s Mother’, which is about Aids and gay people. Most of the play wasn’t about Andre, it was mostly about his mother, friends, and lover that he left behind when he died. As the play progress it gets deeper and deeper and gives the audience something to think about. It’s a bit on the melancholy side because of the death but at the same time the theme can open the eyes of those who can closely relate to it.…
The narrative of our term project begins with Maya and Kala’s graduation which quickly moves to a scene set years later with them having a phone call. This then changes over to their thoughts and what they actually wish they had said on that phone call. After this, there is a funeral. Maya ends up dead and Kala expresses her regrets of not coming to visit her. The scene then turns over to inner monologues by the actresses playing Maya and Kala’s thoughts. The message of this play is that you should attempt to stay in contact and connect with those around you, instead of throwing them…