quakefultales

doctor computational theater snek

indie game dev, AI and narrative design researcher, playwright


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posts from @quakefultales tagged #theatre

also:

Okay so Taming of the Shrew is one of Shakespeare's strangest plays to me. The man writes stories rife with women pulling one over on everyone, cross dressing, etc.

So why the fuck did he write a play where the female lead is utterly broken by a man and it is viewed as a comedy. This is the man who wrote a play about a mediocre white dude's greed and lust destroying a black man's otherwise internally happy marriage. This is the man who wrote Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing. This is the man who wrote All's Well That Ends Well. This is the man who wrote Merry Wives which is entirelyabout some middle aged women having fun at a man's expense. Why did he write Taming of the Shrew?

I have seen it played very straight with Katherine being broken and I have seen it played as them tricking the asshole parents. I don't know which was the bard's intent and it doesnt really matter. More, it is strange to me that someone with the body of work of Shakespeare, with numerous fun and active women in his stories, would write something like Shrew, if we take the text at very face value, that it is good that Katherine becomes subservient. It has been a while since I read or watched Shrew, but when it is done winking to the audience, the story feels fuller. I'll admit I haven't seen Katherine and Petruchio's romance done especially well, but I do think there is more there than the straightforward reading lets on. Maybe I'll do my own version of it eventually who knows



I saw this play a few years ago and remember liking it a lot, it's about the gentrification of a black neighborhood in 1968/69. If you're not familiar with August Wilson, he did a series of plays about black life in every decade post civil war

He's great, he writes amazing dialogue, and knows how to keep the spark of hope alive in the middle of terrible things

The thing I didnt appreciate the first time I saw it was how much it is a play about taking what you are owed and what you are worth. There are three main plotlines in the show, Memphis won't take less than $25k for his diner to be torn down, Sterling wants to get his winning lottery numbers, and Hambone wants to get the ham he is owed for painting the white butcher's fence

All of this takes being stubborn and knowing what you are worth and not accepting the crumbs people give you

So of course there's a current of class in the script too. The undertaker is also the community's landlord and is far and away the wealthiest person we see. Everyone is desperate for money to the point of trying to win some luck from the recently deceased local profit at his wake

But the other part of getting what you are owed is solidarity. Memphis gets better than his floor price by sticking to his guns, and as much as he complains about people using his diner in certain ways, he doesn't throw them out ever. Hambone only posthumously gets his ham thanks to Sterling seeing him. And Sterling gets his winnings and bet back by going and getting it from the white owners, because he doesn't take out getting screwed over on the the man selling the numbers

Also quite a bit about respecting those who came before you and not hiding from that history

Anyway it's a great show if you ever get a chance to see it