...I guess I got invested early on in what I perceived was a lesbian love story. And the firing of the Jewish actress, who I mistakenly thought was the same character as the playwright's wife. (I didn't figure out she wasn't till late in the play.).
The odd thing was that neither of the two leading ladies were sufficiently differentiated for me, except when the one became a shiksa. And I kept wanting to know what happened to the actress-character who became a lesbian. But maybe that never even happened. Maybe that lesbian stuff was only in the "onstage" scenes from "God of Vengeance," and all the (multitude of...?) actresses who played those roles were just actresses, probably heterosexual and no set of them had ever fallen in love.
Curiouser and curiouser.
Someone asked me about museums. I like moma and the met, but the met's better for family meetings and luncheons because moma gets too crowded. MOMA introduced me to DuChamp when I was a kid, so I will always love it, if only for that. |