Preview

Play It As It Lays Characters

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
292 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Play It As It Lays Characters
"Play it as it Lays" is a very intriguing read. First of all, the main character, Maria, is an extremely relatable . Though the novel documents her spiral into mental illness, Maria's struggles are caused by tragedies every human being must endure at some point in their lives such as heartbreak, loss of loved ones and making difficult decisions, which in Maria's case is whether or not to have an abortion after becoming pregnant during an affair, . Maria often times resorts to alcohol, drugs, and isolating herself from society to deal with her overwhelming feelings of depression . Another fascinating aspect of the novel is that it is a satire of Hollywood culture Thought at first Maria was thrilled with the attention she received as a young

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    Annie is the smartest student in the class. She is both liked by the teachers and the students which leads to her befriending a girl named Gwen. Everyday after school Gwen and Annie walk home from school together. Annie then decides that there is a chance to try and replace her relationship with Gwen for the one that she used to have with her mother, but then realizes that is not possible. Annie makes another friend; the Red Girl, who has a very different personality and different morals than Annie and her family. Annie's relationships with Gwen and the Red girl are ways that she has used to deal with the changes with her relationship with her mother. This relationship becomes a way for Annie to rebel against her family, especially her mother. Annie is trying to find her own way to become her own person. The Red Girl is a tomboy who runs around dirty and scruffy. This is something of which her mother does not approve. Annie really enjoys this difference in family morals. Even though she understands it goes against what her family believes in, Annie decides to start playing marbles which then leads into picking up the negative side of Red Girl. She decides to start stealing and lying daily. One day Annie's mother finds out about her new personality and starts to search for the things that she has stolen but is unable to, which amuses Annie. This new Annie starts to die down when Red Girl moves…

    • 921 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    It’s the relationship between Mademoiselle Reisz and Edna. Madame is very talented especially when it comes to playing the piano. Madames talents get over a lot but she doesn’t care. You first meet Reisz in about the middle of the book and from there on Madame and Edna get closer and closer. Edna even tells Reisz her love for Robert before anyone else knew. The main thing that stuck out with Madame is that she is very independant and she doesn’t care about others opinion. To me, Madame Reisz’s independance rubbed off on Edna and that would lead to Edna trying to become more…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Maria Wyeth is an actress, a beaut, a dimming star, a schizophrenic, and beyond that a untraditional loving mother to Kate, her daughter. The way Joan Didion writes “Play It As It Lays” in satirical way upon Hollywood lifestyle is tantalizing the mind to think that Hollywood is full of people who have problems of drinking, drug abuse, and sex. Which is undeniable happening in the most era of Hollywood lifestyle since the day one. Fame, success and pouring fortune are hard to handle for, practically anyone who deals with the hazardous lifestyle of Hollywood. Human relationship is not weigh into the equation, includes the marriage that is usually ruined in the lifestyle, if not meant to be doomed.…

    • 1420 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A 1991 play, Wit written by Margaret Edson explore a women’s life, Vivian Bearing, is suffering from the final stage of ovarian cancer and being treated with a full dose chemotherapy experiment for eight months. She finds out she has cancer and has to deal with it all by herself with no family members and not many friends. Vivian is a literature professor of seventeenth century poetry and also specializes in the Holy Sonnets of John Donne. (Edson pg. 5) She understood her life in an analytical security and she identifies herself as a scholar professor and a specialist in her field. The setting of this play is over the course of two hours in a hospital because that is all the time she has to tell us what happens to her and she knows that she…

    • 421 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    * It is the story of James Piper, orphaned child, who becomes a piano tuner. When James was 18, he met Material, 13, and they elope to the close by village. Materia’s family were against her marriage. James then has three daughters, Kathleen, Mercedes, and Frances. James was a good man, but slowly dark side of his nature asserted itself. He serves in France during the Great War to make money. But the war comes to an end. He returns to his family. Kathleen is dispatched to New York City to study opera, she gets pregnant and later finds a lesbian partner. James finds out and brings his daughter back. Soon he is widower and Kathleen dies while giving birth to the twins. Mercedes tries her best to be the mother of…

    • 1934 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    It is a very interesting piece of literature because the story is vague enough to create a heated debate whether she had an abortion or not in the end. We can make up the future of their relationships in our imaginations and how she might be going to live. It enabled us to figure out what the story were based on, and it showed us a very realistic feature of our very own world we live in and how some people are irresponsible and so self-centered.…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    And the Band played on

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The film, “And The Band Played On,” is based on the discovery of the AIDS epidemic in the United States. The film focuses on a set of doctors who are trying to discover this mysterious disease that has been killing off people, slowly and suddenly. It was very interesting watching these medical professionals work so hard and do so much research on one certain disease. Some of them did not get a long and did not have the same views on the disease. For example, two of the doctors, Dr. Gallo and Dr. Francis did not see eye-to-eye and argued several times. Along with these professionals trying to discover the disease there was controversy with the political aspect as well. It was terrifying for them to let the public know what was going on especially when they were not entirely sure what the disease actually was, so they did not want to mislead the public. The public funding was cheap and when they did let the public in on what they had found they were not accepting of it.…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Susan Glaspell is recognised as being one of the realest authors when it comes to style in American Literature. Glaspell speaks the truth, uses a lot of emotion and puts her characters in real life situations that could happen, maybe to shake her audience and to say “hey, wake up!”. She has a very unique way of making her characters seem normal, It doesn't feel like you're reading a play and everything is scripted, but you actually feel like your present and experiencing what's going on. A very interesting twist she puts into her writing is she critiques society, Glaspell isn't afraid to take a stand. For instance, in this play it's taking a stand for woman.…

    • 241 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Summary: based on a true story about a French diplomat who lived for twenty years as the lover of a person he thought was a Chinese female actress but who was in fact a Chinese male spy. Especially, it is a play base on a true story not a fiction.…

    • 459 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Susan Glaspell Trifles

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Susan Glaspell wrote her one act play to show women of all ages that women can too thrive to be more than just some one who does all of the household chores and takes care of their husband and children. The Stage directions of the play are a large role in affecting the mood of the play.…

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I think the book is about friendship and grief, it shows the influence of grief on friendship. I think with these two themes you can come up with an amazing story but I find that the writer did not utilise these themes as much as she could. She just illustrates a really bad friendship in which grief and acceptance is just not enough convincing. So the book is also about the friendship between Anna and Frankie and to me it feels that remaining their friendship has no purpose, the first problem that has to be solved is Anna and Frankie coming to terms with their secrets for each other and then the consequence of that is that their friendship will remain. But for what purpose? So Frankie keeps on insisting that Anna should have sex and keeps pushing…

    • 264 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Educating Rita

    • 1065 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Educating Rita written Willy Russel is a great play with a good dialogue. The play focuses on only two characters, Rita and her teacher Frank. Personally I like Rita’s personality even though I couldn’t really relate to her at all. Rita is portrayed as a working class woman but she wants to change herself and her class, it appears that she isn’t satisfied with who she is. During the play, she tries to break away from her social class. Throughout the play it’s pretty evident that Rita that Rita wants to be like Frank as he seems to have his life in order but it turns out that he has his problems too. I think most people would relate to that, therefore they would be more engaged into the play and perhaps it would make them reflect upon their own lives. I guess it’s safe to say that for the most part of the play, she is in between being unhappy with her lower class identity and being lost.…

    • 1065 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Every character wants and desires something or someone by the end of the play. It starts with a love story, Callimaco lusts over beautiful Lucrezia. Only problem is that Lucrezia is married and the scheming begins. Ligurio, a former marriage broker, is hired by Callimaco to come up with a plan to get Lucrezia. Nica is Lucrezia’s husband and they have been trying for a baby boy with no success. Callimaco and Ligurio come up with a plan to trick Nica into letting another man sleep with his wife. Callimaco pretends to be a doctor and tells Nica if Lucrezia drinks a potion that she will be able to become pregnant with a boy. Callimaco also states that the first person to a sleep with a woman who has consumed this potion will die the very next day. Nica agrees to this plan and now just has to convince his wife to agree to the plan. With the help of their priest, Timoteo, they are able to convince Lucrezia it is the right thing to do. Timoteo is granted money for his favor of “forgiving” Lucrezia of any future sins. Lucrezia follows through with the potion, Callimaco in disguise is chosen to be the sucker that “dies” for sex with Lucrezia, and Nica now believe he will have his first-born son. The play is a tangled web of lies that begin with the root of self-interests in each character.…

    • 1074 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In today’s socioeconomic world, there is no room for slacking off or failure. People are seen as individuals who earn their social status and there is much pressure to succeed. In the plays, “The Glass Menagerie” and “A Streetcar Named Desire” both written by Tennessee Williams, there are two main characters who are not capable of living in the present and have a difficult time facing reality. Amanda Wingfield, the mother from “The Glass Menagerie” and Blanche Dubois, Stella’s sister in “A Streetcar Named Desire” have many similar characteristics and life styles that are discovers throughout each play. In the article “Tennessee Williams and the Predicament of Women” written by Louise Blackwell both of these women are defined as “Women who have learned to be maladjusted through adjustment to abnormal family relationships and who strive to break through their bondage in order to find a mate”. Each woman played an important role, affecting everyone they came encounter with, starting with the earlier years when they women were “southern belles”. In order for these two characters to deal with the complications in their lives they resort to living in their own fantasy worlds of deception and lies.…

    • 963 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Susan Glaspell's Trifles

    • 2282 Words
    • 10 Pages

    The women, Mrs Hale and Mrs Peter found the evidence for the murder case of John Wright which the murderer was his wife, Mrs Wright ( Minnie ). Minnie was a nice wife, but also a desperate housewife. She could live by her own because her husband didnt give excuse. As a wife, Minnie let her hobbies and gave up everything for her husband. The women, Mrs Hale and Mrs Peter felt emphatized and then decided to cover the murder, even they knew that was wrong. The women in this story was assumed as a fool, which men underestimated them. The women was played by the men, as a servant or keep the household, because they assumed that women didnt know anything. Glaspell brought the feminism and emansipation in this play, when women could be samrter than men. Women saw unimportant things which led them to solve the murder case. But in the end, they covered it because they protected Minnies whom her life was so pitiful and screwed because of her…

    • 2282 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays