However
beautifully written, for obvious reasons, Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour, I found difficult
to stomach. Seeing such evil nature portrayed in a young child, along with watching
a person mask her own sexual identity, is hard to handle. This is another play
that fits along with the well-made play structure relatively well, minus a few
parts. The place in the play that I found deterred the most from this structure
was in the final act. In a state of complete pessimism, Karen ends things with
Cardin and refuses to go to Vienna with him, saying that these troubles will
continue to follow them. Afterwards, Mrs. Tilford comes to the scene, telling
Karen that she now knows the truth and has already made arrangements to fix the
situation. If the play fit perfectly with the well-made play structure, the
character of Karen would take this news and use it to motivate some sort of
action, like going back to Cardin, and living
“happily ever after.” Instead, when Mrs. Tilford tells Karen to go back
to Cardin, Karen responds, clearly unmotivated, with a simple “Perhaps.” Mrs.
Tilford leaves and asks Karen to write her, to which Karen replies with, “If I
ever have anything to say.” This final act leaves the audience with a high
level of uncertainty, which is not a characteristic of the well-made play
structure. I definitely thing Hellman made this stray from the well-made play
structure deliberate. I think this choice was intended to give the audience an
idea of just a little gossip can ruin an entire person’s life; that sometimes
even when the truth is revealed, the person’s personal state can still not be
fixed. Homosexuality, especially in the time this play was written, was
something people were highly ashamed of, and with good reason, with society’s
prejudice for it being so high. If Lillian Hellman would have ended the play
with Karen going back to Cardin, I think it would have diminished the play’s
disheartening effect on the audience.
I felt the same way about the play. While reading it, I just couldn't stand Mary and her evils ways. I also felt bad for Martha because she's has to deny what is actually somewhat true and at the same time know that Karen would probably never love her back. I also feel like a lot of people agreed that the play wasn't about the anti-homosexuality of it, but about how lies can ruin people's lives.
ReplyDeleteI really like your statement of "Hellman made this stray from the well-made play structure." Hellman play gives another way to structure a play that can fall under the well-made play structure. And I like your thought about the choice was chosen to give the audience a not-so nice ending.
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