I'm in a high school production of the musical Damn Yankees, and we open in May. I'm playing Gloria Thorpe, and I'm having trouble getting a concept of my character's role in the story.
Damn Yankees is a classic Faustian piece, set in the 50s-60s. In it, Joe, a huge fan of the Washington Senators, makes a deal with the devil to become a baseball player and help the team win the World Series (and beat the Yankees). However, he tricks the devil into giving him an escape clause, so he can return to his wife. The Devil tries to use one of his seductresses to foil Joe, but ultimately Joe's soul is lost because of the Devils' machinations toward the upstanding, moral reporter, Gloria.
Gloria is a sports writer and baseball fan, and is very hung up about the honor and integrity of the game. She initially likes Joe for his sincerity, but changes her mind when she discovers that he's lying about his background. The devil uses her to spread a rumor that ultimately leads to Joe missing his opportunity to enact the escape clause. The devil used a good woman to bring a good, if stupid, man down.
This bothers me, for a lot of reasons. For one, Gloria loses virtually everything in her pursuit of honor in the game (at the expense of her favorite team)--her reputation, her bond with the Senators, her credibility, and probably a great deal of self-respect. For this, what does she get? The liar going back and helping the team win, unfairly. And in the process, she helped to damn Joe, who was ultimately a good man, even if he made few very stupid mistakes. The only thing she seems to have gotten out of it all is some measure of respect from the Devil himself.
What I'm trying to figure out is, how should I play Gloria, in light of all this? Is there some piece of her that I'm missing in trying to understand how it works? Is there any sin she's committed that I can't seem to see? How should I treat her dealings with the devil? Am I missing or misinterpreting the very theme of the story?
Additional info, added Monday March 28 2005, 10:50 pm: For the record, I'm a woman. Born a woman, plan on staying that way for the rest of my life, and have played women in every play I've ever acted in. My problems with Gloria aren't with her sex, but rather with her role in the theme of the story, and her relevency to its moral implications. I can't figure out if my character is a martyr, a sinner, a combination thereof, or something else entirely.. Want to answer more questions in the Hobbies category? Maybe give some free advice about: Theater? paenian answered Monday March 28 2005, 10:40 pm: wow . . . well, I'm a guy so I'm assuming you are too. Biggest problem I have playing female characters is my you-know-what! Try tucking it back between your legs - it works really well as long as you don't think of anything sexy. [ paenian's advice column | Ask paenian A Question ]
RoadkillSalad answered Saturday March 26 2005, 5:01 pm: Doesn't sound too bad, it's a play, and it sounds like it's a part that needs to be played as kindof a mysterious character. If she's controlled by the devil, well then that's just part of the story, I wouldn't call it immoral in that sense to play that part in the play. Of course, if it seems too demonic or something for you, don't play it. I think it's all a matter of personal preference, if you don't want to play it, well then don't, but I really can't find any problem with it. Odd name for a play, though... [ RoadkillSalad's advice column | Ask RoadkillSalad A Question ]
softballcatb answered Saturday March 26 2005, 4:40 pm: i just saw my highschool production of damn yankees. And gloria always showed her best in front of joe. as he always did for everyone. your attitude should be stern, eligant and sexy . all at once [ softballcatb's advice column | Ask softballcatb A Question ]
shake answered Saturday March 26 2005, 4:11 pm: Yeah, she couldnt do a thing because she was under the influence or someone very strong. [ shake's advice column | Ask shake A Question ]
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