Basic Intro
- Desdemona: a play about a handkerchief
- Produced by Circle Repertory Company in NYC on July 23, 1993 and in November of 1993
- Directed by Gloria Muzio
- Emilia played by Fran Brill, Desdemona played by J. Smith-Cameron, Bianca played by Cherry Jones
- Done in thirty cinematic takes
- Written as a tribute or “rip-off” to the infamous play Shakespeare the Sadist by Wolfgang Bauer
- Paula Vogel (sources: the American Theatre Wing, The New York Times)
- Born in Washington D.C. in 1951
- Daughter of the late Phyllis R. Vogel and Donald S. Vogel
- Her father was a publicist in Washington
- In memory of Paula Vogel’s brother, Mr. Vogel founded the Carl Vogel Center in Washington: a provider of treatment, nutrition, and counseling for people with H.I.V. and AIDS
- Her mother was a secretary at the Postal Service Training and Development Center in Bethesda, Md
Married to Anne Fausto-Sterling
Playwright since the late 1970s
Gained prominence with her AIDS-related seriocomedy The Baltimore Waltz, the play won the Obie award for Best Play in 1992
Best known for the play How I Learned to Drive (1997) which won the Pulitzer Prize, this play examines the impact of child sexual abuse and incest
Developed a nationally recognized center for educational theatre while leading the graduate playwriting program at Brown University
Is currently the adjunct professor and the Chair of the playwriting department at Yale School of Drama, and the Playwright-in-Residence at Yale Repertory Theatre
- Other notable plays: The Oldest Profession (1981), And Baby Makes Seven (1984), Hot N’ Throbbing (1994), The Mineola Twins (1996), and The Long Christmas Ride Home (2006)
Context
- BDSM
- Erotic practices involving dominance and submission, role-playing, and restraint
- The term BDSM originated in the late 1960s, from a combination of D&S (Dominance and Submission) with S&M (Sadism and Masochism)
- The origin of the practice is unknown
- Fille de chambre
- French
- A woman who is employed to clean bedrooms and bathrooms, a chambermaid, a housemaid
Intertexts
- Shakespeare the Sadist by Wolfgang Bauer: German play (Frauen und Film) about a group of slackers, with a character named Shakespeare that acts in a disturbing version of a porn film where he shouts degrading abusive language about women (much like someone we know…) and eventually saws off the girls head, only for her to reappear a minute later.
- The Bible: An obvious one.
- “I believe in the Blessed Virgin, I do, and the Holy Fathers and the Sacraments of the Church” (Emilia, Scene 10, page 18)
- Talk of Rosary beads
- Of course, Othello.
- However, Desdemona is as promiscuous in this play as Iago says she is in Othello (in Desdemona, a play about a handkerchief she has relations with everyone except Cassio)
Subtexts
- “Every play I write is a discourse about power, relationships, and gender” –Vogel (source: theatremania.com)
- Trust
- Deception
- Performance
- Entertainment
- “What else have I got for amusement’s sake…” (Desdemona, Scene 23)
- Acting Falsely
- “I keep her in line with the prospect of eventual advancement, but she’s much too unsuitable for that.” (Desdemona, Scene 15)
- Iago lies to Emilia saying he had guard duty on Tuesday night, but he was at the brothel, doing Desdemona in the dark.
- Desdemona purchases fake virginal blood for her bedsheets so it won’t be found out that she was not a virgin on her wedding night. Even though she slept with the entire encampment, with the exception of Cassio.
- Sexual Performance
- “There was one man who … didn’t last very long.” (Desdemona, Scene 26)
- “Why must you be knowin’ every man’s size?!” (Emilia, Scene 20)
- The acting/performance of prostitutes and Desdemona during BDSM
- Commitment
- Marriage
- “When I was married in the Church…” (Emilia, Scene 27)
- “All women want t’get a smug, it’s what we’re made for, ain’t it?” (Bianca, Scene 23)
- Servitude
- (Scene 15) “Still. she’s devoted and that makes up for all the rest.”
- Emilia only truly becomes loyal when she finds out her husband is disloyal
- Promise/ Word of honor
- “She’ll believe me because...I’ll give her...I’ll give her...my word of honor. (Desdemona, Scene 20)
- “‘Coz a gen’l’men don’t lie to a bird...Besides, m’lord Vassio gi’me a “token o’ ‘is es-teem”- (Bianca, Scene 23)
- Othello and Desdemona
- The fact Othello smells her sheet for traces of a lover and trails her in her garden escapades to see if she’s meeting anyone.
- “And wouldn’t he be mad if he’d paid for what he got for free at home!!” (Desdemona, Scene 21)
- “She’s gullin’ that ass of a husband who’s so taken with her” (Emilia on Desdemona, Scene 13)
- She’s a cuckold.
- Emilia and Desdemona
- Trust here could have saved them from their deaths
- Despite Emilia’s pleas for a promotion for either/ both her and her husband, Desdemona teases her with doing so but holds out on actually going through with it.
- “Should you have “accidentally” taken it- not that I’m suggesting theft in the slightest…” (Desdemona to Emilia, Scene 6)
- Bianca and Desdemona
- Broken by the handkerchief
- The whole relationship is based on a phase of Desdemona’s, she just wants excitement in her life
- The fight scene between Desdemona and Bianca with the horse-pick and wine bottle.
- Race
- “Well the room’s bleeding black- blacker than he is!” (Bianca, Scene 21)
- “He’s as jealous as he’s black.” (Emilia, Scene 13)
- Class
- Emilia’s view that Desdemona should not be associating herself with Bianca because of their social status difference
- “Women can only do that [rise] through their mates….long for the day you make me a lieutenant’s widow!” (Emilia, Scene 6)
- Women
- Solidarity
- “Men only see each other in their eyes.” (Emilia, Scene 26)
- “Woman to woman.” (Desdemona, Scene 23)
- “There’s no such thing as friendship between women.” (Emilia, Scene 13)
- Abusive Relationships
- Physical
- Othello hits Desdemona off screen at the end of Scene 5.
- Verbal
- “Oh m’lady, you know how easy it is to be seduced by a husband’s soft word, when it’s the like of angry words he pours down upon your head-...” (Emilia, Scene 27)
- Emotional
- [See deception.]
- Health
- “You’ll be bleedin’ on the wrong time of the month! (Emilia, Scene 20)
- “I’ll say you’re ill- with woman sickness.” (Emilia, Scene 27)
- “He’s corroded her womb from inside out…” (Desdemona, Scene 14)
- Money vs. Love
- “Men earn their money like Horses and spends it like Asses” (Emilia, Scene 21)
- Emilia thinks the only way women can rise socially is through the status of their husbands (Scene 6)
- “How large now the world for so small a vice, eh Mealy?” (Desdemona. Scene 21)
- “I’m- I’m not to be tempted, Miss Desdemona.” (Emilia, Scene 21)
- Exoticism/ Foreignness
- Purdah
- Female seclusion: both physically separated from men and concealing of the women’s bodies
- Desdemona resorts to the Brothel to escape her repression through seclusion
- “Seed from a thousand lands...with genealogies spread from all over the globe….oh how I travel!” (Desdemona, Scene 11)
- “A man of a different color. From another world and planet.” (Desdemona, Scene 11)
- Religion
- See Bible intertext
- Emilia sees prayer as the best way to deal with unhappiness in a marriage (Scene 10)
- Intimacy
- Three Scene of Physical Contact
- Emilia is comforted by Desdemona when she finds out that Iago was sexually unfaithful to her
- Emilia brushes Desdemona’s hair the night before we know they will both die
- Bianca and the beating scene with Desdemona...enough said.
- Lack of intimate contact, though lots of sex, no meaning behind it.
If you're curious about the "infamous" Wolfgang Bauer play, published in 1978, you can read it (BU login required) at this link: http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.bu.edu/stable/3245004
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