Wit : A Play
by Margaret Edson
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drama
Read in January, 2007
The 1999 Pulitzer winner for drama. The play focuses on middle-aged college professor, Vivian Bearing, and her struggle with late-stage ovarian cancer. It explores her intellectual, stoic approach to English literature and how that same perspective frames her perspective on her medical fate. That perspective changes as she compares her detached demeanor with that of the impersonal medical researcher who is treating her. This play was rather disappointing on the whole. First, I don’t care fo...more
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Read in February, 2007
I'm cunfussed about why so many poeple seem to be in love with it. Maybe it's because the main character has cancer? It's not a bad play, it's well written I just didn't much care for it.
I don't remember what it was, but at one point while I was reading something about it struck me and I thought, "This author has never had cancer". Perhaps it was that that ruined the rest of it for me, I don't know. Later I read the author's biography and I was right, she had not had cancer when she...more
I don't remember what it was, but at one point while I was reading something about it struck me and I thought, "This author has never had cancer". Perhaps it was that that ruined the rest of it for me, I don't know. Later I read the author's biography and I was right, she had not had cancer when she...more
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Read in February, 2008
okay. i take issue with the semi-colon crap on the other bindings but otherwise this is a fine play for reading. the lead, dr. vivian bearing (a surname with many definitions, all of them meaningful and fitting), is well-written if a little hard. no great truths about life and death are unveiled that other people haven't already but then that's sort of the point.
there isn't so much wit to be found in dying as in being dead.
this brought up a few flashbacks of hearing john donne read aloud...more
there isn't so much wit to be found in dying as in being dead.
this brought up a few flashbacks of hearing john donne read aloud...more
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A penetrating look into the medicinal world with a piquant twist.
If reading plays has never appealed to you before, begin with this one. Wit is provocative and endearing.
When Edson, who worked in an oncology unit, was first casting for the part of cancer patient Vivian Bearing, Kathleen Chalfant wasn't sure if she wanted the part, but her brother Alan (battling cancer) read the script and told her it was a must. Chalfant shaved her head in honor of her brother and won numerous awards f...more
If reading plays has never appealed to you before, begin with this one. Wit is provocative and endearing.
When Edson, who worked in an oncology unit, was first casting for the part of cancer patient Vivian Bearing, Kathleen Chalfant wasn't sure if she wanted the part, but her brother Alan (battling cancer) read the script and told her it was a must. Chalfant shaved her head in honor of her brother and won numerous awards f...more
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Read in March, 2008
Extreme intellectually-driven professor has terminal cancer, connects in a more human way than ever before with those around her. The premise seems super cheesy, but I felt like it was carried out very well. Dr. Bearing (cancer-ridden main character) is snarky and delightful, and I liked the contrast of her professional interest in metaphysical poetry versus her emotional detachment from all metaphysical issues (God, life, death, etc.). It's only about 70 pages long, you can read it in one si...more
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Read in April, 2008
I'm thinking about the play from a production standpoint, and am amazed that people can handle the seriousness and intellectual tie ins. It is an amazingly difficult piece and I'd imagine that any actress in the lead role would need some serious therapy after doing this for months. Oh god, how emotionally draining... A college professor with no friends, no family, just literature, journeying through a battle with cancer. It is heart-wrenching but quite artistic. I'd love to see it live, but...more
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This play is very moving and very funny, even through the tragedy of the main character. It's almost a one-woman show, and rarely have I found myself both laughing and crying almost within the same breath. The use of classical John Donne poetry as a focus for the story is brilliant, especially the piece used. If you've never read Donne, don't worry, the play explains the arguments behind the poem and makes the poem (Holy Sonnet 14) very accessible and understandable. Frankly, anyone who can ...more
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Read in April, 2008
Edson's only work to date--she's a full-time kindergarten teacher in her real life--details the slow and often brutally painful decline toward death of Vivian Bearing, a victim of ovarian cancer. The catch of course (and the paradoxical crunch of it for Vivian, a scholar of John Donne) is that the treatment, not the disease, destroys her. It's a mostly but perhaps exhaustable play. This is my third year teaching it, and I found disappointingly little this year that felt new. No matter. That...more
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Read in January, 2002
This book was amazing. I read it shortly after high school, and maybe a year into college. I read it in an hour. It made me laugh, cry and think. It treats death and dying with a realism that I have not seen before. It makes sure that patients are not one-dimensional nor are they stupid. It gives a multi-faceted view of what an undergraduate degree can do, what being driven can do and what one must decide when faced with the inevitable withering of the delicate human body.
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drama
Read in April, 2000
I was actually fortunate enough to read it, and then see it performed during the same semester back in graduate school. In my journal back then, I did write that I thought the play as I read it was better than the performance itself (however, I should note we had gone to see a "preview" performance). But it was still a good experience. There are a lot of ironies in the play, and it is a very moving piece. Again, my journal notes are mostly academic, so I will leave them out.
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Read in January, 2007
I loved this. It's a sad topic. Death and dying. Yet, this award winning play doesn't seem to be morose or melancholy so much as thought provoking and challenging. In this, a woman must examine her life and her ideals when she is finally forced to surrender control of her disease and her ultimately her life. Okay, I've made it sound pretty gloomy and maybe it is, but I remember it as being good and profound. It's worth the couple hours it takes to read.
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absolutely-incredible
Read in January, 1999
recommends it for:
everyone
I don't care if you like or loathe plays. Go to your library and take out this book. It's about an English professor with advanced cancer. She has spent her youth and adulthood wrapped up in her education, her teaching, and finally, John Donne.
It has left her alone and without hope. The play in a work of art in the truest sense, and it was one of those works where I closed the book and felt lucky to have read it.
I can't say enough about Wit.
It has left her alone and without hope. The play in a work of art in the truest sense, and it was one of those works where I closed the book and felt lucky to have read it.
I can't say enough about Wit.
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A play about a hard-nosed and brilliant English professor with terminal cancer, who is beginning to learn for the first time that there is more to the worth of a person than wit.
This was the last text of the last class that Arthur Athanason taught at Michigan State, which we discussed as he was dying of pancreatic cancer. To this day, he is still the most vibrantly and wonderfully alive person I've ever known. I miss him terribly.
This was the last text of the last class that Arthur Athanason taught at Michigan State, which we discussed as he was dying of pancreatic cancer. To this day, he is still the most vibrantly and wonderfully alive person I've ever known. I miss him terribly.
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I saw this movie and it had a profound affect on me. To the core. For several different reasons - the part about whether the punctuation in "Death, be not proud" should be a period, semi-colon, or comma was life-altering. That death may not be meant to be a stop, but a breath, a whisper, a blink. That's not an exact quote, but one of the ideas that I left with. Among so many more that I can't articulate them all here and now.
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A play about a woman who, despite her previous efforts, is humanized through her battle with cancer. The woman is a professor of english and the story is told from her point of view, which is inspired by an erudite intellect and wit. Actress Emma Thompson starred in the filmed version of the play and her performance blew me away; it's one of the rare book to film adaptations that is just as rich on the screen.
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If you enjoy John Donne poetry, or even a women's bravery in dealing with cancer, you would like this play. You may notice that there is some strong language near the end, but it is all in good time. It makes you wonder the small difference between life and death, and helps you appreciate the good things about life. Live life to the fullest, because you never know when your time to go will come.
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bookshelves:
disabilitystudies,
theater
Read in March, 2008
This play explores and critiques the medical model of disability, the relationship between the mind and the body, and the meaning of death. I really appreciated how the main character's analytical mindset leads her to understand the similarities between her life as an academic and the doctor's veiwpoint of her as a research subject, dehumanized. Recommended.
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I think I remember thinking this play was OK. Then I saw the movie with ... whatsherface....and I HATED IT SO MUCH that it has tainted whatever I may have thought of the play. The movie gets negative 1 star. The play may even deserve 1 but I'm not sure b/c I think I'm being influenced by the crappy crapness of the crappy movie. I hate movies like that.
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Read in May, 2008
This is a GREAT short play. It is only about 80 pages, but reads like a book, and really has a great introspective look at "your grown up personality"...if that makes sense. This is somthing I will hang on to and probably read very often for the rest of my life.
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drama-american
Read in January, 2006
I went in wanting to dislike the play, as the whole dying of cancer thing seemed manipulative to begin with, but instead I ended up balling at the end. I've read it, seen it in production, and seen the TV version. It is a better watch than a read.
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