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Aunt Dan and Lemon (Wallace Shawn)
 
 
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Aunt Dan and Lemon (Wallace Shawn) [Paperback]

Wallace Shawn (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Wallace Shawn January 18, 1994
Aunt Dan & Lemon takes us into the world of a young recluse named Lemon (alias Leonora) who spends her nights reading chronicles of Nazi atrocities. Lemon tells the audience about the overwhelming influence in her life of her parents' friend "Aunt Dan," an eccentric, passionate professor whose stories and seductive opinions enthrall Lemon from the time she is a young girl. The relationship that develops between Lemon and Aunt Dan and the conversations that went on in a small house on the bottom of an English garden form the focus of this play about political orientation and the allure of certain ideas-even if they lead to murder. A forceful play exposing the banality of society's evil, Aunt Dan & Lemon explores the ease with which good and bad become reconciled in the human mind.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

This current New York hit is about people who do not believe that human beings are capable of compassion. Stage action features the cold-blooded strangling of a client by a prostitute and monologues justifying the Holocaust and the bombing of Vietnam. In a lengthy afterword Shawn discusses how momentary lapses of logic can subtly undermine our moral sense, gradually creating an immoral world view. However, many readers may feel that the text of the play communicates the very attitudes that Shawn states he deplores. A dark, difficult, and extremely disturbing play. Susan Thach Dean, Fine Arts Div., Chicago P.L.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Wallace Shawn's first play to be produced in New York was Our Late Night, directed by Andre Gregory at The Public Theater in 1975. A Thought in Three Parts was staged two years later by the Joint Stock Theatre Group in London, directed by Max Stafford-Clark. Shawn's next three plays - Marie and Bruce, Aunt Dan & Lemon, and The Fever - were all performed in New York at the Public Theater and in London at the Royal Court. Aunt Dan and Lemon was revived in London in 1999 at the Almeida Theatre, directed by Tom Cairns. Shawn's next play, The Designated Mourner, premiered at the National Theatre, London, with Mike Nichols, Miranda Richardson, and David de Keyser under the direction of David Hare, and was then performed in New York by Wallace Shawn, Deborah Eisenberg, and Larry Pine under the direction of Andre Gregory. In 2009, the Royal Court held a Wallace Shawn season, reviving Aunt Dan and Lemon and The Fever, and staging the premiere of Grasses of a Thousand Colours. Shawn wrote the libretto for Allen Shawn's opera The Music Teacher, directed by Tom Cairns for The New Group in New York (2006). Shawn translated Brecht's The Threepenny Opera (performed in New York at the Roundabout, Studio 54, directed by Scott Elliott).Wallace Shawn and Andre Gregory wrote and performed in the film My Dinner with Andre and Andre Gregory directed Shawn in Vanya on 42nd Street. Shawn has appeared as an actor in many films, including Manhattan, Clueless, Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills,The Moderns, and The Wife. Shawn's Essays was published by Haymarket Books in 2009.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 107 pages
  • Publisher: Grove Press; 1st Grove Press Ed edition (January 18, 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802151035
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802151032
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.4 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #765,541 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

"Full of what you might call conversation starters: tricky propositions about morality... politics, privilege, runaway nationalist fantasies, collective guilt, and art as a force for change (or not)... It's a treat to hear him speak his curious mind."--O The Oprah Magazine

"Wallace Shawn's essays are both powerful and riveting. How rare to encounter someone willing to question the assumptions of class and the disparity of wealth that grows wider every year in this country. To have such a gentle and incisive soul willing to say what others may be afraid to is considerably refreshing."--Michael Moore

"Wallace Shawn's career as a playwright has been uncompromisingly devoted to proving that theater is an ideal medium for exploring difficult matters of great consequence. The qualities that make his dramatic work so challenging, sensual, mind-and-soul expanding, so indispensible, are equally in evidence in the marvelous political and theatrical essays collected here."--Tony Kushner

"Wallace Shawn writes in a style which is deceptively simple, profoundly thoughtful, fiercely honest. His vocabulary is pungent, his wit delightful, his ideas provocative."--Howard Zinn

WITH A BOLD and broad-ranging set of essays, Wallace Shawn takes us on a revelatory journey through high art, war, culture, politics, and privilege. With his distinctive humor and insight, Shawn invites us to look at the world with new eyes, the better to understand and change it.

WALLACE SHAWN is an Obie Award-winning playwright and a noted stage and screen actor. His plays The Designated Mourner and The Fever have recently been produced as films, and his translation of Threepenny Opera was recently performed on Broadway. He is co-author of My Dinner with Andre and the author of The Fever and Aunt Dan and Lemon, among other works. His friends call him Wally.

"I've written plays and a few screenplays, in each one of which a person who isn't me speaks, and then another person who isn't me replies, and then a third one enters or the first one speaks again, and so it goes until the end of the piece. I've even worked as a professional actor, speaking out loud as if I were someone not myself.

Every once in a while, though, I like to take a break from fantasy land, and I go off to the place called Reality for a brief vacation. It's happened a dozen or so times in the course of my life. I've looked at the world from my own point of view, and I've written these essays. I've written essays about reality, the world, and I've even written a few essays about the dream-world of 'art' in which I normally dwell. In a bold mood I've brooded once or twice on the question, Where do the dreams go, and what do they do, in the world of the real?"--From Essays by Wallace Shawn

You can preview the book at Harper's, where an excerpt, "Is Sex Interesting?," of Essays has been published.

Wallace Shawn will be available for select interviews with national media September-October. To request an interview or review copy of Essays, please contact Sarah Macaraeg atsarah@haymarketbooks.org, 773-583-7884 (office), or 312-315-8476 (cell). Select Advance Reader's copies

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Does morality keep us from seeing the world as it truly is?, March 31, 2000
By 
Lena Najarian "lmn" (Los Angeles, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Aunt Dan and Lemon. (Paperback)
I unwantingly began reading this play as a class assignment and by page 3 I was captivated. I couldn't put it down. It made me think about morality and question my own ethics. Aunt Dan helped me understand the concept of ideology, knowing my "role" in society and how morality and ethics shields each of us from seeing ourselves, really seeing who we are. I look forward to reading it again...
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Play; Equality and Indifference. How Animal. How Humane., April 25, 2008
This review is from: Aunt Dan and Lemon (Wallace Shawn) (Paperback)
I have read and been blown away by Shawn's The Fever and The Designated Mourner, and now by Aunt Dan and Lemon. The moral ambiguity that is the conscience of educated, middle and upper class Westerners is the stuff of Shawn's aesthetic, conversational dilemmas. To have the time to consider murder and the threats to our little comforts must come out of the need to murder, a cushion of eras and generations. How else can a society of ideals be established? While the closing speech of Lemon's understanding of Aunt Dan's ideas can be seen as repugnant, it questions just what the value of having morality is, especially when you have an intellect rooted in civilization, existence, even hope and dreams.
But what stimulates the mind even more is the consideration that Aunt Dan is wrong, that compassion can be an involuntary response or spontaneous reaction to another. That people can actually enjoy one another, honestly. Without injecting too personal a view, I'd say that the quality of this work is the potential to see the other sides, that minds are flexibile, and the pursuit of ideas-thusly societies-against our animal essence can be the trial and not the verdict.
But Shawn asks what's so bad about not caring? You may say, what's so bad about promiscuity? Prostitution? Having the memories of a childhood to keep one company in old age?
I could go on, and still not know what I'm talking about. But it feels so important and interesting. I suggest you read this work yourself, or see it, I know I'd like to.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars food for thought, May 30, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Aunt Dan and Lemon. (Paperback)
do you believe killing is wrong? have you ever killed a cockroach? even if you answer no, and say that killing anything under any circumstances is wrong, wouldn't you change your mind if your home were absolutely infestated with cockroaches? if the cockroaches were dropping from the ceiling and crawling en masse up your arms and legs? then you might do something, no?

aunt dan says the nazis were simply defending their homes and that killing for them was a moral and honorable action. outrageous? come see what else aunt dan has to teach.

"lemon" wastes away in her apartment with the vivid memories of her aunt while she weighs morals, politics and the value of life.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Lemon: Hello, dear audience, dear good people who have taken yourselves out for a special treat, a night at the theater. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Aunt Dan, North Vietnamese, Henry Kissinger, Miss Cat
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