"Tagträumer" beschreibt eine lyrisch-sanfte Liebesgeschichte. Rose, Verkäuferin in einem Billigladen, lernt dort Cliff, einen jungen Lastwagenfahren, kennen. Ein Aufeinanderprall zweier amerikanischer Archetypen, die Nachfolger der Cowboys und der Saloonfrauen. Cliff geht zur Kasse, und Rose wünscht sich, dass er zurückkommt. Und es passiert. Rose hat Angst vor ihrer eigenen Courage, will wieder weg. Doch Cliff will mit der Frau allein sein, unternimmt erste Annäherungsversuche. Rose befindet sich in der Abwehr, und durch diese Abwehr zeigt sie immer mehr von ihrer Person.
This play has a fantastic monologue for actresses! "The Birds" is my go to monologue for auditions or performing in classes, as it is full of layers and has great emotional movement which allows you to showcase your skills and talent to the audience.
I was a crane in this play. Crane like the bird. Yeah... I know the script doesn't call for one. It was a college production, what can I say? In any case, I think it is a very sad story, well worth the read (or the see, if you can).
Fantastic dialogue and monologues. Great story about two damaged people—Cliff is a bit of an alcoholic, maybe a bit bipolar and Rose seems normal up until the audience starts to piece together that she is losing her grip on reality a bit. Possibly dissociative identity disorder. Cliffs long drive monologue in the middle is fantastic.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This was intensely awesome! The dialogue is masterfully written and the themes it touches on throughout the play are very heavy topics handled well. I’m so glad I came across this play. Highly recommend.
This play has funny and clever dialogue but the male protagonist was occasionally violent towards the female protagonist which turned me off from the story as a whole. It also got confusing in act 2, almost like the writer lost the plot.
The only underlining in the library copy of this play that I checked out is on Rose’s long bird monologue, and I feel like that sums things up better than I could.
I saw a student theatre production of this at my college. The acting I saw wasn't particularly good, but I could actually feel the script saving the show a lot; you can more easily get away with mediocre acting when you've got good material (not that mediocre acting should ever be your goal). That being said, I thought the monologues were way too long and boring. The characters kept going on and on and on about the same things! Maybe if the acting had been better, it would have been fine, but I'm not sure. It was so bad I kind of zoned out... the monologues were just very long stories about things that happened in the past, and I didn't understand why the other character never broke in.
The story was interesting and kind of fun, though I didn't understand quite why the characters decided to do certain things (maybe that was the fault of the production I saw?). I thought the ending was EXTREMELY abrupt, and I was caught totally off guard when the lights went down. It seemed to me we hadn't reached any kind of real conclusion; they were just, like, right in the middle of a conversation! Also, I don't know what the playwright was trying to tell me about Rose's personality. I thought I mostly understood her, but the ending confused me. I think there was supposed to be some kind of revelation, but I didn't get it.
This play has a good mix of funny moments and serious ones. My favorite scene was at the beginning of Act II when
Overall a good play - definitely has some good moments and two interesting characters (though is Rose too farfetched to be believable?)
I like the play. It confuses me. The structure of the meaning and the arc seem highly subjective. It thusly seems to me an excellent play to work on personalization with because of how it would seem to admit a great degree of diversity in how it might be realized.
It features a strong, gruff male and a sort of weak, flighty flower of a female. At first, I find these stock myths of male and femaleness off-putting. That was my first impression. How he keeps berating her seemingly with jokes that she obviously can't deal with. The need to connect reminds me of frankly and johhny. Something about the girl reminds me of glass menagerie. In fact, the characters have the same name: Rose.
As it proceeds... Things open up into less charted territory. I agree with another review I saw that at least the epic monologue he has in the middle: how does he continue weathering the requirement of need and action... How does he motivate it? And what is she doing all that time?
The end is heart warming and confusing and could end up meaning a bunch of different things, I think. Highly dependent on how it's staged, what is made of it, I assess...
I feel like it's an expression of faith, grace, and the mutual creation of meaning out of the desperate realities of chaotic life. How incredibly specific of me, eh?
God, I have read this play so many times. I've never been one to read many plays for some reason, but this one struck me greatly. It was presented to me in high school by my drama teacher. She said it had the perfect monologue in it for me, and if she could ever do this play (which is impractical for a high school production) she would cast me. Too bad I have stage fright. But I was deeply flattered, because I love Rose. I'm not quite as...eccentric as she is. But I can understand her. For a play, she is a dynamic character. One that I would picture in a great novel. The crane scene twists my arm, breaks my soul, until I'm almost crying in pain. This is just a beautiful play.
OK, so I remembered this play from all those acting class scenes people did and picked it up for $1 at the used book sale. Lame. These are two of the most underdeveloped characters I have ever seen. I don't care how long their monologues are. They bore me.
I spent the entire read waiting for the actual story to start, but it never seemed to. A pair of good actors could make this entertaining, as some of the things Rose has to say are vaguely interesting, but the nonsense conversations were just too longwinded.
In this play, Rose bring Cliff to her apartment. Cliff is a hard-working truck-driver who uses jokes to prevent opening himself to others. Rose is a quiet sales clerk who had a traumatic event happen to her. The push and pull between the two characters comprises the play.