لسماع المسرحية صوتيا يتم إحضار جيم داونز إلى قسم الطب النفسي في مستشفى المدينة بعد محاولة انتحار. وبمساعدة زوجته المتعسفة ، التي تعيش معه ليلًا ونهارًا ، يتعافى. لكن هذا لا يعني أنه حر في العودة إلى المنزل. تتآمر زوجته المنفصلة لإبقاء جيم في المستشفى حتى يتخلى عن صديقته ويوافق على العودة معها. في هذه العملية ، يواجه جيم أناس غير مؤذون ولكنهم غير مؤهلين ، ، الذين أصبحوا هم أنفسهم ضحايا الروتين القاتل. من خلال اختبار واحد تلو الآخر ، يتم تثبيته من أجل سلامة العقل ، حتى يفقده تقريبًا. وإدراكًا لقوة القانون المؤسسي ، يمضي جيم في تقديم "الإجابات الصحيحة" ، إلى أن يتم الإفراج عنه أخيرًا في عهدة زوجته. أخيرًا ، يعلم جيم أنه من خلال المساس بنزاهته ، اختار ببساطة أقل شرين.
Joseph A. Kramm (30 September 1907, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – 8 May 1991) was an American playwright, actor, and director. He received Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1951 for his play The Shrike, later adapted into a motion picture of the same title in 1955.
This is a thriller! It reveals the trapping of a man in an institution and the full control of his wife. It gives one shivers to envision being in this situation and wanting a way out!
This is a marital drama/evil wife play set in a psych ward that mimics some of the Pulitzer winners in the 20s but beefs it up with pretty cogent criticisms of the psychiatric industry of the 50s. It’s, easy to read in interesting themes here that maybe weren’t intended by Kramm— swirling criticisms of the normative American culture that simply couldn’t stick post world wars.
The play is a little cluttered but, it works as a thriller and it’s a quick little read.
This was the 29th play I read in my quest to conquer the Pulitzer Prize for drama
This is what I expect from a Pulitzer-winning play: tension, drama, plenty of room for actors and directors to interpret the story, and an emotional conflict that drives the story from curtain to curtain.
The play begins with Jim Downs brought into a city hospital following an attempted suicide. Separated from his wife and professionally unsuccessful, Downs is put in the psych wards under observation. Once recovered, he’s anxious to get back to his old life, but his attempts to do so are continually blocked by medical personnel and his doting wife.
I don’t want to give much away, but the way the play twists and turns, despite the simplicity of its story, creates so many options for interpretation. It’s an engaging work of drama and might be one of my favorite of the Pulitzer winners. Recommended.