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Description

A scorching one-man tour of guilt, privilege, and moral awakening.

First performed by the author himself at the posh apartments of his Hollywood and literary friends, Wallace Shawn's The Fever is also an unapologetically sharp-edged critique of wealth and privilege. That tension, between the pleasures of affluence and the horrors of capitalism, runs through the play, as its unnamed speaker attempts to overcome the nausea--is it the water or the guilt?--that overwhelms him on a vacation to "a poor country where my language isn't spoken." Awakened to the reality of inequality by a copy of Marx's Capital that mysteriously appears on his doorstep, our narrator surveys a world where Communism has all but disappeared, but the inequality described by Marx in the 19th century has only accelerated. Ashamed of his own complicity in shaping the current landscape, the narrator is nevertheless torn between the comforts of his life and a desire to enact seismic societal change.



Author: Wallace Shawn
Publisher: Theatre Communications Group
Published: 11/12/2024
Pages: 96
Binding Type: Paperback
ISBN13: 9781636702049
ISBN10: 163670204X
BISAC Categories:
- Drama | American | General
- Performing Arts | Theater | Playwriting

About the Author
Wallace Shawn is a noted actor and writer. His often politically-charged and controversial plays include The Fever, Aunt Dan and Lemon, Marie and Bruce and The Designated Mourner. With André Gregory, he co-wrote My Dinner with Andre, in which he also starred. He adapted the classic Ibsen play A Master Builder for film.