Ch 2 PG R1 - ATC · screenplays, several of which were adapted for the screen from his own stage...
Transcript of Ch 2 PG R1 - ATC · screenplays, several of which were adapted for the screen from his own stage...
2017 2018
PLAY GUIDE
Chapter Two Play Guide by Katherine Monberg, with contributions from ATC Learning & Education staff.
SUPPORT FOR ATC’S LEARNING & EDUCATION PROGRAMMING HAS BEEN PROVIDED
APS
Arizona Commission on the Arts
Bank of America Foundation
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona
City of Glendale
Community Foundation for Southern Arizona
Cox Charities
Downtown Tucson Partnership
Enterprise Holdings Foundation
Ford Motor Company Fund
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Foundation
JPMorgan Chase
John and Helen Murphy Foundation
National Endowment for the Arts
Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture
PICOR Charitable Foundation
Rosemont Copper
Stonewall Foundation
Target
The Boeing Company
The Donald Pitt Family Foundation
The Johnson Family Foundation, Inc.
The Lovell Foundation
The Marshall Foundation
The Maurice and Meta Gross Foundation
The Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation
The Stocker Foundation
The WIlliam L. and Ruth T. Pendleton Memorial Fund
Tucson Medical Center
Tucson Pima Arts Council
Wells Fargo
About ATC …………………………………………………………………………………..…
Introduction to the Play ………………………………………………………………………...
Meet the Playwright ……………………………..……………………………………………..
Meet the Director: Interview with Marsha Mason ………………………………………………….
Meet the Characters ……………………………………………….……………………..……
Evolution of a Genre: Romantic Comedy………………………………………………………….
The History of “Dating” …………….…………………..…………………….…………………
Glossary ………………………………………………………………………………………
Discussion Questions and Activities ……………………………………………………………..
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Under new leadership, and now celebrating its 51st season, Arizona Theatre Company boasts the largest subscriber base of
any performing arts organization in Arizona, with more than 130,000 people each year attending performances at the
historic Temple of Music and Art in Tucson, and the elegant Herberger Theater Center in downtown Phoenix. Each season of
carefully selected productions reflects the rich variety of world drama – from classic to contemporary plays, from musicals
to new works – as audiences enjoy a rich emotional experience that can only be captured through the power of live theatre.
Touching lives through the power of theatre, ATC is the preeminent professional theatre in the state of Arizona. Under the
direction of Artistic Director David Ivers in partnership with Managing Director Billy Russo, ATC operates in two cities –
unlike any other League of Resident Theatres (LORT) company in the country.
To inspire, engage and entertain - one moment, one production and one audience at a time.
ABOUT ATC
ATC shares the passion of the theatre through a wide array of outreach programs, educational opportunities, access
initiatives, and community events. Through the schools and summer programs, ATC focuses on teaching Arizona’s youth
about literacy, cultural development, performing arts, specialty techniques used onstage, and opens their minds to the
creative power of dramatic literature. With approximately 450 Learning & Education activities annually, ATC reaches far
beyond the metropolitan areas of Tucson and Phoenix, enriching the theatre learning experience for current and future
audiences.
The Temple of Music and Art, the home of ATC shows in downtown
Tucson.
The Herberger Theater Center, ATC’s performance venue in downtown
Phoenix.
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Mr. Ivers and Mr. Russo continue to work on strategic planning, creative thinking, and adventurous programming all aimed
at serving the current mission:
INTRODUCTION TO THE PLAY
MEET THE PLAYWRIGHT
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Chapter Two
By Neil Simon
Directed by Marsha Mason
Love always deserves another chapter. Neil Simon is widely regarded as one of
the most successful and performed playwrights in the world. Chapter Two is
his semi-autobiographical comedy about recently widowed writer George
Schneider, who is introduced by his press agent brother to soap opera actress
Jennie Malone. Both are trying to come to terms with starting from scratch, and
through their friends – who are determined to see the two happy again – the
pair meet and begin a whirlwind romance. The play was written as a tribute to
Marsha Mason, Mr. Simon’s second wife, who also received an Academy Award
nomination and won a Golden Globe Award for playing the lead role in the film.
Ms. Mason, who wowed Arizona audiences with her direction of last season’s
An Act of God, returns to ATC to direct this comedy filled with truth and
wisdom.
Show art by Esser Design.
Neil Simon, American playwright and screenwriter, is generally considered to be
one of the greatest writers that American comedy has ever seen. Simon was
born in July, 1927 to Jewish parents in The Bronx, New York. His father, Irving
Simon, earned his living as a garment salesman while his mother, Mamie,
worked mostly as a homemaker. Simon grew up in the midst of the Great
Depression, financial hardships and his parents’ marital strife providing an
unstable living environment: his father would often leave the family for months
at a time. In his youth Simon often sought out movie theatres as places of
refuge, which sparked his inspiration to venture into writing comedy. After
high school, Simon joined the Army Air Force Reserve and was sent to Colorado,
where he was assigned to Lowry Air Force Base and attended the University of
Denver in 1945. During his years in the Reserve he began his writing career as Playwright Neil Simon.
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a sports editor; after his discharge he worked in the mailroom at the Warner Brothers offices in Manhattan before teaming up
with his brother, Danny, as writers for radio and television scripts. Those first scripts led to bigger and better jobs, including
writing for The Phil Rivers Show and Sid Ceasar’s Your Show of Shows in the 1950s.
In the late 1950s, Simon began writing his own plays, the first of which was titled Come Blow Your Horn (1961) and ran on
Broadway for 678 performances. He followed his initial success with two more successful plays: Barefoot in the Park (1963)
and The Odd Couple (1965). The Odd Couple won Simon his first Tony Award, and catapulted him to immediate prominence
as one of the most popular Broadway writers of his time. Throughout his career he wrote more than 30 plays and over 20
screenplays, several of which were adapted for the screen from his own stage plays. His comedy came to encompass many
styles of humor including romantic comedy, dramatic comedy, and farce, and in 1983 he became the only living playwright to
have a Broadway theatre named after him.
Neil Simon’s Lost in Yonkers was awarded the 1991 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and his critical reception began to shift: he was
no longer regarded as simply a writer of comedy, but as a writer of great depth as well. The primary themes of his work
center around “the silent majority” and their experiences, and focus on characters that are ordinary and imperfect, but good
at heart. The key component of Simon’s works is his brilliant humor, both verbal and situational, that weaves a story of
depth together with comedic appeal and laughter.
Neil Simon has received more Tony Award nominations than any other writer in history, winning three of seventeen
nominations: Best Author for The Odd Couple in 1965, Best Play for Biloxi Blues in 1985 and Lost in Yonkers in 1991, as
well as a special Tony Award for contribution to theatre in 1975.
Street front and indoor views of Broadway’s Neil Simon Theatre.
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Plays by Neil Simon:
• Come Blow Your Horn (1961)
• Little Me (1962) • Barefoot in the Park
(1963) • The Odd Couple (1965) • Sweet Charity (1966) • The Star-Spangled Girl
(1966) • Plaza Suite (1968) • Promises, Promises
(1968) • The Last of the Red Hot
Lovers (1969) • The Gingerbread Lady
(1970) • The Prisoner of Second
Avenue (1971)
• The Sunshine Boys (1972)
• The Good Doctor (1973)
• God's Favorite (1974) • California Suite (1976) • Chapter Two (1977) • They're Playing Our
Song (1979) • I Ought to Be in
Pictures (1980) • Fools (1981) • Brighton Beach
Memoirs (1983) • Biloxi Blues (1985) • The Female Odd
Couple (1986) • Broadway Bound
(1986)
• Rumors (1988) • Lost in Yonkers (1991) • Jake's Women (1992) • The Goodbye Girl (1993) • Laughter on the 23rd Floor
(1993) • London Suite (1995) • Proposals (1997) • The Dinner Party (2000) • 45 Seconds from Broadway
(2001) • Rose's Dilemma (2003) • Oscar and Felix: A New Look
at the Odd Couple (2004)
MEET THE DIRECTOR: INTERVIEW WITH MARSHA MASON
Director Marsha Mason.
Director Marsha Mason answered some questions about Chapter Two and her
return to ATC, after directing An Act of God from ATC’s 50th Anniversary Season
last year.
Q: What drew you to theatre?
A: It’s hard to say…the first memory I have is as a freshman in high school,
where I played a Jack-in-the-Box at a school production. When I popped out, the
first few rows of little kids went OHHHHHH! and I was hooked. I remember
playing and imagining myself as a nun or some kind of made-up character
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when I was a little girl. What has kept me entranced and intrigued about theatre is the magical relationship that the actor
has with their fellow actors and the audience. I love the adventure of finding myself in another character altogether and just
being that character for the length of time of the play. Another big part of why I do it is to help people experience their
emotions and inner thoughts.
Q: What brought you back to ATC?
A: I had a wonderful experience directing An Act of God last year. David Ira Goldstein and his entire staff were – and are –
so supportive, positive, and helpful. The creative staff of the theatre was wonderful to work with, and it is so much fun to
have the opportunity to work with everyone again. David Ivers has also been terrific, and I look forward to meeting him.
Q: Chapter Two has been a big part of your life: It’s based in part on your relationship with Neil Simon, you starred in the film, and now you’re directing it for the stage. What’s it like to play a fictionalized version of yourself? What’s it like to direct a show that’s (a) based on your life and (b) that you’ve acted in (albeit, a film version)?
A: This production is the second time I have directed Chapter Two. I approach the work just like I do any other production. I
don’t have an attachment to it just because it’s based on a part of my life that is written from the man’s perspective. Jennie
is another character to me, and I approached playing her the same as all my work. My advantage was that I knew her
motivations very well!
Q: How does your past as an actor influence your process as a director?
A: Having been an actor for quite some time now, I know pretty well how most actors feel about directors. They don’t always
work or relate the same way with a director, and I know that. I also have worked with a lot of playwrights and done a lot of
plays, so finding the arc of a story and the character’s place in that arc is also familiar to me. Karl Malden once said in an
interview about directing, “I thought I could direct, but when I did I realized I wanted the actors to act their roles the way I
would do them, and that’s not good directing!” I never forgot that, and I follow the rule “do unto others.” My job as the
director is to focus the work so that the arc of the story is clear and the audience believes what they are seeing and hearing
while I make sure the actor is supported and cared for so that they can realize their potential in the role.
Q: What does the future hold?
A: I am scheduled to shoot another episode of The Middle at ABC in late September. I just finished playing Arlene in several
episodes of Grace and Frankie for Netflix, and I am working on two new plays with a playwright and hopefully directing them
next year!
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The union between comedy can romance can trace its roots back to the turn of the 17th century to the comedies of William
Shakespeare, whose plays A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1600) and Much Ado About Nothing (1600) provided a basic
formula that we still recognize in the romantic comedies of the contemporary age: two people meet, conflict occurs, and
the couple are reunited to the sound of metaphorical (or sometimes real) wedding bells.
MEET THE CHARACTERS
Actor David Mason, who plays
Geo rge Schne ide r i n ATC ’s
production of Chapter Two.
Actor Ben Huber, who plays Lou
Schneider in ATC’s production of
Chapter Two.
Actor Blair Baker, who plays Jennie
Malone in ATC’s production of
Chapter Two.
Actor Diana Pappas, who plays Faye
Medwick in ATC’s production of
Chapter Two.
George Schneider: A writer, recently widowed after a twelve-year marriage to Barbara.
Leo Schneider: George’s younger brother, a publicist. He is married to Marilynn and has two children.
Jennie Malone: An actress, recently divorced after a six-year marriage to Gus.
Faye Medwick: Jennie’s friend, married for eight years.
EVOLUTION OF A GENRE: ROMANTIC COMEDY
This basic premise from literature was first translated to the silver screen with the advent of film in the 1920s, in silent
films such as Sherlock Jr. (1924) and Girl Shy (1924). These films have been cited as some of the first romantic comedies
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The 1950s first introduced the sex comedy, which often highlighted professional rivals that grew into love interests, and
explored differences in gender behaviors and the expectations of men and women. This subgenre persisted into the early
1970s and paralleled sociological research of the day, especially the sexuality research by Alfred Kinsey that introduced the
concept of a female sex drive to the general public. Playboy magazine also emerged in the early 1950s, further
commercializing the concept of sexuality, and the film industry’s traditionally strict code of censorship was replaced with the
modern rating system, providing further momentum to the increasingly frank conversations of sexuality allowed in film.
The sexual revolution of the 1960s sparked the radical romantic comedies of the 1970s that introduced a new sense of
cynicism to the genre, which frequently contemplated the existence of true love, or the conspicuous lack thereof. This period
is important to the development of the genre because it first introduced inverted expectations, sometimes skipping the
“happily ever after” of the traditional romantic comedy and replacing it with more pragmatic appreciation that love does not
solve all of life’s problems.
Jobyna Ralston and Harold Lloyd in Girl Shy (1924).
to make their way to film, though the cleverness and wit of the
stories was somewhat difficult to capture in the title cards of
silent films. In the late 1920s, the introduction of “talkies” allowed
the expansion of romantic comedy by allowing the more refined
capture of the romantic tension and hilarity typical of the genre.
An early form of film romantic comedy was known as the “comedy
of manners,” which typically included a budding romance between
a wealthy and a not-so-wealthy person, a common storyline that
still appears in more modern examples of the genre. The 1930s
brought with it a new subgenre known as the screwball comedy with such films as Bringing Up Baby (1938) starring
Katharine Hepburn. This subgenre takes its name from the sport of baseball in which pitchers threw “screwballs,” or
pitches that would travel in unexpected directions to attempt to surprise and disorient the batters on the opposing team.
Typical screwball comedies also had recurring themes, particularly the inclusion of a female protagonist who drove the
dramatic action.
Finally, the neotraditional romantic comedy emerged in opposition to the cynicism of the radical romantic comedy, focusing
instead on themes of compatibility and love and deemphasizing sex and sexuality. All of these romantic comedy subgenres
play with common rom com themes, including relationships emerging from extreme or unusual circumstances, the
interrogation or reversal of traditional gender roles, and the pull of traditional storytelling conventions that are either
celebrated or inverted to heighten the wit, humor, and emotive character of the story.
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A common theme that runs through literature, film, and even real conversations is the elusive magic of the “first meeting,”
and the unexpectedly impactful set of circumstances that all align to facilitate the first spark of romance. The means of
meeting a prospective romantic partner in the contemporary world are many and varied, with an ever increasing number of
digital applications to help the process along – would you prefer a casual “just” lunch, a simple swipe of a cell phone
screen, a detailed OK Cupid profile, or a social event organized specifically for singles?
THE HISTORY OF “DATING”
However, while the “online” part of online dating may be a novel development, the arrangement of introductions with an eye
toward romance is hardly a new phenomenon: dating agencies can be traced back as far as the 16th century, when parish
vicars would draw up lists of compatible marriage candidates to match couples of similar socioeconomic backgrounds.
Stereotypical image of a date in the 1950s.
One of the first secular “dating” agencies opened in London in 1825,
though its patronage primarily consisted of men who had failed to
find a partner in their traditional social circles and sought a more
arranged introduction as something of a “last resort.” The word
“date” also didn’t enter common vernacular until the 1890s, when it
first appeared in a newspaper column in reference to the writer’s
girlfriend, whose “dates” on the calendar were being filled by other
potential suitors.
The concept of “dating,” which became increasingly popular in the 1900s, first introduced privacy to the process of
courtship, and marks the first time that interested romantic partners were no longer socially expected to have a chaperone.
Being alone with one another before marriage was generally regarded as inappropriate and promiscuous prior to the 20th
century.
The first incarnation of what we would recognize as a modern dating agency came about after World War II, during the
widespread economic prosperity of the post-war years that introduced a new era of leisure time and amusement. Dating
Clubs began to operate as social businesses, and matched profiles of candidates that were likely to get along based on
submitted photographs and limited personal information. As dating grew into a commercial business, the tradition of buying
things for a prospective partner was introduced, and still remains part of dating culture in the present day.
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The 20th century brought personal ads into mainstream media, though they were traditionally used in a non-romantic context
by people seeking friends or pen pals. It wasn’t until the 1960s that personal ads seeking romantic partners became more
socially acceptable, and grew into a favorite way to meet a potential partner, especially someone that might not be
encountered in one’s usual social circle.
Today, online dating is one of the fastest-growing industries in the world, fueled by the recent proliferation of social
networking and the cell phone revolution of recent decades. It’s easier than ever to arrange meetings and introductions via
the plethora of dating apps available. While some regret the loss of that unexpected spark of romance from the chance
social encounters of previous eras, “dating” may never have been quite as serendipitous as tropes and traditions of the rom
com genre may suggest!
21 Club: An upscale restaurant in Manhattan that serves American
cuisine, a former prohibition-era speakeasy that is popular with elite
clientele and celebrities.
Alimony: Court-ordered provision for a spouse after a separation or
divorce.
Andrea Doria: The SS Andrea Doria was an Italian Line ocean liner made
famous in 1956 when she sank in one of the most infamous maritime
disasters of the 20th century after colliding with the SS Stockholm of the
Swedish American Line, killing 46 people.
Antagonism: Active hostility or oppression.
Art Deco: The predominant architectural and decorative style of the
1920s and 1930s, characterized by bold and precise geometric shapes
with bold delineations and strong colors.
As the World Turns: An American soap opera that aired on CBS for 54
years, from 1956 until 2010, created by Irna Phillips as the sister show to
Guiding Light.
GLOSSARY
Example of art deco architecture, the
Chrysler Building in New York City.
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Bambi: A 1942 Disney animated film based on a deer named Bambi. The
film received three Academy Award nominations for Best Sound, Best
Song, and Original Music Score.
Barbados: A country occupying the easternmost island of the West
Indies.
BP: A British multinational oil and gas company headquartered in
London, formerly known as British Petroleum, and one of the world’s
seven oil and gas “supermajors.” Today, BP is largely remembered for
direct involvement in several major environmental and safety incidents,
including the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
Catch-22: Satirical novel by American author Joseph Heller, set in World
War II, that follows the life of Captain John Yossarian of the U.S. Army Air
Forces, and which frequently invokes the paradoxical lose-lose situation
that the novel’s title has come to represent in the English language.
Clandestine: Kept secret or done secretively, often due to illicit actions or
circumstances.
Dallas Cowboys: Professional American football team of the National
Football League based in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex in Texas.
Dickens: English writer and social critic Charles Dickens, generally
regarded as one of the greatest novelists of the Victorian era and the
creator of some of the world’s best-known fictional characters.
Dismayed: To feel consternation and distress.
Writer and social critic, Charles Dickens.
American author, Joseph Heller.
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Doctor Zhivago: Originally a novel written by Boris Pasternak in 1957
and later made into a film of the same name in 1965, the story is named
after its protagonist, a physician and poet, and takes place between the
Russian Revolution of 1905 and the Russian Civil War that began in
1917.
Ecstasy: An overwhelming feeling of joyful excitement or extreme
happiness.
Equilibrium: A state of physical balance or a calm state of mind.
Exodus: A mass departure of people.
Extricate: To free someone or something from a difficulty or a constraint.
Field & Stream: A magazine founded in 1895 and which highlights fishing,
hunting, and other outdoor activities popular in the United States.
Flat: An apartment, usually on one floor and part of a larger building.
Giants: Professional American football team of the National Football
League, based in the New York metropolitan area.
Hindenburg: A German passenger airship best known for catching fire
and being destroyed during an attempt to dock at Naval Air Station
Lakehurst in New Jersey on May 6, 1937. There were 35 fatalities from
among the 97 people on board, and one ground worker was also killed.
The incident destroyed public confidence in airships, and marks the
abrupt end of the airship era.
Hors d’oeuvre: A small savory dish, typically served as an appetizer at
the beginning of a meal.
Ice Station Zebra: A 1968 suspense and espionage film from the Cold
War era, directed by John Sturges and starring Rock Hudson, Patrick
McGoohan, Ernest Borgnine, and Jim Brown.
Hors d’oeuvres.
The Hindenburg disaster.
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Inept: Having or displaying no skill, or the state of being clumsy.
Jane Eyre: A bildungsroman novel by English writer Charlotte Bronte,
published in 1847, and following the experiences of Jane Eyre as she comes of
age and falls in love with her employer, Mr. Rochester.
Jet lag: Extreme physical tiredness felt by a person after a long flight
across several time zones.
Knicks: Reference to the New York Knicks, an American professional
basketball team based in New York City which competes in the National
Basketball Association (NBA).
Maiden name: The last name that a married woman used from birth prior
to legally changing her surname upon her marriage.
Margaret Mead: American cultural anthropologist who was frequently
featured in the mass media during the 1960s and 1970s, and who
popularized the insights of anthropology in modern American and
western culture.
Mets: The New York Mets are an American professional baseball team
based in the borough of Queens in New York City and who compete in the
National League of Major League Baseball (MLB).
Mount Sinai: Reference to Mount Sinai Hospital, located in Manhattan,
New York City.
Paramount: Paramount Pictures is an American film studio based in
Hollywood, California, the fifth oldest surviving film studio in the world
and the second oldest in the United States.
Pâté: A paste or spread made of pureed or finely chopped liver, meat,
fish, or game and usually served as an hors d’oeuvre.
Pâté.
American cultural anthropologist, Margaret Mead.
Logo of the New York Knicks of the NBA.
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Pearl Harbor: United States naval base in Hawaii, largely known for
being the location of a surprise military strike by the Imperial Japanese
Navy Air Service against the United States on the morning of December 7,
1941, during World War II.
Porter: A person employed to carry luggage, especially at a railway
station, airport, or hotel.
Posterity: All future generations of people.
Pumpernickel: A type of dark, dense German bread made from coarsely
ground whole-grain rye.
Repartee: A conversation or speech characterized by witty comment sand
quick replies or quips.
Speed dating: An organized social activity in which people seeking
romantic relationships have a series of short, timed conversations with
potential partners to determine whether there is mutual interest.
Star Wars: An American space opera epic franchise, centered on the film
series created by George Lucas.
Syntax: The arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed
sentences in a particular language.
The African Queen: A 1951 British-American adventure film adapted
from the 1935 novel by C.S. Forester.
The bends: Slang term for decompression sickness, a condition arising
from dissolved gases coming out of solution into bubbles inside the body
when a diver rises too quickly to the surface.
Tom Stoppard: Czech-born British playwright and screenwriter, knighted
in 1997, who has written prolifically for film, TV, radio, and the stage.
Twain: Mark Twain was the pen name for Samuel Clemens, an American
writer, humorist, lecturer, entrepreneur, and publisher.
Writer and humorist, Mark Twain.
Playwright and screenwriter, Tom Stoppard.
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Valium: A benzodiazepine medication that typically produces a calming
effect, and is used to treat conditions including anxiety, seizures, and
alcohol withdrawal.
Via Veneto: One of the most famous, elegant, and expensive streets in
Rome, Italy.
Watergate: Reference to the Watergate scandal, a major political
scandal that occurred when President Richard Nixon’s administration
attempted to cover up their involvement in a break in at the Democratic
National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., in 1972.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
Discussion Questions
1. The two main characters are dealing with loss. What are some different ways people grieve a loss in their life?
2. How do you cope with change or loss in your personal life?
3. Have you ever used art as a creative outlet to deal with difficulty in your life or to process things? If yes, how so?
4. The play originally takes place in the 1970s. How did this production portray dating practices in modern times?
5. How has dating and romantic comedy changed over the years?
6. Which character did you connect with the most and why?
7. How do the characters change throughout the play? What characteristics indicate these changes?
8. Chapter Two is about second chances. Do you think Jennie gave George too many chances? Why or why not?
9. Neil Simon used his own life for inspiration when writing this play. Who are some other authors and artists who have
done this?
President Richard Nixon, central figure in
the Watergate scandal.
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Activities
1. Neil Simon based Chapter Two off of his real life experiences. Pick a moment in your life that you could create a short
play about. First, jot down the images you associate with that memory. In groups or as a class, share these images and
create tableaus or frozen pictures to recreate these images. Use this to explore how to stage your personal stories.
2. Watch the film version of Chapter Two and discuss the differences in the play and the movie, then come up with your
own idea for a scene. Write that scene as a moment in a play, then rewrite it as a moment in a movie. Share your scenes
and talk about how storytelling changes depending on the medium.
3. Have your students discuss the depiction of dating, love and relationships in the play Chapter Two (written in 1977)
and compare that with the dating culture and stories we see today. Noticing what is the same and what has changed, have
your students write their own adaptation of the play from their perspective on relationships in 2017.
4. Every director interprets a script differently and brings new staging ideas to the play. Find a copy of the script for
Chapter Two at a local library or order it online. Split your students into groups and distribute different scenes from the
play. Ask your students to be the director of this scene and stage it however they want. Perform these scenes for each other.
Talk about how the staging choices effect the story.