Showing posts with label fun home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fun home. Show all posts
Saturday, June 30, 2018
Fun Home on Stage
I was excited to see the Fun Home play because I wanted to see how a graphic memoir would translate to stage. I've see picture books as plays, and other "classics" like Peter Pan and Lord of the Flies. But for some reason it wrinkled my brain to imagine the little boxes of a graphic memoir on stage.
It wasn't until after I saw the play that I broke it down further in my mind and thought about how it was a graphic memoir - based on real life, so of course it would easily transfer to a play, because the action was done by real people in the first place.
I did love how it was done, though. The artist Alison Bechdel stood at her art table and watched the action of younger Alisons interacting with her family. After something happened, she would say "Caption..." and brainstorm possible explanations to put with her drawings.
I wasn't a huge fan of the songs. They were gorgeous but I think there was so much action and emotion to explore in the story itself without it being turned into a musical. That being said, the kids' song about the funeral home was definitely my favorite part of the night!
Friday, April 6, 2018
Fun Home
Fun Home: a Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel
This is a graphic novel about a girl who finds out her
father is gay only after she comes out as a lesbian. He dies shortly after, and
she remembers her strange relationship with him, as well as her childhood
growing up in and around funeral homes. There could have been a lot more
emotion to the story, but I think telling it as a graphic novel kind of
diminished that possibility. The drawings didn’t add much depth or insight, but
it would have been a sparse story without them.
I've also read Are You My Mother? by Bechdel
and had a similar reaction regarding the emotion in the book. I can see how
both books were therapeutic for Bechdel to write and illustrate, but I
didn't get much of that from the drawings or even the story. They were both
interesting, but dragged a bit with the navel-gazing, heavy literary
references, and other stuff that could have been cut out to make a snappy,
impactful graphic novel.
Fun Home is going to be performed as a play at
Playhouse on the Square in May, so I'm excited to see how it translates to the
stage. If you've read much of this blog at all, you know I love comparing books
to movies and play versions of themselves, so we'll see how Fun Home turns
out!
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