Thursday, October 24, 2019
Florence by Alice Childress Essays -- Florence Alice Childress Essays
Florence by Alice Childress    This 1950 play by Alice Childress takes place in a train station  waiting room in a very small town in the south. The play describes how  Miss Whitney, an old black woman, discovers that her premonition of  the success of her daughter, Florence, as a black actress is  undesirably similar to that of a racist, white society. This troubling  discovery has just as strong an impact on the reader as it does on  Miss Whitney. This drama teaches the reader how the views and opinions  of individuals or groups can influence other individuals or groups to  approach situations with the same reaction, although their views and  opinions may be opposite.    Marge, Miss Whitney's other daughter, first introduces this frame of  mind to as she accompanies Miss Whitney at the train station. They sit  in the "colored" section of the train station while Miss Whitney  awaits a train to Harlem to convince Florence to come back home to the  south. Florence fled to Harlem with ambition of being an actress.  After she calls home to ask for money, Marge is convinced that  Florence will fail because she is a black woman attempting to make it  in a business dominated by whites in a racially segregated society.  Although Miss Whitney seems to have a little bit more faith in  Florence, she still wants to convince Florence to come back home. They  even have a check ready to pay for her trip home, which is causing  them to be late on their rent. This reveals to us that they are  willing to sacrifice a little in order to prevent Florence from  possibly failing in her quest for success. As Marge speaks to her  mother she reveals her mentality in regards to Florence's situation,  "She ain't gonna get rich up there and we can't afford t...              ...a powerful message. Before Miss Whitney's  conversation with Mrs. Carter, she felt Florence wouldn't make it as  an actress. After realizing that a racist white woman felt the same  way, Miss Whitney reevaluated her reasons for wanting Florence to come  home. Realizing her reason's weren't much different, she felt the best  thing to do is to encourage Florence to follow her dream no matter how  hard it may be to achieve, rather than make her believe it was  impossible, just as the white society wanted her to believe. Once this  message is conveyed to the reader you can't help but look upon your  own past and wonder if you've ever been guilty of letting somebody  else's opinions influence what you believe is or isn't possible. This  play teaches us to be more open-minded as well as not being a  hypocrite. This play is a masterpiece by Alice Childress to say the  least.                      
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.