Criticism In Tony Kushner's 'A Bright Room Called Day'

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"History repeats itself, first as tragedy, then as farce." Karl Marx explained in his essay, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon, that the first time a major catastrophe happens, it is tragic and devastating. Despite that, history tends to repeat itself when people don’t change their ways. For this reason, when a disaster happens again, it becomes less serious. The calamity becomes laughable because people cannot seem to avoid the same mistakes that their ancestors failed to do when the situation happened the first time. Tony Kushner 's A Bright Room Called Day premiered at the Eureka Theatre in California in 1985, provoking the audience by comparing past and present views on similar issues between the reign of Adolf Hitler in the 1930s …show more content…

The audience learns that Zillah is not happy with the current politics that have arisen in the United States. In her first interruption, she writes a letter to President Reagan, expressing all of her anger towards him. Nevertheless, she knows that her letter writing is futile because the president will never read her complaints. Instead, her hard work will be “...get sent to the FBI, analyzed, Xeroxed and burned”. Zillah connects President Reagan to the notion of evil. She feels that during the conservative 1980s too many people were content to bow out of the way and let the president do what he wanted. Ronald Reagan, who passed away in 2004, tried to avoid the AIDS crisis for most of his presidency. When the Reagans were silent about the issue, the LGBT community was terrified that they were not going to get the proper exposure that they needed to try to sustain this horrible disease. Kenneth Bunch, one of the founding members of Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, perfectly sums up the worries of many, “...but they [Ronald and Nancy Reagan] didn’t fight it [stigmatization of AIDS] … that brand of homophobia lasted because Ronald and Nancy Reagan enabled it.” It would be five years before he even utters the word “AIDS” and it would be an additional two years for him to say a speech about the disease that killed 650,000 Americans. She rants that because of Hitler, there is a standard of evil. “When Hitler came to power, nobody really knew what he was going to do. Nobody took it that seriously,” said Mary Beth Easley, artistic director of Brooklyn College’s theater department. “The whole thing [A Bright Room Called Day] is a call to action,” Though Zillah is paranoid and always on edge, she can have faith that at least she 's not in danger, she will always be ahead of the game and be able to find a way

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