Betty Keller's Major Conflict In The Tea Party By Amy Keller

999 Words2 Pages

1. What is the play’s major conflict? The minor conflict?
The play’s major conflict is the loneliness experienced by the two elderly sisters, after outliving most of their relatives. The minor conflict is the sisters setting up a tea party for the newspaper boy who is supposed to collect his pay, but instead skips over their house. The sisters also have another minor conflict about the name of a ship from their father’s voyage. Because both sisters are elderly, they cannot exactly remember the ships name or exact details, and both sisters believe their version of the story is the right one. Although it is a short drama narration, Betty Keller depicts the two sisters in great detail, introduces a few conflicts, and with the use of dialogue, …show more content…

They do not get a lot of company anymore, and most relatives and friends have long passed, so they try to get those who provide them a service to come in and visit with them. It is shown that this isn’t their first time planning these tea parties because in the dialogue they discuss how last time he rushed in and out and the different drink preferences of their bamboozled guests. Loneliness appears as a theme in this short drama, although the sisters have each other, they are very lonely and both want the paper boy to sit next to them and listen to their version of the story. Because they are so lonely, they know the days the paperboy collects his money, and the day the meter man comes to work so they know when to set up their tea parties and hope for a guest, which also shows that they have done this before.
3. What does Alma’s plan for the twenty dollar bill show about her? What does the discussion about both the money and the paperboy indicate about their own …show more content…

As this short drama goes on the reader can witness how they change the room and furniture around trying to get it arranged perfectly to keep their guests visiting as long as possible.
2. Consider the women, particularly with regard to their age. In light of their health and their isolation, how does Tea Party present the circumstances of the aged? How can the play be constructed as a social/political argument, with elderly as a

Open Document