Saturday, October 17, 2009

Black and White, right and wrong

Am I the one who are always in wrong
and you are the one who always correct?

Am I the one who always find faults
and you are always the solution?

Am I the one who always bad and you are good?

You are just trying to apply self-fulfilling Prophecy...
you are trying to maintain the standard of what people label you or how people look at you.
As for me, I think that you are selfish!!
Thanks deardear for comforting me in this matter.
Love and hugs...

Friday, October 02, 2009

Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm feeling So Sad

The night was spend with the gang in KLPac to watch Edwyn, Melissa and Sangeetha's performance - Arthur Kopit's Oh Dad, Poor Dad.
It was my first time watching this type of live performance.
It was totally an eye opening for me as I didn't know it was absolutely awesome.

We can guess, watching Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad, that playwright Arthur Kopit had some issues with women. His two female leads are lunatics: First, a mother so fastidious and overbearing that she locks her son in a hotel room for his entire life. Second, a child-molesting slut who seems hopelessly attracted to Asperger's syndrome. Madonna and whore, mother and lover, a virginal womb and a deflowered one: This is Kopit's bipolar world, where estrogen is gunpowder and testosterone engenders innocence.

Oh Dad, Poor Dad takes place in a hotel in 1950s Havana. Madame Rosepettle is an American widow traveling the Caribbean. She's pushy, demanding, and insulting to everyone. She travels with a piranha, two Venus flytraps and her recently deceased husband, whose corpse is stuffed and hanging in the hotel closet.

Her son, Jonathan, is an obsessive-compulsive collector of stamps, coins and books. Clad in suspenders, shorts and tall black socks, Jonathan is more than a dork -- he's an over-protected son, imprisoned in his mother's room, unable to make decisions, viewing the world through a homemade telescope. Still, life is just uncomfortable until Rosalie arrives: She's a cute blonde in a pink dress, but her lust for Jonathan is comically combustible. This leads to a battle of wits between mother and girlfriend, and everything ends in insanity and death.

Isenberg, Robert (2007)