Slaughter City

Slaughter City

"Slaughter City" is a play written by Naomi Wallace. It tells the story of the otherworldly Cod's employment at a slaughterhouse.

The live stage performance rights are licensed by Broadway Play Publishing Inc.

The play is divided into two acts. The transitions from one scene to the next are written as "fade to black" but has, in the case of the performance held at The University of Texas at Austin in Spring of 2007 the transition between scenes involves the cast arranging the set and props, while at the same time producing a mechanical mechanized rhythm beat. The play itself was inspired by a number of labor related incidents including the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire of 1911 in which textile workers found themselves locked inside the building unable to escape the blaze, the fire department's ladders were too short to reach, and the fire escape warped in the heat. Cod's mother was revealed to be pregnant at the time of the fire, and made a deal with the otherworldly entity known only as the Sausage Man, that he can save her unborn child, if it will be enslaved to him. A deal which she, for the Cod's sake, agrees to, she jumps, landing on a pile of others who had chosen to jump rather than burn, the fall kills her, but Cod is delivered premature but alive, all this is revealed in the course of the play, only fully explaining itself in the final moments of the second act.

The Sausage Man raises Cod for the purpose of playing a game, in which Cod attempts to rally the workers to strike, and the Sausage man attempts to quash the strike by manipulating the management and owners. In order to achieve success Cod, who is in fact a woman, must more often than not disguises herself as a boy, to both aid in her hiring and her ability to rally the workers. Sometimes she works from within the labor union and others she attempts this as a scab. This game is played throughout time and space, on a whim the Sausage Man can pull her in or out of a situation, which has proven to have saved her life, but also to cost her the ability to see things through to the end. Due to the constant shifts in time and location, Cod often finds herself displaced and confused, forgeting where and when she is.

The Sausage Man's ability to manipulate reality is apparently aided by his portable meat grinder, which he constantly has hanging from around his neck.

The characters include:

*Roach - an African American woman who works in the slaughterhouse
*Maggot - childhood friend and co-worker of Roach, the two are somewhat like sisters
*Brandon - also a co-worker who has successfully created the illusion that he is a college student, but later reveals that not only can he not read, but after having his lips sewn shut when he was younger, has never kissed a girl, leading to his unsuccessful attempts to entice Roach and Maggot sexually,
*Tuck - an African American man who, after receiving his job via affirmative action, works as management at the slaughterhouse.
*Baquin - a high powered executive type, who as the play progresses becomes more and more like the animals that his slaughterhouse butchers, physically taking on the appearance of a pig, and being unable to say the word "mood" without resorting to mooing in a cow like fashion.
*Cod's mother-a textile worker, who appears in several illusion or flashback scenes throughout the performance, enacting a routine of her profession of pulling and weaving textiles, while reciting a poem-like monologue in her Irish accent.

Cod, who is introduced as a scab, and is ridiculed by Maggot, Roach, and Brandon, who are union workers. A strike has recently ended without a contract, and the union workers are still negotiating.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Slaughter — may refer to:Animals* Animal slaughter, killing animals for food * Slaughterhouse, abattoirPeople* Anne Marie Slaughter, Dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University * Enos Slaughter, Hall of Fame… …   Wikipedia

  • Slaughter on Tenth Avenue — is a ballet with music by Richard Rodgers and choreography by George Balanchine. It occurs near the end of Rodgers and Hart s 1936 Broadway musical comedy On Your Toes . Slaughter is the story of a hoofer who falls in love with a dance hall girl… …   Wikipedia

  • Slaughter alley — is an American colloquial name given for sections of highway known for a high rates of fatal accidents. Other terms include Blood Alley, Massacre Mountain, Killer Highway (Canada) and Route de la Mort (France) and El Camino de la Muerte (Bolivia) …   Wikipedia

  • City Hunter (TV series) — City Hunter Promotional poster for City Hunter Also known as 시티헌터 Genre Romance Action …   Wikipedia

  • Slaughter of the knezes — Seča Knezova Tablet at Belgrade Military history museum Location Valjevo, Serbia …   Wikipedia

  • City of the Damned (Judge Dredd story) — City of the Damned Interior artwork from 2000 AD prog. 397 (Dec 22 1984). Art by Steve Dillon. Publisher IPC Magazines Ltd Publication date 24 November, 1984 – 23 Febru …   Wikipedia

  • City Slickers — Theatrical release poster Directed by Ron Underwood Produced by …   Wikipedia

  • Slaughter-House Cases — SCOTUSCase Litigants=Slaughter House Cases ArgueDate=January 11 ArgueYear=1872 ReargueDateA=February 3 ReargueDateB=5 ReargueYear=1873 DecideDate=April 14 DecideYear=1873 FullName=The Butchers Benevolent Association of New Orleans v. The Crescent …   Wikipedia

  • Slaughter, Louisiana — Geobox Village name = Village of Slaughter native name = other name = other name1 = category = Village image size = image caption = flag size = symbol = symbol size = symbol type = country = United States state = Louisiana region = East Feliciana …   Wikipedia

  • Slaughter Beach, Delaware — Infobox Settlement official name = Slaughter Beach, Delaware settlement type = Town nickname = motto = imagesize = image caption = image mapsize = 250px map caption = Location of Slaughter Beach, Delaware mapsize1 = map caption1 = subdivision… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”