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Drama, American
The Fever by Wallace Shawn β€” book cover

The Fever

by Wallace Shawn
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Synopsis

Wallace Shawn's The Fever is the winner of the 1991 Obie Award for Best Play and soon to be a film starring Vanessa Redgrave. While visiting a poverty-stricken country far from home, the unnamed narrator of The Fever is forced to witness the political persecution occurring just beyond a hotel window. In examining a life of comfort and relative privilege, the narrator reveals, "I always say to my friends, We should be glad to be alive. We should celebrate life. We should understand that life is wonderful." But how does one celebrate life — take pleasure in beauty, for instance — while slowly becoming aware that the poverty and oppression of other human beings are a direct consequence of one's own pleasurable life? In a coruscating monologue, The Fever is most of all an eloquent meditation on living a life with conscience and action in ethical relationship to others in the world.

NY Newsday

...mesmerizingly theatrical-a profoundly engaging journey through the awakening of a pampered man's conscience.

About the Author, Wallace Shawn

Wallace Shawn is the author of "Our Late Night" (OBIE Award Best Play) "Marie and Bruce", "Aunt Dan and Lemon", "The Designated Mourner", "The Fever", among other plays, and the screenplay for "My Dinner with André". He has translated and adapted "The Threepenny Opera", "The Master Builder" and "The Mandrake".

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Book Details

Published
June 1, 1992
Publisher
Dramatists Play Service, Incorporated
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780822203988

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