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Shaw's Mrs. Warrens Profession

Essay by   •  March 30, 2011  •  Essay  •  818 Words (4 Pages)  •  1,588 Views

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In 1894, Socialist playwright, George Bernard Shaw wrote the highly controversial play, Mrs. Warren's Profession. The play was censored and it would take eight years, before it was finally produced in London in 1902 for private performance. The production survived a mere two performances as an irate audience condemned the play, protesting that the content was immoral for its themes involving both prostitution and incest. Mrs. Warren's Profession however, presented both an argument and counter-argument. First, Shaw makes an influential case that it was poverty, not immorality that led the young Mrs. Warren into prostitution. He then counters the argument, suggesting that she has become a willing active participant in a capitalist society. Shaw's refusal to moralize about the sex trade, only about the system that supports it created a play that was clearly before its time allowing for poignancy over a century later.

In the play, Vivie Warren, an intelligent and independent Cambridge graduate, learns that her mother, Mrs. Warren, has risen from poverty to her present wealth through prostitution. As the play unfolds, Vivie is forced to come to terms with her mother's secret and that she is a direct beneficiary of a chain of European brothels by allowing her mother to fund her education and life of comfort. Shaw's clever dialogue, embedded with his bright wit keeps an audience's intrigue, as the bleak questions about social justice, sexual relationships, and mother and daughter conflicts, posed by the play, lead the characters to find a sense of resolve and persuade the audience to examine their own attitudes toward women and the capitalist machine.

Eugene Scribe's "well-made" play was the typical form employed by playwrights in the second half of the nineteenth century. The plot dominated the "well-made" play format, often eclipsing any characterization. The realization scene, where the characters learn the truth occurs at the end of the "well-made" play which allowed the playwright to quickly tie the loose ends together. Shaw revolted against the artificial form of the "well-made" play, arguing that the format did not represent real life. In Mrs. Warren's Profession, the action is character driven with little emphasis on any plot development. In the play, the important realization scene occurs at the close of Act II, allowing the remainder of the play to show the characters react to the new reality. Had Shaw formatted Mrs. Warren's Profession to that of the "well-made" play, Vivie might have rejected her mother at the end of the play for living an immoral life, but would come to forgive her mother by the end of the play on the belief that despite her mother's way of life she was a decent person. Instead, Shaw wrote the revelation and reconciliation at the beginning of the serious action. Creating a reverse on traditional expectations, Vivie accepts her mother as a former brothel-keeper and then rejects her as a conventional mother. Another reversal of expectation takes the form of a false ending; in Act III upon ascertaining that Vivie may share a father with

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