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Form, structure, language and devices - CCEAFlashback

Philadelphia, Here I Come! is a play written by Brian Friel. It is a tragicomedy. On his last night in Ireland a series of visitations - some real and some in his imagination - force Gar O'Donnell to confront the choices he has made.

Part of English LiteraturePhiladelphia, Here I Come!

Flashback

The past is important in this play and through we see Gar reviewing the significant events that led to his decision to emigrate. He remembers his love of Kate Doogan, but also his interview with her father - the superior Senator Doogan - and how he bottled out of asking him for Katie鈥檚 hand in marriage.

He recalls too when his aunt, Lizzy Sweeney, visited and how she was desperate for Gar to come to Philadelphia so she can mother him. She cries 鈥淢y son, Gar, Gar, Gar 鈥︹ as she throws her arms around him.

These two incidents are re-enacted, with the action of the play shifting between past and present showing how they are linked. Lizzy鈥檚 visit coinciding with Kate Doogan鈥檚 wedding day brings all Gar鈥檚 emotions together, overwhelming him so much that he decides to emigrate.

Stage directions

The stage directions are the part of the script. They are often in brackets or italics.

Stage directions tell the actors how they are to move or speak their lines. While they do not form the dialogue of the play, they are obviously important as they inform us what the writer intended the audience to see on stage.

For example, the stage directions in Philadelphia, Here I Come! often show us that the dialogue is not what it seems. This is apparent when S.B. seems unconcerned about his son鈥檚 impending departure, but the stage directions indicate his real feelings may be different when they inform us that the newspaper he has been concentrating on 鈥渉as been upside down鈥 all along.

Silence

Friel鈥檚 use of silence between the characters emphasises the distance between them. Because of Gar Private鈥檚 incessant commentary, it is often easy to forget that there is actually silence on stage if you remove what are essentially Gar鈥檚 internal thoughts.

Private鈥檚 long monologues often hide the lengthy silences when father and son are on stage together. These awkward silences contrast with the memories S.B. has of when Gar was a child and S.B. 鈥渃ouldn鈥檛 get a word in edgeways with all the chatting he used to go through鈥 鈥 showing that there used to be much affection and companionship between them.

Here S.B. poignantly echoes Madge鈥檚 sarcastic comment earlier in the play that 鈥淎 body couldn鈥檛 get a word in edgeways with you two!鈥 鈥 highlighting how little they say to each other these days.