martes, 15 de febrero de 2022

"The end of Eddy"

On Friday, we went to see "The end of Eddy", a play against bullying, based on the autobiographical novel by Édouard Louis. 

Here, some students' works:

The end of Eddy

The play starts with a summary about Eddie’s life, a gay boy who is born in a very low class family in a small French town which is 200km away from Paris.

He tells us that his dad is an authoritarian man who teaches their children (they all are boys) using bad works and violence and his only hobbies are getting drunk and watching TV while his mom spends her days washing the dishes and smoking.

Eddie’s life is very depressing so far, and it continues getting even worse when he's bullied at school and the only thing he can do to face the bullies is smile due to his nervousness.

But this is not all, when he starts acting like a female (according to his town society standards) even his dad starts to make fun of him with his friends. His mom also has got a very bad relationship with him since she finds him doing “grown-up activities" with his cousins in the shed.

Those events have a very negative effect on his mental health so he thinks that being gay is wrong and he decides to start dating girls to try to prove that he’s a macho man, which ends with Eddy being unable to get excited while “staying in a private zone” with the girls he flirted with. Anyway, having flirted with those girls makes his popularity levels increase a lot making him even be accepted in the group of popular guys.

The final act of the play is basically Eddie coming out of the closet.

In my personal and humble opinion, the play was quite good, if I had to say something bad about it, it would be that some scenes were a little bit explicit and out of context, but the rest was so cool. The actors besides having great skills to do their job, were also able to change the scenery and music on their own, which makes them even more skillful.

 

 

                                                       (By Juan Pablo Valle)

   

 

(By Miguel Pablo Lozano, María Ortega and Mª José Sánchez)

 

In his novel, Édouard Louis says: " The truth is a revenge because we live in a world of lies, about poor people, about gay people, about what we are, what we experience. Every time, truth is a fight.” Heartbreaking, isn't it?



 


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