Women Laughing
- This article is about the play. For the painting by Goya, see Man Mocked by Two Women.
Women Laughing is a stage play written by Michael Wall in 1989. It was first produced for the stage in 1992, just after the author’s death.
The original version of the play, which was for radio, contained only one act. A second was added for the stage production.
Women Laughing has been performed at the Royal Exchange Manchester, the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs, the Palace Theatre Watford and was toured in 2000 by Not The National Theatre.
Plot and Characters
While the husbands stand outside on the terrace, drinking and boasting; their wives are inside talking about those husbands (and laughing).
In this black comedy, Colin and Stephanie have invited Tony and Maddy to lunch in Ealing. As the men uneasily try at conversation, the laughter of their wives, which seems so uninhibited in comparison with the men's struggles at communication, is a constant interruption. The women finally join the men, and a confrontation results.
The stage play contains a second act, where these positions are reversed. Colin and Tony are now behaving freely, while the women feel more constrained.
The play moves from a garden party to the grounds of a mental hospital.
Themes and Structure
The pressures of modern life come out at a garden party. Themes include: marriage, mental illness