Difference between revisions of "James B. Carrington"
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[[File:Carrington.png|thumb|right|''CARRINGTON: Maybe they ''should'' feel lost, Joseph: just as lost then as we are always already lost. Just like poor, itinerant Silas, wandering the road, looking for a home.'']] | [[File:Carrington.png|thumb|right|''CARRINGTON: Maybe they ''should'' feel lost, Joseph: just as lost then as we are always already lost. Just like poor, itinerant Silas, wandering the road, looking for a home.'']] | ||
− | '''Carrington''' is a friend of [[Joseph]] and [[Lula]] from their | + | '''Carrington''' is a friend of [[Joseph]] and [[Lula]] from their University days. [[Conway]] has the chance to meet him at [[Equus Oils]] in [[Act I]]. Throughout the story, Carrington searches for an outdoor venue to perform his play, an experimental adaptation of Robert Frost's [[wikipedia:The Death of the Hired Man|"The Death of the Hired Man"]]. He is also director of the play ''[[The Entertainment]]''. In talking with [[Shannon]] at the [[Random Access Self-Storage Facility]] in [[Act III]], he references many others plays as well, such as ''[[wikipedia:Oresteia|Oresteia]]'', ''[[wikipedia:Goethe's Faust|Faust]]'', ''[[wikipedia:The Iceman Cometh|The Iceman Cometh]]'', and ''[[wikipedia:The Glass Menagerie|The Glass Menagerie]]''. He claims drama is only his second love; his true calling is pseudoscience. |
[[Category:Characters]] | [[Category:Characters]] |
Revision as of 09:12, 1 February 2018
Carrington is a friend of Joseph and Lula from their University days. Conway has the chance to meet him at Equus Oils in Act I. Throughout the story, Carrington searches for an outdoor venue to perform his play, an experimental adaptation of Robert Frost's "The Death of the Hired Man". He is also director of the play The Entertainment. In talking with Shannon at the Random Access Self-Storage Facility in Act III, he references many others plays as well, such as Oresteia, Faust, The Iceman Cometh, and The Glass Menagerie. He claims drama is only his second love; his true calling is pseudoscience.