Angels in America is a phenomenal play, and probably 75% of the characters are either gay or hinted to be gay. There are characters in The Glass Menagerie and Three Tall Women who are not explicitly stated to be gay, but are based on their creators (Tennessee Williams and Edward Albee, respectively), who are. M. Butterfly is not technically about gay people, but it does feature a relationship between two men.
Last Summer at Bluefish Cove is an excellent play about a gang of lesbians who rent cottages over the summer together.
Fight it. You're not a lesbian
Deal with it?
He was popular, and most of his plays were received enthusiastically. He was a successful business and purchased a great deal of property.
The most unwanted characters are those with a Narcissistic personality disorder, and the way to deal with them is to avoid them.
If someone is bothering you about being a lesbian don't listen to then. So what if you're a lesbian, no matter what someone is always going to saysomething rude about you and you shouldn't let that keep you down. Being a lesbian is how you are and you shouldn't be ashamed of that because that makes you unique. Just block out the rude comments.
Basically because they are very good. Shakespeare chose stories that deal with essential human problems, dramatised them using complex and ambiguous characters, and gave those characters lines to say which are memorable and express ideas and feelings perfectly. On top of that, he knew how to throw in a dirty joke, an action sequence, a drunkard or a brothel keeper to keep things lively.
deal or no deal
In cribbage, the player who did not deal the cards plays after a go.
In cribbage, the player who did not deal the cards plays after the "go."
If her mind is made up and she has accepted the lifestyle, there is no point in trying to change her. This will lead to problems in your relationship with her as a mother.
Just deal with it basicly
Shakespeare wrote ten plays called history plays based on events in English History: King John, Richard II, Henry IV Parts 1 and 2, Henry V, Henry VI Parts 1, 2, and 3, Henry VIII and Richard III. His plays Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra while not called history plays deal with historical events. Some others deal with historical characters but fictional events (Macbeth, Cymbeline).