Fefu and Her Friends
by María Irene Fornés
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Description
New England, Spring 1935. Fefu and seven friends gather at Fefu's house to rehearse a charity performance. Before and after their rehearsal, the women interact with one another, and share their thoughts and feelings about life along with their personal struggles and societal concernsTags
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Member Reviews
My first Fornés play, Fefu and Her Friends really threw me for a loop. The characters and their interactions are both bizarre and at times tender delivers an existential gut-punch that left me intrigued and thoroughly confused at the end. The whole scope of the play, the second part being acted out in four pieces, four times, simultaneously, makes me curious to see the work staged. Fefu is a work that is both intellectually trying, stimulating, and compelling. Perhaps I'll have more to say later or I may just be too busy rereading.
I participated in a reading of Fefu and her Friends with a bunch of actors, and enjoyed it very much, though I'm not an actor. The play concerns a group of women, friends since college, who meet at Fefu's house to plan for a charity event. Their attitudes toward men, toward each other, toward death and toward community are explored. Possibly some of them are mentally ill. The work is reminiscent of Wendy Wasserstein's play Uncommon Women and Others but a little more pessimistic and mysterious. I'm not sure which is the better play, but both require really good actors (of which I certainly am not one).
Thank god this was short, because it was really bad. It made absolutely no sense, the characters were odd, the dialog completely unrealistic, and the action baffling. I will, however, acknowledge that maybe this is edgy and post-modern and whatever and I'm just too stupid to get it.
I saw this play about a month ago, and found it to be rather lacking, which I attributed to the acting. Having read it, I think that it reads much better than it plays, but that it is still a rather plodding work. Good, but not great.
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Author Information

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María Irene Fornés was born in Havana, Cuba on May 14, 1930. She moved with her mother and a sister to New York City in 1945. Before becoming a playwright, she was a painter who studied for a time with the Abstract Expressionist Hans Hofmann. Fornés taught playwriting at New York University, the Padua Hills Playwrights Festival in California, show more and the Intar Hispanic American Arts Center in Manhattan. In 1965, collaborating with the composer Al Carmines, she wrote the book and lyrics for Promenade. Her other plays included Fefu and Her Friends, Mud, The Danube, The Conduct of Life, Abingdon Square, Enter the Night, and Letters from Cuba. Her plays received eight Obie awards and she received an Obie for lifetime achievement in 1982. She died on October 30, 2018 at the age of 88. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Canonical title
- Fefu and Her Friends
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- Members
- 135
- Popularity
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- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (3.43)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2
- ASINs
- 5


























































