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Ladies in Black (Theatre)

 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
type
TVTItem
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
label
Ladies in Black (Theatre)
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
page
LadiesInBlack
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
comment
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Ladies in Black is a 2015 Australian musical, adapted from the novel The Women in Black by Madeleine St John. The book was written by Carolyn Burns (who also did the stage adaptations of High Society and Priscilla, Queen of the Desert). The music was written by Tim Finn (of Crowded House).The show is set in Sydney, Australia, in the late 1950s. The main characters are: Lisa Miles, a young, bookish Australian girl finishing twelfth grade, and her family: Mr George Miles, Lisa's conservative, paternalistic, controlling father. Mrs Miles, Lisa's quiet, conflict-averse mother. The staff of F.G. Goodes, a Sydney department store where Lisa gets a casual job: Miss Cartwright, the no-nonsense manager of the store at which Lisa works. Miss Jacobs, a somewhat frazzled older lady who oversees Alterations. Magda Szombathelyi, the cool, aristocratic, distant and pointedly European mistress of the Model Gowns department. Patty Williams (nee Crown) and Fay Baines, two working-middle-class salesladies in the Cocktail Frocks department. Their friends and families:Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); }) Stefan Szombathelya, Magda's husband, Hungarian, affable and literary. Rudi Janosi, Stefan's and therefore Magda's friend, a recent arrival from Hungary and a serial romantic. Mrs Crown, Patty's working-class, worldly-wise mother. Dawn and Joy, Patty's happier but somewhat more abrasive sisters. Myra, Fay's socially forward, free-spirited friend.The film Ladies In Black is also based on the same novel, but the film is not an adaptation of the musical.
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2023-02-22T10:28:29Z
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2023-02-22T10:28:29Z
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_1ba17583
type
The Ghost
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_1ba17583
comment
The Ghost: Barely averted with Lisa's Love Interest Michael. He is present and seen with Lisa in the party scene, but has no dialogue, and no actions apart from what Magda tells him to do. Dialogue from that point forward establishes that Michael is still present and doing things in Lisa's life, just not onstage.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_1c79ae8c
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Those Two Guys
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_1c79ae8c
comment
Those Two Guys: Fay and Patty; part of the plot is Fay's Character Development into someone other than Patty's rather quiet, romantically unsuccessful friend.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_20c99f6e
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Hidden Heart of Gold
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_20c99f6e
comment
Hidden Heart of Gold: Magda, to an extent.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_20c99f6e
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_2740531a
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She Cleans Up Nicely
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_2740531a
comment
She Cleans Up Nicely: This trope can apply to Fay, Magda and Lisa, depending on the production.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_2740531a
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_28c1d543
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Defrosting Ice Queen
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_28c1d543
comment
Defrosting Ice Queen: Magda, although she defrosts fairly fast.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_28c1d543
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_294ed981
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Bilingual Bonus
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_294ed981
comment
Bilingual Bonus: Lisa and Magda have some dialogue in French. None of it is particularly pivotal, but it adds depth.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_294ed981
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_308ac24f
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Fantasy-Forbidding Father
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_308ac24f
comment
Fantasy-Forbidding Father: Lisa's father considers Lisa's intellectual pursuits worthless and is set on preparing her for life as a housewife and mother. He eventually comes around near the end of the show.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_308ac24f
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3126c34a
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Insufferable Genius
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3126c34a
comment
Insufferable Genius: Magda, and very occasionally Lisa.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3126c34a
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3126c34a
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_31da1e24
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Shipper on Deck
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_31da1e24
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Shipper on Deck: Magda, for Lisa and Michael.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_33d5b7f2
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Adapted Out
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: Several other Goodes staff members appear in the book but are left out of the musical, including: Mr Ryder, the floor manager (whose place in the story is largely taken by Miss Cartright) Paula, a friend of Patty's who works as a sales lady on another floor (whose role in the plot is transferred to Lisa)
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_33d5b7f2
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_35e077
type
Fourth-Date Marriage
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_35e077
comment
Fourth-Date Marriage: Rudi and Fay meet at Magda's New Year's Eve party, and are engaged before the end of January. Assuming they don't go on any more dates than the ones shown or mentioned in dialogue, the date in which Rudi proposes is literally their fourth date.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3946634e
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The Smart Guy
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3946634e
comment
The Smart Guy: Lisa. She is unashamedly bookish and academically high achieving in 1950s Australia, not the most friendly environment for intellectuals.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3d5c5deb
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Flat Character
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3d5c5deb
comment
Flat Character: About half of the leads, including Lisa. While opinions differ on whether it hurts the show, the fact remains that the stories with the most Character Development are not necessarily those with the most stage time.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3dcc914f
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Took a Level in Kindness
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3dcc914f
comment
Took a Level in Kindness: Magda seems to have done this by the end of the show.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3dcc914f
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3ed17fe0
type
Wide-Eyed Idealist
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_3ed17fe0
comment
Wide-Eyed Idealist: Lisa, whose ideas of what she will be able to do with her life are regarded by others as charmingly naive and romantic.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_48b9731f
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Paper-Thin Disguise
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_48b9731f
comment
Paper-Thin Disguise: Out-of-universe. Depending on budget limitations, it can be obvious to the point of confusion that Mr Miles and Stefan are played by the same actor.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_48b9731f
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_48c24da4
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Significant Double Casting
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_48c24da4
comment
Significant Double Casting: The standard casting has some actors playing multiple smaller roles, sometimes to significant effect. The actor playing Lisa's Fantasy-Forbidding Father also plays Stefan, who encourages her to pursue her dreams. The actor playing Rudi, Fay's love interest, also appears in her flashbacks to her less successful past relationships.
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_48c24da4
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_575fd5e2
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Dark Is Not Evil
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_575fd5e2
comment
Dark Is Not Evil: The titular Ladies dress in sharp black uniforms throughout, but there is never any suggestion that any of them are evil.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_5ce2c9c6
type
Suddenly Shouting
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_5ce2c9c6
comment
Suddenly Shouting: Depending on the production, Lisa's argument with her father late in Act II can be this.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_603f1a80
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Pragmatic Adaptation
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_603f1a80
comment
Pragmatic Adaptation: The novel is a series of vignettes flitting between Lisa, Patty, Fay, and Magda and giving them each approximately equal page time. The stage version focuses on Lisa's coming-of-age story as the main plot thread that the rest is arranged around. As a consequence, Lisa is made more involved in the others' stories, and is the catalyst for the big changes in Patty's and Fay's lives (which happen independently of her in the novel). Also, the characters are generally more inclined to tell each other about what's going on in their lives, because in a stage show with no narrator that's the only way the audience is going to hear about it.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_603f1a80
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_653c5c73
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Cannot Spit It Out
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_653c5c73
comment
Cannot Spit It Out: An abstract version. Frank and Patty are married but are so repressed that they (initially) can't confront the issues stopping them from having a sex life.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_653c5c73
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_66755d29
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Author Avatar
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_66755d29
comment
Author Avatar: The foreword to the script suggests that Lisa is this for Madeleine St. John, author of the original novel.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_71748a39
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Named by the Adaptation
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_71748a39
comment
Named by the Adaptation: Lloyd and Joe, the two men Myra and Fay go on a disappointing double date with. In the novel, the two men go unnamed.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_71748a39
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_72ce3f54
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Adaptation Relationship Overhaul
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_72ce3f54
comment
Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: The ladies of the Cocktail Frocks department are friendlier with each other and more inclined to talk about their hopes and their troubles than in the novel, allowing various bits of exposition to be conveyed in dialogue in the absence of a narrator. Similarly, Rudi's friendship with Magda and Stefan is closer and of longer duration than in the novel (where they're fairly recent acquaintances), so that their dialogue can support exposition about each other and what it's like being reffos.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_730d3664
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Adaptational Angst Upgrade
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_730d3664
comment
Adaptational Angst Upgrade: The resistance put up by Lisa's parents to the changes in her life, and especially her father's outspoken resistance to her academic hopes, is played up in the stage version to give her storyline more drama. In the novel, her mother, though taken aback by some of the changes, is generally supportive, and her father is mostly away at work or at the racetrack and barely takes notice of what Lisa's up to until his last couple of scenes, which end with him grumpily accepting the fait accompli. Fay's fears that her relationship history will spoil Rudi's opinion of her is given more play in the stage version than in the novel, where Rudi anticipates the problem and puts her mind at ease before she's had a chance to really work herself up over it. Miss Jacobs' backstory, with the soldier fiancé she never got over, is entirely invented for the stage version. In the novel, her personal history and life outside work remains an enigma from start to finish.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_794f3589
type
Adaptation Explanation Extrication
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_794f3589
comment
Adaptation Explanation Extrication: In the sequence where Lisa goes to visit Magda's home after work, Lisa changes out of her black dress before leaving the store, but Magda wears her black dress home and changes there. The disparity is not addressed in the musical, but in the novel it was explained that Magda does not wear the uniform black dress issued to the other staff members, but wears her own black dresses to work, having persuaded the manager that individual style is appropriate to her position in Model Gowns.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7eb2bc15
type
Ambiguous Time Period
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7eb2bc15
comment
Ambiguous Time Period: It is never stated out loud exactly when in the 1950s the show is set. However, the show is set at Christmas and a clip of Queen Elizabeth II's 1958 Christmas broadcast is played at the beginning of Act II, dating the show to that year.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7eb2bc15
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7eb2bc15
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7febc23b
type
Establishing Character Moment
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7febc23b
comment
Mrs Miles has hers much later in the show, in "Make Something Out Of This"; it is an Establishing Character Moment partly because she has been quiet, retiring and desperately trying to avoid establishing her character throughout the show.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7febc23b
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_7febc23b
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_808cbaeb
type
Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_808cbaeb
comment
Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: Magda's husband asks her why she seems troubled. She lists the reasons: she's worried that one of her colleagues may be getting involved with the wrong kind of man (partly at her instigation), another colleague's marriage is on the rocks, ...and most of the stock in Model Gowns sold out during the Christmas-New Year rush and she thinks that the mostly-empty racks look inelegant.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_808cbaeb
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_808cbaeb
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_82518cf7
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Motor Mouth
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_82518cf7
comment
Motor Mouth: Lisa can verge into this under stress or when enthusiastic.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_82518cf7
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_82518cf7
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_83a903f6
type
Stepford Smiler
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_83a903f6
comment
Stepford Smiler: Miss Jacobs has shades of this. She is unrelentingly kind, but also clearly frazzled and nervous, and on some level clearly grieving the loss of her fiance 40 years earlier.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_8426d2ac
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Inherently Funny Words
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_8426d2ac
comment
Inherently Funny Words: "Wagga" (the name of a city in inland New South Wales). It is said a few times with increasing incredulity in Act II.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_8b568cb7
type
Posthumous Character
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_8b568cb7
comment
Posthumous Character: Miss Jacobs' soldier fiance. He appears in "On a Summer Afternoon" at the top of Act II, but is an ensemble dancer with no lines.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_8b568cb7
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Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_8b568cb7
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_92b20172
type
Love Interests
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_92b20172
comment
Love Interests: Rudi for Fay. The mostly unseen Michael for Lisa.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_92b20172
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_9591377d
type
Heel Realization
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_9591377d
comment
Heel Realization: Mr Miles goes through this late in the show.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_987104cb
type
Calling Out for Not Calling
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_987104cb
comment
Calling Out for Not Calling: After the first time Lisa goes to lunch at Magda's house, she arrives home much later than expected, partly because she was having such a good time and partly because she didn't account for the bus home being on a weekend timetable. Part of the subsequent dressing-down from her parents includes pointing out that she didn't even call home to let them know the situation, so they had no idea what had become of her.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_a2492aff
type
Dogged Nice Guy
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_a2492aff
comment
Dogged Nice Guy: Michael Kovak is established to have some of this going on.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_a2492aff
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_a8dcb1d7
type
Love at First Sight
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_a8dcb1d7
comment
Love at First Sight: Rudi toward Fay. How sincere he is can depend on the production.
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 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_aaedd10
type
Given Name Reveal
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_aaedd10
comment
Given Name Reveal: It is made clear at the start of the show that nobody knows Miss Jacobs' first name. At the end of Act II, she gives Lisa a farewell gift with a card, revealing that her given name is Rebecca.
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1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_aaedd10
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_aaedd10
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_af2547c9
type
Informed Flaw
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_af2547c9
comment
Informed Flaw: Miss Cartwright and Magda are both suggested to be considerably more fiery and temperamental than they are seen to be on stage.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_af2547c9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_af2547c9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_af2547c9
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_b707726f
type
Hypocritical Humor
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_b707726f
comment
Hypocritical Humor: Patty gets a lot of comedy in Act I based on the contrast between her outward stitched-up, judgemental Puritanism, and the fact that her entire subplot is based on trying to bed her husband.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_b707726f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_b707726f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_b707726f
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
type
Really Gets Around
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
comment
Really Gets Around: Myra, who - interestingly for 1950s Australia - is completely unashamed about it.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bfdbf829
type
Significant Name Shift
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bfdbf829
comment
Significant Name Shift: The moments at which Lisa's mother and (some time later) her father accept her new name stand in for them accepting and beginning to support her hopes for her future.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bfdbf829
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bfdbf829
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_bfdbf829
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_c3478f1d
type
Badass Bookworm
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_c3478f1d
comment
Badass Bookworm: Downplayed. Lisa is a relatively shy, bookish twelfth-grader, but doesn't let that stop her doing her high-pressure retail job, and stands up to her father.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_c3478f1d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_c3478f1d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_c3478f1d
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d08595d3
type
Broken Bird
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d08595d3
comment
Broken Bird: Miss Jacobs. She copes with everyday life fine, but is suggested never to have really gotten over losing her fiance forty years earlier.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d08595d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d08595d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d08595d3
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d280a296
type
Teen Genius
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d280a296
comment
Teen Genius: Lisa, albeit for the arts and humanities, rather than the traditional portrayal of this trope as STEM.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d280a296
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d280a296
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_d280a296
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dc579c91
type
Contrived Coincidence
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dc579c91
comment
Contrived Coincidence: The entire point of Magda's party; it is essentially an excuse for matchmaking.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dc579c91
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dc579c91
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dc579c91
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dca70c44
type
Reasonable Authority Figure
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: Miss Cartwright and Magda both tweak things just a little to ensure Lisa eventually gets Lisette, the model gown she's been longing for throughout the show.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dca70c44
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dca70c44
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dca70c44
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dcb9c541
type
Ship Tease
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dcb9c541
comment
Ship Tease: To an extent. Lisa's developing romance with Michael Kovak is the subject of discussion through Act II, but it is not resolved to any extent by the end of the show.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dcb9c541
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dcb9c541
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dcb9c541
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
type
Despair Event Horizon
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
comment
Despair Event Horizon: Miss Jacobs is implied to have hit hers when her fiance was killed in the First World War.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e13156e1
type
Mama Bear
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e13156e1
comment
Mama Bear: Mrs Miles generally tries to avoid and defuse conflict between her daughter and her husband, but when that is no longer possible, she takes Lisa's side with a passion.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e13156e1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e13156e1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e13156e1
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
type
Morality Pet
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
comment
Morality Pet: Lisa is suggested to be this for Magda to an extent, although Magda is never suggested to be evil. "Extroversion pet" or "Friendliness pet" might be more appropriate.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e6a901a3
type
Meaningful Rename
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e6a901a3
comment
Meaningful Rename: Lisa's real name is Lesley, but she doesn't like the name and takes the opportunity to rebrand herself when her job at Goode's provides her with a new circle of acquaintances.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e6a901a3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e6a901a3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_e6a901a3
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_eab212a8
type
Period Piece
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_eab212a8
comment
Period Piece: Set in the 1950s. Ambiguous Time Period: It is never stated out loud exactly when in the 1950s the show is set. However, the show is set at Christmas and a clip of Queen Elizabeth II's 1958 Christmas broadcast is played at the beginning of Act II, dating the show to that year.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_eab212a8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_eab212a8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_eab212a8
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
type
Brick Joke
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
comment
Brick Joke: Fay and Patty joke about Magda being a "crazy continental" during Act I. In the last few minutes of the act, Magda refers to herself in the same words, in a way which suggests she knows exactly what Fay and Patty have been saying. She is speaking to Fay, who has the good grace to blush.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff17ccf1
type
Innocently Insensitive
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff17ccf1
comment
Innocently Insensitive: When asked if she plans to make a career in the retail trade, Lisa replies with an amused, "No," ... before remembering she is interviewing for a retail job. Thankfully, Miss Cartwright takes it in good humour.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff17ccf1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff17ccf1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff17ccf1
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
type
Pet the Dog
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
comment
Pet the Dog: Magda, implied to have previously been rather cold and distant, ends up helping Fay find love.
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_name
comment
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_name
 Ladies in Black (Theatre) / int_name
itemName
Ladies in Black (Theatre)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Australian Media / int_57c7a569
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Given Name Reveal / int_57c7a569
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Significant Name Shift / int_57c7a569
 Ladies in Black (Theatre)
hasFeature
Theatre of the 2010s / int_57c7a569