CANCELLED! Three Women, a play by Sylvia Plath

Unfortunately, due to unforeseen circumstances, Three Voices, who were due to perform this with GWL have had to pull out. We are obviously very reluctant to cancel this event so last minute but see no other option. I do hope you will keep in touch with the library and come along to future events. Check out our Read Out! Read In! event taking place on Tuesday 24 November. Our sincerest apologies for any inconvenience caused.

CANCELLED!
Glasgow Women’s Library would like to invite you to this new staging of Sylvia Plath’s performance poem, Three Women.

Wednesday 18 November 2009, 7pm to 9pm
Glasgow Women’s Library, 81 Parnie Street, Glasgow

Requested minimum donation of £3 per person

Focusing on the experiences of pregnancy of three different women, the play deals with the women’s lives and personal circumstances in a non-judgemental and insightful manner. The theme of pregnancy and maternity is dealt with in a way which is highly subjective and personal but also manages to say something of universal significance by dealing with the strong emotional experiences some women go through during their lives but few probably voice in public.

We are luck enough to have the group Three Voices, made up of Susan Hansen, Felicity
Thomson and Arlene Wood performing the play. The event is B.Y.O.B. and any funds
raised will go towards Glasgow Women’s Library’s move to The Mitchell.

Sylvia Plath and Three Women
WORDS SUCH as heartbreaking, highly complex and uncompromising have often been used to describe the poetry and prose of Sylvia Plath. The dramatic poem Three Women was first published in 1962 and it does very much encompass such descriptions.

When Plath tragically committed suicide with cooking gas in 1963, just 30 years of age, her only play Three Women was performed on BBC Radio that same year. The verse play combines a timeless quality of writing with a strong experimental and artistic expression and an honesty, which can seem brutal at times. Some critics believe that the density of Plath’s poetic work equals that of Shakespeare’s and it can be argued that this is evident in Three Women.

It is hard not to feel moved by the deep search for purpose and meaning when presented with any piece of writing by this extraordinary American writer. It very quickly becomes apparent that every word, every line and every piece does not just mean something. In Plath’s case it will inevitably mean a lot, and this is what gradually becomes clear to any reader or student of her work.

By focusing on the experiences of pregnancy of three different women, it deals with the women’s lives and personal circumstances in a non-judgemental and accurately insightful manner. While the poem’s first woman, or First Voice, wants to be a mum and ends up giving birth to a baby boy, the same cannot be said for woman behind the Second voice, who suffers a traumatic miscarriage. The Student, who appears in the play as the Third Voice, experiences the emotional consequences of giving a child up for adoption when she declares that she is not yet ready to be a mother. In the case of Three Women the theme of pregnancy and maternity is dealt with in a manner, which is highly subjective and personal but also manages to say something of universal significance by dealing with the strong emotional experiences some women go through during their lives but few probably voice in public.

Comments are closed.