Can you count to a million billion trillion?
Let us all agree that I would make the world's worst theater critic, at least in terms of timing. But if you have no plans for tomorrow afternoon, I strongly recommend you catch the last performance of Carole Braverman's The Margaret Ghost as performed by Theatre@First, because I went with no expectations but historical curiosity and good memories of last season's The Winter's Tale and what I got was as smart as Stoppard and reminded me intermittently of certain webcomics I love. The play is a three-act semi-fantasia on the life of Margaret Fuller; it is subtitled A Transcendentalist Love Story and indeed there is a triangle of emotions at its heart, although really it's sort of a pentangle, or maybe it has nine points, one for each actor in the cast. If you have ever wanted to see Ralph Waldo Emerson, poet-prophet of Concord, saint of the Transcendentalists, utterly and completely wrong-footed by a woman who's got a classical education and isn't afraid to use it, this is your play. This is also your play if you want to hear Horace Greeley talking socialism with Nathaniel Hawthorne, a chair-throwing argument in Italian, the world's least informative crash course in sex ed, or just if you want complex relationships between fully human beings, meaning that none of them are without moments of sympathy and all of them are flawed, including the heroine. Quite a lot of it is quotably funny. ("Then the Dark Vision is a blabbermouth!") It even passes a kind of reverse Bechdel test—when two male characters talk, they are just as likely to be talking about Margaret as about politics or philosophy or art. She shouldn't have died at age forty, but neither should many extraordinary people at the ages they did. I am sorry her writings were censored; I am glad enough survived to attest to her brilliance and incidentally to construct this play. I think I am about to continue my long tradition of fiction-inspired research. And I also think that I may have to pick up a subscription to Theatre@First, because I was told after the show that their upcoming season will include Christopher Fry's The Lady's Not for Burning. Maybe I'll even get to see it not on the next-to-last night . . .

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I am so glad you had such a wonderful time. This production was part of a year-long celebration of Margaret Fuller and there are more chances to learn about her throughout the country at that website, I believe.
Thank you so much for coming!
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Awesome. There were several people I would have liked to show this play to and at least two of them were inconveniently out of town.
You're making me think we should offer them online.
You should. Also, if you're the person to talk to about this: given that the published script already includes an introduction by the director, you could consider collecting the actors' notes in print as well. I was pointed in their direction by John Olson and they're more personal and more striking perspectives—on the dramatic characters, the historical figures, and the two different productions—than one gets from things like program notes; they're worth preserving somewhere more permanent than Google.
Thank you so much for coming!
Thank you for the show!