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On Sunday, March 9, 2003, I sat in Parker Theatre on the SUNY New Paltz campus, along with about a hundred other people, and experienced, A Doll House. ... He looked at her as a possession, something he owns to make the house look prettier. ... Although they were forbidden for her, she still found ways to sneak them into the house. ...
Another was the doll house and the doll that is on the stage. ... Nora even says in the end that she was her fathers doll child, then Torvald’s doll wife and now she plays with her children as she played with her dolls. They are now her doll children. The doll house on stage was build to look like the houses that were on the outside of the stage, like neighboring houses. The doll that was on the couch, she was always dressed in the same clothes as Nora was. That doll was a Nora Doll. ... This is supposed to represent the shattering of the doll house.
Approximate Word count = 1254 Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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