Willy Russell produced a play that showed us the differences in the classes that existed in Liverpool in the 1980s. He did this by showing us a contrasting life between the two boys and their mother. Mrs. Lyon was living a relaxing life, and Mrs. Johnston was living a hard life and had to work hard in order to make a living. Mickey's life is painful, Eddie is sending a relaxing life. Willy Russell also shows that your class and social background can directly affect education, living environment, housing, and wealth.
Social commentary Bloody Brothers: Drama Willy Russell Willy Russell's "brother of blood" is done on the same day in the same twisted story of two brothers born in the uterus of the composition, but they I live in two different worlds. In the scene of the first encounter between Russell Eddy and Mickey. At the beginning Mickey suspected Eddie (Mickey - "Hello" suspected), but after talking in that innocent era it gathered quickly. Eddie is very polite in all aspects of him - saying "bad looking at the dictionary" and "forgiveness".
In the drama, bloody brother Willy Russell explored the differences between working-class families and middle-class families during the recession of the Liverpool industry in the 1960s and 1970s. And it brought economic depression in the early 1980s. In fact, there are two diametrically opposite families, Mickey and Edward. They are two identical twins; but Mickey grew up in a working-class family, Edi grew up in a middle-class family. Using these two extremes, Russell explored the history of the British class system in a very extreme way.
The deaths of Millie and Edward at Willy Russell's Bloody brothers "Do you believe in superstition for obsolete things, or are we in classes that British knows?" Bloody brothers are Liverpool's drama. Willy Russell wrote in 1983. Willy Russell once wrote a play in Liverpool. Because it was the place he grew up in a working class family and when he lived there bloody brothers were associated with this and the classroom. Willie Russell grew up outside Liverpool, graduated from a school as a hairdresser at the age of 15, and in the early twenties he decided to go back to school and get an O level.