Woman in Black: How does Arthur's character change in the story? At the beginning of the story, Arthur is an urban inhabitant of a proud fighting struggle enjoying life. As a result of the terrible experiences that he encountered while staying at a squid wetland, this satisfied condition worsened. This affected the rest of his life. Arthur is an ambitious person who is interested in building his own future; we learned this in the first chapter: This house is my own home one day. (Page 13) In order to fund these ambitions, he wishes to take more responsibility in the project so that he may ask him to raise salary by his employer Bentley.
In June 2012, I was fortunate to see "Black women" at the Fortune Theater. Low temperature adaptation of Susan Hill's 1983 novel. In this story, a young women attorney enters a small town and the villagers explore the story of "black women" who hesitate to talk about this ghostly role. This program was first performed as a "Christmas drama" to attract profits at Scarborough's Saint Joseph Theater in 1987, but attracted more attention than anticipated. Critics praised and succeeded the drama and eventually upgraded to the Fortune Theater currently in Drury Lane.
In the script rehearsal and opening, I comment on the stage when they saw a black woman who did not participate in the stereotype that they were educated, wealthy, and any black men often played on the stage Black women in the audience I heard. I heard that the color of a young lady is comparable to the way Hussein's anger at the end of the play, her anger to Baltimore's riot, and her perception of mob is interpreted as hatred for white people, but that is truly black From infinite love. I have heard that people with a variety of backgrounds talk about how Amir is not only representatives of Muslim people, but how they express oppression on the stage. I heard Muslim audiences speak about how their acting on the theater was erroneously expressed, and they feel that this theater exacerbated the current misunderstanding of Islam.