Wicked Witch or Damsel in Distress?
The Wicked Witch Who Disguised Herself as a Damsel In Distress
"Brilliant
satire!""Wickedly funny!""Making fun of prominent liberal
women without naming them was a stroke of genius. ""Feminists will
fume. The rest of us will chuckle.""I sure hope someone brings this
to the stage.""It is about time that men and women teamed up to
defeat feminism."
A Narrated Historical Fable as a Stage Production
Stage Manager - Meant
to be presented as a stage production. Screens for multi-media images are
set up around the theater. As the narrator speaks, slide shows, film
clips, news photos, and other images, flash on the screens. Actors,
dancers, and mimes, move on-stage to further illustrate the events described by
the narrator in scripted and non-scripted mini-tableaux. Emotionally
stirring music is synchronized to the script of the narrator. Each scene will
be accompanied by graphics, videos, and photos to enhance the activities of the
actors onstage while the narrator speaks.
(Narrator moves
on-stage to ominous rumble of kettle drums mixed with discordant cello chords.)
Act I
Wicked Witches in Ancient Times
Narrator: Once
upon a time, right after human women invented agriculture, and mankind began to
settle into permanent communities, the wicked witches began to appear.
Nobody knows if there is a cause and effect connection between these two events
of ancient history. Nevertheless, wicked witches have been with us for a
very long time.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: In these
ancient times life was tough, even for wicked witches. Wicked witches
don't really have powerful magic. They can disguise themselves, they cast
spells on humans, and sometimes temporarily take over human lives, but they
can't magically make food appear, for instance. They survive by
establishing a parasitic relationship with human males. Since humans
weren't doing all that well back then, the witches also found it hard to survive.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Wicked
witches weren't usually able to marry men in those days because they were so
ugly, and had such nasty dispositions. However, it didn't take long for
the wicked witches to make good use of their limited powers. A good and
loyal wife with a sweet disposition would become irrationally irritable and
unreasonable for a few days. She wouldn't comb her hair, and saw
what was wrong with and complained about everything. The husband would
notice that tools were missing. Stores of food were ransacked and
much was stolen. Wood gathered for heating and cooking was taken.
The children had nightmares. This made life most upsetting for early
human families.
Stage Manager –
End Scene
Narrator: Eventually,
humans caught on about the influence of wicked witches and devised techniques
to drive them away. The most effective method was for men and women to
protect each other. The only sure way a man could be protected from a
wicked witch was by the love of a good woman. The only sure way a woman
could be protected from a wicked witch was the love of a good man. This
ancient technique remains effective down to the present day.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: By the dawn
of recorded history, specially trained humans could counter many of the wicked
witches' rudimentary skills. Wicked witches are very deceptive, so
detecting the influence and identity of wicked witches became an important
function for ancient priests, seers, prophets, and oracles.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Wicked
witches, or women who had been taken over by wicked witches, are mentioned in
ancient religious literature. The Hebrew Bible warns: "It is better
to have a straw mat in a corner of the rooftop, than a palace shared with a
nagging wife." And, "A continual dripping on a rainy day
and a nagging wife are alike; to restrain her is to restrain the wind or to
grasp oil in the right hand." Nagging is a sure sign of wicked
witch-hood, or that some unfortunate woman has been captured by a wicked witch's
spell. The Hebrews had a zero tolerance policy toward wicked witches, so
it is not likely that these wives mentioned in the Bible were actually wicked
witches. More likely, they were human women under a spell.
End Act I
Stage Manager - Curtain
closes, lights dimmed for 15 seconds, lights up, curtain open)
Act II
Wicked Witches in the Classical Period
Narrator: By the
beginning of the early classical period there are many mentions of wicked
witches in literature. The Sirens, who disguised themselves as beautiful
women, who would lure sailors to their death on jagged rocks, were really wicked
witches. Xanthippi, Socrates' wife, was a wicked witch, a real one, not a
human woman under a spell. Xanthippi was renowned for her beauty and her
nagging tongue. She had disguised herself as a beautiful woman.
Stage Managers -
Socrates and Xanthippi enter from rear of center stage and pause.
Xanthippi is classically beautiful, and she is also shaking her finger at
Socrates and uttering an impromptu nagging monologue. The actress should
make this nagging monologue clever and funny, while simultaneously being mean and
nasty. Socrates walks to front stage center. The focus and volume
of Xanthippi fades. Just as she is about to exit stage right, she looks
back over her shoulder at the audience, she is spotlighted and for a few
seconds you see how ugly she really is.
Stage Manager - Scripted
mini-tableau:
Socrates: Above all I wish to learn tolerance. If I can be
tolerant of Xanthippi, I can tolerate anyone.
Narrator: Socrates would later come to say,
Socrates: Encouraging women to be equal is foolhardy, they don’t know
how. They must remain submissive or they become domineering.
Narrator: In spite of his reputation for wisdom, he had not realized
that his individual experience with his own beautiful wife, who was indeed a
wicked witch, had caused him to generalize all women and female behavior.
Stage Manager – End Scene
Narrator: Even
Socrates was fooled! This goes to show that even the wisest of men are
sometimes fooled by the wily ways of wicked witches. Some ancient
sources say Socrates discovered the true identity of his wife, and that is the
real reason he drank the hemlock. According to this theory the famous
"Apology" was just a way to make Socrates' death count for something,
and seem noble.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Wicked
witches consider Xanthippi's skills quite an accomplishment. Wicked
witches are very ugly. It takes years of training and self discipline for
a wicked witch to look like a beautiful woman, and most wicked witches can't do
it at all. The payoffs for wicked witches who looked beautiful were
enormous. Rich and powerful men chose beautiful women, and the richest
and most powerful human males made the best choice for a parasitic life
form. So, Xanthippi is considered a hero to the sisterhood of wicked
witches. However, Xanthippi still had a wicked witch's disposition.
She couldn't even fake being civil during the honeymoon.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Xanthippi
towers over the classical Greco-Roman period of wicked witch history.
Cleopatra was a wicked witch of considerable skill, but her
great-great-grandmother mated with a human and a few of the human traits were
mutated into Cleopatra’s gene pool. That made Cleo weak in her resolve
to be wicked. Cleo also fell in love with human males rather than hating
them completely. Cleopatra might be famous in human history, but wicked
witches do not respect her.
Stage Manager - Theater
darkens
Narrator: During the dark ages the wicked witches
solidified their position in human affairs and sharpened their skills of
deception, but there were no outstanding heroes of wicked witchdom during this
period.
End Act II
Stage Manager -
Curtain closes,15 seconds in darkness, then house lights up
Intermission
(Champagne and refreshments in the vestibule)
Act III
Wicked Witches in Modern Times
(Biting the hand that feeds)
Narrator: By the
19th century wicked witches had become Queens, Empresses, and President's
wives. Abraham Lincoln was married to a wicked witch. Abe's wife
was not a beauty. She looked a lot better than the average wicked witch,
but that left her in the category of "mud fence," as far as humans
were concerned. She had the typical nasty disposition of wicked
witches. Once she hit poor Abe in the face with a log because he failed
to build a fire quickly enough to suit her. She also threw hot coffee in
Abe's face. On one occasion she hit him again and again with a broom
stick until she physically drove him out of the house and into a street full of
neighbors, who were collected in front of Abe's house because of the noise
of the fight.
Mrs. Lincoln's tirades
were the talk of the neighborhood. She also aimed her wickedness at
tradesmen and servants. She physically abused her sons as well. Her
wide experience in physical violence caused her to discover another important
wicked witch principle. Mary Todd Lincoln is credited with promoting
domestic violence as a way for wicked witches who are married, to keep their
men under their thumbs. She discovered that men seldom hit back, and when
they do defend themselves they are faced with well intentioned although perhaps
misplaced condemnation from other men as wife-beaters. She also found
that involving a third party (counselor, clergy, relatives, etc.) almost always
resulted in the human male being blamed or punished. Her maxim, "If
the police get involved, they will always arrest the man," was an
inspiration to several generations of wicked witches. Her prestige among
wicked witches is evidenced by the fact that a wicked witch advocacy group
lobbied to get Mary Todd Lincoln on the face of the one dollar bill in 1996.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Abe hinted
at his attitude about being married to a wicked witch in 1864, when he pardoned
a young man who was sentenced to death for desertion.
Stage Manager - Scripted
mini-tableau
The Presidential
Secretary: Mr. President, this document is the pardon application for the
man who was found guilty of desertion and is sentenced to die tomorrow.
His only grounds in asking for clemency are that he is in love, and he
wants to get married to his sweetheart.
Abe, while signing
pardon: I want to punish this young man. Probably in less than a
year, he will wish I had withheld the pardon.)
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Historically,
the next wicked witch to make a major advance was Mata Hari. Not only was
she beautiful, but she was deceptively charming as well. Her ugliness was
hidden in her secret treachery. So now, some wicked witches could not
only look beautiful, but be falsely charming. Of course, their wickedness
came through in their behavior, but it was much easier to find a host male if a
wicked witch had beauty and feigned charm. Wicked witches soon found out
that most men were fools. Good looks, the promise of sex, and a little
flattery could keep almost any human male under her thumb, and busy being her
beast of burden. Mata Hari is also credited with promoting the use of
poison as the primary assassination technique of wicked witches. The CDC’s
database reports that more than 1000 men were poisoned by their wicked witch
wives.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: With the
growing industrial revolution, wicked witches found new opportunities for
attaching themselves to male providers. It had taken many thousands of
years, but wicked witches began having a major impact in human affairs by the
turn of the twentieth century. Even though they were not fully developed
humans, by the 1920’s they had even gained the privilege to vote.
Stage Manager – End Scene
Narrator: By the early
20th century, wicked witches also had gained proficiency in the art of playing
"damsel in distress." Wicked witches discovered that human
males are biologically programmed to rescue, protect, and provide for
women. By the 1950’s wicked witches were adept at giving off the signals
of an injured or threatened human female. This soon became even more
effective than being beautiful. If a wicked witch didn't want to
make the effort to become beautiful, she could always give off "damsel in
distress" signals, and some idiot man would rescue her and take care of
her, even if she was ugly and nagged a lot.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: The
collective genius of the wicked witches of the late 20th century cannot be
overstated. The synergy of mixing all the skills of wicked witches
throughout history was the crowning achievement of wicked witchdom.
One of the pioneers of the "synergistic" technique was so good at her
disguises and spells that she was actually an employee of a sex club that
catered to the rich playboy type of human male. Imagine how powerful the
effect of a “damsel in distress” would be if she was beautiful, charming, and a
sexual tease in a skimpy bunny costume, all at the same time. Men would
flock to be a beast of burden to this kind of wicked witch. By the time
of the late 1960’s the wicked witches were doing so well that they began to
think they could live without their human male host organisms. Thus, they began
“biting the hands that fed them”.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Dependency
breeds hatred. The wicked witches had
been dependent for thousands of years. Soon, wicked witches began to add
a new intensity to their hatred of men. This new level of loathing was
similar to a milder version of the same dynamic which human adolescents
exhibit. In their late teens, young humans begin to think they can live
without their host organisms. As soon as that thought occurs, a deep rage
sets in against their parents, and they are blind to any virtues their parents
might have. So, after having existed as a parasitic life form since the
dawn of civilization, the wicked witches suddenly decided they could live
without men. This made for a very volatile situation. Humans were
not aware of it, but their very existence stood in great peril.
Stage Manager – End Scene
Narrator: The
leadership of the wicked witches realized they were really on to something with
their new "synergistic" techniques. By the late 1960's,
hoards of beautiful wicked witches showed up in provocative clothing, with
no bras and wearing skimpy skirts. Sometimes they would wear their bras
and take them off in public and set fire to them. They would give off
strong "damsel in distress" signals by claiming that they were being
treated unfairly, or that men were rude to them. They used all of the
deceptive tricks and wicked spells they knew. Of course, like flies to
honey, men were attracted, and then they were scornfully rejected by the wicked
witches. With apocalyptic clarity, it was evident that the wicked witches
had dropped the pretense of being charming. More than one man was crushed
by their cruel words of rejection.
Stage Manager - Scripted
mini-tableau stage left
A beautiful young
women in high heels, a mini-skirt, wearing a tank top, no bra, and displaying
ample bosoms complete with obviously erect nipples, gets out of her stalled car
and bends over to look under the hood. As if responding to a subliminal
signal, the men rise simultaneously and start toward her with hopeful grins on
their faces to offer their help to a damsel in distress..
Wicked witch:
"What do you think you are looking at, you sexist pigs?"
Narrator:
Frequently, wicked witches in this role would complain of being treated like
"sex objects," which is sort of like water complaining about being
wet.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Men crave
approval from human females. Of course, men felt instinctually attracted
to these beautiful, sexy, damsels in distress, and did everything they could
think of to somehow please the wicked witches and gain their approval.
But, nothing the men did was good enough. The rejection and outright
hatred men received for their effort was an ever escalating psychological
torture which held men in a mire of pathological trances. None of the men
could figure it out; "What do wicked witches really want?" This
frustrating "seduction/rejection" technique, backed by
"there is nothing you can do to please me," caused many American men
to keep their tails between their legs.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: All the
while, human women were having a really rough time. The wicked witches
worked hard to make traditional feminine contributions, like the domestic arts,
seem unworthy. Women who cared for their children, created a nurturing
home environment for their families, and practiced the traditional values of
home and hearth, were portrayed as second class humans. Women who loved
their husbands, and saw their role as supporting him in his career, were told
that they needed a career of their own, and that they should learn to get along
without a husband. Everywhere they could, wicked witches attempted to
drive a wedge between human men and women and destroy families.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: By this time
in the history of the United States, the wicked witches had gained a strong
influence in higher education. The wicked witch professors implemented a
deliberate scheme to sabotage the education of American women. Young
human females who enrolled in universities across the country were exposed to
Wicked Witch Studies at major universities. Soon, it was even possible to
get a Ph.D. in Wicked Witch Studies at many fully accredited universities. Wicked
Witch Studies taught that disciplines like mathematics and science were part of
the way human women were oppressed. The Wicked Witch professors were
teaching young college women that there were two kinds of truth; "male
truth" and "female truth". Wicked Witch Studies classes
began to focus on "non-linear thinking" as the preferred way for
women to think, and, of course, superior to "male thinking".
The famous treatise on mathematics "Principia Mathmatica", by
Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead was banned at Universities across
America. This book was the main reason Bertrand Russell won the
Nobel Prize in 1950. By 1990 the book was renamed "Newton's Rape
Manual" and burned by wicked witches in academia. Around the same time, science, engineering,
mathematics, and so many great “human” discoveries and accomplishments began to
be seen by the witches as symbols of male dominance and the label, “toxic
masculinity,” started to circulate among them.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Under the
spell of irrationality cast upon these young women, many of them actually came
to believe the incantations they had learned to chant in their Wicked Witch
Studies classes. Upon graduation, they falsely believed that men in their class
were making more money. Playing victim for so long, some were even convinced
that they were experiencing employment discrimination, although the EEOC (Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission) had been in operation for more than 50
years! Let us show you what we mean.
Stage Manager - Scripted
mini-tableau takes place, stage right:
Indoctrinated young
woman: My boyfriend only has a masters and he gets paid twice what I do even
though I have a PhD!
Lawyer: In what field
is your boyfriend’s masters degree?
Indoctrinated young
woman: It’s in business management.
Lawyer: And your
Ph.D.? It’s in what exactly?
Indoctrinated young
woman: Wicked Witch Studies!
Lawyer: Oh.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Many
of these young women attended a university with all tuition, expenses, and
spending money provided by mom and dad. After the introductory lecture
for Wicked Witch Studies 101, they would call home, collect, to tell their
fathers that they had felt exploited by dad all their lives. To
outward appearances these female students were all from good families.
They were young, attractive, well educated, and raised properly. Many
were enrolled in the best private women's colleges. Tragically, the faculties
of these women’s colleges were mostly wicked witches. The wife of
one of the United States Presidents in the late 20th century was the second
wicked witch to be called "First Lady." Other wicked witches,
having been educated at prestigious women’s colleges, maneuvered their way into
high political positions.
To young men, these
college women should have been an ideal mate pool. However, a perversely
evil spell had been cast in Wicked Witch Studies 101. "A wicked
witch needs a man, like a fish needs a bicycle," was echoed by some of the
female students, forgetting that they were human women. It was tragic to
see the "creme de la creme" of young American women succumbing to
such an evil spell. Soon it became very difficult to discern the
difference between wicked witches and American college women in general.
By the late 1980’s to
early 1990’s, wicked witches were everywhere: in government, in the media, in
academia, in the professions, and even in blue collar jobs. During this
period, the Wicked Witches began to drop all pretense of reasonableness or
civility.
Stage Manager - Spotlight
shifts to 13 ugly, poorly dressed, women each delivering in angry and shrill
tones, real life quotes from wicked witches that can be found on the internet, as
a mini-soliloquy from today’s wicked witches
"I feel that man-hating
is an honorable and viable political act."
"Wicked Witches must be warriors. We are at war with
men and we need to win. We need a political and violent effort above
ground and underground."
"There are only two kinds of men - the
dead and the deadly."
"I need only three things in a man.
He must be handsome, ruthless, and stupid."
"Beware of men who cry. It's true that men who cry
are sensitive and in touch with feelings, but the only feelings they tend to be
sensitive to and in touch with are their own."
"Don't accept rides from strange men, and remember all men
are strange as hell."
"If it wasn't for women, men would still
be hanging from branches by their tails."
"The male is a domestic animal. A dumb beast of
burden, which, if treated with firmness and kindness, can be trained to do most
things you might want done."
"Giving men education is like giving a dog a computer.
Chances are, he will not use it for its intended purpose."
"The more I see of men the more I like
dogs."
"I married beneath me. All wicked
witches do."
"Men are beasts. And even the
beasts are not as beastly as men."
Stage Manager – End
Scene -Spotlight back to narrator
Narrator: With
such techniques, and many more, the wicked witches set about destroying
marriages, families, educational institutions, the justice system, the business
community, and other cherished institutions that built and sustain America.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: By the
beginning of the 22nd century the wicked witch takeover in America was nearly
complete. They took off their disguises to reveal all their
ugliness. The Lincoln Memorial was demolished and the Mary Todd Lincoln
Memorial stood in its place. Cherry blossoms refused to open in the
nation's capital thereafter.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Wicked
witches took on extra nasty dispositions, to make up for the years they had
pretended to be ordinary women. By 2120 they had enough political power
to overthrow the government and establish the Wicked Witch States of
America. They enslaved all the men. They killed all the human
women, except those they kept for artificial insemination and sexual purposes.
Stage Manager – End
Scene
Narrator: Wicked
witches have always used artificial insemination as a means of reproducing
their stock of male labor slaves and female sex slaves. They wouldn't
want the men to enjoy any form of pleasure. Besides, many wicked
witches are obsessively jealous and possessive of human women. One of the
guiding principles of late 21st century wicked witch philosophy was; "All
sex is rape, unless wicked witches are doing it with each other, or to human
women." Fortunately for the men, wicked witches usually prefer human
women as sex partners. But, oh, those poor human women!
Stage Manager - Disturbing,
discordant shrieks of violins mixed with rhythmic deep cello chords, as scenes
of wicked witches masturbating while looking at old Girl Scout calendars, and
actively molesting innocent young maidens flash on all theater
screens. Ends with "The Scream" as a still shot on all
theater screens. Music abruptly stops and lights go out simultaneously.
End Act III
Epilogue
Stage Manager - Lights
fade up as we hear, played on fife only, the opening notes of "The Battle
Hymn of the Republic" which begin to rise in the background, and continue
to build until full volume of orchestra and chorus climaxes, just after the
narrator's last words. Narrator now continues speaking at full emotion
and volume.
Narrator: A few
heroic American men and women escaped from the Wicked Witch States of
America. It is in honor of our brave ancestors who managed to escape,
that we launch this campaign to reestablish the American dream. Never
again will the wicked witches be able to divide American men and women and
conquer the United States of America. Only if we stand together can we
win against this evil force. This noble mission can only be won by brave
male and female warriors marching arm in arm, side by side, back to back, and
belly to belly, to take back what is rightfully theirs. We must free the
surviving men and women of America from enslavement. We will take back our
beloved nation. We will repopulate America with real men and real women.
We must unmask, forever, the deceptively beautiful wicked witch who plays the
damsel in distress. Onward to victory! We will have a zero tolerance policy toward
wicked witches!
Stage Manager - Lots
of French horns and kettle drum music as the brave male and female warriors
march off stage to begin a wicked witch hunt in America.
Definition of Biting the Hand That Feeds You:
1: Turn against a benefactor, a friend or a supporter.
2: Repay support with wrong.
1: Turn against a benefactor, a friend or a supporter.
2: Repay support with wrong.
3. No good turn goes
unpunished.