Millennium Approaches 1.2

Summary

Joseph Pitt sits waiting in Roy Cohn's office while Roy conducts business with several people through his phone system. Roy is loud and obscene until Joe asks him to "please not use the Lord's name in vain" (20). When Roy asks what religion he is, Joe tells him that he is Mormon. Roy then suddenly offers Joe a job in the Justice Department in Washington, DC. Joe says that "it's incredibly exciting" but that he must talk to his wife before accepting the job (22).

Notes

 
La Cage aux Folles
  • 42nd Street (18) - a Broadway musical. It premiered in New York City in 1980 and is considered one of the most successful productions in the history of Broadway theater.
  • La Cage (18) - La Cage aux Folles is a French play that became Broadway's first "homosexual" musical in 1983.

Commentary

Angels in America's Roy Cohn is based on the real-life American lawyer of the same name; however, Kushner's play is not as much "about" Cohn as it is about what "Cohn represents socially and historically" (Borreca).

 
Roy Marcus Cohn (February 20, 1927 – August 2, 1986).

Cohn became famous during Senator Joseph McCarthy's investigations into Communism in the government and especially during the Army-McCarthy Hearings. Cohn was widely unpopular during his lifetime, yet he still gained tremendous political power. He was most famous for his role in the 1951 trial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. His cross examination of Ethel's brother produced the testimony that was mainly responsible for the defendents' conviction and execution. Cohn took great pride in the case, claiming to have played an even greater role than was realized. In his autobiography, he wrote that his influence had led to the appointment of Judge Irving Kaufman to the case, and that Kaufman, who was a family friend, had imposed the death penalty on Cohn's personal advice.

It was because of the Rosenberg trial that Cohn, at the age of twenty-four, had been recommended and appointed as McCarthy's chief counsel. In 1954, when McCarthy was censured, Cohn resigned and went into private practice, beginning a thirty-year career as a high-powered attorney in New York City. In the 1970s and 1980s, he was charged three times with professional misconduct but never convicted. However, eventually the New York Bar association brought disbarment proceedings against him for unethical and unprofessional conduct, which caused him to lose in license in August 1986, the last month of his life.

Although he was extremely conservative in politics, Cohn was rumored to be a homosexual, and it was widely believed that he and G. David Schine, whom he appointed chief consultant, had a sexual relationship. However, Cohn continued to deny he was gay and he even lent his support to anti-gay political campaigns. In 1984, he was diagnosed with AIDs, but he attemped to keep it secret by saying he had liver cancer. Despite aggressive drug treatment, he died on August 2, 1986 at the age of 54.

Study Questions

  1. What is Roy's profession?
  2. What is Roy Cohn's favorite Broadway musical? What does this suggest about the character?
  3. While he is conducting business, what does Roy keep insisting Joe do?
  4. What job does Roy offer to Joe and what would it require Joe to do?
  5. Why does Joe tell Roy that he has to "think about" his job offer?
  6. Who is the Attorney General at the time of the play?

External Resources

Works Cited

  • Kushner, Tony. Angels in America. New York: Theatre Communications Group, 1995.
  • Borreca, Art. "Angels in America, Part 1: Millenium Approaches." Theatre Journal 45.2 (May 1993): 235.