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==Summary== | ==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) | 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. His actions continue in a blisteringly vulgar fashion 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 almost seems excited by the idea that Joe is a Mormon. He 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 == | == Notes == | ||
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*Borreca, Art. "''Angels in America'', Part 1: Millennium Approaches." ''Theatre Journal'' 45.2 (May 1993): 235. | *Borreca, Art. "''Angels in America'', Part 1: Millennium Approaches." ''Theatre Journal'' 45.2 (May 1993): 235. | ||
*Kushner, Tony." Angles in America",Part One: Millennium Approaches,1995. | *Kushner, Tony." Angles in America",Part One: Millennium Approaches,1995. | ||
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[[Angels in America | Millennium Approaches Act 1 Scene 3]] | [[Angels in America | Millennium Approaches Act 1 Scene 3]] | ||
[[Category:Literature]] | [[Category:Literature]] |
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