La Casa de Las Diablitas (a play in three acts)

Nonfiction, Entertainment, Drama, American
Cover of the book La Casa de Las Diablitas (a play in three acts) by Angus Brownfield, Angus Brownfield
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Angus Brownfield ISBN: 9781311519542
Publisher: Angus Brownfield Publication: August 18, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Angus Brownfield
ISBN: 9781311519542
Publisher: Angus Brownfield
Publication: August 18, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

A tour group of US housewives is stranded in Mexico City by a revolution erupting north of the border. Rather than be confined to a refugee camp, they accept an offer from the mysterious Big Julie to set them up in a bordello. Big Julie will be their Madam; their customers will be expatriates from the US.
Meanwhile, led by the charismatic but vicious Honey Bartles, the People’s Park Freedom Fighters capture the states from the West Coast to the Appalachians, creating the United States of Mesoamerica, land of the have-nots. As the play opens, a truce has been called with the Original United States and the women of La Casa de Las Diablitas are contemplating going home.
Several agents of fate intervene. Big Julie, the madam, is actually Jules Barnes, former CIA Director, in drag. He has fled south to avoid capture by Honey Bartles, his real-life brother, John Barnes. Immediately after the truce is signed, the Revolutionary Cabinet deposes Honey, who flees with the Revolutionary treasury for Mexico City. Jules and John, mortal enemies, have each tried to assassinate the other, and that is Honey’s intent in coming to Mexico City.
Big Julie also took under “her” protection a social anthropologist, Heather O’Malley, who was stranded in Mexico City while studying the lives of Mexican streetwalkers. Heather is the prostitutes’ house mother, and she’s planning to get back to the States pronto, when first Julie and then Honey interfere.
Heather’s anchor to reality is a deaf and dumb charwoman (known simply as La Abuelita) who, when things look darkest for the housewife-prostitutes, organizes a pint-sized revolution that not only salvages their self-respect, but teaches Heather that she has something to gain from stepping out from behind her scientific objectivity and finding something worth dying for.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A tour group of US housewives is stranded in Mexico City by a revolution erupting north of the border. Rather than be confined to a refugee camp, they accept an offer from the mysterious Big Julie to set them up in a bordello. Big Julie will be their Madam; their customers will be expatriates from the US.
Meanwhile, led by the charismatic but vicious Honey Bartles, the People’s Park Freedom Fighters capture the states from the West Coast to the Appalachians, creating the United States of Mesoamerica, land of the have-nots. As the play opens, a truce has been called with the Original United States and the women of La Casa de Las Diablitas are contemplating going home.
Several agents of fate intervene. Big Julie, the madam, is actually Jules Barnes, former CIA Director, in drag. He has fled south to avoid capture by Honey Bartles, his real-life brother, John Barnes. Immediately after the truce is signed, the Revolutionary Cabinet deposes Honey, who flees with the Revolutionary treasury for Mexico City. Jules and John, mortal enemies, have each tried to assassinate the other, and that is Honey’s intent in coming to Mexico City.
Big Julie also took under “her” protection a social anthropologist, Heather O’Malley, who was stranded in Mexico City while studying the lives of Mexican streetwalkers. Heather is the prostitutes’ house mother, and she’s planning to get back to the States pronto, when first Julie and then Honey interfere.
Heather’s anchor to reality is a deaf and dumb charwoman (known simply as La Abuelita) who, when things look darkest for the housewife-prostitutes, organizes a pint-sized revolution that not only salvages their self-respect, but teaches Heather that she has something to gain from stepping out from behind her scientific objectivity and finding something worth dying for.

More books from Angus Brownfield

Cover of the book When Your Number's Up, a short story by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book The Birdman by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book 6 Summer Haiku by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book Where Am I? by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book Galluping, a short story by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book Day of the Dead by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book The Spare Husband, a Short Story by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book The Deep Blue Sea by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book The Day's Vanity, The Night's Remorse by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book The Hummus Dealer of Meknes, a short story by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book 5 Spring Haiku by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book Tec, A Short Story by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book Bread to the Wise: Book I of The Libertine by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book Universal Superficial Contagion by Angus Brownfield
Cover of the book The Crossing, a short story by Angus Brownfield
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy