Freudian Excuse/Theatre: Difference between revisions

updated header and footer to current ATT standard
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{{trope}}
Examples of [[{{TOPLEVELPAGE}}]]s in [[{{SUBPAGENAME}}]] include:
 
* Described in "Officer Krupke" in ''[[West Side Story]]'', where the Jets sing a mocking song to a (not present) police officer describing various excuses for their misbehavior.
* Joseph Pitt from ''[[Angels in America]]'' had a rough relationship with his now-gone father. During a phone conversation with his mother, he asks if his father ever loved him. She dodges the question. When he tells her that he's gay, she snaps that he knows damn well his father never loved him, and that's no excuse for him to be acting up like this.
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* In ''[[Chicago]]'', Roxie Hart sings a line in the song Roxie that goes "And the audience loves me. And I love them. And they love me for loving them, And I love them for loving me. And we love each other. That's because none of us got enough love in our childhoods."
 
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Freudian Excuse]]
[[Category:Theater]]