Titus Androgynous
“Madam, you are ugly. In the morning, I shall be sober.”
Titus Androgynous is Shakespeare's first great tragedy. Contrary to popular belief, it is not about a goat.
Plot Overview[edit | edit source]
The play opens up in a small salad bar in Omaha, Nebraska. Near the sneeze guard, the band Slumping Bosoms plays, led by Titus MacLeod, lead singer, occasional heterosexual and protagonist of this piece of work. Titus sings his heart out for unappreciative diners, and understandably, nobody really understands his bisexually elitist, poorly produced stage show. As Titus finishes with his first song, he thinks back to his previous life in East Poland.
We now see Titus as an adolescent, tormented over his 'differences' with no knowledge of David Bowie doing the same thing in Britain. Titus is teased mercilessly by his very-secure-in-their-gender-roles classmates, and a carton of milk is poured down his trousers. He goes off to sulk, brood, and write poetry to explore his feelings. He also outlines plans to destroy each and every child at his school.
We learn that the cause of Titus' estrangement and belittlement lies in the pogroms placed on androgynous people by the infamous dictator Karol Wojytla, or as he is known by his followers, The Pureblood Pole. This horrible madman has sanctioned attacks on homos everywhere, and as Titus has never kissed a girl before, he is assumed to be gay.
Confused by his feelings, Titus is driven into the arms of a sympathetic American serviceman named Kermit, who opens up Titus' eyes to a whole new world. He promises to bring Titus back to America with him where they can move to Vermont or San Fransisco and open an antiques store. Only one problem, Titus would need to secure a passport, and his alcoholic father will not allow this.
Kermit stuffs Titus into a suitcase and carries him aboard the airplane as his carry-on. However, while trapped in this suitcase, Titus' penis atrophies due to lack of air. Upon being released from his Samsonite velvet-lined prison, Kermit sees what has become of his lover, and flees. Titus, alone in a strange new country, meets up with a travelling band of musicians and sings them his poetry of anguish and longing for acceptance.
Back in modern day, Titus meets a man, Collins, after the show who has been mugged. He takes him back to his modest apartment, and the man reveals that he is a famous music producer. Touched by Titus' kindness, he agrees to give the Slumping Bosoms a record deal, and Titus a date.
The Slumping Bosoms become an international hit, everybody who teased Titus in his youth is really sorry, and Titus' old elementary school blows up, for reasons only Titus and the audience know. The play then ends on the touching musical number "I Got No Junk (But I've Got Funk!)"
Character List[edit | edit source]
- Titus MacLeod: Androgynous hermaphrodite, lead singer of the glam-rock band Slumping Bosoms, snazzy dresser
- Kermit Andrews: Self-loathing homosexual American marine
- David Bowie: Artistic inspiration, public flagellation, baked goods
- Ryan: Lastnameless childhood tormentor of Titus, grows up to be a convict
- Collins: Rich and famous music producer, lover of Titus, one glass eye
Original Cast[edit | edit source]
Here is the cast list as it appeared in the playbill for the first public presentation of Titus Androgynous at the Orpheum Theater, Birmingham, December 29, 1980
- Titus MacLeod: Bob Saget
- Kermit Andrews: Oscar Wilde
- David Bowie: Himself
- Ryan: A tomato
- Collins: Ultra Jesus
Notable Quotables[edit | edit source]
"If only there was somewhere I could go to escape all of this pain and torment. . . Oh Auntie Em, there's no place like Macy's, there's no place like Macy's, there's no. . . Hey, a nickel!" Titus MacLeod (Act 1, scene 2)
"I shant, not without my brunch!" Kermit Andrews (Act 2, scene 1)
"There's no need to get all licentious about it, Dad, it's only lipstick," Titus MacLeod (Act 2, scene 2)
"Do I have any lines at all?" David Bowie (Intermission)
"Villain, I have done thy mother." Titus Androgynous (Act 4, Scene 2)
"Now no one will ever love me! Not that they did before, but now I don't even have a joystick!" Titus MacLeod (Act 4, scene kumquat)
"It's either your music or that last smack with the crowbar, but something keeps pounding in my head, and I'm not exactly sure that I want to lose it. . ." Collins (Act 5, scene 1)
"Honest officer, I haven't been to Poland in 8 years," Titus MacLeod (Act 6, scene 17)
"If this cruel fate hadn't happened to me, I might almost be inclined to chortle at myself," Ryan (Act 7, scene 1)
"Really, what was my purpose at all?" David Bowie (Curtain call)
Study Questions[edit | edit source]
- This, along with his other much-maligned work of gender-confused genius Much Ado About Yokels, explores the themes of sexual repression to a great degree. Could William Shakespeare have been trying to figure something out about himself in these plays?
- Would you, could you, love somebody like Titus?
- What is the purpose of the sneezing gardener in Act 2, Scene 2? Is he merely eye candy, or a comment on the need for unity among the differing social classes? Explain in Pig Latin.
- Seriously, ya think Shakespeare was a homo?
- Hey, I was baked, and Juliet was hot. Sorry, God.
Tragedies: Antony and Cleopatra • Coriolanus • Hamlet • Julius Caesar • King Lear • Macbeth • Othello • Romeo and Juliet • Romeo + Juliet • Timon of Athens • Titus Androgynous • Titus Andronicus • Troilus and Cressida
Comedies: A Midsummer Night's Dream • All's Well That Ends Well • As You Like It • The Comedy of Errors • Cymbeline • Dude, Where Art Mine Horse and Carriage? • Love's Labour's Lost • Measure for Measure • The Merchant of Venice • The Merry Wives of Windsor • Much Ado About Nothing • Pericles, Prince of Tyre • Taming of the Shrew • The Tempest • Twelfth Night • The Two Gentlemen of Verona • The Two Noble Kinsmen • The Winter's Tale Histories: The Bawdy Bard • King John • Richard I • Richard II • Henry IV, Part 1 • Henry IV, Part 2 • Henry V • Henry VI, part 1 • Henry VI, part 2 • Henry VI, part 3 • Henry VIII • Richard III • Richard IV • Richard V • Richard VI • Richard VII • Richard VIIII • Richard IX • Richard X Poems and Sonnets: Venus and Adonis • The Rape of Lucrece • The Passionate Pilgrim • The Phoenix and the Turtle • A Lover's Complaint • Sonnet 18 |
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