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Furthermore, the quality of illegal PDFs is terrible. Scans of the 1978 acting edition are often missing pages, have illegible margin notes, or are missing the critical prop list. You will waste hours squinting at a blurry page.
This article dives deep into the historical truth, the dramatic power of the script, and the legal/ethical maze surrounding the quest for its PDF. Before dissecting the script, one must understand the bedrock of real-life tragedy. Mary Girard (née Lum) was the wife of Stephen Girard, one of the wealthiest men in early American history. Stephen Girard is a titan of Philadelphia lore: a French-born banker, a savior of the U.S. government during the War of 1812, and the founder of Girard College.
By 1814, Mary had suffered through years of marital strife, the deaths of her children, and a suspected affair. Stephen, a cold pragmatist, had her declared "insane" not through a medical trial, but through a private act of the Pennsylvania legislature. He then had her committed to the basement of his own mansion at 21-23 South Third Street in Philadelphia.
So, go find the script. But do it with respect. Buy the perusal copy. Visit a library. Pay for the art. Because the irony of Mary Girard is that she was a woman with no agency. When you pirate the script, you take agency away from the artist who gave her a voice.