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"Fun and Games" is also the name of the first act of ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'', and the scenes with Anne Bonny and Mary Read are very reminiscent of the casual yet awkwardly playful hatred that George and Martha share with one another, with the bewildered and uncomfortable Ed and Stede being the stand-ins for Nick and Honey. Additionally, the ending of this story involves [[spoiler:Anne burning their house to the ground]] much in the same way that George symbolically does to Martha by "killing" their "son".
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ShoutOut: "Fun and Games" is also the name of the first act of ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'', and the scenes with Anne Bonny and Mary Read are very reminiscent of the casual yet awkwardly playful hatred that George and Martha share with one another, with the bewildered and uncomfortable Ed and Stede being the stand-ins for Nick and Honey. Additionally, the ending of this story involves [[spoiler:Anne burning their house to the ground]] much in the same way that George symbolically does to Martha by "killing" their "son".
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!!Tropes include:
"Fun and Games" is also the name of the first act of ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'', and the scenes with Anne Bonny and Mary Read are very reminiscent of the casual yet awkwardly playful hatred that George and Martha share with one another, with the bewildered and uncomfortable Ed and Stede being the stand-ins for Nick and Honey. Additionally, the ending of this story involves [[spoiler:Anne burning their house to the ground]] much in the same way that George symbolically does to Martha by "killing" their "son".
"Fun and Games" is also the name of the first act of ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'', and the scenes with Anne Bonny and Mary Read are very reminiscent of the casual yet awkwardly playful hatred that George and Martha share with one another, with the bewildered and uncomfortable Ed and Stede being the stand-ins for Nick and Honey. Additionally, the ending of this story involves [[spoiler:Anne burning their house to the ground]] much in the same way that George symbolically does to Martha by "killing" their "son".