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3%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Do not uncomment them without expanding them to explain how these tropes apply. A character name is not context. "And how" and "Oh so very much" are word cruft, not context. HOW do these tropes show up?
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6[[quoteright:230:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/august-osagecounty_329.jpg]]
7[[caption-width-right:230:Misery Loves Family.]]
8
9''August: Osage County'' is a play written by Creator/TracyLetts, which premiered at Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre in 2007 and was given a Broadway showing shortly thereafter. It won the 2008 UsefulNotes/PulitzerPrize for Drama.
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11The play tells the story of the Weston family, which is forced to reunite after the patriarch, once-famous poet Beverly Weston, turns up dead from suicide. It becomes apparent that Beverly's vindictive and pill-popping widow, Violet, has psychologically damaged each of their three middle-aged daughters, causing them to lead similarly self-destructive lives.
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13After Beverly's funeral, what is meant to be a time of mourning for the Westons devolves into several weeks of pettiness, cruelty, and recrimination that destroys the family from within.
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15A [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]], directed by John Wells and starring Creator/MerylStreep, Creator/JuliaRoberts, and an AllStarCast, was released on Christmas Day 2013.
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17----
18!!This play provides examples of the following tropes:
19* AbusiveParents: Violet to her daughters. Mattie Fae to Little Charles. Barbara to Jean.
20* TheAlcoholic:
21** Beverly and Violet are both alcoholics at the start of the play, though Violet's main addictions come from prescription drugs.
22** Barbara becomes one after [[spoiler:her husband and daughter leave her while the rest of the family collapses.]]
23* BigDamnHeroes: Johnna the housekeeper walks in on Steve molesting Jean and beats him off with a frying pan. In the film, Johnna overhears Steve trying to convince Jean to lift up her shirt in exchange for marijuana, though this is offscreen and the viewer is only shown Johnna's point of view. She attacks Steve with a shovel.
24%%* BigScrewedUpFamily: The Westons, oh so very very much.
25* BrotherSisterIncest: [[spoiler:Ivy and Little Charles think they are KissingCousins. Thanks to Mattie Fae and Beverly, they're not.]]
26* BuildingOfAdventure: The action of the play is confined to a three-story rural house, which is built ''entirely on stage''.
27* BumblingDad: Charles and Bill are portrayed as incompetent, indecisive and weak-willed both as fathers and husbands, at odds with their wives at every turn.
28* ControlFreak: Barbara desperately tries to seize control of her mother's drug addiction, the decline of her marriage, and the impending self-destruction of her entire family. [[spoiler:She fails at all three.]]
29* {{Deconstruction}}: Of the DysfunctionalFamily. Often, this trope is played for comedy, particularly in sitcoms whereas the family is at odds with each other and even bully one another for little to no reason. While the play ''is'' a BlackComedy, it also tears down the trope and demonstrates how miserable these people are with one another.
30** Violet, the matriarch of the entire clan, is vindictive, emotionally abusive and manipulative. Her behavior in-universe is the reason why her grown-up daughters are growing apart from her. It is then revealed that Violet's mother was even ''worse'' to her and her sister, Mattie Fae, making them both dark examples of ParentsAsPeople.
31** Her daughters are not that much better. Barbara, her eldest, ''loathes'' Violet and cut off all contact with her until her father, Violet's husband Beverly, disappears [[spoiler: and commits suicide]]. Ivy [[HonorThyAbuser was stuck in their hometown taking care of Violet and Beverly while her sisters lived their lives]] and is desperate to leave and try living for herself. Karen is implied to be the most broken of the three as TheUnfavorite and the most affected by the abuse. She has found herself in one abusive relationship after the next to the point where when her current fiance [[spoiler: tries to molest her niece, Jean]], she [[IgnoredEpiphany doesn't dump him and is still hellbent on marrying him just to have someone]].
32** Mattie Fae's behavior towards her son, Little Charles, plays off the same way sitcoms play off mothers making jabs at their adult sons. Usually, TheUnfairSex is in play and no one really cares that the man is being bullied, especially if it's because of their mother or spouse. At the start of the play, Charles Sr. is clearly on the end of his rope with his wife's behavior and [[RageBreakingPoint finally rips her a new one after she insults Little Charles one too many times, threatening to leave her if she doesn't stop her abusive behavior.]] This also mirrors Barbara's marriage with Bill, where it is revealed that he left her for one of his own college students. It is never explicitly explained why, but the play and the characters observe that Barbara [[NotSoDifferentRemark is similar to Violet in many aspects]]. While Bill cheating on Barbara is also considered wrong, the narrative isn't one-sided against him and shows how difficult Barbara has been during their marriage.
33** While Violet and Mattie Fae had an awful mother in their childhood, the narrative doesn't try to justify their toxic behavior at all. In fact, Charles Sr. declares in his TheReasonYouSuckSpeech to Mattie Fae that [[FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse what their mother did to them doesn't justify their own shitty parenting]] and adds that his own family never treated each other like garbage. Violet and Mattie Fae's antics may be played for dark laughs, but Charles Sr. makes a point of saying that is ''not'' how families should be treating each other.
34%%* DespairEventHorizon: Beverly's condition at the start of the play. Barbara's condition by the end.
35* DinnerAndAShow: One of the more bleak examples. The dramatic centerpiece of the play is the dinner following Beverly's funeral, which ends in a physical brawl between Barbara and Violet.
36* DrivenToSuicide: Beverly Weston. The play explores why he did it.
37%%* DrowningMySorrows: Barbara near the end of Act Three.
38* DownerEnding: Karen learns that Steve is a sleazy pedophile but chooses to ignore the truth and marries him anyway; Ivy learns that she is actually half-siblings with her lover Little Charles but still chooses to run away with him to New York; Bill and Jean become fed up with Barbara's domineering behavior and leave her; Barbara ends up becoming an emotionally destitute drunk like her parents, and after finally realizing just how far gone Violet is, leaves her to eventually die miserable and alone. In the film this becomes LighterAndSofter, if only by omission. Ivy is shown driving away by herself. Barbara is still left at the house, although no descent into alcoholism is shown. It is also left ambiguous what happens to Violet. The entire family has left at this point, though she is shown with housekeeper Johnna. Karen still marries Steve.
39%%* DysfunctionalFamily: See DysfunctionJunction below to get the nitty-gritty details of how and why.
40* DysfunctionJunction: The Weston family ''in spades'':
41** Even before being DrivenToSuicide, Beverly Weston was a failed poet and [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic]] who had crossed into the DespairEventHorizon over the state of his wife and family.
42** Violet Weston is a pill-popping AbusiveParent and [[ManipulativeBastard Manipulative Bitch]] who insults each of her family members and turns them against each other.
43** Barbara Weston, Violet's oldest daughter, is a neurotic ControlFreak who constantly tries to micromanage the chaos around her, from Violet's drug addiction to her own failing marriage.
44** Ivy Weston, Violet's middle daughter, is planning to run away with her first cousin Little Charles Aiken, unaware that [[spoiler:he is actually her half-brother.]]
45** Karen Weston, Violet's youngest daughter, is obsessed with her wedding plans even in the midst of her father's funeral and chooses to live in denial when her "perfect" fiancé tries to molest her niece.
46** Bill Fordham, Barbara's husband, slept with one of his students at the college where he taught.
47** Jean Fordham, Barbara's daughter, is apathetic towards the rest of the family and shows more concern for watching Creator/LonChaney's ''Film/ThePhantomOfTheOpera1925'' on television than attending Beverly's funeral.
48** Mattie Fae Aiken, Violet's sister and Little Charles' mother, constantly puts down her son until her husband gives her the [[ReasonYouSuckSpeech Reason You Suck]] treatment and [[spoiler:his BrotherSisterIncest with Ivy is revealed]].
49* EvilMatriarch: You could reasonably argue that Violet was influenced by the drugs she took. But even after she was weaned off the drugs, Violet still revealed traumatizing secrets about her daughters to the rest of the family ForTheEvulz.
50%%* FilmOfTheBook: As noted above. There are some differences between the two.
51* FreudianExcuse:
52** It's hinted that the reason Barbara is such a ControlFreak towards Bill and Jean, and the reason she did not speak to Beverly and Violet, was to avoid the toxic mayhem of the Weston household.
53** Similarly, Violet's mother was emotionally abusive, and in all likelihood far worse than Violet herself. Easy to see where she gets it from, huh?
54* GenderBlenderName: Beverly Weston.
55%%* GranolaGirl: Jean.
56* IgnoredEpiphany: Twice. First, Karen tries to blame Jean for Steve's attempt to molest her and chooses to lie to herself over what he did, obsessed with getting a better life than the rest of her family and deluding herself into thinking a marriage to Steve will assure that. Then, Ivy learns from Violet that her first cousin Little Charles [[spoiler:is actually her half-brother]], but insists that she will still start a new life in New York with Little Charles without telling him the truth.
57* KilledOffscreen: Beverly's fate is implied but left ambiguous until the end of Act One. Averted in the film, which shows him climbing into a boat as he prepares to drown himself.
58* KissingCousins: Subverted. Ivy and Little Charles try to keep their relationship a secret because they are first cousins. [[spoiler:It turns out later that Beverly was Little Charles' real father, making them ''half-siblings''.]]
59%%* ManipulativeBastard: Violet. ''And how''.
60* LaserGuidedKarma: Violet's actions alienate her entire family by the end, leaving her alone and pathetically staggering through the empty house.
61* NeverTrustATrailer: The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Hd_uO72h1s trailer]] for the Creator/MerylStreep film adaptation makes ''Osage'' look like an upbeat family dramedy. Only someone who has seen the play would know how dark and depressing the story really is. The poster is much more [[http://img2.timeinc.net/ew/i/2013/10/16/August-Osage-County-Poster.jpg truthful]].
62* NotSoDifferentRemark: Violet and Barb. They are both assertive, quick to temper, holier than thou, and by the end of the play they are both hard drinkers. [[spoiler: Brutally lampshaded by Ivy when Violet reveals that she and Little Charles are half-siblings.]]
63-->'''Barb:''' This wasn't me, okay? This wasn't me. This wasn't me, it was Mom!
64-->'''Ivy:''' ''There's no difference!''
65%%* OnlySaneMan: Johnna, Charles Aiken, and Sheriff Gilbeau.
66* ParentalFavoritism: Discussed. Violet tells Barb that she was Beverly's favorite and that she is partly responsible for his death by moving away. Ivy later counters this by saying that she was Beverly's favorite and Barb was Violet's, and that Barb's moving away hurt her the most. Of course, this leaves Karen as TheUnFavorite.
67* PlotTriggeringDeath: Beverly's death gathers the family together and shortly after that all kinds of conflicts that had been seething under the surface erupt.
68* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Plenty throughout:
69** Charles gives one to Mattie Fae over her abusive treatment of Little Charles, threatening to leave her if she doesn't start treating him better.
70--->'''Charles''': Mattie Fae, we're gonna get in the car and go home. [[RageBreakingPoint And if you say one more mean thing to that boy I'm gonna kick your fat Irish ass into the highway]].\
71'''Mattie Fae Aiken''': What the hell did you just say to me?\
72'''Charlie Aiken''': Kids, go outside, would you please? I don't understand this meanness. I look at you and your sister and the way you talk to people and I don't understand it. I can't understand why folks can't be respectful to one another. I don't think there's any excuse for it. My family didn't treat each other that way.\
73'''Mattie Fae Aiken''': Oh, maybe cause your family didn't have...\
74'''Charlie Aiken''': You better not say anything about my family right now, I mean it! We just buried a man I loved very much. And whatever faults he may have had, he was a good, kind, decent man. And to hear you tearing your own son not even a day later dishonors Beverly's memory. We've been married 38 years and I wouldn't trade it for anything. But if you can't find a generous place in your heart for your own son, [[TranquilFury we're not gonna make it to 39.]]
75** Bill gives one to Barbara after she slaps Jean during an argument, announcing that he and Jean are leaving the house and will not take Barbara with them.
76%%** Violet delivers them to everyone, constantly.
77* ScrewPolitenessIAmASenior: With her giving TheReasonYouSuckSpeech left and right, deserved or not, Violet epitomizes this trope.
78* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: Firmly on the side of cynicism.
79%%* StepfordSmiler: Karen's endgame.
80* SurpriseIncest: [[spoiler: Little Charles and Ivy, who were already KissingCousins, are revealed to be half-siblings]].
81* TheUnfavorite: Karen. She has the least interaction with her mother, and what little she does have are brutal criticisms.

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