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* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: Were [[spoiler:Eddie and Mickey's death simply a tragedy caused by societal failings, or did the superstition Mrs. Lyons invented about separated twins come true?]] Lampshaded by the narrator.
-->And do we blame superstition for what has come to pass? Or do we blame what we, the English, have come to know as class?
-->And do we blame superstition for what has come to pass? Or do we blame what we, the English, have come to know as class?
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Changed line(s) 8,9 (click to see context) from:
''Blood Brothers'' is a musical written by playwright Willy Russell, about twin brothers--Mickey and Eddie--who are [[SeparatedAtBirth separated at birth]] by their mother, Mrs. Johnstone, who can't afford to raise them both, and her barren employer Mrs. Lyons. They are brought up in two vastly different environments, on opposite ends of the social spectrum. As children, they meet and become best friends, never finding out they are brothers until the day of they die.
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''Blood Brothers'' is a musical written by playwright Willy Russell, about twin brothers--Mickey and Eddie--who are [[SeparatedAtBirth separated at birth]] by their mother, Mrs. Johnstone, who can't afford to raise them both, and her barren employer Mrs. Lyons. They are brought up in two vastly different environments, on opposite ends of the social spectrum. As children, they meet and become best friends, never finding out they are brothers until the day of they die.
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Changed line(s) 34 (click to see context) from:
* IJustShotMarvinInTheFace: At the end of the play, [[spoiler:Mickey threatens Edward with a gun he doesn't know is loaded, and accidentally shoots him.]]
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* IJustShotMarvinInTheFace: At the end ([[ForegoneConclusion and beginning]]) of the play, [[spoiler:Mickey Mickey threatens Edward with a gun he doesn't know is loaded, and accidentally shoots him.]]