Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Theatre / LoveInHateNation

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/new_1000x1000_5.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''"Revolution in the institution!"'']]
3
4''Love In Hate Nation'' is an original musical written by Creator/JoeIconis of ''Theatre/BeMoreChill'' fame. It premiered at the Two River Theatre in Red Bank, New Jersey in November 2019.
5
6Set in The60s, it tells the story of sixteen-year-old Susannah Son, a Black aspiring musician who is sent to a girl's juvenile hall following a [[DrivenToSuicide suicide attempt]]. Run by the tyrannical Miss Asp, National Reformatory for Girls, or "Nation" for short, is a decrepit and oppressive institution where Susannah encounters all kinds of misfits -- including their leader, resident bad-girl Sheila Nail. Romances blossom, fights break out, and revolutions are born, all set to some catchy vintage tunes.
7
8----
9!!''Love In Hate Nation'' contains examples of:
10
11* ZeroPercentApprovalRating: All of the inmates hate Miss Asp, [[spoiler: even Judith when she [[TheMole temporarily allies with her.]]]]
12* AbusiveParents: Judith and Kitty's fathers, Susannah's white adoptive family, and to a quite horrifying extent [[spoiler: Miss Asp both had and was this.]]
13* ActOfTrueLove: [[spoiler: Susannah rescuing Sheila from solitary when Susannah could have very well been killed.]]
14* ActionGirl: All the girls become Action Girls during Operation Sha-La-La when putting their [[ChekhovsSkill skills]] mentioned in "Life in Hate Nation" to use. Sheila specifically has been an Action Girl since she was eight, defying authority and surviving at every turn. Judith, too, could qualify, as [[spoiler: she survived her father's sexual abuse by ''cutting his penis off''.]]
15* ActionGirlfriend: At first, Sheila is this to Susannah, as Susannah admires Sheila for her badassery and defiance to authority and feels like she could never be so bold. Then, during Operation Sha-La-La, Susannah becomes an [[ActionGirl Action Girl]] in her own right and they are each other's Action Girlfriends.
16* AdultsAreUseless: None of the characters have a single authority figure they can trust or depend on.
17* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Or bad ''girls'', as it turns out - the sweet and shy Susannah is almost immediately infatuated with Sheila's leather jacket, heavy eyeliner, rebellious attitude, and many stories of her failed attempts to escape Nation. It's Sheila's feistiness and James Dean affectation that eventually inspires Susannah to become a crusader for her beliefs, too.
18* AlliterativeName: Susannah Son and Dorothy Donaldson.
19* AllMusicalsAreAdaptations: Subverted, this is an original story!
20* AlmostKiss: Susannah and Sheila at the end of "Oh Well".
21* AloofDarkHairedGirl: Sheila, practically a female [[Creator/JamesDean James Dean]] in dress, aura, reputation and in attitude, fits this trope to a T. When first realizing she has feelings for her, Susannah moons over her hair being "black as a feather."
22* AmbiguousCriminalHistory: It is never stated why Sheila or Ya-Ya are in prison. The Love in Hate Nation Facebook page lists some reasons, but they are either too broad or possibly not related to the breaking point of the authorities.
23* AmbiguouslyGay: In addition to the canon lead romance, a lesbian couple, many of the girls in Nation have varying degrees of subtext between them.
24* AmbiguousStartOfDarkness: Miss Asp was progressive before she got sent to Nation, and it is made clear during canon that electroconvulsive "therapy" is what traumatized her into being bigoted and totalitarian. However, it is unknown when exactly during Miss Asp's time in juvie that she made that change.
25* AngryMobSong: "Revolution Song," naturally, as the girls plot their revolution and ultimately succeed in rioting and [[spoiler: burning down the prison]] to save Sheila and themselves.
26* AppealToForce: Aside from Miss Asp being able to negatively change the inmates' futures if they are insubordinate, she can [[spoiler: and will]] order an inmate to be shocked for disobedience.
27* ArcWords: Plenty, "sha-la-la" being the most significant.
28* ArchnemesisDad: Kitty's father forced her into juvie for being trans, Susannah's father is rude towards her, and [[spoiler: ''Judith's'' father... [[RapeAsBackstory well...]]]]
29* ArmorPiercingQuestion: When Kitty is consoling Susannah in the conversation leading into "Masochist".
30--> '''Susannah:''' I should've taken the blame. I was just afraid... of my dad finding out.
31--> '''Kitty:''' Finding out ''what''?
32* BadBadActing: Ya-Ya's solo at the party, "Jezebel," is intentionally awful.
33* BedsheetLadder: How Sheila tried to escape Nation in almost all of her escape attempts.
34* BeehiveHairdo: It is The60s after all - many of the women have this.
35* BeingTorturedMakesYouEvil: Miss Asp was actually progressive before being thrown into Nation at the behest of her father. During canon, after having been tortured by electroshock "therapy," she is oppressive and bigoted.
36* BeneathTheMask: Nearly all of Nation's inmates are putting up a front—usually an aggressive one—to hide their deep-seated trauma.
37* BerserkButton: Pretty much every one of the girls has one, except the shy, gentle-natured Susannah.
38* BigBad: Miss Asp, and on a wider level, mainstream conservative America.
39* BigDamnHeroes: [[spoiler: Susannah's dramatic rescue of Sheila]], which takes up the majority of Act 2.
40* BigDamnKiss: At the end of "I Was A Teenage Delinquent," [[spoiler: Susannah and Sheila ''finally'' kiss after an entire show of buildup, just as Francis pulls up on his motorcycle in the background.]]
41* BigEntrance: Sheila Nail, the main love interest of the show and the coolest and most popular of the girls, has a big one, followed by an entire solo number about her exploits and reputation.
42* BlackComedy: Much of the show's humour, being set in an oppressive juvenile hall.
43* BookEnds: The show starts and ends with Susannah playing a song she wrote.
44* BootsOfToughness: Sheila's black boots display her strength and resilience.
45* BreadEggsMilkSquick: "Miss Asp's Song II" has her wistfully listing all the things she misses about the comparatively more conservative [[The40s '40s]] and [[The50s '50s]], which include silent movies, traditional gender roles, wartime American patriotism, and ''Hitler''.
46* BreakTheCutie: Susannah goes through countless tribulations at Nation, all of which wear her down psychologically and/or traumatize her.
47* BreakUpDemand: [[spoiler: Miss Asp shouts at Susannah and Sheila after catching them kissing at the party, breaking them up.]]
48* BreakUpMakeUpScenario: Susannah and Sheila meet, bond, and fall in love during Act 1. At the end of Act 1, [[spoiler: Miss Asp finds them and breaks them up and Susannah lies about Sheila forcing a kiss on Susannah]]. [[spoiler: Susannah apologizes for her betrayal and she and Sheila make up]] in Act 2.
49* BreakupSong: Susannah and Sheila's solos during "Solitary" qualify, where both agonize over what happened the night of the party and how much Susannah's actions have wounded them both.
50* BrokenBird: The ''entire cast'' (excepting the men), even [[BigBad Miss Asp]] to an extent. Thankfully, the [[EarnYourHappyEnding heroes recover]].
51* BSODSong: The Act 1 finale "I Hope" is one for Susannah after she [[spoiler: lies about Sheila out of fear and is locked up in Miss Asp's office for the night]], sending her into a downward spiral about her suicidal impulses, her guilt, her unwillingness to marry Francis, and seeming lack of options as a Black lesbian in the 1960s. Sheila's verse of "Solitary" also counts as she succumbs to despair after having her heart broken by Susannah.
52* TheBully: Judith.
53* CabinFever: "Solitary." After the party goes south and Miss Asp starts her VillainousBreakdown, Act 2 opens with the girls getting restless and violent after having been locked in their dormitory for eight days as punishment for drugging Buzz and stealing alcohol from Asp's office. [[spoiler: Sheila]], who's actually ''in'' solitary confinement, has the worst of this.
54* TheCakeIsALie: [[spoiler: Miss Asp promises Judith a transfer to a different juvie hall if she continues to be her mole for information about the other inmates, but never actually follows through on this promise.]]
55* CallForward: When Susannah sees Sheila for the first time early in Act 1, time seems to stop and she sings a line or two about how immediately awestruck she is. It's the tune of their FinalLoveDuet right near the end of the show, "I Was a Teenage Delinquent."
56* CharacterDevelopment: Everyone goes through it to an extent, but Susannah and Sheila have the most significant ones. Susannah starts off as a shy, frightened girl struggling with suicidal depression and trying to find where she fits into society, and ends the show as the leader of a resistance movement, proudly owning every part of herself as a mentally ill Black lesbian who wants to use her music to change the world. Sheila, who starts off as a tough, guarded rebel who doesn't want to depend on anyone and clings to her cool image to cope, [[DefrostingIceQueen completely melts]] when she falls in love with Susannah, and becomes a much warmer, more openly emotional person with restored faith that the world can change.
57* ChekhovsHobby / ChekhovsSkill : Every single one of the inmates' quirks, interests, and abilities are put to use to pull off Operation Sha-La-La.
58* ChekhovsGun: Miss Asp's scissors.
59* ColdBloodedTorture: Doc Shock's entire character exists to deliver this at the behest of Miss Asp, under the guise of [[BlatantLies rehabilitation]]. There's also use of solitary confinement, mostly on Sheila, which legally qualifies as torture although it's not really treated as such in-story.
60* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Susannah wears bright yellows and reds, showing her innocence and attempts toward an optimistic outlook, while Sheila wears a black leather jacket, cementing her cynical and rebellious status. The other girls' outfits reflect this trope as well; Kitty, who paints herself as a [[TheVamp fabulous flirt]] wears red, girly Dorothy wears [[TrueBlueFemininity blue]], and sci-fi fan and oddball Ya-Ya wears bright green. Antagonistic Judith wears dark colours to reflect her typical emotional state.
61* ComingOutStory: [[spoiler: Susannah tells the girls (minus Sheila) that she loves Sheila on impulse, simultaneously coming out as a lesbian after all her time of self-doubt and internalized homophobia.]]
62-->[[spoiler:'''Susannah:''' And... I love her.]]
63-->[[spoiler:''(The girls gasp.)'']]
64* CondescendingCompassion: Miss Asp, particularly towards Black inmates.
65* CoolBigSis: Kitty, who is protective of all the other girls, and who reaches out to Susannah when she's being shunned. She tries to bring everyone out of their shells, pushes them to show off their talents, and counsels them to be proud of themselves. And loves to do their makeup, too.
66* CoolPeopleRebelAgainstAuthority: "This Is The Way..." lists off various rebellious things that the inmates do, such as smoking cigarettes and buying contraband, that make them "badass."
67* CorporalPunishment: As Judith says, Miss Asp is excessively liberal with her usage of electroshock "therapy."
68* CounterpointDuet: "The Other One," which fittingly explores Susannah and Sheila's contrasting perspectives on being outcasts.
69* CostumeEvolution: The character's 60s prison get-ups compared to their costumes in the [[The80s epilogue]] give a lot of hints not just to the changing eras, but to the trajectories their lives have taken. Miss Asp's outfits get progressively fancier as well as she prepares for Life Magazine's impending visit.
70* CrazyEnoughToWork: Susannah knocking her and Sheila's Morse Code beat on the pipes leading to the solitary confinement cells in the hopes that she'll recognize it and knock back, giving the signal that she's alright and can still be rescued. Operation Sha-La-La as a whole may qualify, too, relying largely on the girls' skills, scrappiness, and togetherness.
71* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler: Harriet is ''burnt alive'' by electroshock "therapy."]]
72* CulturePolice: Miss Asp dislikes anything that does not conform to her white-bread cultural Puritanism, including rock music.
73* CureYourGays: [[spoiler: Miss Asp tries to "cure" Harriet, her daughter out of wedlock, of being gay by forcing electroconvulsive [[BlatantLies "therapy"]] on her, which ends up killing her.]]
74* DadsOffFightingInTheWar: Susannah's birth father was shot and killed in combat during an unspecified war.
75* DarkReprise: The tune of "This Is The Way..." gets one in the bridge of "I Hope," and then there's also "Susannah's Song", which comes up whenever she needs to comfort herself in distressing or frightening situations.
76* DarkestHour: When [[spoiler: Sheila is caught during "Operation Sha-La-La" and Miss Asp receives a telegram on Life Magazine's cancellation, leading to the absolute apex of her VillainousBreakdown]].
77* DarkIsNotEvil: Sheila wears a lot of dark colors, but she's one of the kindest, bravest girls in Nation, always willing to protect those around her and stand up for others. Additionally, one of the messages of ''Love in Hate Nation'' is that people with dark skin are not evil.
78* DatingWhatDaddyHates: Francis dates Susannah, a Black girl, as a way to rebel against white society.
79* ADayInTheLimelight: "Masochist" is a song in the limelight for Kitty, following her journey towards defiant self-love in the face of the transphobia she's experienced.
80* DeliberateValuesDissonance: This mostly comes from the antagonists, Miss Asp and Francis, who respectively symbolize the conservatism the heroes must fight and the self-serving "college revolutionary" types who are no better than those they claim to be fighting. However, even some of the girls fall into this, too, it being The60s; outdated terms are used for Black people, many of the characters make casually racist remarks, and amongst the inmates, there's a lot of homophobia and transphobia. The difference is, of course, that the girls later overcome these views. This trope ties in pretty strongly with the themes of the show as the characters struggle with and eventually combat internalized bigotry, taking on views that are more popular today as they are inspired to form and join various social movements.
81* {{Delinquents}}: All the inmates—literally; they're in a prison for juvenile delinquents.
82* {{Demonization}}: Miss Asp is disgusted by every disprivileged identity, [[FemaleMisogynist including her own]], and thus attempts to make disprivileged peoples' attempts at revolution appear terroristic and un-American.
83* DestructiveRomance: Susannah and Francis's romance is undoubtedly an emotionally abusive relationship. Francis dates Susannah solely because she is Black for social clout among his progressive college friends, and he attempts to coerce her into having sex with him - not to mention Francis also being racist, sexist, and homophobic towards her.
84* DidNotThinkThisThrough: Francis's increasingly harebrained schemes to spring Susannah from Nation so that they can get married. Susannah [[LampshadeHanging calls him out on this]], and not just for comedic effect; she's right to point out that his plans are putting her in danger while he risks very little.
85* DistantDuet: Susannah and Sheila's parts of "Solitary."
86* DistantFinale: The show ends with a TimeSkip to 1984, [[spoiler: where we see how Susannah and Sheila's lives have unfolded up until their reunion, 22 years later.]]
87* DistractedByTheSexy: Dorothy and Kitty argue over who gets to be this to Buzz when setting up to throw the party.
88--> '''Dorothy:''' ''I'm'' the flirt, you're just the distraction!
89--> '''Kitty:''' Don't put me in a ''box'', Dorothy!
90* DoubleAgent: [[spoiler: Judith allies herself both with the girls and with Miss Asp by being her mole.]]
91* DramatisPersonae: "Life in Hate Nation" may qualify as one as it serves introduce most of the cast, the exceptions being of course the two leading ladies, who get their own introductory songs.
92* DrivenToSuicide: A major theme of the show. Susannah's birth mother and [[spoiler: Harriet's pianist girlfriend]]. Additionally, Susannah is imprisoned for a botched attempt, over which she bonds with Sheila, as the latter reveals in detail during "The Three Failed Escape Attempts of Sheila Nail" that she's tried and failed as well.
93* DrunkenSong: "Jezebel" might count, considering Ya-Ya's over-the-top performance, which involves whooping and throwing some of her clothes off. The girls did steal alcohol for the party, after all.
94* TheDulcineaEffect: Sheila and Susannah's [[spoiler: affirmation of their willingness to participate in Operation Sha-La-La]] is indicative that they are willing to die for each other, even though they have known each other for at most a few weeks when this happens.
95* DysfunctionalFamily: Several:
96** Kitty's father made her go to juvie for being transgender.
97** Susannah's adoptive family is harsh to her, sending her to juvie merely for [[DrivenToSuicide mental health reasons]].They also do not pay much attention to her.
98** [[spoiler: [[RapeAsBackstory Judith being raped repeatedly by her father]].]]
99** [[spoiler: Miss Asp had her own daughter electroshocked.]]
100* EarnYourHappyEnding: Sheila and Susannah [[spoiler: finally get together after all their trials... twenty-two years after having to separate]].
101* TheEasyWayOrTheHardWay: When Susannah and the other inmates are [[spoiler: inciting their revolution against Nation,]] Susannah tells Miss Asp that [[spoiler: she can either rebel and be in the girls' favor or stick to her old ways and be their enemy.]]
102* ElectroconvulsiveTherapyIsTorture: Electroconvulsive "therapy" is explicitly portrayed as torture throughout ''Love in Hate Nation'', especially when it is revealed that [[spoiler: Harriet was killed by being burnt alive by said "therapy."]]
103* ElectricTorture: The main method of [[CorporalPunishment Corporal Punishment]] that Miss Asp employs for harsh transgressions of Nation's—and society's, as Nation is intended to be a microcosm of U.S. 1960s society—rules.
104* TheElevenOClockNumber: "Revolution Song" and "I Fell In Love In Juvie Hall!".
105* EnemyMine: [[spoiler: Judith hates Miss Asp, but she's been acting as her informant for years in the hopes of protecting herself from the abuses the other girls face and being transferred to a better facility. It doesn't last.]]
106* EverythingHasRhythm: In "Solitary," the inmates, with the exception of Susannah [[spoiler: and Sheila,]] are banging various things and body parts against the walls and pipes of Nation out of boredom, but because "Love in Hate Nation" is a musical, this banging is rhythmic.
107* EvilReactionary / SoulSavingCrusader: Miss Asp believes that, through electroshock "therapy" and following dictatorial institutional and societal rules, the inmates can become the "perfect American mother[s] and [wives]."
108* FaceHeelTurn: This is what happened to Miss Asp. However, whether she was a "good," neutral, or bad person who went too far with one mistake before her imprisonment at Nation is unknown.
109* FallGuy: Judith tries to blame Sheila for the stolen alcohol and the party when everyone is caught by Miss Asp.
110* FamilyOfChoice / CriminalFoundFamily: Despite their differences, once they finally band together to take down Nation, the girls, who have been orphaned, abused, abandoned, betrayed or otherwise forgotten by their families, all view each other as such, as they state in "Revolution Song."
111--> '''Susannah, joined by the other girls:''' ''S-T-O-P!/You won't touch my family!''
112* {{Fangirl}}: Plenty. Susannah for Black-led [[GirlGroup Girl Groups]], Sheila for rock bands and Pete Seeger, Ya-Ya for science fiction, and so on. Miss Asp worships ideals of white, conservative femininity like Doris Day. Even Francis is a fan''boy'' for the Beats. In the epilogue, [[spoiler: we see InUniverse ones for Susannah after her music career took off and she inspired future generations as a Civil Rights and gay rights icon]].
113* FeelingOppressedByTheirExistence: Miss Asp feels as though her rights and the future of America are being threatened by the existence of oppressed minority groups.
114* FeminineWomenCanCook: Miss Asp tries, anyway. Dorothy, the most girly of the inmates of Nation (who also assists with her cooking), openly ridicules her culinary failures.
115* FinalLoveDuet: "I Fell In Love In Juvie Hall!", as Susannah and Sheila finally confess their feelings and share one last song and kiss [[spoiler: in the smoking rubble of the now-destroyed Nation, just before Sheila flees to Mexico on a motorcycle.]]
116* FlashbackEcho: "This Is The Way" has Kitty instructing the girls to conjure something horrible someone has done or said to them, and then picturing that person [[ItMakesSenseInContext being eaten alive by ocelots]] as they inhale and exhale their cigarette smoke, in order to look "deeply tortured" and rebellious while doing so. Although it's PlayedForLaughs in this instance, Susannah frequently has less comedic flashbacks of cutting or painful things Francis has said to her, particularly the times he's tried to pressure her into sex or marriage, and insulted and berated her with racist and homophobic remarks when she refused him.
117* FlatWhat: Sheila's reaction to Susannah mentioning "Operation Sha-La-La."
118--> '''Sheila:''' That is a ''terrible'' name, by the way.
119* FlirtingUnderFire: All of Susannah and Sheila's romance is this. Besides being in juvie, the two are in the racist, sexist, homophobic 1960s United States, being monitored constantly and punished severely for any hint of homosexuality. They risk their lives every time they flirt with each other.
120* ForbiddenLove: One of the central themes of the show. Susannah and Francis's [[DestructiveRomance "love"]] is forbidden because Susannah is Black and Francis is white, and Susannah and Sheila's love is forbidden because they are both girls and because Sheila is white.
121* {{Foreshadowing}}: "And if we meet again/How I hope the world is different then!" [[spoiler: It is. And they do meet again.]]
122* {{Forgiveness}}: Sheila agrees to forgive Susannah for [[spoiler: lying to Miss Asp that Sheila forced a kiss on Susannah]].
123* ForYourOwnGood: Miss Asp claims that every oppressive, cruel, and bigoted thing that she does to the inmates of Nation is for the sake of them being blissful in their assumed futures as "domesticated" housewives.
124* FrameUp: [[spoiler: Susannah frames Sheila as nonconsensually trying to kiss her at the end of "Oh Well," when in reality Susannah wanted to kiss Sheila.]]
125* FreakyIsCool: Ya-Ya's interests are pretty straightforward as an example of this; this also is one of the focal points of all the girls' development, and more subtly, the romance between Susannah and Sheila.
126--> '''Susannah:''' ''(dreamily)'' She said that I was a weirdo in the ''good'' way!
127--> Which I think is delinquent for "you're charismatic, smart and sweet"
128* FreudianExcuse / DrivenToVillainy / WhenIWasYourAge: Miss Asp became a villain by having been treated just as viciously as the inmates, thus having a schema of having to do the same to others in her mind.
129* FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse: [[spoiler: Miss Asp uses the cruel things done to her as the reason for her doing the same to the inmates of Nation, but Susannah rejects this excuse during Operation Sha-La-La.]]
130* FriendshipSong: "This Is The Way" for the inmates.
131* FriendshipTrinket / MementoMacGuffin / TragicKeepsake: [[spoiler: Ya-Ya keeps Harriet's doll and names the doll Harriet II in honor of her friendship with Harriet, Miss Asp's daughter out of wedlock who was electrocuted to death for being gay.]]
132* FullNameBasis: Judith Ramone.
133* TheGadfly: Judith often says mean, cruel, or annoying things purely because she enjoys provoking the other inmates. [[spoiler: However, the audience later learns that this is partially due to her trauma from being repeatedly raped by her father since she was seven years old.]]
134* {{GASP}}: The inmates' reaction when [[spoiler: Susannah declares to them her love for Sheila]].
135* {{Gayngst}}: The main plotline of the show is Susannah and Sheila struggling to overcome both institutional and their internalized homophobia, and confess and manifest their mutual love for each other.
136* GayAesop: Among many anti-bigotry aesops of ''Love in Hate Nation'' is to simply treat gay people well.
137* [[GayngstInducedSuicide Gayngst-Induced Suicide]]: [[spoiler: It is mentioned by Buzz and the inmates that Harriet's love interest stabbed herself in the neck with a broken plate after hearing that Harriet got burnt alive by electroshock "therapy."]]
138* GirlGroup: Susannah's favourite style of music. Sheila prefers rock, and the music style of the show is a combination of both styles to reflect the way the girls influence one another as well as the time period.
139* GirlsLikeMusicians: Sheila finds Susannah's songwriting and ukulele playing [[EndearinglyDorky Endearingly Dorky]], and it's one of the reasons she has a crush on her ("her freaky ukulele"). Comes to a head when [[spoiler: Susannah visits Sheila when Sheila is in solitary and serenades her.]]
140* TheGhost: Harriet.
141* GorgeousPeriodDress: Miss Asp owns a few beautiful ones.
142* TheGrovel: [[spoiler: When she is able to escape to Sheila's cell in solitary, Susannah apologizes repeatedly for her betrayal and begs for Sheila to take her back.]]
143** [[EnforcedTrope Enforced]] by Miss Asp as a control tactic when she forces Susannah [[spoiler: to beg her not to cut up her ukulele strings]]; it's implied this is far from the first time she's done this to the girls.
144* HatesBeingAlone / IJustWantToHaveFriends: Susannah does not like her solitude and wants a group in which to be the center of attention as described in "The Other One."
145* HatesTheirParent: Kitty to her father for forcing her into juvie hall for being transgender, and [[spoiler: Judith to her father for his repeated raping of her.]]
146* HaveAGayOldTime: Intentionally so. Well said, Miss Asp!
147--> '''Miss Asp:''' I'm beginning to think something ''queer'' is going on around here!
148* HaveIMentionedThatIAmHeterosexualToday: Susannah, when talking about Francis and her experiences with boys. She repeats over and over what a 'marvellous opportunity' marrying Francis, who is wealthy and white, would be, most likely repeating what she was told by him. When Sheila hears this, she offhandedly talks about the many flings she's apparently had with guys... [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial right before singing a duet where she bonds with Susannah]].
149* HeartbeatSoundtrack: The love {{Leitmotif}} for Susannah and Sheila, even [[LampshadedTrope described as their heartbeats]] in "Oh Well." [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that it has an in-universe plot purpose - the rhythm starts off as a Morse code message Susannah teaches Sheila, that they later use to communicate when [[spoiler: Sheila's in solitary]], leading into the song.
150* HeelFaceTurn: [[spoiler: Judith, previously TheMole for Miss Asp and the toughest of the girls, as well as Sheila's enemy, finally comes around and is the first to sing in "Revolution Song."]]
151* HeroicSelfDeprecation: Susannah, until Sheila and Kitty bring her out of her shell.
152* TheHeroSucksSong: The ensemble part of "Solitary" has all the girls locked in the fifth floor dormitory blame Susannah for their misery and denounce her as a traitor.
153* HeteronormativeCrusader: Miss Asp, often with tragic and horrifying results.
154* HigherUnderstandingThroughDrugs: Francis thinks this will happen for him.
155* HomophobicHateCrime: [[spoiler: Miss Asp burns her own daughter, Harriet, alive via electroshock therapy gone too far after catching her with another girl; the same fate is intended for Sheila, but thankfully averted.]]
156* HoneyTrap: Kitty and Dorothy's plan to distract Buzz as a way to slip castor oil into his drink.
157* AHouseDivided: The inmates' small rivalries turn especially intense when they're all confined to their collective prison cell, especially [[spoiler: Judith and Kitty's]].
158* IAmSong: Plenty. The tail end of Sheila's introduction in "The Three Failed Escape Attempts of Sheila Nail" is the most straightforward example. "The Other One" is one for both Sheila and Susannah, as the girls bond and discuss their respective views on being outcasts. Also, "Masochist," Kitty Minx's Act 2 showstopper about her pride in her trans identity. Finally, some parts of "Life In Hate Nation" that introduce each respective inmate are this, particularly Judith's verse.
159* IHaveNoSon: [[spoiler: Miss Asp]] to her daughter for "ruining her life" by being the result of a TeenPregnancy that led to her own incarceration and inability to get married. It reaches truly monstrous heights, such as [[CruelandUnusualDeath letting her fry to death]].
160* IconicOutfit: Sheila's black leather jacket, which gets referenced many times in song.
161* ILied: [[spoiler: After Judith inquires about when she'll get transferred to another juvie hall per Miss Asp's promise, Miss Asp reveals that she never really intended to transfer Judith anywhere.]]
162* ImpliedRape: [[spoiler: Judith]] is implied to have been raped by her father. It's not outright stated, but she cut off his penis and insists that it was an "appropriate response to the things he'd done to [her]."
163* ImprovisationalIngenuity: The girls manage to plan a [[spoiler: successful]] revolution using only the resources obtainable from a juvie hall.
164* IncomingHam:
165** KNOCK KNOCK, DOC SHOCK, Z-Z-ZZZZAP! ''OOOOOOOOOOOH!''
166** ''Who'' is ''she?!'' '''JU-U-U-DITH RAMOOOOOOOONE!'''
167** ''Ki-tty'' Minx, her name is ''Kitty Minx''!
168* IncompatibleOrientation: Besides Francis's bigotry and sexual coercion, this is the main reason why Susannah is uncomfortable with Francis's love, but she doesn't know this until [[ClosetKey Sheila]] comes into her life.
169* TheIngenue: Dorothy plays up that she's this as part of her false Southern Belle persona; Susannah is genuinely one, shy and taken aback by the roughness of life in juvie hall.
170* ItWillNeverCatchOn: Most people, even Sheila, are skeptical of Susannah's love of [[GirlGroup Girl Groups]] and nonsense syllables in music. Lo and behold, "Operation Sha-La-La," whose name was derided by many of the inmates, became the name of Susannah's hit band.
171* IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy: [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed.]] [[spoiler: Francis agrees to take Sheila to Mexico on the principle that it will make Susannah happy. Not a major case of this, however; he is far from the type of chivalrous person who would do so, and acts more out of fear when Judith threatens him into doing what Susannah says.]]
172* IWantSong: "Susannah's Song," as well as "I Hope," explore Susannah's depression and desperation as she struggles to find her place in the world as an adopted Black lesbian living in 1960s America with few to no role models. "Oh Well" might also be one as both Sheila and Susannah yearn to confess their feelings to each other despite the prejudice they face.
173* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: All the girls in Juvie with the exception of perhaps [[CoolBigSis Kitty]] have tough exteriors and often make mean-spirited jokes, but are lovely souls deep down, the two biggest examples being Sheila and Judith.
174* JuvenileHell: Nation is hellish: inmates are oppressed, psychologically abused, and regularly electroshocked for the slightest infractions.
175* KarmicDeath: [[spoiler: Miss Asp, a fire and brimstone tyrant who rules Nation with an iron fist first has her dreams crushed, then has Nation, which she helped build, burn down with her still in it - doubly poetic since it was her own hatred that got her daughter burned alive. She's seen in her last moments desperately pointing a camera at herself, desperately trying to get that perfect picture she wanted from Life Magazine.]]
176* KinslayingIsASpecialKindOfEvil: [[spoiler: The fact that Miss Asp inadvertently(?) killed Harriet is made [[CrossesTheLineTwice doubly evil]] by the fact that Harriet is/was her daughter.]]
177* LaResistance: Naturally, as it is The60s. The denouement of the show relies on a "Revolution in the institution," where Susannah overcomes her fears and leads the girls not only stage a prison break, but fight for civil, LGBT+, and feminist rights. Francis ''thinks'' he's a part of this, meeting Susannah at a demonstration for environmental conservationism, but he's still against gay rights and is more interested in appearing good than actually ''doing'' any good. He clearly uses his interracial relationship for social clout and personal gratification, still treating Susannah as his inferior and insisting she should be a homemaker.
178* LastKiss: Susannah and Sheila think their [[BigDamnKiss first kiss]] before [[spoiler: Sheila flees to Mexico]] is this, complete with the getaway motorcycle pulling up in their periphery, as neither of them know if they'll ever see each other again.
179* LastHetRomance: Though the audience doesn't know what happens to Susannah in [[spoiler: the intervening 22 years before she and Sheila reunite]], we can assume that [[spoiler: her "romance" with Francis is this.]]
180* LastSecondChance: [[spoiler: Susannah offers Miss Asp a last chance to rebel with her and the inmates just before they get rid of Nation forever. Of course, Miss Asp does not take this chance.]]
181* {{Leitmotif}}: The "I fell in love in juvie hall" phrase and "Sha-la-la" recurring melody follow Susannah and Sheila around the show. Also, the rhythm "bum bum-bum" is present in many transitional and turning-point moments.
182* LeaveTheTwoLovebirdsAlone: [[spoiler: At the end of the show, when Sheila and Susannah are clearly about to discuss their mutual love for each other, Judith says "Give 'em some privacy, will ya?"]]
183* LightIsNotGood: Miss Asp wears hyperfeminine pastels and florals, but her clinging to traditional expectations of womanhood is her weapon of choice in her truly heinous acts. Also, ''Love in Hate Nation'' shows that whiteness does not automatically make a person morally good.
184* LocationSong: "Life In Hate Nation," sung by the inmates when Susannah first arrives in juvie hall and first encounters the prison's decrepit state and intimidating roster of inmates.
185* LockedintheDungeon: Sheila has been locked in solitary many times before canon, but she is also [[spoiler: locked in solitary again ''during'' canon for "forcibly" trying to kiss Susannah.]]
186* LoveAtFirstSight / LoveAtFirstNote: When Susannah and Sheila meet, time itself seems to slow down, and both later refer to their first meeting/hearing each other sing being when they fell in love.
187* LoveObstructingParents / ShippingTorpedo: Miss Asp [[spoiler: for Susannah and Sheila when she forces Sheila into solitary, and to deadly extents with Harriet and her lover.]]
188* LyricalDissonance: Par for the course with a Joe Iconis work. The show's musical style is catchy and upbeat, said to be a riot grrl re-imagining of 60s Girl Group and blues tunes, with some early rock thrown in. The lyrics, meanwhile, aren't joking around from the get-go, discussing racism, psychiatric abuse, homophobia, transphobia, attempted suicide/suicidal thoughts, solitary confinement, betrayal and more.
189** InUniverse with Susannah's early music; Sheila points out the dissonance between the subject matter of Civil Rights songs she performs for her and her love of cheery nonsense syllables ("What's with all the sha-boop sha-boop?"), inspired by artists like the Ronettes. Susannah insists there's place for both - something they both realize when "sha-la-la" becomes the ArcWords for their burgeoning star-crossed romance.
190* MaliciousMisnaming: Kitty chewing out Judith for [[spoiler: outing Harriet to Miss Asp]] gets Judith so furious that she deadnames Kitty before attacking her.
191* ManipulativeBastard: Miss Asp psychologically manipulates the girls, alternating between breaking them down for their crimes, perceived or otherwise, and promising them rewards she seldom (if ever) delivers on if they comply with her wishes. She also specifically cultivates rivalries and resentment to pit the girls against each other, convincing them that they are one another's enemies, rather than her, to stymie the formation of camaraderie or solidarity. Francis may also qualify to a lesser extent, as while his lectures to Susannah on the privilege of being in a relationship with a rich white man do get to her, but his pathetic attempts at manipulating her into sex and later, marriage, ultimately fail.
192* MassiveMultiplayerEnsembleNumber: "Life In Hate Nation" and "Revolution Song" are the two biggest examples, although the latter half of "Masochist" counts as well.
193* MasterRace: Miss Asp thinks white people are this.
194* MaybeEverAfter: [[spoiler: ''Love in Hate Nation'' ends with Susannah and Sheila finally reuniting after 22 years apart, and the ending only shows them starting a conversation with each other before the final [[FadetoBlack fade to black]]. The show leaves what happens afterwards to the audience's imagination.]]
195* MeaningfulEcho: Susannah's reprises of "Oh Well."
196* MeaningfulName: Plenty, [[JustifiedTrope justifiably]] as this is in part an AffectionateParody of a bad-girl-in-jail ExploitationFilm.
197** The villain, Miss Asp, is cruel and powerful, a fitting name for a poisonous cobra that used to symbolize Egyptian royalty; Judith even [[LampshadeHanging calls her a "snake"]] when she betrays her trust.
198** Susannah ''Son'' (sounds like 'sun') wears a lot of yellow, and while her character struggles to find happiness, she is definitely full of light and kindness.
199** Kitty ''Minx'' prides herself on her beauty and fabulous and flirtatious demeanour. Additionally, she's a fan of Series/HoneyWest, wanting a pet ocelot of her own. An ocelot is a type of wildcat - in other words, a kitty.
200** Ya-Ya's real name, Gloria ''Meeks'', describes her nature.
201** Sheila ''Nail'', additionally, suggests the character's toughness (evoking the expression "tough as nails").
202** Even the orderly, Buzz, has a RunningGag where he's driven crazy by incessant ''buzzing'' of the front doorbell to the prison.
203** More subtly, Judith Ramone could be a reference to the [[Literature/BookOfJudith Biblical Judith]], who beheads an enemy general who lusted after her. Famously, Baroque artist Creator/ArtemisiaGentileschi depicted the scene with herself as Judith and her rapist as Holofernes. Judith Ramone's crime? [[spoiler: She castrated her father after years of enduring his sexual abuse, removing another "head."]]
204* MisfitMobilizationMoment: [[spoiler: The one just before the start of Operation Sha-La-La.]]
205* MissingMom: Susannah's birth mother [[spoiler: killed herself after losing her husband to war]].
206* TheMole: [[spoiler: Judith to Asp, although she regrets it, and does a HeelFaceTurn when she finds her promises of rewards to be empty.]]
207* MolotovCocktail: [[spoiler: What Ya-Ya uses to burn down Nation.]]
208* MomentKiller: [[spoiler: Miss Asp interrupting Sheila and Susannah's kiss is the ultimate moment killer: not only does she interfere with their loving moment, she throws Sheila in solitary confinement due to Susannah's lie about Sheila's "forced" kiss.]]
209* MoodWhiplash: Plenty. Comedic or tender moments are frequently followed by violent or upsetting scenes and vice-versa. The primary example would be the Act I finale; the tender bonding moment between Susannah and Sheila, followed by a romantic duet and their AlmostKiss, is brutally interrupted by Miss Asp, who [[spoiler: gets into a violent altercation with both girls, destroys Ya-Ya's beloved doll, intimidates Susannah into betraying Sheila, and locks the former in her office while sending the latter off to Solitary.]] The reveal of Judith's [[spoiler: [[AbusiveParents backstory]]]] is also this.
210* MortonsFork / SadisticChoice: [[spoiler: When Miss Asp finds Susannah and Sheila about to kiss, if Susannah tells the truth and confesses that she wanted to kiss Sheila, she and Sheila would both potentially suffer [[CruelandUnusualDeath the same fate as Harriet]] and [[DriventoSuicide her lover]]. On the other hand, if Susannah lies and says Sheila forced the kiss on her, she will be "free" to live with the other inmates, but Sheila will be the one in pain. Susannah takes the latter option in this case.]]
211* MotorMouth: In addition to a stutter, Susannah lapses into this when she's nervous or frightened, particularly if she has something to hide. Ya-Ya's a more outgoing version of this.
212* MusicalisInterruptus: Happens a few times, but most significantly at the tail end of "The Other One," where Susannah and Sheila's bonding moment is interrupted by the other girls barging into the restrooms to discuss their plans.
213* MustMakeAmends: Susannah is determined to earn Sheila's forgiveness after [[spoiler: lying that Sheila forced a kiss on her, thereby sending her to solitary]].
214* MyFriendsAndZoidberg: During "Life In Hate Nation," every girl gets a big ensemble introduction of her name and characteristics, except for Ya-Ya, who pleadingly tries to get them to join in, establishing her place amongst the girls. They only join in when she starts crying that nobody likes her. This becomes a bit of a RunningGag with her, although the girls become more protective as the show progresses.
215--> '''Ya-Ya:''' My name is Gloria Mee...
216--> ''(silence from the other girls)''
217--> '''Ya-Ya:''' My name is Gloria Mee...
218* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Susannah has one at the end of Act 1 and in early Act 2 after [[spoiler: betraying Sheila out of fear of Miss Asp's abuse.]] She even gets two songs about it -- "I Hope" and her solo in "Solitary."
219* MyGodYouAreSerious: Susannah's reaction when Sheila says she plays billiards.
220* MysteriousPast: Nothing about Ya-Ya's past is ever revealed except for her previous friendship with [[spoiler: [[PosthumousCharacter Harriet]]]].
221* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Miss Asp and Doc Shock.
222* NoSell: When Miss Asp tries to appeal to the girls during their revolt on the basis that she's gone through "things... as cruel and hateful as things done to all of [the inmates]" and citing her lack of choices. Susannah isn't impressed, standing her ground and letting Asp know that she has a choice ''now'' - to either stand with them or against them.
223* NostalgiaFilter / AppealToTradition: Miss Asp thinks tradition is better to an extreme extent. In "Miss Asp's Song II," she lists things that she misses about the even more conservative 1940s and 1950s:
224-->'''Miss Asp:''' I miss the forties, the fifties, and more
225--> I miss silent movies and I miss the war
226--> I miss [[BreadEggsMilkSquick Hitler]]
227* NotSoDifferentRemark: Miss Asp tries to [[InvokedTrope invoke]] this when the girls revolt, citing her own abuse and troubled past and the fact that she never had any choices. The girls aren't having it.
228* ObsessivelyNormal: Miss Asp, as a result of societal conditioning and trauma which formed her beliefs, desperately wants to be a housewife in a heterosexual male-female nuclear family with at least one child. She hates everything weird and different for the same reasons and will immediately (only try to, in some cases) stamp out anything weird and/or different.
229* OffingTheOffspring: Whether it's intentional or not, [[spoiler: Miss Asp was responsible for the death of her daughter out of wedlock, Harriet.]]
230* OhCrap: Susannah when she gets caught [[spoiler: almost kissing Sheila in Asp's office]]; later, the girls all share one when [[spoiler: Buzz drags Sheila back inside mid-escape plot]].
231* OnceDoneNeverForgotten:
232** [[spoiler: To Sheila and Kitty at least: Judith outing Harriet as a lesbian to Miss Asp, leading to Harriet getting (unintentionally, but horrifically nonetheless) electrocuted to death.]]
233** [[spoiler: Miss Asp ordering Harriet to be electrocuted at a slightly higher level than advisable, leading to the above.]]
234* OneTrueLove: [[spoiler: Sheila returns to Susannah at the end of the show, showing that the two were meant to be together.]]
235* OnlyFriend: Dorothy seems to be this to Ya-Ya. At the very least, she seems to feel sorry for her. Sheila ''starts'' as this to newbie Susannah, but it quickly leads to something more.
236* OnlySaneMan: Sheila appears to be this at first, being down-to-earth, direct, relatively laid-back and the only inmate who doesn't freak Susannah out. An interesting case, considering she describes herself as being "a basket case" and "fucked in [her] head" [[spoiler: and indeed appears to suffer from some form of mental illness, having attempted suicide in the past]].
237* OnlyTheLeadsGetAHappyEnding: Not exactly played straight, but we only find out what happens to Susannah and Sheila.
238* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Kitty is usually very friendly and dramatic for the fun of it; during "Solitary," however, [[Jerkass Judith]]'s callousness about the [[spoiler: murder of Harriet, which she caused, and the fact that Sheila may soon meet a similar fate]] provokes her to fight dirty, with her words and then her fists.
239** PlayedForLaughs with Dorothy when Rat calls her out for pretending to be a SouthernBelle.
240* OppositesAttract: The emotional, shy, fearful, stammering [[TheIngenue innocent]] Susannah, desperate to fit into society, and the aloof, tough, openly rebellious troublemaker who rejects social standards, Sheila, fall in love. They even share a song, "The Other One," about all the ways in which they differ despite both being outcasts.
241* OrphanageOfFear: Sheila briefly mentions being raised in one.
242* OutlivingOnesOffspring: [[spoiler: Miss Asp. Not a terribly sympathetic example, however, as it's her own fault.]]
243* [[OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire Out of the Closet, Into the Fire]]: This happens twice before the events of the show and once over the course of the show. Before the show, Kitty is outed or comes out as transgender to her father/parents and is sent to juvie hall, and [[spoiler: Harriet is outed as a lesbian to Miss Asp by Judith and killed, making her love interest kill herself]]. During the show, [[spoiler: Miss Asp walks in on Susannah and Sheila's [[AlmostKiss Almost Kiss]] at the party and puts Sheila in solitary]].
244* PastVictimShowcase: [[spoiler: Judith does this when explaining Harriet's [[ElectroconvulsiveTherapyIsTorture backstory]] and implying that Sheila might suffer the same fate.]] Miss Asp inadvertently does this to herself when she says that she was "transformed" "through the miracle of electroconvulsive therapy."
245* PastimesProvePersonality: Sheila's liking of billiards at a time when it was considered a men's game shows that she is not traditionally feminine.
246* ParentalAbandonment: Sheila's a "ward of the state," and mentions having been raised by nuns. Susannah's an orphan too, having lost her birth mother and father to suicide and war respectively. Both she and Kitty were thrown into Juvie at the behest of their (in Susannah's case, adoptive) fathers.
247* ParentalIncest: [[spoiler: Judith's father was raping her.]]
248* PatrioticFervor: Miss Asp has such an intense case of this for the United States that she misses war and ''Hitler'' because both things drew Americans together to fight for their country and a common cause.
249* PervertDad: [[spoiler: Judith's father, as he has/had been raping Judith since she was seven years old.]]
250* PlayingtheVictimCard: [[spoiler: In the middle of the inmates' successful rebellion against Nation, Miss Asp pleads for the girls to settle down because the things done to her were just as cruel and oppressive as the things Miss Asp has done to them.]]
251* PosthumousCharacter: Harriet, who is later revealed to have been [[spoiler: Miss Asp's illegitimate daughter she hid in Nation, and later had electrocuted to death after catching her with another girl]].
252* PrecisionFStrike: A few. Sheila gets a fairly triumphant one one during [[IAmSong "The Three Failed Escape Attempts of Sheila Nail"]]:
253--> '''Sheila:''' I may be ''fucked'' in my head,
254--> But hey, at least I ain't dead!
255** Judith Ramone gets an [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome awesome]] one that highlights her HeelFaceTurn and leads into the SignatureSong, "Revolution Song".
256--> '''Judith:''' [[PunctuatedForEmphasis Total.]] ''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis Fucking.]]'' [[PunctuatedForEmphasis Rebellion.]]
257** Ya-Ya gets one during [[spoiler: the confrontation with Asp]].
258--> '''Ya-Ya:''' This is for Harriet, you ''son of a bitch''.
259* PrejudiceAesop: The entire message of ''Love in Hate Nation'' is to not be bigoted.
260* ProperLady: Miss Asp believes herself to be this and claims to want to shape the "garbage girls" in her care into this. A large part of Susannah's arc deals with her struggle with wanting to fit into this ideal (mostly associated with the safety and privilege 1960s American society would deny her because of her race) versus wanting to become who she truly is, a musician and a fighter for equality. Dorothy also champions herself as a "proper Southern homemaker through and through," but girly as she is, she's a lot more rebellious than the archetype would suggest.
261* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: [[spoiler: Judith's father and Buzz.]]
262* RedemptionEqualsAffliction: [[spoiler: Judith is redeemed from her [[TheBully bully]] status by deciding to be one of the starters of Operation Sha-La-La. This is after she gets hurt from realizing that Miss Asp is never going to transfer her to another juvie hall even after her faithfulness to her role as Miss Asp's mole and even despite all the damage she knows she's done.]]
263* {{Retraux}}: The show premiered in the late 2010s, but is set in and musically styled after The60s.
264* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Plenty, with poor Susannah on the receiving end of most of them. Francis dishes them out cruelly to Susannah whenever she doesn't go along with what he wants, Sheila gives her a biting one after [[spoiler: she betrays her]], and "Solitary" is one from all the inmates, including ''herself''. Miss Asp frequently gives the "garbage girls" these to beat them down, most significantly to Judith and Sheila. On the more heroic end of things, Kitty gives one to Judith for [[spoiler: betraying Harriet]], and Susannah gives an [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome epic one]] to Miss Asp during the climax.
265* RebelRelaxation: The inmates often adopt this idle stance.
266* TheReveal: Harriet's story, and [[spoiler: the fact that she was Miss Asp's illegitimate daughter]].
267* {{Revenge}}: [[spoiler: Burning down Nation, taking its oppression with it.]]
268* RomanceEnsues: Several moments between Susannah and Sheila, but the first time they're alone together with an opportunity to really know about each other is when Susannah has to change into her skirt.
269* RhymingWithItself: During "Solitary," for comedic purposes.
270--> '''Ya-Ya:''' It's like we're in prison!
271--> '''Rat:''' ...'cos we ''are'' in prison.
272* RightBehindMe: Miss Asp at the end of "Oh Well," [[spoiler: to disastrous results]]. It's PlayedForLaughs earlier during "This is the Way" when she comes up behind [[Cloudcuckoolander Ya-Ya]] continuing to jump around, shout and dance long after the song finishes.
273* RomanticFalseLead: It's pretty obvious from the get-go that Francis is a lot more enthused about his romance with Susannah than she is, and that's even before she meets [[OneTrueLove Sheila]].
274* RunningGag: Plenty, but the main one is Francis repeatedly finding ways to break into Nation for whatever romantic escapades he's come up with next. Susannah even [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] this:
275--> '''Susannah:''' ... how do you ''keep getting in here?!''
276* {{Sadist}}: Doc Shock:
277-->'''Doc Shock''', about his electroshock "therapy:" (whispering) God, I love the smell of your skin when it sizzles.
278* SanitySlippageSong: "Miss Asp's Song I" and its reprise illustrate Miss Asp's motives and gradual VillainousBreakdown as she loses control of the prisoners.
279* SayMyName: Every single one of the girls introduced in "Life In Hate Nation," particularly Judith Ramone. Sheila Nail gets quite a few in "The Three Failed Escape Attempts of Sheila Nail," while "Susannah's Song" and "Francis's Song" both do this to Susannah.
280* SealedWithAKiss: [[spoiler: The last thing that Susannah and Sheila do before Sheila flees to Mexico is [[BigDamnKiss finally]] kiss - with no interruptions.]]
281* SeeminglyWholesome50sGirl: Subverted with Miss Asp, as the audience immediately knows she is the villain upon her introduction, but she puts on a front of being the 1950s United States's ideal of a woman. She wears modest clothing, acts submissive to men, and is "polite," even when psychologically abusing and oppressing the inmates of Nation.
282* SexDrugsAndRockAndRoll: Francis, a college campus liberal, plans on fleeing to a commune in Mexico full of "like-minded youths experimenting with fascinating new drugs."
283* SettingIntroductionSong: "Life In Hate Nation."
284* ShamedByAMob: [[spoiler: At the reveal of Operation Sha-La-La to Miss Asp and Buzz, the inmates let Miss Asp know ''exactly'' what they think of her villainy.]]
285* SheIsNotMyGirlfriend: Susannah is in heavy denial over her blossoming romance with Sheila, brushing off the other girls' teasing about it, until Kitty, a trans girl, advises Susannah to follow her example and be proud of who she is.
286* ShootTheDog: [[spoiler: Susannah lying and telling Asp that Sheila tried to kiss her, getting her thrown in Solitary and almost subjected to electroconvulsive therapy in the process in order to protect herself. The look on Sheila's face after she does it ''really'' doesn't help.]]
287* ShoutOut: Several, particularly to musicians, writers, and artists of The60s. Most significantly is the significant Morse Code rhythm shared between Sheila and Susannah, a direct reference to the beat of "Be My Baby" by the Ronettes, of whom Susannah's a huge fan. Miss Asp, meanwhile, tries to push the girls to model themselves off of [[Series/LeaveItToBeaver June Cleaver]].
288* SignificantDoubleCasting: "The Guy" is a single credit for all three male roles in the show - Francis, Doc Shock, and Buzz. This works with the feminist themes of overcoming different forms of patriarchal abuse and oppression that seem to be multiple sides of the same die.
289* SlidingScaleOfSillinessVersusSeriousness: [[JustifiedTrope Justifiably]] on the ''extremely'' serious end of the scale.
290* SlippingaMickey: Judith's plan to sedate Buzz so that he can't catch the inmates partying or Rat stealing the confiscated alcohol.
291* SmugSnake: Miss Asp, as her name would suggest.
292* TheSomethingSong: An Iconis staple; "Susannah's Song," "Miss Asp's Song I" (and its reprise), "Francis's Song", and of course, "Revolution Song."
293* TheSongBeforetheStorm: "Oh Well," before [[spoiler: Miss Asp's violently homophobic reactions upon catching Sheila and Susannah about to kiss.]]
294* SouthernBelle: Dorothy ''tries'' to be this.
295--> '''Rat:''' She's from Buttzville, New Jersey.
296* SourOutsideSadInside: Judith Ramone, the toughest girl other than Sheila, acts the most like a bully [[spoiler: as a result of a lifetime of experiencing racism, sexism, and sexual abuse.]]
297* SpiritualSuccessor: Can be seen as one to ''Hair'' and ''Theatre/HedwigAndTheAngryInch'' due to the similar subject matter, eras, and style of music.
298* StarCrossedLovers: Susannah and Sheila, an interracial lesbian couple in The60s who meet in an oppressive prison, have everything and everyone except their friends rooting against them.
299--> '''Susannah:''' Besides the world isn't ready
300-->For two girls going steady
301** [[EntitledToHaveYou Francis]] sees himself and Susannah as this because of their racial difference, and plans to reap the social clout from this viewpoint amongst other "revolutionaries" at Columbia University.
302* StepfordSmiler: Any of the cheerier girls in Nation are just putting up a front or trying to make the best of their awful situation. Miss Asp is a villainous example.
303* StickyFingers: Brenda "Rat" Ratowski, a Brooklyn-born thief who smuggles contraband into the prison.
304* StylisticSuck: Ya-Ya's original song she performs at the party, "Jezebel". Even the usually-encouraging Kitty is eager to get her offstage.
305* SurvivalMantra:
306--> "Oh, Susannah, you're gonna find a way
307--> Oh, Susannah, to make it through the day
308--> Believe me when I say it's gonna be okay
309--> It's gonna be okay, hey, hey"
310* SuspiciouslySpecificDenial: Susannah and Sheila ''both'' fall into this when either someone questions them or they slip up about their sexualities.
311* SympathyForTheHero: How genuine it is is [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation up for debate]], but at least at first, Miss Asp acts as if she has a very twisted, patronizing version of this for Susannah, claiming she can "still save her".
312* TakeThat: During "Life In Hate Nation":
313--> '''The Inmates:''' 'Cause America just ''really fucking sucks'' for girls!
314** In the epilogue, Susannah makes it a point that she starts every performance with getting her audience to chant "Fuck you, [[UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan President Reagan]]!"
315* TeensAreMonsters: [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] quite thoroughly; while the girls of Nation are introduced as an intimidating bunch and Miss Asp, Buzz, and Francis all have this view of them, their crimes and turn towards violence is depicted very sympathetically as being a result of the oppression and abuse they have faced; the audience is meant to root for their violent uprising at the end, considering the AssholeVictim status of those they're fighting.
316* ThereAreNoTherapists: Girls in Nation, many of whom suffer from genuine mental illness or trauma, are subjected to excessive and punitive ECT as means of 'rehabilitation', with the sadistic Doc Shock referred to as a 'therapist'.
317* TongueTied: Susannah has a habit of freezing up or stuttering if she's nervous or afraid...or flustered.
318* TortureTechnician: Doc Shock.
319* TotallyRadical: "Ginchy!"
320* TransTribulations: Kitty is in juvie for being trans, and [[spoiler: is deadnamed by Judith during "Solitary," enraging her enough to fight Judith.]]
321* TraumaCongaLine / DysfunctionJunction: Arguably the entire cast get put through one.
322* TriumphantReprise: "Oh Well" and "Masochist" both get a couple.
323* TroubledButCute: Pretty much all the girls in Nation - especially Sheila.
324* TrueBlueFemininity: The uniform of Nation, meant to push conformity and "elegan[ce], behav[iour] and subservien[ce]" onto the girls, is a blue plaid skirt. Additionally, Dorothy, the most feminine of the girls, wears a frilly blue cherry-print top.
325* TrueCompanions: How the inmates of Nation eventually come to see one another.
326* UptightLovesWild: The repressed, shy Susannah falls for the rebellious and brassy Sheila.
327* VillainousBreakdown: Miss Asp, big time. She discovers [[spoiler: Sheila and Susannah about to kiss]], which leads to her [[spoiler: developing a "nervous condition" resulting in her thinking that the girls are aliens from the future.]] She tightens the already restrictive rules of Nation and later [[spoiler: tries to kill Sheila with a pair of scissors during the climax]].
328* VillainSong / VillainousLament: "Miss Asp's Song I" and its reprise discuss her conservative world views and the internal struggle that led to them, as well as her anguish and horror in the face of a changing world when she had no choices as a woman. To a lesser extent, "Doc Shock" and "Francis's Song."
329* ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption: The girls find that there is no other way to [[spoiler: put up their resistance]] when the escape plan for Sheila goes south, especially considering the institutional violence done to them.
330* ViolentlyProtectiveGirlfriend: Sheila will [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown beat the ever-loving shit]] out of anyone who hurts or threatens Susannah. Susannah doesn't fight physically much herself, but she does return the favour by leading an arsonist rebellion to rescue Sheila.
331* WarIsGlorious: Miss Asp during her MotiveRant song reveals she believes as much.
332--> '''Miss Asp:''' I miss silent movies/and I miss the war!
333--> I miss [[BreadEggsMilkSquick Hitler]]!
334--> ''(beat)''
335--> ...and yes, I know he was psychotic
336--> But villains make people act so patriotic!
337* WellIntentionedExtremist: Miss Asp believes her cruel impositions are for the girls' own good... at least until the SanitySlippage sets in.
338* WhamLine: Judith gets one early in Act 2.
339--> '''Judith:''' And now, your little dream-girl is gonna fry. Just like [[spoiler: Miss Asp's ''daughter''. Sweet little Harriet.]]
340** Susannah gets one near the end of act one when she [[spoiler: tells Asp that Sheila tried to kiss her, pinning the blame solely on Sheila in order to save herself.]]
341--> '''Susannah:''' [[spoiler: She-she tried to kiss me and I was scared and I didn't know what to do...]]
342* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: We never learn what became of any of the other girls; just Susannah and Sheila.
343* WhatTheHellHero: [[spoiler: The inmates openly hate Susannah for lying about the consensuality of she and Sheila's kiss to Miss Asp.]]
344* WhoopiEpiphanySpeech: [[spoiler: Susannah gives one to Miss Asp at the inmates' reveal of Operation Sha-La-La, affirming her pride in being Black and self-proclaimedly weird, along with stating how none of the inmates deserve to be dehumanized because of their identities.]]
345* WildTeenParty: The girls throw one while Asp is away at a conference, knocking Buzz, the orderly, unconscious and stealing alcohol.
346* WouldHitAGirl: Buzz, the sleazy orderly, frequently threatens and occasionally engages in physical violence against the girls.
347* WouldHurtAChild: Miss Asp, who [[spoiler: had ECT used to punish and eventually kill her ''own daughter'' at the age of sixteen for kissing another girl.]] She routinely abuses the other teenage girls held in Nation, and [[spoiler: outright tries to ''kill'' Sheila during the climax with a pair of scissors.]]
348* WrongGuyFirst: Francis to Susannah, albeit more of a complex case than you'd usually see in a musical. It is gradually revealed that in addition to having a serious case of EntitledToHaveYou, a large part of their relationship is predicated on Francis wanting to date a Black girl to feel and appear more progressive than the rest of his peers. On Susannah's end of things, she's frequently uncertain about her relationship with Francis, thanks to the rotten way he treats her and later, her gradual realization that she's a lesbian. She feels like she has to stay with him out of a mixture of guilt, fear of further ostracism, a desire for acceptance, and because they both know his privilege can provide her with opportunities she otherwise wouldn't get.
349--> '''Francis:''' I'm your ''only'' hope.
350* YankTheDogsChain: Although the ukulele strings are against the rules, Miss Asp offers to leave Susannah's beloved instrument intact if she [[AintTooProudToBeg begs her not to]] without stuttering, in front of all the inmates. She cuts them up anyway.
351* YouAreWorthHell: Susannah risks severe punishment when she [[spoiler: sneaks into Solitary to tell Sheila the plan to bust her out]], and even risks getting caught when she [[spoiler: plays their love song for her in the hallway]] despite Sheila's warnings. She is willing to face whatever Asp might do to her if it means breaking Sheila out of solitary confinement and rescuing her from abusive administration of [[ElectricTorture ECT]]. In turn, Sheila ''risks her life'' physically fighting Miss Asp and Buzz not once, but twice, to defend Susannah.

Top