Again and again the universality of human experience is stressed within the play. The Stage Manager himself is more than just a chorus; he is a universal figure outside of time and space because he can talk to the audience, the characters in the play, and even the dead in the cemetery. The storyline in the play has a very large universality. When people read or watch Our Town, they'll realize that this play could have happened anywhere, in any time, to any one of us.
Answer:
It depends.
Explanation:
You will meet so many people in your life. There will be some who will want to read it, this could include an agent or a parent. However, directors and the people who run the show might not want to hear/read it.
Answer:
1. !
2. .
3. .
Explanation:
The last one is a guess. It sounds like they are saying if as a fact, so it’s a period.
The narrator of “The Deciding Pitch” is neutral about who wins the game, but the narrator of “The View from the Bleachers” isn’t.
Answer:
In my opinion, Carroll (the author of the story) is trying to tell children, everyone who read this book that it could be weird, strange when you growing up as you were a child.
The evidence is after Alice change the size many times in a day and meet Caterpillar, she said "I can't explain myself becaose I'm not my self, I'm afraid" and "all I know is it feeling very queer to me" queer means strage, weird.
This is my own view with the story, I'm not sure it would pls you or not but hope this helped :3