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  1. Topdog/Underdog: Scene Two Summary & Analysis. Topdog/Underdog: Scene Two. It’s Friday evening and Booth enters the apartment wearing multiple layers of clothing. When he sees that Lincoln isn’t home yet, he starts taking off each layer, revealing to the audience that he’s wearing two beautiful suits, both of which still have price tags ...

  2. Topdog/Underdog is a play by American playwright Suzan-Lori Parks which premiered in 2001 off-Broadway in New York City. The next year it opened on Broadway, at the Ambassador Theatre, where it played for several months. In 2002, Parks received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Outer Critics Circle Award for the play; it received other ...

  3. Star-Studded Cast. When Topdog/Underdog first opened, Booth was played by Don Cheadle (known for his roles in Hotel Rwanda, Ocean’s 12, and Crash, among many other films) and Lincoln was played by Jeffrey Wright (of Westworld and The Hunger Games). When the play ran on Broadway, the rapper and actor Mos Def replaced Cheadle as Booth.

  4. The Play. PDF Cite. Set in a seedy urban studio apartment, Topdog/Underdog explores the relationship between two brothers, Lincoln and Booth, so named as a joke by their father. A former master of ...

  5. Nov 1, 2022 · Topdog/Underdog is a top American play. Topdog/Underdog first premiered Off Broadway at The Public Theater in 2001 before moving to Broadway in 2002, and it ran there for five months. In 2002, the play earned Parks the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, making her the first Black woman to ever win that award. In 2018, the Times ran a list of the 25 best ...

  6. Scene One. In the opening scene of Topdog/Underdog, Booth sits in a squalid apartment and practices playing Three-Card Monte atop a cardboard box propped up by milk crates. He rehearses his banter, imitating phrases he’s heard hustlers use on the street. Interrupting him, his brother Lincoln enters. Lincoln is a former hustler and Three-Card ...

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  8. Scene Summaries Chart. Scene. Summary. Epigraph. The play's epigraph, "I am God in nature; / I am a weed by the wall" is a line from the essay "Circles" (1841) by Americ... Read More. Scene 1. The play opens on a Thursday night. Booth, an African American man in his 30s, sits in a dingy, sparsely furnished apart...