Further stories in Mrs. Hawking

Apr 02, 2013 22:09

Thinking so much about Mrs. Hawking makes me think of all the other possible stories that could be told about those characters and that world. It's very much set up to be a series of adventures, given that they theoretically work "cases," so even though Shakespeare is the only theater writer I can think of that does sequels, I can't help but think of what else could happen to our society avengers.

I would love to write an "origin story" of sorts for Mrs. Hawking, how she came to become the female-Sherlock-Holmes-Batman that she is, detailing her youth and circumstances that made her who she is. What I see of her background is that she grew up the child of a local governor in New Guinea or something like that. Her father had a native valet with a martial background who she insisted teach her how to stalk and sneak and fight. And there would have to be something that introduced her to her trade, some injustice to women that would pull her into her true calling, of avenging those who society had trapped and wronged.

One character people ask me about a lot in regards to this story is the Colonel, the esteemed Reginald Prescott Hawking, Mrs. Hawking's late husband. As he died before the events of the play, we do not actually meet him. In fact, all we know about him is provided by his two family members, his wife and his nephew Nathaniel. What makes it interesting is that they have very different perceptions of him, and neither of them are totally reliable narrators. Nate idolizes him while she resents the hell out of him, and I like to think that neither of them are entirely right, nor entirely wrong. That origin play would also have to include how she and the Colonel met, how they got married, what led to all Mrs. Hawking's resentment.

I would also love to give her an opponent who was the "anti-Mrs. Hawking," a woman just as devious and formidable as she, but who uses and manipulates the system to take advantage of women's social entrapment for her own ends. They could have a secret war, and I think it should be  someone who knows her, someone for whom such actions would be a deep betrayal. I also like the idea that she would know Mrs. Hawking's ways and would not underestimate her the way her male enemies do.

And of course there's Mary's future. Mary would definitely need to come into her own even more, more independence, more agency. I'd love her to meet someone and have a romance with a gentleman who was worthy of her, who of course Mrs. Hawking would despise because she would hope Mary to be a confirmed lone wolf like herself. In the original piece Mary turned out to be even more central and significant than I ever expected, so I would want her to continue to grow and develop, and, as she proved to be remarkably good at, to force Mrs. Hawking to do the same.

All the information for the reading next week can be found on the Facebook page. I hope to see you there!

musing, mrs. hawking, writing

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