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COMPANY "But who will I take care of?"

COMPANY "But who will I take care of?"

aasjb4ever Profile Photo
aasjb4ever
#1COMPANY "But who will I take care of?"
Posted: 1/6/11 at 5:59pm

I've never understood why after "The Ladies Who Lunch" Bobby and Joanne do their bit and she says "I'll take care of you" "But who will I take care of?" and then she flips out at him.

Can someone explain?

TheBatBoy
#2COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 6:04pm

From what I remember from doing the show: when Bobby says "But who will I take care of?" it's like him finally admitting to himself that taking care of someone is exactly what he may need. He spends most of the show trying to get close to relationships but then backing off, afraid to get close. As Joanne states "I just heard a door open that's been shut a long, long time."

As someone who has known Robert for a long time, I'm assuming that an admission such as his is monumental. That's why she flips out (aside from being intoxicated), it's what catapults him into Being Alive.


With a little mascara...all your dreams come true.
Updated On: 1/6/11 at 06:04 PM

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#2COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 7:27pm

Bobby, for several reasons, sees a great deal of himself in Joanne. Most importantly, he sees everything that he is afraid of. That scene, between the two of them, is really where you see Bobby's breaking point; she's the person who, for all of those reasons, finally gets through to him. He may be able to shrug off a lot of the things he's told (though I don't think he truly does), but he listens to her. What she says to him, in that scene and in the song, makes him finally get The Point, as it were. It makes him realize that what she's offering him -- to be taken care of -- is not what he wants. It's not enough. He needs to give it back, too.

Look at what she says when she "flips out" at him after he asks that, though:

Joanne: Well, did you hear yourself? Did you hear what you just said, kiddo?
Robert: I didn't mean that.
Joanne: Oh, I just heard a door open that's been stuck a long time.


She's not angry at him. She's FINALLY gotten through to him. She's gotten him to say what he's been refusing to say, and possibly realize, for, maybe, as long as she's known him. I know there's a certain... bite to a lot of readings of that line, but I don't think she's "flipping out" at Bobby, per se. I think there's a certain bitterness there, because he still has time. Joanne is tremendously unhappy. Bobby's younger. He hasn't given himself away to people who were wrong for him, or wasted time like Joanne has, and knows she has. I think she's jealous of him, and that he's realizing these things in time to make a change.

And since someone brought it up, I think the fact that they're both intoxicated in this scene is actually tremendously important (especially if you're looking at it through the lens of John Doyle's production, where Bobby had that drink in his hand for the entire show). It's a representation, I think, of the idea that when we're drunk, we speak the truth. Or, at least, our truth. Bobby's not only drunk at that moment at the club with Joanne; he's been getting drunk all night that we're with him during the show.


A work of art is an invitation to love.
Updated On: 1/6/11 at 07:27 PM

Katurian2 Profile Photo
Katurian2
#3COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 11:13pm

Every thread that Emcee posts about Company on is like a thread that's been touched by a magical and wonderful fairy...


"Are you sorry for civilization? I am sorry for it too." ~Coast of Utopia: Shipwreck
Updated On: 1/6/11 at 11:13 PM

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#4COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 11:47pm

Hahah, thank you, that made me smile.


A work of art is an invitation to love.

husk_charmer
#5COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 11:51pm

luvtheemcee-
That was the only thing I really liked in Doyle's production. I thought it was an incredibly fascinating choice to make.


http://www.youtube.com/huskcharmer

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#6COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 11:54pm

It was one of my favorite choices. A lot of people ask whether it was deliberate, and of course it was. I just loved the directness of its implication. I saw a production out in Chicago a few months ago that borrowed that image, and used it a little differently, but just as effectively.


A work of art is an invitation to love.
Updated On: 1/6/11 at 11:54 PM

Boq101
#7COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/6/11 at 11:56pm

I think the idea of the drink also made it seem like it was all being recollected in his head leading to the scene with joanne. specially in scenes when he's just standing on the glass cube with the drink in hand, sort of visiting an old memory.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#8COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 12:01am

Well, it is. The whole thing, save for the beginning and the end that take place in "real time," is happening in Bobby's head. The actual timeline of Company is that Bobby comes home from work or whatever, listens to his voicemails, finds out about this party, freaks out, sits around thinking (getting drunk) -- and all of those memories are the vignettes -- and then leaves his apartment, leaving his friends sitting by and waiting for him.


A work of art is an invitation to love.
Updated On: 1/7/11 at 12:01 AM

chekkyjr
#9COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 3:26am

What happens to Bobby after COMPANY ends?

I've never believed he ends up living happily with a woman for ever and ever, or even for now.

My guess is that like Dean Jones himself Bobby finds Jesus, and ends up running one of those "ex-gay" ministries somewhere in Kansas, with a wasbian for a wife and a giant crush on ex-gay after ex-gay after ex-gay. . .

sweetestsiren Profile Photo
sweetestsiren
#10COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 6:53am

I don't think Bobby necessarily runs out and gets married, but "Being Alive" is still a breakthrough in that, for the first time, he's able to admit that maybe he wants to really connect with someone. I think he probably moves, starts over, and probably does some dating but doesn't emotionally close himself off from everyone. Although it would be interesting to think that maybe when he leaves he falls into the same patterns...

I've had a few good discussions about whether Joanne was legitimately hitting on Bobby, or was trying to get him to see what he really wants. I tend I lean towards the former, with the breakthrough being, while not unwelcome, incidental. I think she absolutely would have slept with him, and it would have fed perfectly into her self-loathing (although surely would have been fun), but deep down she'd be disappointed that he went the same way.
Updated On: 1/7/11 at 06:53 AM

A NIce Macaroon Profile Photo
A NIce Macaroon
#11COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 6:54am

If you think anything in Company is a "bit" you need to start over.

chekkyjr
#12COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 10:48am

I've just never been able to accept the notion that Bobby is straight.

No doubt I'm reading my own agenda into the character.

Nonetheless. He absolutely strikes me as a certain kind of closety faux-heterosexual "sensitive" and terminally single self-deluding guy who very much existed in the world in 1970.

PalJoey Profile Photo
PalJoey
#13COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 11:33am

I very much agree with luvtheEmcee about that moment.

But I'm interested, aasjb4ever. What made you say Joanne "flips out"? I've always seen that moment as triumphant for her.

And, for the record, anything chekkyjr says about anything is either false or beside the point.


luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#14COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'
Posted: 1/7/11 at 11:43am

I agree that I don't think Bobby runs out and gets for a while. I think I want to believe that he does eventually, but he needs time. People have moments of instant realization that they need to change, which is what Bobby is going through with Being Alive. They don't change overnight.

I read the idea of "flipping out" at someone as giving it a sense of anger or... scolding, in a way. But like I said, I don't think it's that, either. Something in the text is a bit triumphant; she's done something nobody else has really been able to, or achieved it at a more successful level, and she knows that. But the tone with which it's often read adds something else to that.

And I agree with sweetestsiren about Joanne's proposition, though we have talked about this at length. COMPANY 'But who will I take care of?'


A work of art is an invitation to love.
Updated On: 1/7/11 at 11:43 AM