Roy Cohn in Angels in America (Broadway revival)

E295950

Roy Cohn in the Broadway revival of Angels in America is a ruthless, closeted, and terminally ill lawyer whose denial, power plays, and moral corruption embody the play’s critique of American politics, homophobia, and the AIDS crisis.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Roy Cohn in Angels in America (Broadway revival) canonical 1

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Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf fictional character
theatrical character
appearsIn Angels in America
Angels in America
surface form: Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes
appearsInProduction Angels in America: Perestroika (Broadway revival)
surface form: Angels in America (Broadway revival)
associatedWithTheme AIDS crisis
American politics
homophobia
basedOn Roy Cohn
characterTrait homophobic
manipulative
morally corrupt
power-hungry
ruthless
claimsToHave liver cancer
conflictsWith Belize
createdBy Tony Kushner
denies having AIDS
diesFrom AIDS-related complications
genreContext LGBT theatre
political drama
hasDisease AIDS
hasRelationshipWith Belize
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
surface form: Ethel Rosenberg

Joe Pitt
isCloseted true
isHauntedBy Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
surface form: Ethel Rosenberg
languageOfPerformance English
medium stage
narrativeFunction embodies critique of Reagan-era conservatism
embodies critique of legal and political corruption
embodies denial in the face of AIDS
occupation lawyer
political fixer
portrayedAs closeted gay man
ruthless lawyer
terminally ill man
roleInPlot mentor to Joe Pitt
setting New York City
sexualOrientation gay
symbolizes denial of responsibility
internalized homophobia
moral corruption in American politics
timePeriod mid-1980s
uses legal intimidation
power plays

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Nathan Lane portrayedCharacter Roy Cohn in Angels in America (Broadway revival)