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* ObsessedWithFood: {{Exaggerated}}. It's safe to say that 90% of the Nona's dialogue is either her insistently demanding food or animatedly reminiscing the delicious banquets of her youth. Toward any other topic, she's uncaring and apathetic.
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* TheFilmOfThePlay: A film adaptation was released in 1979. It was directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Roberto Cossa.
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* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the original play, la Nona remains an unnamed character. In the [[Film/LaNona film]], however, she becomes Carmen Racazzi. Meanwhile, her relatives get the Spadone surname (implied to have been inherited from la Nona's husband). Finally, Don Francisco's last name is revealed as being Colauti.

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* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the original play, la Nona remains an unnamed character. In the [[Film/LaNona film]], film, however, she becomes Carmen Racazzi. Meanwhile, her relatives get the Spadone surname (implied to have been inherited from la Nona's husband). Finally, Don Francisco's last name is revealed as being Colauti.
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* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: The only one who is realistic about Chicho's artistic aspirations is María. All of her political family is willing to excuse Chicho's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Chicho to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Chicho's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.

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* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: The only one who is realistic about Chicho's artistic aspirations is María. All of her political family is in-laws are willing to excuse Chicho's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Chicho to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Chicho's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the original play, la Nona remains an unnamed character. In the [[Film/LaNona film]], however, she becomes Carmen Racazzi. Meanwhile, her relatives get the Spadone surname (implied to have been inherited from la Nona's husband). Finally, Don Francisco's last name is revealed as being Colauti.
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None


* AdaptationNameChange: Some UsefulNotes/{{Peru}}vian takes on the play change Chicho's name to Tito due to the former name's resemblance to a slang word that means tits.

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* AdaptationNameChange: Some UsefulNotes/{{Peru}}vian takes on the play change Chicho's name to Tito due to the former name's resemblance to a slang word that means tits.tits and Aunt Anyula's name to Ángela for no reason other than drive home that the character is very religious.
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Added DiffLines:

* AdaptationNameChange: Some UsefulNotes/{{Peru}}vian takes on the play change Chicho's name to Tito due to the former name's resemblance to a slang word that means tits.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: When it comes to Chicho's artistic aspirations, the only one who is realistic about it is María. All of her political family is willing to excuse Chicho's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Chicho to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Chicho's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.

to:

* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: When it comes to Chicho's artistic aspirations, the The only one who is realistic about it Chicho's artistic aspirations is María. All of her political family is willing to excuse Chicho's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Chicho to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Chicho's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.
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None


* GratuitousItalian: {{Justified|Trope}}. By virtue of being descended from Italian immigrants, the Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".

to:

* GratuitousItalian: {{Justified|Trope}}. By virtue of being descended from an Italian immigrants, the immigrant, la Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Martita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. María, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that María and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

to:

An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Martita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. María, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, Chicho, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito Chicho and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that María and Carmelo start demanding Tito Chicho to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.



This DarkComedy was written by Creator/TitoCossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.

to:

This DarkComedy was written by Creator/TitoCossa Creator/RobertoCossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.



* AmbiguouslyHuman: The titular character is this. The eldest in a somewhat impoverished family, "La Nona" (jargon for "granny") is a BigEater of superhuman quantities and is likewise ObsessedWithFood. She's also extremely old yet perfectly healthy despite all of that. Throughout the play, la Nona foils her grandson Tito/Chicho's increasingly desperate attempts to get rid of her and slowly causes every member of her family to die (or move away in María's case). Meanwhile, La Nona herself is none for the worse, and could very well be immortal.

to:

* AmbiguouslyHuman: The titular character is this. The eldest in a somewhat impoverished family, "La Nona" (jargon for "granny") is a BigEater of superhuman quantities and is likewise ObsessedWithFood. She's also extremely old yet perfectly healthy despite all of that. Throughout the play, la Nona foils her grandson Tito/Chicho's Chicho's increasingly desperate attempts to get rid of her and slowly causes every member of her family to die (or move away in María's case). Meanwhile, La Nona herself is none for the worse, and could very well be immortal.



* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: When it comes to Tito's artistic aspirations, the only one who is realistic about it is María. All of her political family is willing to excuse Tito's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Tito to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Tito's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.

to:

* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: When it comes to Tito's Chicho's artistic aspirations, the only one who is realistic about it is María. All of her political family is willing to excuse Tito's Chicho's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Tito Chicho to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Tito's Chicho's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.



* LazyBum: Tito contributes exactly nothing to the household. He doesn't help with the chores, spends all day lazing around in his bed composing tangos, and is allergic to the idea of seeking a job. When the family's finances start tightening due to the crisis, he still makes excuse after excuse and plans harebrained schemes to avoid working. It's PlayedForDrama because his reluctance forces his relatives to make great sacrifices, [[spoiler:which ultimately leads to their demise.]]

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* LazyBum: Tito Chicho contributes exactly nothing to the household. He doesn't help with the chores, spends all day lazing around in his bed composing tangos, and is allergic to the idea of seeking a job. When the family's finances start tightening due to the crisis, he still makes excuse after excuse and plans harebrained schemes to avoid working. It's PlayedForDrama because his reluctance forces his relatives to make great sacrifices, [[spoiler:which ultimately leads to their demise.]]
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An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Marthita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that María and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

to:

An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Marthita Martita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, María, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that María and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.



* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Marthita's actual jobs have always been of a "doing sexual favors" nature, what with her taking night shifts and getting picked up at her home by a man in a luxurious car. The reason she does it, however, is to lend financial support to her family. She could have gone and rented her own place but has decided to stay and give up most of her pay to help buy food and other necessities. Her love for her parents and extended family is genuine too.

to:

* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Marthita's Martita's actual jobs have always been of a "doing sexual favors" nature, what with her taking night shifts and getting picked up at her home by a man in a luxurious car. The reason she does it, however, is to lend financial support to her family. She could have gone and rented her own place but has decided to stay and give up most of her pay to help buy food and other necessities. Her love for her parents and extended family is genuine too.



* SecretSexWorker: Marthita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts (now "at a bakery") take longer, she returns more tired, and she [[spoiler:eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease]]. Her loving family is grateful for the much-needed money she provides them but remains none the wiser until the very end.

to:

* SecretSexWorker: Marthita Martita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts (now "at a bakery") take longer, she returns more tired, and she [[spoiler:eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease]]. Her loving family is grateful for the much-needed money she provides them but remains none the wiser until the very end.
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* OnlyKnownByHerNickname: La Nona's real name is never disclosed, with everyone referring to her as la "nona" (which is slang for "granny") because the only other characters are her children or grandchildren.
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* SecretSexWorker: Marthita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts (now "at a bakery") take longer, she returns more tired, and she eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease. Her loving family is grateful for the much-needed money she provides them but remains none the wiser until the very end.

to:

* SecretSexWorker: Marthita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts (now "at a bakery") take longer, she returns more tired, and she eventually [[spoiler:eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease.disease]]. Her loving family is grateful for the much-needed money she provides them but remains none the wiser until the very end.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* SecretSexWorker: Marthita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts take longer, she returns more tired, and she eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease.

to:

* SecretSexWorker: Marthita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts (now "at a bakery") take longer, she returns more tired, and she eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease.disease. Her loving family is grateful for the much-needed money she provides them but remains none the wiser until the very end.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* SecretSexWorker: Marthita is heavily hinted to be a sex worker. At first, it's something milder --like being a waitress or escort-- that still requires her to "take night shifts at the pharmacy". She becomes a full prostitute when her family's situation worsens and there's barely any money to get by. This is indicated by the fact that her shifts take longer, she returns more tired, and she eventually contracts a fatal sexually transmitted disease.

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Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Marthita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

to:

An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Marthita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria María and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.



* AmbiguouslyHuman: The titular character is this. The eldest in a somewhat impoverished family, "La Nona" (jargon for "granny") is a BigEater of superhuman quantities and is likewise ObsessedWithFood. She's also extremely old yet perfectly healthy despite all of that. Throughout the play, la Nona foils her grandson Tito/Chicho's increasingly desperate attempts to get rid of her and slowly causes every member of her family to die (or move away in Maria's case). Meanwhile, La Nona herself is none for the worse, and could very well be immortal.
* BigEater: PlayedForDrama. La Nona's ginormous food consumption severely strains her family's finances while she herself cares little for the situation. Every few hours, she re-enters the kitchen to demand snacks or meals and is appeased with increasingly smaller portions (what little her family can offer her). Later, she gets married to the owner of a bodega and manages to eat all of the establishment's candies in a month and a half. Her finishing monologue has her alone, [[spoiler:as all of her relatives have either died or left]], reminiscing about the fantastic meals she enjoyed in her youth.

to:

* AmbiguouslyHuman: The titular character is this. The eldest in a somewhat impoverished family, "La Nona" (jargon for "granny") is a BigEater of superhuman quantities and is likewise ObsessedWithFood. She's also extremely old yet perfectly healthy despite all of that. Throughout the play, la Nona foils her grandson Tito/Chicho's increasingly desperate attempts to get rid of her and slowly causes every member of her family to die (or move away in Maria's María's case). Meanwhile, La Nona herself is none for the worse, and could very well be immortal.
* BigEater: PlayedForDrama. La Nona's ginormous food consumption severely strains her family's finances while she herself cares little for the situation. Every few hours, she re-enters the kitchen to demand snacks or meals and is appeased with increasingly smaller extra portions (what little her family can offer her). Later, she gets married to the owner of a bodega and manages to eat all of the establishment's candies in a month and a half. Her finishing monologue has her alone, [[spoiler:as all of her relatives have either died or left]], reminiscing about the fantastic meals she enjoyed in her youth.youth.
* TheDissenterIsAlwaysRight: When it comes to Tito's artistic aspirations, the only one who is realistic about it is María. All of her political family is willing to excuse Tito's willful unemployment under the guise that "he would lose his muse if he had to work". María is the only one who sees it as utter bullshit and pushes for Tito to support the family's income. As the play progresses, Tito's ridiculous schemes and excuses to escape work are half the reason for the family's tragic downfall.
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* EmbodimentOfVice: It is {{implied}} that la Nona is actually misery in human form, representing the hard times Argentinian families experienced during TheSeventies, with misery spreading through everyone, just like la Nona is given shelter by a blissfully unaware family at the end of the play.

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* EmbodimentOfVice: It is {{implied}} that la Nona is actually misery in human form, representing the hard times Argentinian families experienced during TheSeventies, with misery spreading through everyone, just like la Nona indirectly causing the deaths of all of her relatives, who either work themselves to the bone or just succumb into mental illness. She is then given shelter by a blissfully unaware family at the end of the play.play, so the cycle resets.
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The play was written by Creator/TitoCossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.

to:

The play This DarkComedy was written by Creator/TitoCossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ForeignRemake: The Scottish play ''Yer Granny'' is a remake of the play, relocated to a Glaswegian chip shop.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* AmbiguouslyHuman: The titular character is this. The eldest in a somewhat impoverished family, "La Nona" (jargon for "granny") is a BigEater of superhuman quantities and is likewise ObsessedWithFood. She's also extremely old yet perfectly healthy despite all of that. Throughout the play, la Nona foils her grandson Tito/Chicho's increasingly desperate attempts to get rid of her and slowly causes every member of her family to die (or move away in Maria's case). Meanwhile, La Nona herself is none for the worse, and could very well be immortal.


Added DiffLines:

* EmbodimentOfVice: It is {{implied}} that la Nona is actually misery in human form, representing the hard times Argentinian families experienced during TheSeventies, with misery spreading through everyone, just like la Nona is given shelter by a blissfully unaware family at the end of the play.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Marthita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona, who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

to:

An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Marthita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona, Nona (jargon for "granny"), who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

Added: 472

Changed: 2

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Martha supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona, who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

to:

An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Martha Marthita supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona, who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.


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* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Marthita's actual jobs have always been of a "doing sexual favors" nature, what with her taking night shifts and getting picked up at her home by a man in a luxurious car. The reason she does it, however, is to lend financial support to her family. She could have gone and rented her own place but has decided to stay and give up most of her pay to help buy food and other necessities. Her love for her parents and extended family is genuine too.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


It's widely believed that the only reason ''La Nona'' was able to avoid censorship from the then dictatorial government is because of the subtlety in which it criticizes society. No character ever says anything against the regime, yet la Nona's plentiful youth contrasts heavily with the poverty that pervades her eldership --whose fault is that the country stopped being prosperous?

to:

It's widely believed that the only reason ''La Nona'' was able to avoid censorship from the then dictatorial government is because of the subtlety in which it criticizes society. No character ever says anything against the regime, yet la Nona's plentiful youth contrasts heavily with but the poverty that pervades her eldership --whose fault is that quickly worsening situation and the country stopped being prosperous?
sacrifices they've forced to make paints a bleak picture indeed.
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* GratuitousItalian: {{Justified}}. By virtue of being descended from Italian immigrants, the Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".

to:

* GratuitousItalian: {{Justified}}.{{Justified|Trope}}. By virtue of being descended from Italian immigrants, the Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The play was written by Roberto Cossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.

to:

The play was written by Roberto Cossa Creator/TitoCossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BigEater: PlayedForDrama. La Nona's ginourmous food consumption severely strains her family's finances while she herself cares little for the situation. Every few hours, she re-enters the kitchen to demand snacks or meals and is appeased with increasingly smaller portions (what little her family can offer her). Later, she gets married to the owner of a bodega and manages to eat all of the establishment's candies in a month and a half. Her finishing monologue has her alone, [[spoiler:as all of her relatives have either died or left]], reminiscing about the fantastic meals she enjoyed in her youth.

to:

* BigEater: PlayedForDrama. La Nona's ginourmous ginormous food consumption severely strains her family's finances while she herself cares little for the situation. Every few hours, she re-enters the kitchen to demand snacks or meals and is appeased with increasingly smaller portions (what little her family can offer her). Later, she gets married to the owner of a bodega and manages to eat all of the establishment's candies in a month and a half. Her finishing monologue has her alone, [[spoiler:as all of her relatives have either died or left]], reminiscing about the fantastic meals she enjoyed in her youth.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* GratuitousForeignLanguage: By virtue of being descended from Italian immigrants, the Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".

to:

* GratuitousForeignLanguage: GratuitousItalian: {{Justified}}. By virtue of being descended from Italian immigrants, the Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".

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Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The play was written by Roberto Cossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa.

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It's widely believed that the only reason ''La Nona'' was able to avoid censorship from the then dictatorial government is because of the subtlety in which it criticizes society. No character ever says anything against the regime, yet la Nona's plentiful youth contrasts heavily with the poverty that pervades her eldership --whose fault is that the country stopped being prosperous?

The play was written by Roberto Cossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa. ''La Nona'' has had such a cultural impact that it's still being performed in several Argentine and Latin American theaters.
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The play was written by Roberto Cossa and published in 1977 under the Argentores editorial. Two years later, it got a [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] directed by Héctor Oliviera and scripted by Cossa.
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An Argentinian household struggles to make ends meet during TheSeventies crisis. Carmelo, the main breadwinner, owns a stall in the local market and is very proud of it. His daughter Martha supposedly works at a drug store but is implied to be a sex worker of some kind. Martha, the wife, and Angela, the elderly aunt, do the chores. Carmelo's brother, Tito, is an unemployed composer with no intention of lifting a finger to earn money. All of them look after the grandmother, la Nona, who is one whooping century old and a massive BigEater. Tito and la Nona's lifestyles put a great strain on the household's finances, to the point that Maria and Carmelo start demanding Tito to seek a job. He gets into all sorts of hijinks to avoid pulling his weight.

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!!Tropes:

* BigEater: PlayedForDrama. La Nona's ginourmous food consumption severely strains her family's finances while she herself cares little for the situation. Every few hours, she re-enters the kitchen to demand snacks or meals and is appeased with increasingly smaller portions (what little her family can offer her). Later, she gets married to the owner of a bodega and manages to eat all of the establishment's candies in a month and a half. Her finishing monologue has her alone, [[spoiler:as all of her relatives have either died or left]], reminiscing about the fantastic meals she enjoyed in her youth.
* GratuitousForeignLanguage: By virtue of being descended from Italian immigrants, the Nona often flavors her speech with basic Italian phrases and words such as greetings. When sent to her room after being denied her nth serving of food, she angrily mutters "Andiamo! Andiamo!" as she repeats back in Italian what her relatives told her in Spanish --"¡Vamos, Nona, a su cuarto!".
* LazyBum: Tito contributes exactly nothing to the household. He doesn't help with the chores, spends all day lazing around in his bed composing tangos, and is allergic to the idea of seeking a job. When the family's finances start tightening due to the crisis, he still makes excuse after excuse and plans harebrained schemes to avoid working. It's PlayedForDrama because his reluctance forces his relatives to make great sacrifices, [[spoiler:which ultimately leads to their demise.]]
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