Showing posts with label debutante. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debutante. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

The Debutante Tradition: What does it mean to Viola?



The film production She’s the Man directed by Andy Fickman, although more heavily focused on the Ganymede (Viola/Sebastian) aspect, also strongly plays out the common practice of debutantes.  Viola, the stereotypical tomboy, is dragged unwillingly into the entire affair although she finds it “archaic”.  In Viola’s social class this is customary for young women about to become a “lady” to have a “coming out” ceremony and be introduced to society proclaiming herself a fully-fledged lady, while on the arm of a male usher.  Debutante ceremonies were a means for the sovereign to view the ladies of higher nobility who were bachelorettes entering the social season and ready to be married. 
            In Viola’s case, the debutante tradition was carried on by the Junior League and every woman was expected to participate although it was not required.  What is interesting about such a tradition is that another term for it is a “coming out” ceremony.  And was a question posed to the ladies of Viola’s Junior League, “Who’s ready to come out?”  Although the audience knows what the director of the ceremony was referring to, the phrase “coming out” is a modern term used to describe someone who is “coming out” into their homosexual preference.  Viola, being a tomboy, has or projects what is considered more masculine characteristics, therefore the debutante tradition could be a symbol of Violas “coming out”, although not into her sexuality, but into her true identity and her mother’s acceptance of that.  However at the end of the film, Viola did give in to wearing a dress, a thin and sleek one and chose to be presented on her own terms but was still presented to be in accordance with her mother’s wishes.  Since Viola kissed Duke at the presentation, she lets every man there know that she is “taken” and socially unavailable to them.  Therefore, the debutante tradition, for Viola acts as a presentation of herself as a tomboyish woman who loves soccer, to everyone she knows within her social circle. 

She's the man