Thomas Babe's writing deals with the traditional notion of a hero. Throughout
A Prayer for My Daughter, the two 'heroes,' the police officers, increasingly blur the lines between right and wrong. Its 2008 revival was described by critic
Karen Fricker as a "poetic meditation on the lack of clear boundaries between masculine and feminine, and good and evil." It combines a threat of violence and homoeroticism. This was written a few years after the end of the
Vietnam War, and Babe created one officer as a Vietnam veteran, coping with losing the war and being rejected by his countrymen in the anti-war protests and activism. The play is named for
William B. Yeats'
poem for his newly born daughter. Each of the characters, in one way or another, has a daughter; and a variety of father/daughter relationships are explored. This is in contrast to the majority of family dramas related to parent/child relationships, which more often explore the father/son dynamic. ==Productions==