"My father is a farmer who raises grass-fed beef, but when I told him the story of 'The Crucible,' I said, 'John Proctor is the villain,' and that phrase stuck with me."
Isn't that a strange sentence? See if you can figure out the context, the reason to begin "My father is a farmer who raises grass-fed beef, but...."
The sentence is from "Studio Theatre’s ‘John Proctor Is the Villain’ rethinks ‘The Crucible’/A new play imagines contemporary high school students considering the classic work through the lens of the #MeToo movement" (in The Washington Post).
Here's your final clue:
CORRECTION
An earlier version of this story misquoted playwright Kimberly Belflower. Recounting a conversation she had with her father about “The Crucible,” Belflower recalled that it was she, not he, who said that “John Proctor is the villain.” The article has been corrected.
I have an idea for a play about a woman whose desire for credit is her downfall. A theater critic in a big newspaper makes much of her new play because he loves what he sees as a charming scene in which the father — a beef farmer — says the line that has become the title of her play....
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