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4 answers

Virginia Woolf was an author with a famous husband, and 'I'm afraid of the big bad wolf' coz he blew my house down.
It's a pun, or play on words.

2006-10-18 04:07:20 · answer #1 · answered by SteveUK 5 · 0 0

Because Virginia Woolf was kind of a powerful person, and it sounds like the old childrens' song "who's afraid of the Big Bad Wolf" from 3 Little Pigs.

2006-10-17 21:22:46 · answer #2 · answered by Kacky 7 · 1 0

The play's call, which alludes to novelist Virginia Woolf, is a parody of the song "who's terrified of the massive undesirable Wolf?" from Disney's lively version of the three Little Pigs. (despite if, when you consider that paying for the rights to apply the song of this song could have been astronomically costly, maximum point variations (and the action picture) have Martha sing it to the song of "here We bypass around the Mulberry Bush," which inserts the meter somewhat nicely and is in the time-honored public area.) it somewhat is printed in the 1st few moments of the play that Martha coined the word formerly on in the night at a occasion. Martha and George again and again needle one yet another over despite if the two one in all them found it humorous.

2016-12-08 16:39:05 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ha vagina wolf rofl
you are 2 stupid to not reconise that

2006-10-17 21:20:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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