This is the story of how a single day unfolded across three different centuries, bound together by the relentless, ticking rhythm of the hours. The Author: Richmond, 1923
By 1951, that lifeline reached Laura Brown in Los Angeles. Trapped in the suffocating perfection of a post-war suburban dream, Laura held Virginia’s finished book in her trembling hands. She looked at her adoring husband and her young, perceptive son, Richie, and felt an incomprehensible urge to vanish. Reading Virginia's words about a woman's internal world, Laura realized she was drowning in a life that did not belong to her. The Hours(2002)
Virginia was a woman kept in a gilded cage. Her loving husband, Leonard, moved her to the quiet suburbs to protect her from the overstimulating roar of London, believing the silence would heal her fragile mind. But to Virginia, the silence was a vacuum that sucked the air from her lungs. This is the story of how a single
In 1923, Virginia Woolf dipped her pen into a heavy glass inkwell in Richmond, England, feeling the familiar, terrifying static of another mental breakdown hovering just at the edge of her vision. She wrote a single line— “Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself” —and in doing so, she unwittingly threw a lifeline across time. She looked at her adoring husband and her
She sat in her room, listening to the agonizingly slow drip of the afternoon. As she constructed the life of Clarissa Dalloway, she grappled with a profound question: Should her protagonist live or die? The Hours (2002) - IMDb
By 2001, the echo manifested in Clarissa Vaughan in New York City. Nicknamed "Mrs. Dalloway" by her brilliant, dying former lover, Richard, Clarissa spent her morning buying flowers for a party he would never truly attend.