The play uses the metaphor of a pinball machine—a new innovation in Italy at the time of and one of which Fo and his wife Franca Rame were fond— to convey mechanisation and conspicuous consumption.
Extended play | Don Quixote | Don Giovanni | extended play | Don Cherry | Don | Don (honorific) | play | Don Cheadle | Rostov-on-Don | Play (theatre) | Don Williams | Don Juan | Don Knotts | Don Imus | Don Carlos | Extended Play | Don Rickles | Don Omar | Don Henley | Google Play | Salesians of Don Bosco | Don Johnson | Don Drysdale | Play for Today | Julius Caesar (play) | Don Pasquale | Don Messick | Don Bluth | Henry V (play) |