Topic > Dee, Dee and Dee's Personal Experiences - 1288

Maggie isn't interested in materialistic things. Maggie knows her family and the story behind the family name. Maggie lives comfortably in the small house with her mother. Maggie never left the house. In the film version of “Everyday Use,” Maggie is happy at the end of the film. The reason Maggie is happy at the end of the film is because Dee leaves. Dee makes Maggie uncomfortable when she's there. Dee, on the other hand, is the opposite of Maggie. Dee isn't afraid to tell anyone what she thinks or how she feels. Dee changes her birth name to an African name. Dee also changes the way she dresses. Dee, in the film, wears an African dress, hoop earrings and sports thick hair. In the film version of "Everyday Use" Dee asks her mother "where's the bathroom?" (Films Media Group 2003) Mom looked at Dee as if she had never lived there. Dee acts like she's from a foreign country. Dee knows where the bathroom is. In the film version of “Everyday Use,” he first photographs his mother and Maggie. When she shows up in the film version of “Everyday Use,” Dee says, “No, Mom, not Dee, it's Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo” (Films Media Group 2003)! Dee has never liked where she comes from. From the beginning of the story, Dee hated her name. Dee likes to get everything she wants and wants everything that's trendy. Hearing “no” is a foreign word to Dee. When she had friends, she