
In Act 1 of The Cherry Orchard, we see a slight improvement in the social class issue. I did not read the book version of the play, because when I saw all of the names and etc, I decided to watch the BBC video version instead. From what I saw in the video, the "help" or maids were extremely outspoken and self-centered. Usually, and from what we have read about in Pride and Prejudice and Huckleberry Finn, the "help" is very quiet and does not give an opinion unless asked or spoken to. They do not disagree with anything their "masters" say, and if they do, then they do it in a way, in which it does not seem as if they are contradicting you but rather somehow agreeing with whatever you are saying.
The first act shows quite a few of these instances of abruptness from the maids. When Anya is telling Dunyasha about her trip, she cuts her off and does not let her finish. She then begins telling her about her own problems and what had been happening in her absence. Although they still had to be respectful, and whatever the masters did was "the law," they had more freedom than that of the maids in the previous works of literature that we have read.

