LAURIE I'm almost through, Ma.
 BLANCHE All right, darling. Don't get up too quickly.
 KATE (To LAURIE) You have better color today, sweet-heart. Did you get a little sun this morning?
 LAURIE I walked down to the beach.
 BLANCHE Very slowly, I hope?
 LAURIE Yes, Ma.
 BLANCHE That's good.
 EUGENE (Turns to the audience again) She gets all this special treatment because the doctors say she has kind of a flutter in her heart . . .
 —Brighton Beach Memoirs,
 Neil Simon
 Why does Eugene speak to the audience?
 He helps us understand why people are so nice to Laurie.
 He tells us why a heart flutter is dangerous.
 He makes us feel sorry for Laurie. 
 He lets us know that he’s tired of the special treatment Laurie receives.