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Forever House (NHB Modern Plays)
Forever House (NHB Modern Plays)
Forever House (NHB Modern Plays)
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Forever House (NHB Modern Plays)

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A darkly comic drama from an exciting new playwright.
In three linked scenes, all set in the same terraced house, three ill-matched pairs search for a new beginning - but the past won't let any of them go without a struggle.
Teenager Richard is plotting his escape to art college, just as lecturer Graham is settling in. Mum-to-be Laura has big plans for her forever home - if only Becci will sell it to her. And in the middle of the night, marine expert Mark has an unexpected visitor, a young woman with more than paddleworm samples on her mind...
A story of buried secrets and new beginnings, Forever House is the debut play of West Country-born writer Glenn Waldron. It's a pitch-black comedy drama that asks the question: can you ever really start again?
'Waldron has an exceptional ear for dialogue... every character rings with credibility' - Exeunt Magazine
'a well-observed piece' - Whatsonstage.com
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 26, 2016
ISBN9781780017754
Forever House (NHB Modern Plays)
Author

Glenn Waldron

Glenn Waldron is a playwright and journalist. His plays include: Natives (a Boundless Theatre production at Southwark Playhouse, 2017, following a production at Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus in 2016); The Here and This and Now (Theatre Royal Plymouth, 2017); and Forever House (at the Drum, Theatre Royal Plymouth, 2013). He is the former Editor of i-D magazine and his work has appeared in The New York Times, the Guardian, the Independent and Vogue.

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    Book preview

    Forever House (NHB Modern Plays) - Glenn Waldron

    Epub cover

    Glenn Waldron

    FOREVER HOUSE

    art

    NICK HERN BOOKS

    London

    www.nickhernbooks.co.uk

    Contents

    Title Page

    Original Production

    Acknowledgements

    Dedication

    Characters

    Forever House

    About the Author

    Copyright and Performing Rights Information

    Forever House was first performed at the Drum Theatre Plymouth, on 21 March 2013, with the following cast:

    Acknowledgements

    Joe Murphy, Simon Stokes, David Prescott and everyone at Theatre Royal Plymouth, Bethany Pitts, Hannah Clark, Isobel Waller-Bridge, Charlotte Sutton and our incredible cast and crew. Harriet Pennington Legh at Troika, James Grieve and Paines Plough, Robin Maddock, Rob Drummer, Rachael Stevens, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, the man in Peverell who initially thought David Prescott and I were burglars but then very kindly showed us round his house, Matt Hall at the Marine Biological Association, my friends and family.

    G.W.

    For Tom and Wilf

    Characters

    RICHARD, a young man

    GRAHAM, forty-five

    LAURA, twenty-eight

    BECCI, twenty-eight

    LUCY, twenty-three

    MARK, thirty-nine

    Note on Text

    / indicates an interruption in dialogue.

    [ ] indicates when a word is implied but not said.

    indicates an unfinished or unarticulated thought.

    indicates a very brief pause or a beat where a thought is being clarified.

    A beat is a bit longer than that. A pause is a bit longer still.

    A long pause is longer still and pretty much unbearable.

    One

    September 1999. The living room of a Victorian terraced house in Plymouth, not particularly near the sea. It’s early evening – there’s still a bit of light coming in from outside. The room has a rather elegant corniced ceiling and a cheap-looking carpet. There’s a leather sofa, an armchair and a record player, along with some large cardboard boxes and haphazard stacks of books and records. Up against the wall are various prints and framed exhibition posters, waiting to be hung. A recording of Mozart piano sonatas plays in the background.

    A young man, RICHARD, is sat on the edge of the sofa. He still has his jacket and rucksack on. He seems uncertain of his surroundings. There’s an almost-painful self-awareness to everything he does.

    A man’s voice (GRAHAM) from the kitchen.

    GRAHAM (off). The Contax S2. Have you seen that?

    RICHARD. Yes, I think so. (Beat.) Maybe. (Beat.) I don’t know.

    GRAHAM (off). Same kind of thing as the Canon I think but with a Carl Zeiss lens. You should check it out.

    RICHARD. Um. Okay.

    A pause. RICHARD takes his rucksack off and places it on the sofa next to him. He thinks about it for several moments then moves it slightly. The position seems somehow important.

    GRAHAM (off). Remind me what you have again.

    RICHARD. Er, nothing really.

    GRAHAM (off). Sorry?

    RICHARD (louder). A – er – an Olympus OM-1?

    GRAHAM (off). That’s alright.

    RICHARD. It’s not but – but I’m saving up.

    GRAHAM (off). Are you?

    RICHARD. Yes.

    GRAHAM (off). What for?

    RICHARD. Um. A Minolta Dynax 700si?

    GRAHAM (off). Sorry?

    RICHARD. A Minolta Dynax?

    GRAHAM (off). Oh, great. The 500 or the 600?

    RICHARD. The, um, 700?

    GRAHAM (off). Wow, fantastic. How far have you got to go?

    RICHARD. Oh, um. A bit. (Beat.) I could buy the 600 now but I’m gonna wait.

    GRAHAM (off). Good for you. No point in skimping. Would you like some nibbles?

    RICHARD. Um, no? (He does.) No. I’m fine, thank you.

    GRAHAM (off). Are you sure?

    RICHARD. Yes? (He’s not.) Yes, thank you.

    Another pause. RICHARD thinks then moves the rucksack again, this time putting it on the floor to the side of the sofa.

    GRAHAM (off). Used to have a 9xi. Do you know it?

    RICHARD. Um. No.

    GRAHAM (off). Quite heavy but brilliant shutter speed. Stopped making them now I think. Shame really.

    GRAHAM enters. He has a relaxed, fatherly appearance. He is fairly tall; ruggedly handsome though slightly gone to seed. He has just-greying hair and some facial stubble. He wears jeans, a jumper and a pair of socks with a hole in the toe. He’s carrying two mugs of coffee and has to push the door open with his foot.

    RICHARD jumps up when GRAHAM comes in the room.

    There you go.

    RICHARD. Thanks.

    GRAHAM. Take your coat off if you want to.

    RICHARD. Oh. Yes. (Beat.) Um…

    There is no coffee table and RICHARD doesn’t know where to put his mug.

    GRAHAM. Oh, gimme that.

    RICHARD hands GRAHAM his mug and then,

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