Contemporary Duologues Collection: Two Men | Two Women | One Man & One Woman
By Trilby James
()
About this ebook
Helping you select and perform the audition piece that is best suited to your performing skills
This collection, available only as an ebook, combines the material available in the separate print volumes, Contemporary Duologues: Two Men, Contemporary Duologues: Two Women and Contemporary Duologues: One Man & One Woman.
As an actor at any level – whether you are doing theatre studies at school, taking part in youth theatre, preparing for drama-school showcases, or attending professional acting workshops – you will often be required to prepare a duologue with a fellow performer. Your success is often based on locating and selecting a fresh, dynamic scene suited to your specific performing skills, as well as your interplay as a duo. Which is where this book comes in.
This collection features seventy-five fantastic duologues, all written since the year 2000 by some of our most exciting dramatic voices, offering a wide variety of character types and styles of writing.
Playwrights featured include Mike Bartlett, Howard Brenton, Jez Butterworth, Caryl Churchill, Helen Edmundson, Ella Hickson, Sam Holcroft, Anna Jordan, Lucy Kirkwood, Evan Placey, Jessica Swale and Jack Thorne, and the plays themselves were premiered at the very best theatres across the UK including the National Theatre, Manchester Royal Exchange, the Traverse in Edinburgh, Shakespeare's Globe, and the Almeida, Bush, Hampstead and Royal Court Theatres.
The collection is divided into three sections, with twenty-five duologues for two men, twenty-five for two women, and a further twenty-five for one man and one woman.
Drawing on her experience as an actor, director and teacher at several leading drama schools, Trilby James equips each duologue with a thorough introduction including the vital information you need to place the piece in context (the who, what, when, where and why) and suggestions about how to perform the scene to its maximum effect (including the characters' objectives).
The collection also features an introduction on the whole process of selecting and preparing a duologue, and how to present it to the greatest effect. The result is the most comprehensive and useful contemporary duologue book of its kind now available - and this combined ebook represents great value for money.
'Sound practical advice... a source of inspiration for teachers and students alike' Teaching Drama Magazine on The Good Audition Guides
Trilby James
Trilby James trained as an actress at RADA, before working extensively in theatre, film and television, before starting as a freelance director and teacher at several leading drama schools including ALRA, Arts Educational Schools, Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, East 15, Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where she is now an Associate Teacher. She is a script reader and dramaturg for Kali Theatre Company and has directed several play-readings for their 'Talkback' seasons.
Read more from Trilby James
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Contemporary Duologues Collection - Trilby James
The Good Audition Guides
CONTEMPORARY
DUOLOGUES
COLLECTION
edited and introduced by
TRILBY JAMES
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
INTRODUCTION
ONE MAN & ONE WOMAN
2nd May 1997
by Jack Thorne
Anne Boleyn
by Howard Brenton
Blue Stockings
by Jessica Swale
Britannia Waves the Rules
by Gareth Farr
Chicken Shop
by Anna Jordan
Chimerica
by Lucy Kirkwood
Fault Lines
by Ali Taylor
God’s Property
by Arinze Kene
Lemons Lemons Lemons Lemons Lemons
by Sam Steiner
Love and Information
by Caryl Churchill
Moth
by Declan Greene
Pandas
by Rona Munro
Pronoun
by Evan Placey
Rafta, Rafta…
by Ayub Khan Din
Ramallah
by David Greig
The River
by Jez Butterworth
Scarborough
by Fiona Evans
Scuttlers
by Rona Munro
Sex with a Stranger
by Stefan Golaszewski
Spinning
by Deirdre Kinahan
Tiger Country
by Nina Raine
Unbroken
by Alexandra Wood
Unscorched
by Luke Owen
While You Lie
by Sam Holcroft
Yen
by Anna Jordan
TWO WOMEN
3 Winters
by Tena Štivičic
Blue Stockings
by Jessica Swale
Bracken Moor
by Alexi Kaye Campbell
Consensual
by Evan Placey
Eggs
by Florence Keith-Roach
Elephants
by Rose Heiney
Firebird
by Phil Davies
Forever House
by Glenn Waldron
Freak
by Anna Jordan
The Girl’s Guide to Saving the World
by Elinor Cook
Honour
by Joanna Murray-Smith
How Love Is Spelt
by Chloë Moss
Intimate Apparel
by Lynn Nottage
James I: The Key Will Keep the Lock
by Rona Munro
Low Level Panic
by Clare McIntyre
Mary Shelley
by Helen Edmundson
Our New Girl
by Nancy Harris
Pests
by Vivienne Franzmann
Push Up
by Roland Schimmelpfennig
Queen Anne
by Helen Edmundson
Ruined
by Lynn Nottage
The Sugar Wife
by Elizabeth Kuti
This Wide Night
by Chloë Moss
The Thrill of Love
by Amanda Whittington
The Wardrobe
by Sam Holcroft
TWO MEN
#aiww: The Arrest of Ai Weiwei
by Howard Brenton
2nd May 1997
by Jack Thorne
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas
from the book by John Boyne adapted by Angus Jackson
Boys
by Ella Hickson
The Crocodile
by Tom Basden after Fyodor Dostoyevsky
God’s Property
by Arinze Kene
The Initiate
by Alexandra Wood
An Intervention
by Mike Bartlett
James II: Day of the Innocents
by Rona Munro
Jumpers for Goalposts
by Tom Wells
Lizzie Siddal
by Jeremy Green
Mad About the Boy
by Gbolahan Obisesan
The Maths Tutor
by Clare McIntyre
Me, As A Penguin
by Tom Wells
Mustafa
by Naylah Ahmed
My Night with Reg
by Kevin Elyot
Nineteen Ninety-Two
by Lisa McGee
Parlour Song
by Jez Butterworth
The Pride
by Alexi Kaye Campbell
Regeneration
from the book by Pat Barker adapted by Nicholas Wright
Scuttlers
by Rona Munro
Sixty Five Miles
by Matt Hartley
The Three Lions
by William Gaminara
The Wardrobe
by Sam Holcroft
Yen
by Anna Jordan
THE GOOD AUDITION GUIDES
THE DUOLOGUES
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION
Introduction
WHY DUOLOGUES?
Whether you are doing theatre studies at school, taking part in a youth theatre, at drama school (perhaps in your final year and looking for showcase material), or attending a professional acting workshop, the duologue will arguably provide the most intense form of character exploration and analysis. It will draw on all the essential skills of the actor -namely playing an objective, identifying obstacles, incorporating backstory, staying in the moment and listening. It is what any Stanislavsky-based acting technique is all about, and a well-crafted duologue will allow you to put all these elements into practice.*
The twenty-five duologues in this volume are from plays that have largely been written post-2000. With the odd exception the characters range in age from fourteen to forty. There is a wide variety of character types and styles of writing from which to choose. They are all drawn from the extensive list of new plays published by Nick Hern Books.
CHOOSING YOUR DUOLOGUE
Not surprisingly, the majority of duologues for men and women are of a romantic or sexual nature. Many are about relationships that are new and flirtatious, while at the other end of the spectrum there are some that explore the moments just before the break-up of a marriage or partnership.
The majority of the duologues for two women explore feminist themes. Many are about female friendship and female rivalry. Some involve the dynamic between older and younger women and some are between sisters. Many have historical backgrounds and tell the stories of real-life people.
A good proportion of the duologues for two men are also of a familial nature, some are between friends and some are of a romantic or sexual nature.
Several of the duologues in this collection are ethnically or geographically specific, but the majority can be played in any accent and by any ethnicity. Similarly, out of context, some of the duologues can be played either younger or older than specified. Use your judgement and change place names or other references to suit your own purposes.
You will also find a good mix between the dramatic and the comic, the overtly political and the more playful. Some contain strong language and deal with adult themes. All provide a particular challenge and represent the pressing interests of some of our leading playwrights.
PREPARING YOUR DUOLOGUE
To understand the characters and their context in any one piece, you will need to read the whole play and to undertake all necessary research. Work with your scene partner to create detailed character histories and a backstory. Work out what it is that you want in the scene, where your characters are in agreement and where they are in conflict. Is there a power struggle? Ask yourselves what the scene is about (see below) and think about the story you wish to tell and why. The duologues in this volume concern themselves with the human condition. They explore our deepest longings, fears and needs. They pose complex questions about how we relate to each other and to the world around us. By engaging in the characters’ psychology you will be able to reveal what lies at the heart of a scene.
PERFORMING OR PRESENTING YOUR DUOLOGUE
As obvious as it may sound, remember that the playwright has written a conversation, so you will need to listen and to reply accordingly without preempting any outcome.
Allow yourself to be affected by what is said to you as you respond, and think about the effect you want to have on your partner. Stay in the moment and remain flexible and open to any impulses you or your partner might experience. The best kind of duologue is like an exciting tennis rally in which the audience are gripped, not knowing which way it will go. Several of the duologues in this volume are highly physical. Perhaps you will be working with a director who will have their own ideas about how to stage the scene. If you are working just the pair of you, think about how and where you will move in the space and what sort of physical dynamic there is between the characters. In some cases the writer has given a detailed description of what happens physically. Follow their stage directions and think of it as ‘choreography’ as you would a dance. Some of the writers use forward slashes (/) to indicate when the other character interrupts with their next speech.
THE USE OF PROPS
Several of these duologues require the use of props. As far as you are able you will want to seek out items that are as close to the specified article/s as possible. Most actors enjoy working with props. The challenge of how to handle them during a scene, and the comic and dramatic possibilities they offer are all very much part of the actor’s craft. Be sensitive to anything that you handle on stage. Is it an item of rare or precious value? Is it something that disgusts you? Is it something that is dangerous and might frighten you? If you cannot get the ‘real’ thing, use your imagination to endow the object with all the qualities of the original.
TIMING/EDITING
For the most part, the duologues are the same length as they appear in the original play script. Unless you are looking for showcase material, where you will be obliged to edit a scene to the standard one to three minutes, you will find it more useful to have the complete scene as it is written. Occasionally I have modified a duologue to make it flow more easily, and where a duologue is exceptionally long I have shortened it. In these cases, I have inserted this symbol […] to show where a cut has been made.
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
For each duologue I have provided a list of the following:
WHOThe characters’ names, their ages, and where they come from. In many cases, the characters can be played either younger or older than in their original context. If a character’s accent is not native to you, you may like to try playing it in your own accent. However, watch out for duologues that have been written with a strong dialect or idiom and where the essential rhythm of the piece needs to be maintained.
WHEREFor the most part, this is specified in the text. However, you may prefer to change place names if you wish to transpose the scene to suit your own accent.
WHENMost of the duologues in this volume are set in the present day. Some are historical. Read the whole play to make further decisions about the time of year it is, day of the week and the time of day.
WHAT TO CONSIDERThis will include the style of the play, its themes and use of language, the characters’ backstories and some indication about what happens next.
WHAT THE CHARACTERS WANTObjectives to play. Once you have learned your scene and have done all the necessary research and preparation, the only thing you should be actively playing is the ‘What do I want?’ or the ‘What do I have to have?’
WHAT THE SCENE IS ABOUTIt is important to think beyond what your character says and does to the wider implications of a scene. This will enable you to play the scene with intelligence, sensitivity and a greater understanding and awareness of what the play is trying to say.
*
These lists are suggestions only. When you become increasingly familiar with your duologue you will find you have opinions of your own; you may even find yourself in disagreement with my notes. Use this book as a springboard from which you will form your own opinions and ideas. My notes are by no means a substitute for reading the play or for thinking for yourself about the characters and their situations; they are rather a tool intended to help, to provoke and hopefully to inspire.
* Konstantin Stanislavsky (1863-1938) was a Russian theatre practitioner who developed a series of techniques in order to help the actor towards a more realistic portrayal of his character.
CONTEMPORARY DUOLOGUES
One Man & One Woman
2nd May 1997
Jack Thorne
WHOSarah, twenty-eight, and Ian, twenty-nine. Out of context both characters could be played either younger or older.
WHEREIan’s tiny bedsit.
WHEN2.41 a.m. on 2nd May 1997.
WHAT HAS JUST HAPPENEDSarah has met Ian at an election-night party hosted by the Liberal Democrats. Their duologue comes in the middle of a full-length play that sees two other couples, the first set earlier that night and the third set the following morning.
WHAT TO CONSIDER
• It is election night, 1997. The year that Blair came to power and led a landslide victory for the Labour Party.
• It was hot in London that night and there was an atmosphere of shock and excitement as many high-profile Conservative politicians, including Michael Portillo, lost their seats. In his case to a completely unknown candidate at the time, Stephen Twigg.
• The stage direction reads: ‘SARAH [is] drunk, but not so you’d notice immediately’ , but be careful not to overplay Sarah’s drunkenness. Drunk people tend to make a special effort to appear sober.
• As we discover in the scene, Sarah has mistaken Ian for a man called James whom she fancies.
• Sarah is very much of the Bridget Jones and the Sex and the City generation of women. These books were first published in 1996 and 1997 respectively.
• The following excerpt comes at the beginning of a much longer scene between the two of them. Later on in the duologue we discover that, a year ago to the day, Sarah’s mother was brutally murdered. Ian’s mother has cancer and both characters are having to confront mortality.
• Although the scene starts comedically, and seems to be as much about sex as anything else, it is important to carry a sense of the characters’ pain from the outset.
• The singer Cilla Black presented the hugely popular television series Blind Date . She had a Liverpudlian accent and her question to the contestants – ‘What’s your name and where do you come from?’ – became a kind of catchphrase.
• The ‘Millennium Bug’ was the fear that in the year 2000 all computer data would be lost.
• Read the play to see what happens at the end and to make a decision about whether you think these two could end up together.
• Words in [square brackets] are there to indicate intention, and not to be spoken.
WHAT SARAH WANTS
• Attention. (Think about how she loves to shock.)
• To be heard.
• To find comfort.
• Relief from her loneliness.
• To be held, both emotionally and physically.
WHAT IAN WANTS
• Company. (In order not to have to think about the fact that his mother is dying.)
WHAT THE SCENE IS ABOUTThe fear of insignificance, loneliness, abandonment, mortality.
NBThis play offers a number of other duologues from which to choose.
A tidy bedsit. SARAH enters first, she’s drunk, but not especially so you’d notice immediately. IAN isn’t drunk.
SARAH. Oh, it’s not that messy…
IAN. It’s not tidy.
SARAH. With the bed to the side…
IAN. And the sofa… there… you want to sit down?
SARAH. I want to look around.
IAN. Looking for what?
SARAH. I just want to poke…
I like people poking about my house.
I like people being intrigued.
IAN smiles.
IAN. Then we should have gone to yours… I could have been intrigued at [yours] –
SARAH. No, I followed you… If you had followed me we could have gone back to mine.
But I made the move, so I won a trip to your house.
She starts to poke about. IAN looks at his hands.
My mum used to love poking about my room – poke – poke – one time she found an old toothbrush she insisted I was using as a dildo. I was fifteen years old – she said, ‘Lots of girls have very healthy sexual appetites at your age, I know I did, but it’s a very confusing as well as perfectly natural time.’
IAN laughs. SARAH looks at him.
IAN. My dad just gave me a book. Your Body and You.
SARAH. ‘It’s perfectly natural, do you want to talk about it?
The dildo?’ No, she called it something else. She called it something – I can’t remember – I think she may have called it a ‘sexual device’. Truth was, she’d heard about it on Radio 4 – Woman’s Hour did dildos. Sexual devices.
But the truth also was that I had a new pair of Doc Martens and I was proud of them and mud and shit kept getting caught in the tread, because it was quite deep tread, so I used a toothbrush to… True story. Bet I don’t look like a woman who used to wear Docs as a kid.
Maybe I do. Do I?
IAN. You could…
SARAH. You should have seen the toothbrush – I mean, you must wonder what she thought I had up my fanny. The toothbrush was… not clean. It was brown. The bristles were brown. I mean, really quite… really quite… not nice.
IAN isn’t sure how to respond, so just smiles.
Pause. She continues to try and behave casually as she pokes through his stuff. Eventually, she needs to break the silence…
What shall I do with my coat?
IAN. Oh. Just put it anywhere.
SARAH. I hate phrases like that. ‘Just put it anywhere.’ I feel like shouting at the screen – ‘It’s your dick, put it in her fanny.’
She starts to take off her shoes, they look like they’ve hurt her feet.
IAN. Do you?
SARAH. Sorry, am I being confrontational? It’s a mixture of drunkenness and fear of sex.
IAN. Right.
She gives her shoes to IAN. Who doesn’t quite know what to do with them, and so puts them down beside himself. In the centre of the room. It’s an odd place for shoes. She looks at where he’s put them. She looks at him. Slightly accusingly.
SARAH. Don’t worry. I’m not going to take the rest of my clothes off and hand them to you…
IAN. Not that – no.
She laughs. He doesn’t know why.
SARAH. You were giving as good as you got at the party…
IAN. No. I wasn’t –
SARAH. You fucking were, wideboy.
IAN. No. Was I?
SARAH. What was it you said… I can’t remember how you said it… You said something about Blair being one bollock short of a mouthful.
IAN. I didn’t.
SARAH. ‘The thing about Tony Blair is, he’s one bollock short of a mouthful.’
IAN. I think you’ve got me mixed up.
SARAH. ‘One bollock short of a mouthful.’ It’s a lovely phrase. I was quite surprised at a Liberal Democrat…
IAN. I think… that was probably James.
SARAH. James?
IAN. James. Yes. James. He came with me. Wiry hair. Grey jacket.
I’m not much of a talker. You were mostly talking to him.
I was there. But you two talked.
He’s not really a Liberal Democrat.
Beat. SARAH appraises the situation.
SARAH. And what happened to James?
IAN. Um. Well…
He, uh… He had to go home.
SARAH bullet laughs and then bullet laughs again.
SARAH. I went home with the wrong guy.
IAN. No.
SARAH (really laughing). I went home with the wrong guy.
IAN. It’s – um – Did you?
SARAH. Jesus. Am I that drunk?
Pause.
James.
IAN. We work together. He’s a good friend. Well. Colleague.
Wiry hair. Grey jacket. Do you want to leave?
SARAH. Fuck no. This is exciting. This is like ‘Guess Who?’ but… sexual. ‘Sexual Guess Who?’ Awesome.
She’s staring at him quite intently.
IAN. Do you want the TV on? We could check what’s –
SARAH. See how far you’ve lost yet…
IAN. Well. Not really about the winning.
Not that it’s about the taking part either…
SARAH laughs again.
SARAH. It was a good party. ‘Sexual Guess Who?’ Who are you?
IAN. Who am I?
SARAH (Cilla Black impression). ‘Hello, number two, what’s your name and where do you come from?’
IAN. Don’t…
She laughs again. He doesn’t know why. Again.
SARAH. The Party party?
IAN. What?
SARAH. A Party having a party – funny when you – I thought that was funny – a Party having a party – Who was I talking about that with…? Did we talk at all?
IAN. Of course we did… we, um… we talked about the Millennium Bug.
SARAH. I only went because my friend Ruth told me free – booze… ‘Come to the Party party.’ It might have been her I was – talking about it with.
IAN. Yeah? Yeah. That’s sort of why James came… We don’t really… It’s open-door. We talked about restricting, but…
SARAH. I can fit my whole fist in my mouth. Can you do that?
IAN. What? Can you?
SARAH. Sorry – party – party tricks, that’s the way my brain works, I won’t show you. It’s painful and makes me look very unattractive.
IAN. I’m sure it doesn’t.
SARAH. Well… it does…
Pause.
IAN. There was a guy at my school whose party trick was he could fit his whole penis in an eggcup.
Pause. SARAH barks a laugh and then stops.
SARAH. Jesus.
IAN. What?
SARAH. ‘Hello, Cilla, my name is…’
IAN. Ian. We definitely did the names thing… You’re Sarah.
SARAH. ‘And I am a… Liberal Democrat, Cilla.’
IAN. Housing Officer. I’m a Housing Officer.
Pause. SARAH tries to think of a response to that. She fails. She barks another laugh.
SARAH. Have you got any alcohol?
IAN. Good idea. What would you like?
SARAH. I would like a pint of water and a large glass of red wine…
IAN. That… I can do…
SARAH. Good.
IAN exits. SARAH looks around his room. She picks a book out. Will Hutton – The State We’re In. She flicks through. She smiles. She reads a page. She calls off…
You write notes in the margins of your books.
IAN reappears. Suddenly. Anxiously.
IAN. Not really.
SARAH. You’ve written an exclamation mark beside a – you’ve written an exclamation mark – what does it say?
IAN. Don’t read it out.
SARAH reads the paragraph. She reads it again. She frowns. She puts the book back on the shelf.
SARAH. Do you do it for your fiction books too? Do you underline your fiction books? Or is it only facts – are you only interested in facts or do you underline a choice phrase or two in fiction? A lovely Dickens – sentence or a Shakespearean thing. Do you underline?
IAN. Um. Some. Sometimes.
SARAH. What about letters? Do you underline letters?
IAN. Who from?
SARAH. The bank. British Gas. Friends. Family. Lovers. Letters from other people. So you can skim-read them and not have to…
IAN. No. Not… Well. Some[times] –
SARAH. Yeah? Interesting.
IAN. Um… yeah, just… when things matter – I like to remember them.
SARAH shifts her weight from one foot to the other. She looks at IAN. For some reason she likes this.
SARAH. Do you?
IAN. Yeah.
SARAH. Yeah.
IAN thinks, and then exits again. SARAH looks around, sees the bed and stalks over to it. She looks at it a moment and then suddenly pulls back the duvet. She laughs at herself. She touches the sheets underneath. And then bends and smells the sheets. Then she laughs. Then she calls out.
You don’t mind if I check your sheets, do you?
IAN re-enters on the bounce.
IAN. What?
He looks at the bed.
SARAH. I slept with one guy – the other day, I am a bit of a slut, by the way – whose sheets were so greasy, it almost made me sick. They smelt of old sweat and greasy hair and they were horrible to sleep on. Horrible.
I’m not promising anything, just better to know the full facts before making a decision. As the bishop said to the abortionist.
With his thumb up her bottom… Or…
He thinks of how to respond to that, he can’t, he exits. He re-enters, carrying a tray of drinks, he puts them down on his coffee table. He smoothes down a cushion and puts it where she might sit on the sofa. Then he sits on the other sofa. He doesn’t look at her the entire time. He can’t. This whole thing is slightly too real.
IAN. Why don’t we…? We could drink these sitting down… Watch the…
He puts on the TV. He looks at what’s happening.
She watches him with a smile. He turns and looks at her. He calculates what he’s just done.
Sorry.
SARAH. No.
IAN. That was…
He turns off the TV miserably.
SARAH. Not for me. Don’t turn off for me. You can have the… It’s your party.
They sit in silence.
Anne Boleyn
Howard Brenton
WHOHenry the Eighth of England, forty-years old, and his mistress, Anne Boleyn, thirty-years old.
WHEREKing Henry’s Court.
WHEN1531.
WHAT HAS JUST HAPPENEDHenry and Anne are five years into their ‘affair’. Anne still refuses to sleep with Henry, insisting they be married first. In order for him to take Anne as his wife, Henry must first secure a divorce from Catherine of Aragon to whom he is still married. A court session has been set in which Henry will seek an annulment on the premise that his marriage to Catherine, who was the widow of Henry’s brother, was incestuous and therefore illegal. Catherine meanwhile will have the right to plead her case and is to be supported by a number of bishops whom Anne detests. In the scene that precedes this duologue, Anne has expressed her rage at Catherine and fears that the Pope will not agree to an annulment. Henry now seeks to calm Anne down and to reassure her that they will one day be man and wife.
WHAT TO CONSIDER
• Henry and Anne are genuinely in love with one another.
• Anne held off having sex with Henry for another two years (seven in total). She finally agreed to sleep with him a few weeks before they were married in January 1533.
• Read Howard Brenton’s excellent introduction to the playtext, in which he sets out his interpretation of Anne as both sexual temptress and great religious reformer. She was a woman who changed the course of history and was tragically betrayed by former allies.
• As it was originally written and produced for Shakespeare’s Globe theatre in London, there is no sense of a ‘fourth wall’ in the play. Characters talk to the audience (see Henry’s aside) and the style of writing is bold. It is important to capture this boldness in the playing without losing the truth of the characters’ intentions and depth of feeling.
• The song is from Britten’s opera Gloriana . They do not sing, but rather speak the lyric with a lift in their voices.
• The comic and the serious. Work to strike the balance between the characters’ theatricality (Anne is particularly skittish in this scene) and what we know of their real selves.
• Read the whole play to get a fuller picture of Anne and Henry and to understand how the playwright has cleverly fused his interpretation with known facts. You will also see how Brenton has told the story from the point of view, a hundred years later, of James the First of England, who imagines he can sense Anne’s ghost.
• Make time to do your own research into the lives of Henry and Anne. You may like to read the work of Hilary Mantel, whose books Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies have been adapted into a stage version, published by Nick Hern Books, and a television series for the BBC.
WHAT HENRY WANTS
• To placate Anne.
• To reassure her.
• To be free of his first wife and the politics surrounding it.
• To have sex with Anne.
WHAT ANNE WANTS
• To be Henry’s wife.
• To be Queen of England and to have:
Legitimacy.
Respect.
Power.
Security.
• Henry to herself.
WHAT THE SCENE IS ABOUTThe struggle between the personal and the political, frustration, lust, power, love.
NBThis play offers a number of other duologues from which to choose.
HENRY. Don’t start, Anne!
ANNE. I’m not going to ‘start’. It’s always you who ‘start’. […] Nothing will come of this ridiculous Court.
HENRY. You don’t see the full matter. Leave it to your betters.
ANNE. You mean bishops?
HENRY. The Legatine Court is the best hope for an annulment. His Grace the Cardinal Campeggio will be here in a month.
ANNE. I met Cardinal Campeggio. Ten years ago, in France. He was already senile then. He dribbled.
HENRY. It doesn’t really matter if he dribbles or not! All he has to do is take the Court’s decision to the Pope. And the Court will decide for my divorce.
ANNE. Really? How?
HENRY. Anne, this matter is complex, it is theological, it is High Church politics and it is beyond a woman’s brain!
ANNE. It’s not beyond your wife’s brain. She understands it all too well. She got her uncle in Madrid to persuade the Pope to send Campeggio. Well, didn’t she?
HENRY. Perhaps.
ANNE. She did! She did! I know it.
HENRY (aside). Tomorrow I’ll be hunting. Charging away, flying through the world, horses, dogs, men in pursuit of something that can actually be caught! (To ANNE.) Wolsey will work the bishops.
ANNE. Work Fisher? He hates me. No doubt he thinks I’m a demon goat. Or a witch. Or Martin Luther in woman’s skirts…
HENRY. You’ve heard those things?
ANNE. Of course. Cooks in the kitchens up to your ministers in the Privy Chamber, they all whisper about me. Don’t you think I know how palaces work?
HENRY. My love, I’m so sorry. I’ll flog anyone… cook or earl…
ANNE. No one would dare say a word against me, if I were what you say you wish I were.
HENRY. Can’t we just… be?
ANNE. Be what?
HENRY. Man and woman.
They look at each other.
ANNE. Just be.
HENRY. As in the song.
‘To furnish forth our fate
On some unhaunted isle
Where harmless robin dwells with gentle thrush
Happy we…
ANNE. Happy we…
HENRY. Obscure from all society
From love and hate and worldly foes…
ANNE. In contemplation spending all our days…
And loving ways to make us merry…
HENRY. Happy we…
ANNE. Happy we.’
A moment. Then they return to their real world.
You know what your wife will do. When, after delay after delay, the Court finally meets, she’ll appear all innocent, calm, ill done by, full of godly airs, the perfect wife so infuriatingly in the right! And the bishops, piled up on their benches behind the Pope’s man, will all burst into tears and nothing, nothing will be decided!
HENRY. The Court will work. It must work. There is nothing else.
ANNE. Nothing else?
HENRY. Wolsey warns that he can see no other way to get the Pope’s approval.
ANNE. Oh, does he. Wolsey, Wolsey, woolly Wolsey…
HENRY. Anne…
ANNE (whirling around). Woolly woolly Wolsey, woolly sheep… butcher’s son, let him butcher a sheep! Or, better, butcher him.
HENRY. He is my greatest servant! Be silent!
ANNE. He does look like a sheep.
HENRY. Stop it!
ANNE. Bah bah, bah bah.
HENRY. Anne…
ANNE. Bah bah, Wolsey black sheep… (Pulls a face.)
HENRY (laughs). Bah bah bah.
ANNE. Bah bah bah.
HENRY. Bah bah bah.
They laugh. HENRY pulls her to him and they go to the ground. He puts his hand up her skirt.
Allow me, further than your knee. After five years, Mistress, a little further than the knee?
ANNE. Yes, My Liege, Lord and Master, a little further.
HENRY. And… a view from behind?
ANNE. At a distance, with the curtain half-closed.
HENRY stands and pulls her to her feet. They run hand in hand and exit.
Blue Stockings
Jessica Swale
WHOTess Moffat, a student at Girton College, Cambridge, and Ralph Mayhew, a student at Trinity College, Cambridge.
WHEREThe orchard at Girton College.
WHENThe autumn term, 1896. Night-time.
WHAT HAS JUST HAPPENEDTess is in her first term studying science at Girton College Cambridge. She is described as ‘a curious girl’ and has already got into trouble for expressing views that her male lecturers consider outrageous. She has also caught the attention of Ralph Mayhew, a student at Trinity College. They met in the library where they exchanged notes and secretly agreed to meet in the orchard at Girton at night, where this duologue takes place.
WHAT TO CONSIDER
• Girton was the first college in Britain to admit female students, and 1896 saw the first intake. Make time to research this fact and to understand the phenomenal bravery of the women who fought for this right.
• The immense opposition that Tess and her fellow female students must face.
• The emergence of women as free-thinking individuals, in search of lives other than those of being a wife and mother.
• The frisson that an exchange with such a woman could provoke in a man at that time. Notice how at the top of the scene Ralph doesn’t even know her name.
• Ralph may be enjoying the dalliance, but make a decision about whether or not he would secretly consider Tess suitable for marriage.
• I would suggest that Ralph recites the poem rather badly (i.e. as any Englishman would who doesn’t understand it or speak Italian).
• Read the play to find out what happens to Tess and Ralph. Remember not to anticipate the outcome when you are playing the scene.
WHAT TESS WANTS
• Excitement. Adventure. Romance. Make a decision about whether it is Ralph she particularly likes or the thrill of the danger associated with meeting him.
• To push the boundaries of her protected existence.
• Parity with men.
WHAT RALPH WANTS
• An intrigue. (Note the way he says, ‘I’ll leave you a sign. Look out for it.’)
WHAT THE SCENE IS ABOUTFlirtation, a woman asserting herself, a man enjoying the chase.
RALPH waits leaning against a tree. TESS appears. It’s dark and very quiet. She creeps to one tree. He creeps to another. She moves in the shadows from tree to tree, becoming increasingly anxious.
TESS. Curses.
He follows her. She stops under an apple tree. He creeps round the other side and puts his hand out to steady her.
RALPH. Good evening.
She screams.
It’s alright, it’s alright! It’s alright.
TESS. Jesus!
RALPH. I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to scare you.
TESS. It’s so dark, I was afraid.
RALPH. Me too. I thought your old chaperone might be on the prowl.
She giggles.
Listen, I’m sorry I asked you here. I’ve been paralysed with guilt.
TESS. It’s alright.
An owl screeches.
RALPH. It’s just a barn owl.
TESS. ‘Tyto alba alba.’
RALPH. Oh, so you’re a Latin scholar?
TESS. No. I’m an astrophysicist.
RALPH. Well! Me too. Venus is bright tonight.
TESS. Striking, isn’t she?
RALPH. Yes, she is. (A little moment.) Listen, I don’t even know your name.
TESS. Tess Moffat.
RALPH. Well, Miss Moffat, it’s a pleasure to meet you properly.
TESS. You too.
RALPH. Ralph Mayhew. ‘Esquire.’
They shake hands rather formally. Beat.
Well, this is rather unconventional, isn’t it. I probably should have asked you to a clarinet concert, not to some spooky orchard.
TESS. It is a bit.
RALPH. Isn’t it! (Ghostily.) Woooo! Look, please forgive me, I hope you don’t mind; I thought I might – read you something.
TESS. Oh. Here?
RALPH. Yes. But I’m not very literary, so it might be disastrous.
TESS. I doubt that.
RALPH. It’s a poem. But it’s… actually, maybe I shouldn’t.
TESS. No, please do.
He takes a slip of paper out, looks at it.
RALPH. I really don’t know –
TESS. Go on.
RALPH. Alright. It’s a love poem.
TESS. Oh.
RALPH. It’s called A Lady Who is Fair.
TESS. Right.
RALPH.
Provedi, saggio, ad esta visïone,
e per mercé ne trai vera sentenza.
Dico: una donna di bella fazone,
di cu’ el meo cor gradir molto s’agenza.
mi fe’ d’una ghirlanda donagione,
verde, fronzuta, con bella accoglienza.
Pause.
TESS. Well that was –
RALPH. That’s not the end.
TESS. Oh. Right.
RALPH.
Appresso mi trovai per vestigione
camicia di suo dosso, a mia parvenza.
Allor di tanto, amico, mi francai che
dolcemente presila abbracciare.
Pause.
That’s the end.
TESS. Well! Well. That was quite beautiful. Thank you. What does it mean?
RALPH. I have no idea. I’m a scientist. Maybe next time I’ll show you an experiment.
TESS. I should like that.
RALPH. Or I could write you a paper on Kepler.
TESS. How do you know I like Kepler?
RALPH. Your book, in the library.
TESS. So you knew I was an astronomer!
RALPH. I was impressed.
TESS. You don’t think it’s unfeminine?
RALPH. Anyone who can make head or tail of Kepler deserves a medal in my book. I’m using my copy as a doorstop. I think you being here – ladies studying – well, it’s grand.
TESS. We don’t hear that very often.
He looks at her fondly, then takes a risk.
RALPH. Miss Moffat, may I kiss your hand?
TESS extends her hand. He takes it and kisses it politely. He holds on to it for just a second.
You’re getting cold. You mustn’t stay out any longer.
TESS. Thank you for your unusual poem. May I keep it?
RALPH. They say it’s the most beautiful love poem ever written.
TESS. I wonder what Shakespeare would say to that?
RALPH. He’d probably pinch it. Maybe you should keep it under your hat.
TESS. I’ll do just that.
She loosens her hat and takes it off. He places the poem on her head carefully, holding it there for a second as she puts her hat back on. They look at each other for a moment.
RALPH. So, goodnight, Miss Moffat.
TESS. Goodnight.
She walks back towards the door. He begins to walk away.
Wait! How will I know…?
RALPH. I’ll leave you a sign. Look out for it. Goodnight, sweet mistress!
TESS. Goodnight.
She watches him until he is out of sight. Then she has a little moment of elation before she exits.
,
Britannia Waves the Rules
Gareth Farr
WHOGoldie Shaw, a young woman from Blackpool, and Carl, a young soldier, also from Blackpool.
WHEREA nightclub, Blackpool.
WHENPresent day.
WHAT HAS JUST HAPPENEDCarl has joined the army in search of a better life than being stuck in Blackpool on benefits. Still in training, but back home on leave, he bumps into Goldie, a girl he’s known since primary school and whom in a previous scene he has got off with. In the duologue that follows they attempt to pick up from where they left off.
WHAT TO CONSIDER
• Carl’s mother died when he was still a child, leaving Carl alone with his dad.
• His father had a kind of nervous breakdown, grew a beard and started playing with toy trains.
• Carl is angry.
• He vents his rage by writing poems and running.
• Carl struggles to fit in. He hates his home town and has a horror of ending up like the people he sees there.
• When the army puts up a stall in town hoping to attract recruits Carl is seduced by the prospect of seeing the world and signs himself up.
• He takes to the training like a fish to water.
• Read the whole play to find out what happens when he sees active service.
• Goldie’s parents own a toy shop.
• In a previous monologue, Carl describes Goldie as ‘Beautiful. Eighteen-carat-solid, fit-as-fuck’. He tells us: ‘She had what all the other girls wanted and what all the boys wanted to get hold of.’
• While he still wants to have sex with Goldie, his objectives are complicated by the change in him and by his need to re-evaluate his life. She remains very much part of the ‘old’ him and the Blackpool which he loathes.
• She, on the other hand, is confident and happy. For Goldie life is quite simple.
WHAT CARL WANTS
• To have Goldie be his girl.
• For Goldie to wash away his hurt and to make him clean.
• To explain how different he feels and to have Goldie understand him.
WHAT GOLDIE WANTS
• To get close to Carl. (The stage direction at the end of the scene reads: ‘ She kisses him. It’s youthful and hungry and full of true love.’ )
WHAT THE SCENE IS ABOUTLonging, re-evaluating people and places, sexual attraction and desire, hope.
NBThis play offers a number of other duologues from which to choose.
GOLDIE. Carl? Carl Jackson?
CARL. Goldie? Goldie, how are you?
GOLDIE. Fuckin’ hell I thought it was you. Carl Jackson as I live and breathe. What are you doing here?
CARL. I’m just seeing some of the lads.
GOLDIE. How long are you staying?
CARL. Few days, maybe a week.
GOLDIE. Bloody hell, Carl Jackson, how long have you been away for now?
CARL. Dunno.
GOLDIE. Piss off.
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. It’s eleven months.
CARL. Yeah?
GOLDIE. Yeah. You left a hole.
CARL. Yeah?
GOLDIE. Yeah, a bit. Look it’s loud in here do you want to go outside?
CARL. Yeah, sure.
The music fades to a low thump in the background. Outside.
GOLDIE. Fuckin’ Blackpool.
CARL. Yeah I know, shit isn’t it?
GOLDIE. Is it?
CARL. Yeah.
GOLDIE. Fair enough.
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. Nothing.
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. I just don’t think it’s that shit that’s all.
CARL. No?
GOLDIE. No.
CARL. Right. I do.
GOLDIE. Yeah. I get that.
Pause.
You look different y’know.
CARL. People keep saying that.
GOLDIE. Yeah? Well they’re right.
CARL. Right. Well, so do you.
GOLDIE (laughing). Fuck off Carl.
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. No I don’t.
CARL. Okay.
GOLDIE. You’re being all fly, Carl.
CARL. Am I?
GOLDIE. Yeah.
CARL. Okay.
Pause.
Their silences aren’t uncomfortable or challenging, they are natural and charged with potential. They glance at each other, sometimes together, sometimes when the other isn’t looking, sometimes when the other chooses not to look.
How’s everything here then?
GOLDIE. What do you care, you think it’s shit?
CARL. So it’s not shit then?
GOLDIE. No.
CARL. No?
GOLDIE. No. It’s not.
CARL. What makes it not shit?
GOLDIE. What makes it not shit? What kind of grammar is that then? I thought you wrote poems.
CARL. Fuck off.
GOLDIE. Don’t tell me to fuck off Carl Jackson.
CARL. Fuck off.
They smile.
GOLDIE. You don’t like it do you?
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. Someone talking about your poems.
CARL. I don’t care.
GOLDIE. Bullshit, yeah you do.
CARL. No I don’t, I’m on-top.
GOLDIE. Say one then.
CARL. Say one what?
GOLDIE. A poem.
CARL. No.
GOLDIE. Say one to me now. Why not?
CARL. Because I don’t even write poems.
GOLDIE. I thought you didn’t care. I thought you were on-top. Say one.
CARL. No.
GOLDIE. Mary had a little lamb…
CARL. Piss off Goldie.
GOLDIE. What? I don’t care. I’ll say one.
Mary had a little lamb…
CARL. Shut up.
GOLDIE. No.
Mary had a little lamb she tied it to a pylon,
A thousand volts went up its arse,
And turned its wool to Nylon.
CARL. You’re not funny.
GOLDIE. Yes I am. I am a funny girl Carl. Just because you’re training to kill people and you look different it doesn’t mean that I’m not funny. That is a funny poem, you could learn something from that.
CARL. Whatever.
Pause.
GOLDIE. So have you shot anyone yet?
CARL. No, have I fuck.
GOLDIE. Sorry, I’m only asking.
CARL. I’m still in training aren’t I?
GOLDIE. I don’t know do I? Still in training after eleven months, how long does it take?
CARL. Ages. There’s different kinds.
GOLDIE. Either that or you’re just a bit shit.
CARL. I haven’t been in theatre yet. If I’d shot anyone it’d mean that I’d shot one of my own, which would mean that I am more than a bit shit.
GOLDIE. And you’re not?
CARL. No.
GOLDIE. Just us then.
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. Nothing.
Pause.
Would you?
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. Shoot someone?
CARL. Yeah, I reckon.
GOLDIE. Yeah? Fair enough.
CARL. You would too. Anyone would.
GOLDIE. Oh, I know I would Carl Jackson. In fact I might have to borrow that Uzi of yours if my old man gives me any more grief.
CARL. He’s alright your dad isn’t he?
GOLDIE. Yeah, he’s alright. I still see yours.
CARL. Yeah?
GOLDIE. Yeah, from time to time. We chat y’know?
CARL. Yeah? Good luck with that.
GOLDIE. You’re at it again.
CARL. What?
GOLDIE. Being all fly.
CARL. Sorry.
GOLDIE. So what’s it like then? Really.
CARL. It’s better than here.
GOLDIE. I’m not going to tell you again Carl.
CARL. Tell me what?
GOLDIE. I live here. You might have jumped ship and found a better beach to play on but Blackpool is my home so stop saying it’s shit.
CARL. Alright, calm down.
GOLDIE. No. Blackpool’s not shit Carl, you just choose to see it that way. You used to live on that Pleasure Beach when you were a kid. Fuckin’ smiles wider than the front. I watched you then too.
CARL. I’m not a kid any more though am I?
GOLDIE. Clearly.
CARL. I’m out of here Goldie and it’s bigger and better and… I’m better, I breathe better. I do. Free and me. That’s it.
GOLDIE. Have you got a Pleasure Beach though?
CARL. The biggest.
GOLDIE. Stay safe out there Superfly. We don’t want you tripping over your shoelace and shooting yourself in the head now. It happens, I’ve seen it on YouTube.
CARL. I’ll try.
GOLDIE. Good.
Silence. It lasts.
Are you going to kiss me then or what?
CARL. You what?
GOLDIE. Bloody hell, I hope you’re not in the Signals Carl Jackson or else we’re all fucked.
Chicken Shop
Anna Jordan
WHOLuminita, twenty-four, Moldovan, and Hendrix, sixteen, British.
WHEREA room in a brothel above a chicken