DISCO FEVER. By Craig Sodaro. Performance Rights

Similar documents
NEXT VICTIM, PLEASE. By Rocky Soderman and Terri Ferguson. Performance Rights

The Fourth Wall. By Rebekah M. Ball. Performance Rights

TOM S HUSBAND. Aadapted by Jolene Goldenthal. from the story by Sarah Orne Jewett. Performance Rights

CHRISTMAS COMES to DETROIT LOUIE

DEAD GIVEAWAY. by Pat Cook. Performance Rights

YOUR CHRISTIANITY IS SHOWING!

SHELBY S SONG. By Renee C. Rebman. Performance Rights

The Act of Murder. By Billy St. John

PINOCCHIO. By William J. Springer. Performance Rights

RUMPELSTILTSKIN! Adaptation and lyrics by Edward Gupton Music by Duke Marsh, Jr. Performance Rights

CASTING JULIET. By Claudia Haas. Performance Rights

ARE WE THERE YET? A Musical with Momentum

THE HOUSE of the SEVEN GABLES

Tales From the Enchanted City

THE HERO OF BINGSLEY MANOR

Altar of Deception. By David Wesner. Performance Rights

PS: Merry Christmas. By Pat Cook. Performance Rights

65 Mustang. A comedy in one act by Burton Bumgarner

THE GIFT OF THE SHEPHERDS

LADIES AT LUNCH. By Carol Woods. Performance Rights

Angel in a Ball Cap. A Christmas Story. By Eddie McPherson

Arthur and Guinevere

The Little Theatre. A Play in One Act by Con Chapman PERFORMANCE RIGHTS

DOOR BANG. A Play in One Act. by Leslie Hewett. Performance Rights

MR. PATTERSON S $5,000 DOG IS DEAD

MGTV. by Stephen Murray. Performance Rights

The Pass-It-On Christmas

THE THREE PRINCE CHARMINGS

NAZ. By Sharon Dunn. Performance Rights

A MURDER OF SCARECROWS

The PRINCE and the PAUPER

EINSTEIN INSIDE OUT. by Russell S. Dowd. Performance Rights

Murder by Ten. A Murder Mystery Spoof. By Eddie McPherson PERFORMANCE RIGHTS

Shoestring Theatre. By Eddie McPherson

Here Come the Brides - or - Skunked in Skagway

Never Too Old for Christmas

THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR

HARK AND HAROLD & THE CHRISTMAS STAR

She Was Only A Garbageman s Daughter

A CHRISTMAS VACATION

HOW TO MEET MY MOTHER

Epic Fail. A Comedy in One Act. By Bradley Hayward. Performance Rights

THE UGLY DUCKLING. Adapted by Jack Neary from the story by Hans Christian Andersen. Performance Rights

The School Spirit. By Scott Haan. Performance Rights

A Little Christmas Spirit

UNTURNED STONE. A play in one act. By Daniel Munson

MEETING at the MANGER

Gravedigger. A Play in One Act. By Eric Luthi. Performance Rights

THE HIDDEN GIFT BY WALTER E BUTTS, JR. Performance Rights

Heaven Only Knows. By Corey Sprague by Corey Sprague ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Duplication Prohibited

TREASURES OF THE ORIENT

When Ernest Believed In Santa

Conning Kirby. A Farce. By Michal Jacot. Performance Rights. ELDRIDGE PUBLISHING COMPANY 2015 by Michal Jacot

WOOLFIE. by Sybil St. Claire. Performance Rights

MARXISM: THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO GROUCHO. by David J. LeMaster. Performance Rights

Every Little Crook and Nanny

Hit the Books. By Dwayne Yancey. Performance Rights

Shakespeare on Trial

Scars & Stripes. by Thomas Cadwaleder Jones. Winner of the 1994 AATE Distinguished Play Award. Performance Rights

NOT AN AFTER-SCHOOL SPECIAL

STRING OF LIGHTS. By Terry Earp. Performance Rights

The Pirate Princess. A play in one act. by James Armstrong. Performance Rights

DEATH ALWAYS COMES IN THREES

THE NEW MINISTER S WIFE

THE GIFT: 7 POUNDS, 3 OUNCES

Hope s Diner. By Phillip D. Smith. Performance Rights

COUCH POTATOES OF THE 21st CENTURY

The Prodigal. By Stephen Guschov. Performance Rights

OCCUPATION: MURDER! An Audience Participation Murder Mystery/Comedy. By Billy St. John. Performance Rights

Robin Hood Tales of Ye Merry Woode

Fran Lang Productions, LLC

And Also Much Cattle

SCREAM IF YOU RE A SURVIVOR

RETURN TO CALAMITY GULCH

THE NEW YORK STORIES

Attention Detention. A Comedy in One Act. By Bradley Hayward. Performance Rights

Sweet Redemption Music Company

Jack s Adventures With the King s Girl

JONAH AND BIGFISH. By Richard T. Young

A Very Bad Day for Brandon Butterworth

DIRTY DEALINGS IN DIXIE

THE CANTERVILLE GHOST

UPDATED Audition/Tech Crew information for RPHS All School Musical

GET A CLUE! A Murder Mystery Play in One Act. by Alex Garnett and Greg Lotze. Performance Rights

DNA: Desperately Nutty Ancestors

THE POISONED PEN. by Craig Sodaro. Performance Rights

Tales From Beatrix Potter

SCAMILY. A One-Act Play. Kelly McCauley

TUNE IN TO MURDER. By Craig Sodaro. Performance Rights

The Flight Before Christmas

WHEN BIRDS CRY By Mike Willis

The Dane. a ten minute comedy. James O Sullivan. Copyright March 2016 James O Sullivan and Off The Wall Play Publishers.

DONOVAN S DAUGHTERS The Musical

Puss in Boots A Play With Music In the English Pantomime Tradition

The Funsucker. A One-Act Comedy. by Christopher Landrigan. Performance Rights

The Mystery Club and the Case of the Missing Pearls. A Play for Students in Grades parts

The Visitor. By Ev Miller. Performance Rights

THE MAGIC of BEAUTY and the BEAST

Try to Act Normal. Fred Sahner

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS THEATRE 101

Transcription:

DISCO FEVER By Craig Sodaro Performance Rights It is an infringement of the federal copyright law to copy this script in any way or to perform this play without royalty payment. All rights are controlled by Eldridge Publishing Co. Inc. Call the publisher for additional scripts and further licensing information. The author's name must appear on all programs and advertising with the notice: "Produced by special arrangements with Eldridge Publishing Co." ELDRIDGE PUBLISHING COMPANY www.histage.com 2005 by Craig Sodaro Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing http://www.histage.com/playdetails.asp?pid=1691

- 2 - STORY OF THE PLAY When bill collectors are pounding on the door and movers begin to repossess the furniture, wealthy but ditzy Patricia Smitherton-Smatherton and her granddaughters realize something is very wrong. Perkins, the perfect butler, tries to tell Madame that the problem lies with Stan D. Mann, her unscrupulous business manager, but she is far too trusting. When the granddaughters find out Stan plans to sell their house to a flashy Hollywood producer for big bucks, the girls decide the only way to come up with the mortgage money is to turn the mansion into a disco, a la Studio 54. They call their place Disco Dawg and hire a singer with the promise that a few movie stars will be there. They decorate the place in the current groovy 1970s style, and everyone who s anyone shows up including Stan D. Mann. Unfortunately, while he s dancing, Stan drops dead. Tracy, the oldest granddaughter, is arrested because she picks up what everybody thinks is the murder weapon, a South American blowgun. Chuck s Angels, three lady detectives, step in to help the daffy police officers solve the crime. Tracy is released when it is determined that poison was worked into Stan s new perm. When Patricia s social secretary disappears leaving only a bloodied scarf, Chuck s Angels and the granddaughters come up with a plan. The killer makes a move during a big night at Disco Dawg s, and only some quick thinking on the part of Perkins stops the killer from getting away.

- 3 - CAST OF CHARACTERS (9 m, 16 w, and extras ) PERKINS: The perfect butler. PATRICIA SMITHERTON-SMATHERTON: The nervous matron. MISS SNIVEL: An interior decorator. MISS GRUNDY: Patricia s prim social secretary. JANICE: A business owner. HAL: A young mover. AL: His partner. TRACY: Patricia s oldest granddaughter. DONNA: A second granddaughter. LIVVY: The youngest granddaughter. STAN. D. MANN: Patricia s business manager. G.G. FLASH: A Hollywood producer. LULU: An actress. BABETTE: Another. JAYDEE: A deejay. GLORIA: A disco singer. CHUCK: A private detective. STELLA: One of Chuck s Angels. ELLA: Another. NELLA: A third. SGT. DRAGLY: A police officer. RUPP: His female partner. SWEEZIE ZIPP: Owner of Hairs to You beauty parlor. AUNT LETICIA: Patricia s sister. KRAMER: A bill collector. Can be doubled by Stan D. Mann. EXTRAS: Disco dancers for Act II. COSTUME NOTES Unless noted, characters should dress in 70s period clothing. Colors were bright, lapels were wide, jeans often decorated, skirts were mini, and both men and women wore lots of jewelry and platform shoes. See special costume notes at the end of the script.

- 4 - SOUND EFFECTS Doorbell Instrumental disco music Vocal disco music (a song to which Gloria can lip-sync) Phone ringing Screams Footsteps Banging followed by a crash Thwack (board hitting something hard) Voice on answering machine SYNOPSIS OF SCENES ACT I Scene 1: The great room, a summer afternoon, 1975. Scene 2: The same, that evening at seven. Scene 3: The same, the following night. ACT II Scene 1: The same, the following morning. Scene 2: The same, a few minutes later. Scene 3: A hallway in the house, played before the curtain; that night. Scene 4: The great room, the following night. NOTE The set design and props list are located in the back of script.

- 5 - ACT I Scene 1 (AT RISE: PATRICIA and MISS SNIVEL stand near the window with fabric swatches. PERKINS is on phone. MISS GRUNDY sits primly on chair taking notes.) PERKINS: I m very sorry, but Mrs. Smitherton-Smatherton is not at home. I m very sorry. Sir, you needn t be so persistent. She won t be at home to you anytime in the near future! (PERKINS hangs up.) PATRICIA: (Moving to PERKINS, with a characteristic British accent.) Oh, dear, Perkins... which one was that? PERKINS: The heating people, Madame. PATRICIA: (Nervously.) What did they want? PERKINS: What they all want. Their money. PATRICIA: Did you tell them Mr. Mann pays all my bills? PERKINS: I told them that last month and the month before that. (DOORBELL RINGS.) PERKINS: (Continued.) Excuse me, Madame. (HE EXITS SR.) MISS SNIVEL: So, you decided which you want for the new drapes, Smithy? MISS GRUNDY: It s Mrs. Smitherton-Smatherton to you! MISS SNIVEL: I can t say that with gum in my mouth! PATRICIA: Oh, it s quite all right. Which do you prefer, Miss Grundy? MISS GRUNDY: I prefer the more conservative blue. Oranges and avocados belong in a salad, not the drapes! MISS SNIVEL: But ya know, orange and avocado are the in colors.

- 6 - MISS GRUNDY: Being in has never been one of my concerns, young lady. MISS SNIVEL: I can tell! You oughta try to get a new perfume, lady! MISS GRUNDY: I beg your pardon! MISS SNIVEL: That stuff you got on reeks! MISS GRUNDY: I m not wearing perfume. MISS SNIVEL: Uh oh! MISS GRUNDY: I m cleaning a spot off this blouse, if it s any business of yours. MISS SNIVEL: I just thought PATRICIA: I have to agree with Miss Grundy. I do like the blue. MISS SNIVEL: You sure? I mean you get these curtains and then a nice orange shag carpet, a couple of macramé plant holders hanging from the ceiling and you ve got yourself a real nice pad here, lady. PATRICIA: I m not ready for that much of a makeover. MISS SNIVEL: C mon! This is the seventies! You gotta get with it! PATRICIA: Oh, dear... each decade is so much harder to get with than the previous one. MISS SNIVEL: Okay, okay, go with the blue. It ain t bad. A bit square, but this place is kinda square, if you know what I mean. (JANICE ENTERS SR holding clipboard. PERKINS follows.) JANICE: I don t care if she s busy! PERKINS: I m sorry, Madame, but this woman insisted -- JANICE: You bet I insisted! PATRICIA: How do you do. I m Patricia Smitherton- Smatherton. JANICE: Just the lady I want to see. MISS GRUNDY: I ll show you out, Miss Snivel. JANICE: You owe our company fifteen hundred dollars. PATRICIA: Oh, dear... Perkins? PERKINS: It s the Merry Maids, Madame. MISS SNIVEL: You guys got Robin Hood on your truck, right?

- 7 - JANICE: That s right. MISS SNIVEL: And you clean this place? That must be a fulltime job! JANICE: For which we haven t been paid! PATRICIA: I don t understand. Mr. Mann is my business manager and he s always been so prompt with the bills. JANICE: We haven t received a payment since March. MISS SNIVEL: Look, lady, you want Daffy Drapes to make you some new curtains, you d better come up with some cash first. Give us a call! (MISS SNIVEL EXITS SR.) JANICE: (HER hand out.) My money? PATRICIA: Well, yes, I ll write you a check. Miss Grundy, my checkbook? MISS GRUNDY: Shouldn t you check with Mr. Mann first? PATRICIA: If we keep the Merry Maids waiting any longer, they won t be very merry. JANICE: You got that right. (MISS GRUNDY hands PATRICIA the checkbook. Patricia writes check as phone RINGS.) PERKINS: Smitherton-Smatherton residence. No, I m sorry, Madame is indisposed. The disposal company? I m sorry, but you ll have to check with Mr. Mann, our hello? Hello? PATRICIA: Here you are. JANICE: Thanks, and if you ever need a cleaning service again, don t call the Merry Maids. Call the Scabby Scrubbers. (MISS GRUNDY escorts JANICE out SR.) PERKINS: Madame, if I may say so, I believe something is rotten in Denmark. PATRICIA: I don t see how. My late husband s investments have been doing splendidly according to the quarterly reports.

End of Freeview Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing http://www.histage.com/playdetails.asp?pid=1691 Eldridge Publishing, a leading drama play publisher since 1906, offers more than a thousand full-length plays, one-act plays, melodramas, holiday plays, religious plays, children's theatre plays and musicals of all kinds. For more than a hundred years, our family-owned business has had the privilege of publishing some of the finest playwrights, allowing their work to come alive on stages worldwide. We look forward to being a part of your next theatrical production. Eldridge Publishing... for the start of your theatre experience!