ANTI-DEPRESSANTS TEN-MINUTE PLAY

Similar documents
ANTI-DEPRESSANTS. By Jeff Weisman

THE GREAT IRONY HEIST

B-I-N-G OH! TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Jonathan Markella. Copyright MMXIV by Jonathan Markella All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

NO IT ISN T. By Joe Musso. Copyright MMVII by Joe Musso All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

THE CELEBRITY. By Paul D. Patton. Copyright MMVII by Paul D. Patton All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

ABBOTT AND COSTELLO TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Jonathan Mayer

DRIVER S ED TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Steven Schutzman. Copyright MMV by Steven Schutzman All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

ADAM By Krista Boehnert

ROMEO & WHAT S HER NAME

THE ELEVENTH MINUTE TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Marika Barnett. Copyright MMV by Marika Barnett All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

FRUIT SKINS TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Amanda Burris. Copyright MMXII by Amanda Burris All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

CANDI WITH AN I By Macee Binns

A SMALL, SIMPLE KINDNESS By Bradley Walton

A PRESCRIPTION FOR EMBARRASSMENT By Jerry Rabushka

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK ADDICT

TIS NOT ME SHE LOVES

THE ISOLATION BOOTH TEN-MINUTE PLAY

DEVIOUS DATING By David Burton

PERFECT STRANGERS TEN MINUTE PLAY. By Peter Snoad. Copyright MMXII by Peter Snoad All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

BROOKLYN PUBLISHERS, LLC

THREE LITTLE WORDS By Krista Boehnert

SERIAL STAR A TEN MINUTE MONOLOGUE. By Deborah Karczewski

LESSON PLAN. By Carl L. Williams

Clint Snyder Big Dog Publishing

GHOSTS By Bradley Walton

THE TICK OF THE CLOCK By Ron Dune

ART IMITATES LIFE. By Mike McCafferty. Copyright MMIX by Mike McCafferty All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

MY DAILY LIFE. By Tom Akers. Copyright MM by Tom Akers All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

HOW TO MEET MY MOTHER

DRINKING UP HOT. By Jerry Rabushka

THE SCRIPT A COMEDY IN ONE ACT. By Kamron Klitgaard. Copyright MMVIII by Kamron Klitgaard All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

A ten-minute comedy inspired by Aesop's Fable The Ant and the Chrysalis by Nicole B. Adkins SkyPilot Theatre Company Playwright-in-Residence

THE LIBRARIAN AND THE JOCK

HE WON T QUIT SMOKING

SHAMELESS SELF-PROMOTION By Leon Kalayjian

THE TEXT ON THE DRIVE HOME By Bradley Walton

SO YOU WANNA MARRY MY DAUGHTER

ABBOTT AND COSTELLO By Jonathan Mayer

ASSAULT TOAST A COMEDY DUET

THE GLASS SLIPPER By Claudia Haas

HO HO HO. By Joseph Sorrentino

HOW I GOT A RHINOCEROS INTO THE ELEVATOR AT SAKS By Kelly Meadows

THANK YOU FOR TEXTING By Camila Vasquez

NO MORE TEEN STEREOTYPES By Kelly Meadows

Look Mom, I Got a Job!

A WHOLE LATTE By Joe Salvatore

THE CASHIER IN LANE 8 By Jerry Rabushka

THE BEST THANKSGIVING EVER

TODD AND BECKY. By Phil Olson. Copyright MMV by Phil Olson All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

PERFORMANCE RIGHTS AND ROYALTY PAYMENTS:

FRANK AND HARRY: A WALK IN THE WOODS By Joseph Sorrentino

I DON T WANT YOUR PITY I WANT YOUR BROCCOLI By Bradley Walton

TWO GUYS AND A BENCH TEN-MINUTE PLAY

I LIKE ART TEN-MINUTE PLAY

Little Jack receives his Call to Adventure

THE TICK OF THE CLOCK

SCAMILY. A One-Act Play. Kelly McCauley

DESTITUTE. By Bradley Walton

I DID IT ALL FOR THE SCISSORS By Bradley Walton

180 By Mike Shelton Copyright 2008

THANKS FOR NOTHING ANNE RICE By Jerry Rabushka

SO YOU WANNA MARRY MY DAUGHTER By Joseph Sorrentino

QUACK. By Patrick Gabridge

THE CHEKONSTINESTANISLAVEMEYERHOLDSKI METHOD By David J. LeMaster

WHEN BIRDS CRY By Mike Willis

Emerging Cocoon Order the complete book from

Book, Music and Lyrics by Michelle G. Reiff. Sample Script Pages

Worth Saving. Jeff Smith

LIFE JITTERS Dramatic Comedy Duet

THE BEST THANKSGIVING EVER By Monica Bauer

DUELING PHOBIAS By Brenda Cohen and Jonathan Mayer

The Caliph, Cupid, And The Clock

Clouded Thoughts by John Cosper

Merry Christmas / Happy Thanksgiving. Susan Jarrett

LADIES AT LUNCH. By Carol Woods. Performance Rights

The Love Potion Of Ikey Schoenstein

LOVE IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN MY HISTORY PAPER By Kelly Meadows

NEVER CALL ME A LADY By Rusty Harding

A short dramedy by Jeri Weiss

RED By Kelly Meadows

DITZIES By Deborah Karczewski

The Innkeeper s Dilemma Original Version

The Arms. Mark Brooks.

With This Ring. Calvin J Walker

NOT READY! A TEN MINUTE MONOLOGUE. By Kelly Meadows

OLD FLAME. Eléonore Guislin

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO GODOT? By Jonathan Dorf

GREEN EGGS AND HAMLET

FISHBOWL ONE ACT PLAY. By Donald Tongue. Copyright MMX by Donald Tongue All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

Sample Copy. Not For Distribution.

HOW I GOT MY SUPERPOWERS

WHEN AMOEBAS ATTACK By Jerry Rabushka

HO. HO. HO. TEN-MINUTE PLAY

(UN)COMFORTABLE SILENCE By DJ Sanders

Name of Playt. No Frills Airline. Dory Kaiser. Book Title. Author

WHY I HATE MY SISTER By Kelly Meadows

FOR OLD TIME S SAKE By David MacGregor

CAN T GET THERE FROM HERE

FORK IN THE ROAD. By Y YORK. Inspired by the Ninth Commandment by Y York. The Dramatic Publishing Company, Woodstock, Illinois

Clint Snyder Big Dog Publishing

Transcription:

ANTI-DEPRESSANTS TEN-MINUTE PLAY By Jeff Weisman Copyright MMVIII by All Rights Reserved Heuer Publishing LLC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa The writing of plays is a means of livelihood. Unlawful use of a playwright s work deprives the creator of his or her rightful income. The playwright is compensated on the full purchase price and the right of performance can only be secured through purchase of at least three (3) copies of this work. PERFORMANCES ARE LIMITED TO ONE VENUE FOR ONE YEAR FROM DATE OF PURCHASE. The possession of this script without direct purchase from the publisher confers no right or license to produce this work publicly or in private, for gain or charity. On all programs and advertising this notice must appear: "Produced by special arrangement with Heuer Publishing LLC of Cedar Rapids, Iowa." This dramatic work is fully protected by copyright. No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without permission of the publisher. Copying (by any means) or performing a copyrighted work without permission constitutes an infringement of copyright. The right of performance is not transferable and is strictly forbidden in cases where scripts are borrowed or purchased second hand from a third party. All rights including, but not limited to the professional, motion picture, radio, television, videotape, broadcast, recitation, lecturing, tabloid, publication, and reading are reserved. COPYING OR REPRODUCING ALL OR ANY PART OF THIS BOOK IN ANY MANNER IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN BY LAW. PUBLISHED BY HEUER PUBLISHING LLC P.O. BOX 248 CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA 52406 TOLL FREE (800) 950-7529 FAX (319) 368-8011

ANTI-DEPRESSANTS By Jeff Weisman CAST OF CHARACTERS (ONE MAN, ONE WOMAN) JAMES... Male. Age early 20s. Depressed student. MONICA... Female. Age mid 20s. Clothing store clerk. Production History: Anti-depressants premiered at the University of Iowa s 8 x 10 Festival, February 2008. - 2 -

SETTING: Waiting room at a therapist s office. A barebones waiting room. A few chairs, an old table, a small window. There are no decorations or anything with much life or color. The entrance door is offstage at stage right, and the patient room is offstage at stage left. AT RISE: JAMES sits in one of the chairs. He is reading, but is distraught by the weather as he periodically glances out the window. He has a grey bike helmet on the seat next to him, and holds a coffee cup. MONICA enters through the door at stage right wearing headphones. She wears brighter colored clothes, carries a coffee cup and seems generally carefree. MONICA: Hello. (JAMES glances up at her, and then immediately retreats back to his book. After some loud rustling, she settles into a chair opposite JAMES. She pulls out a camera, and starts looking through pictures. She makes a broad range of exaggerated and slightly obnoxious reactions to each photo. JAMES looks up from his book at her.) Oh... sorry. (No response. Pause.) My friend Susie had this wild party... anyways... I m sorry. JAMES sips his coffee. MONICA: Oh... a Starbucks fan too, I see. I probably just pulled in as you pulled out. JAMES: I doubt it. I rode my bicycle... except, now it s raining. MONICA: Don t you just love the rain? JAMES: What s to love? MONICA: It s just pretty... a beautiful imperfection. JAMES: I mean, it s cold and wet. I d rather it were eighty degrees and sunny. MONICA: That s no fun. That s like... being hopped up on a bunch of anti-depressants. - 3 -

JAMES: I guess... but what s wrong with that? MONICA: Oh, right. Therapist s office. (Laughs.) Is that why you re here? JAMES: Excuse me? MONICA: Are you actually depressed, or do you... you know... JAMES: What? MONICA: Just like to party. Wink, wink. JAMES: I m not sure I follow. MONICA: Here, let me show you. (She puts an exaggerated frown on her face, slouches in the chair, and says in a dead-pan voice.) I don t know where my life is going, doctor. I need something more than just anti-depressants... well, I guess maybe they will make me feel better. JAMES: You mean you re here for the drugs? MONICA: Duh... why else? JAMES: Actual uncertainty, depression, loneliness, the pressure to succeed, confusion, lack of interests or hobbies... the feeling that you have no place in the wor - MONICA: Hey, you re a pro at this. They ll probably just hand you the keys to the pharmacy. JAMES: Except, I don t want all those pills for recreational use. MONICA: Can t knock it till you try it. (Beat.) So which one of those is the reason you re here? JAMES: I don t know... all of them. MONICA: (Pause.) Would you mind if I came and sat next to you? JAMES: You may want to keep your distance, my parents say it s contagious when I act this way. MONICA: (While rising to sit next to him.) Honey, please. Who doesn t get grief from their rents? What are you drinking there anyways? JAMES: Coffee. Black coffee. MONICA: How boring. Here, try this. JAMES: That s OK - MONICA: It s a quadruple iced caramel machiatto with an extra pump of syrup. - 4 -

JAMES: I don t deserve anything sweet. MONICA: What is your deal, buzz-kill? Everybody deserves something sweet. JAMES: It s quite alright. Why is your drink in that cup anyway? Don t they usually put the iced drinks in the clear cups? MONICA: (Laughs.) It s a really funny story. Want to hear it? JAMES: Why not? MONICA: OK, so I was in this women rape and self-defense seminar for work. JAMES: OK... MONICA: And one of the sections was about improvising with what you have as weapons. Well, coffee was one of the things. Are you following? JAMES: Yeah, I m with you so far. MONICA: OK, well about a week after the seminar, I am walking down the street, drinking my machiatto and I feel somebody grab my shoulder. JAMES: Oh jeez... MONICA: So without thinking, I turn and throw my coffee in his face! JAMES: Jesus. MONICA: I know. JAMES: So you burned him pretty badly then? MONICA: No, I only drink iced coffee. See, I thought it was the acidity in the coffee that would eat away at his flesh. JAMES: (Pause.) Hmmm, so what happened? MONICA: He got wet and then stole my wallet. So now, I keep my iced coffee in a hot cup. I play the part to perfection. Here, watch. (She picks up the cup, fumbles it between her hands like it is scalding. She hesitates before taking a baby sip, as if it is too hot.) See? JAMES: That is... actually... JAMES lets out a slight laugh. - 5 -

MONICA: (Announcing.) He does laugh, ladies and gentlemen! (She laughs with him. Pause.) So are you in school still? JAMES: My last year, yeah. MONICA: What s your major? It s not psychology, I hope. JAMES: English, actually. MONICA: Oh mine, too. Well, it was, graduated in 03. JAMES: What do you do now? MONICA: I work at J. Crew. The one in the mall. JAMES: Oh. Well. That s... you kn - MONICA: Relax, I like it. Stress-free environment, discounts on clothing, new people everyday, and it gives me time to party. JAMES: Do you find it fulfilling? MONICA: Hmm... that fulfilling word is a tricky one. Be more specific. JAMES: Does it, I don t know... make your life worth living? MONICA: I think so, yeah. It s not a grind day in and day out like most jobs... life should be fun. JAMES: What about leaving your mark, or changing the world, or anything like that? MONICA: Doesn t interest me. JAMES: Isn t that a bit selfish? MONICA: Eh, I m fine with that. The world was screwed up when I got here, so I ll just leave it that way. I was raised not to tamper with things that weren t mine. JAMES: I was raised to be financially wealthy... MONICA: Shouldn t you be studying business or pre-med? JAMES: I was pre-med, actually. MONICA: Oh. What happened? JAMES: I wasn t happy, so I changed it. MONICA: Yet, here you are. (Laughs by herself. Pause.) Sorry. JAMES: It s OK. The English classes don t feel... ay... how do I... right. They don t feel right. MONICA: You don t enjoy them? JAMES: No, it s not that. In fact, I like them. MONICA: Well, that s good then. - 6 -

JAMES: No, it s not. I should be working hard, disciplining myself, feeling stressed, and thinking about my future. MONICA: That sounds miserable. JAMES: Exactly. And the problem is... I m not getting that. MONICA: Why would you want to be miserable? JAMES: To get a good job, why else? MONICA: Let me get this straight... you are miserable... because you don t feel miserable? JAMES: (Pause.) I guess I... never... MONICA: (Laughs.) Well, at least you can re-distribute the therapist fund into something a little more exotic! JAMES: God, what is wrong with me? Am I stupid... I really need to get my life togeth - MONICA: Stop it! You are doing it again. Just... find something every single day that makes you stop and think ahhh, life is good. JAMES: Yeah. But... MONICA: Hey, look at me. I m a retail clothing store cashier, but check out this smile. (She exaggerates her smile, and points at it. He involuntarily smiles back. Offstage voice.) Monica, we re ready for you! MONICA: Well, I have to go get my drugs, but listen, I want you to come out with some of my friends and I. JAMES: Why? Not to be rude or anything, but why would you want me... MONICA: You re easy to talk to. Plus, you could really use it. JAMES: Nah... I don t know if... MONICA: I won t take no for an answer. Here (She takes the sleeve of her coffee cup off and writes her number on it.) I m Monica. JAMES: Hi. James. MONICA: Call me this weekend, James... seriously. JAMES: OK. - 7 -

MONICA: Alright, time to get the game face on. (She frowns, hunches over, and gives out a whimper as she heads toward stage left. She stops.) Oh, hold this. It ll take away from my character. (He takes the coffee from her. She exits in her depressed character.) JAMES places her drink down, puts his bike helmet on. He reaches for his black coffee. Right before it reaches his lips, he stops, puts it down, and picks up the machiatto instead. He slowly raises it to his lips, and sips it. He closes his eyes and takes a euphoric deep breath. The lights fade. THE END - 8 -