ASSAULT TOAST A COMEDY DUET

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ASSAULT TOAST A COMEDY DUET by Bradley Walton Brooklyn Publishers, LLC Toll-Free 888-473-8521 Fax 319-368-8011 Web www.brookpub.com

Copyright 2012 by Bradley Walton All rights reserved CAUTION: Professionals & amateurs are hereby warned that Assault Toast is subject to a royalty. This play is fully protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America, Canada, the British Commonwealth and all other countries of the Copyright Union. RIGHTS RESERVED: All rights to this play are strictly reserved, including professional and amateur stage performance rights. Also reserved are: motion pictures, recitation, lecturing, public reading, radio broadcasting, television, video and the rights of translation into non-english languages. PERFORMANCE RIGHTS & ROYALTY PAYMENTS: All amateur and stock performance rights to this play are controlled exclusively by Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. No amateur or stock production groups or individuals may perform this play without securing license and royalty arrangements in advance from Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. Questions concerning other rights should be addressed to Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. If necessary, we will contact the author or the author s agent. PLEASE NOTE that royalty fees for performing this play can be located online at Brooklyn Publishers, LLC website (http://www.brookpub.com). Royalty fees are subject to change without notice. Professional and stock fees will be set upon application in accordance with your producing circumstances. Any licensing requests and inquiries relating to amateur and stock (professional) performance rights should be addressed to Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. You will find our contact information on the following page. Royalty of the required amount must be paid, whether the play is presented for charity or profit and whether or not admission is charged. Only forensics competitions are exempt from this fee. AUTHOR CREDIT: All groups or individuals receiving permission to produce this play must give the author(s) credit in any and all advertisement and publicity relating to the production of this play. The author s billing must appear directly below the title on a separate line where no other written matter appears. The name of the author(s) must be at least 50% as large as the title of the play. No person or entity may receive larger or more prominent credit than that which is given to the author(s). PUBLISHER CREDIT: Whenever this play is produced, all programs, advertisements, flyers or other printed material must include the following notice: Produced by special arrangement with Brooklyn Publishers, LLC (http://www.brookpub.com) TRADE MARKS, PUBLIC FIGURES, & MUSICAL WORKS: This play may include references to brand names or public figures. All references are intended only as parody or other legal means of expression. This play may contain suggestions for the performance of a musical work (either in part or in whole). Brooklyn Publishers, LLC have not obtained performing rights of these works. The direction of such works is only a playwright s suggestion, and the play producer should obtain such permissions on their own. The website for the U.S. copyright office is http://www.copyright.gov. COPYING from the book in any form (in whole or excerpt), whether photocopying, scanning recording, videotaping, storing in a retrieval system, or by any other means, is strictly forbidden without consent of Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. TO PERFORM THIS PLAY 1. Royalty fees must be paid to Brooklyn Publishers, LLC before permission is granted to use and perform the playwright s work. 2. Royalty of the required amount must be paid each time the play is performed, whether the play is presented for charity or profit and whether or not admission is charged. 3. When performing one-acts or full-length plays, enough playbooks must be purchased for cast and crew. 4. Copying or duplication of any part of this script is strictly forbidden. 5. Any changes to the script are not allowed without direct authorization by Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. 6. Credit to the author and publisher is required on all promotional items associated with this play s performance(s). 7. Do not break copyright laws with any of our plays. This is a very serious matter and the consequences can be quite expensive. We must protect our playwrights, who earn their living through the legal payment of script and performance royalties. 8. If you have questions concerning performance rules, contact us by the various ways listed below: Toll-free: 888-473-8521 Fax: 319-368-8011 Email: customerservice@brookpub.com Copying, rather than purchasing cast copies, and/or failure to pay royalties is a federal offense. Cheating us and our wonderful playwrights in this manner will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Please support theatre and follow federal copyright laws.

ASSAULT TOAST by Bradley Walton CHARACTERS: ANDIE / ANDY and CARY / CARRIE. They are teenage siblings. PROPERTIES: Table, toaster containing a slice of toast, and tools. PRODUCTION HISTORY: Assault Toast premiered April 15, 2012 at Muhlenberg Lutheran Church in Harrisonburg, Virginia with Kylie Britt as ANDIE and Merrill Harmison as CARRIE. AT RISE: CARY is hunched over a table, working on a toaster with some tools. ANDIE enters. Props can be mimed if being performed for competition. ANDIE: Cary, what are you doing? CARY: Working on the toaster. ANDIE: Is it broken? CARY: No. ANDIE: Then why are you working on it? CARY: I m improving it. ANDIE: Toasters toast. It s a pretty straightforward concept. How do you improve a toaster? CARY: I m modifying this one for home security and defense. ANDIE: What? CARY: Home security. You know in case somebody breaks into the house. This toaster will help keep our family safe. Along with my comic books and your stamp collection and all those old Star Wars figures dad keeps hidden under his side of the bed. ANDIE: What s wrong with locking the door? CARY: Nothing. But if somebody really wanted your stamps, they wouldn t let a little thing like a locked door stop them. ANDIE: There s also these things called alarm systems. CARY: Yeah, somebody breaks into the house and the alarm goes off. Big whoop. What s that going to do? Annoy them to death? ANDIE: Maybe it gives them an incentive to get out of the house cause, y know, the police are going to be coming? CARY: How long will that take? Couple of minutes, at least. Plenty of time to grab the action figures and go. Do you know how upset dad would get about that? The one Canadian figure alone is worth a couple hundred bucks. ANDIE: And your solution is the toaster? CARY: Not merely the toaster, no. ANDIE: No? CARY: No. ANDIE: What else? CARY: Think, Andie. What comes out of a toaster? ANDIE: Toast? CARY: Exactly. ANDIE: And waffles? CARY: You should ve quit while you were ahead. ANDIE: What s wrong with waffles? CARY: Nothing. But this isn t about them. It s about toast. ANDIE: Toast. CARY: Assault toast. ANDIE: Assault toast? CARY: Right. ANDIE: You plan to keep our home and belongings safe with assault toast? CARY: Sure, why not? ANDIE: Well, let me think how about it s stupid? CARY: That s an incredibly narrow-minded view. ANDIE: Your narrow-minded is my practical. CARY: Your practicality would have somebody selling your stamps in an online auction before you even had a chance to bid on them yourself. ANDIE: I wouldn t bid on my own stuff if somebody stole it and tried to auction it off! I d call the cops! CARY: But the beauty of assault toast is that you don t need to call the cops to get your stuff back. With assault toast, all you need the cops for is to collect the unconscious bodies! ANDIE: I think you re maybe a little too excited about this. CARY: I think you should open your mind more to the possibilities of things, like I do. ANDIE: I think the door to your mind is off its hinges, and I never want anyone to confuse me with you. CARY: I totally wish somebody would try to break in here right now so I could test this baby out. ANDIE: Would you like me to try to break in, Cary? CARY: No. You could really get hurt. ANDIE: I could also get hurt flossing my teeth too hard. CARY: You re not taking this seriously, are you? ANDIE: It s difficult.

CARY: Okay. Fine. If you want to take your life into your own hands to prove me wrong, go right ahead. ANDIE: What do you want me to do? CARY: Break into the house! ANDIE: How do you want me to break in? CARY: I don t know. I m not a burglar! ANDIE: How can you plan a defense against burglars without trying to think like a burglar? CARY: By imbuing an ordinary toaster with assault toast capabilities. ANDIE: Did you seriously just use the word imbuing? For real? CARY: What s wrong with the word imbuing? ANDIE: Nobody says imbuing in a normal conversation! CARY: This isn t a normal conversation! ANDIE: That s right it s not! Because we re talking about assault toast! How could I have possibly forgotten? CARY: Are you insulting my assault toast? ANDIE: Maybe just a little. CARY: Oh yeah? Well, how do you like this? (CARY pushes a button on the toaster. Nothing happens.) ANDIE: It s not plugged in. CARY: I added a battery backup. ANDIE: So something was supposed to happen? CARY: (trying to bluff) Of course not. If I d meant for something to happen, it would have happened. ANDIE: If you have to push the button for it to work, what good does it do when everybody s asleep or nobody s home? CARY: It s a prototype, okay? This is the Mark I version. When we get to the later versions, that s when I start adding the computer and the lasers and stuff. ANDIE: You re going to hook the toaster up to a computer? CARY: Sure. ANDIE: Were you going to buy a computer for that? CARY: No, I was going to use the one we already have. ANDIE: That s my computer. CARY: I use it, too. ANDIE: It s my computer that I let you use. That s different from it being your computer or even our computer. CARY: You let me use it for games and homework and stuff. Why wouldn t you let me use it for this? ANDIE: Homework and games and stuff is not the same thing as hooking the computer up to a toaster. CARY: Are you scared I ll break it or something? ANDIE: That s exactly what I m scared of. CARY: Andie, do you have that little faith in me? ANDIE: You can t even get your stupid assault toaster to work! I mean, I assume it s supposed to shoot out steel-hard toast at an incredibly high velocity, ricochet it off the ceiling and walls, and knock its target unconscious but it doesn t even pop out a piece of toast like a normal toaster! CARY: How did you know what it was supposed to do? ANDIE: What else would it do? CARY: Have you been digging through my files on your computer? ANDIE: No! CARY: Do you know about the poodle and the grocery store discount cards? ANDIE: What? CARY: You do! Oh my gosh! I can t believe this! (CARY picks up the toaster, turns it upside down, and starts shaking it. The ACTOR should hold his fingers over the slots to keep the toast inside from falling out.) I ll teach you to invade my privacy! ANDIE: What are you doing? CARY: Trying to get the toast out of this thing. ANDIE: It doesn t seem to be working. CARY: Stupid toast! ANDIE: Be careful. CARY: Don t tell me how to extract the ammunition from my lethal instrument of doom! ANDIE: If you keep shaking it like that, you re going to hit yourself in the head and wind up with a concussion. CARY: You re right. Here. You do it. (Holds out toaster to ANDIE.) ANDIE: Me? CARY: Yeah. ANDIE: Why? CARY: I m hoping that you ll hurt yourself. ANDIE: You can t get the toaster to hurt me, so you re hoping that I ll hurt myself with the toaster? CARY: Right. ANDIE: (taking the toaster) Why am I doing this? CARY: Because I m pathetic and you feel sorry for me. ANDIE: This is very true. (Gives the toaster a gentle shake.) CARY: Bring it up closer to your face.

ANDIE: Bite me. CARY: If I was going to bite you, I wouldn t have handed you the toaster to hurt yourself with. ANDIE: (Taps the bottom of the toaster and the toast falls out.) Here. (Hands the toast to CARY.) That s some weird-looking toast. And it s cold. Why is it cold? CARY: Never mind. Just hold still while I throw this at you. ANDIE: It s a piece of toast. Even if it s burned to a hard crisp, it s not gonna hurt me. (CARY throws the piece of toast at ANDIE.) Ow! That hurt! CARY: Told you so. ANDIE: No piece of toast is that heavy! What d you do to it? CARY: Soaked it in diet soda and put it in the freezer. ANDIE: Diet soda? CARY: Yeah. So if I ate some, it wouldn t make me fat. And it s not as sticky. ANDIE: Why? CARY: To give it enough heft to do some damage. ANDIE: So it s not even real toast. CARY: It s assault toast. It s special! I mean, use your common sense. END OF FREE PREVIEW