Maisie and Grover Go to the Theatre 1. Maisie and Grover Go to the Theatre. Tony Vellela. Book Title. Author

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Transcription:

1 Maisie and Grover Go to the Theatre Tony Vellela Book Title Author

2 ArtAge supplies books, plays, and materials to older performers around the world. Directors and actors have come to rely on our 30+ years of experience in the field to help them find useful materials and information that makes their productions stimulating, fun, and entertaining. ArtAge s unique program has been featured in Wall Street Journal, LA Times, Chicago Tribune, American Theatre, Time Magazine, Modern Maturity, on CNN, NBC, and in many other media sources. ArtAge is more than a catalog. We also supply information, news, and trends on our top-rated website, www.seniortheatre.com. We stay in touch with the field with our very popular enewsletter, Senior Theatre Online. Our President, Bonnie Vorenberg, is asked to speak at conferences and present workshops that supplement her writing and consulting efforts. We re here to help you be successful in Senior Theatre! We help older performers fulfill their theatrical dreams! ArtAge Publications Bonnie L. Vorenberg, President PO Box 19955 Portland OR 97280 503-246-3000 or 800-858-4998 bonniev@seniortheatre.com www.seniortheatre.com

3 NOTICE Copyright: This play is fully protected under the Copyright Laws of the United States of America, Canada, and all other countries of the Universal Copyright Convention. The laws are specific regarding the piracy of copyrighted materials. Sharing the material with other organizations or persons is prohibited. Unlawful use of a playwright's work deprives the creator of his or her rightful income. Cast Copies: Performance cast copies are required for each actor, director, stage manager, lighting and sound crew leader. Changes to Script: Plays must be performed as written. Any alterations, additions, or deletions to the text must be approved. Permission to Film: Rights to produce, film, or record, in whole or in part, in any medium or in any language, by any group amateur or professional, are fully reserved. Royalty: Royalties are due when you perform the play for any audience, paying or non-paying, professional or amateur. This includes readings, cuttings, scenes, and excerpts. The royalty for amateur productions of this show is posted online. It is payable two weeks prior to your production. Contact us for professional rates or other questions. Royalty fees are subject to change. Insert the following paragraph in your programs: Performed with special permission from ArtAge Publications Senior Theatre Resource Center at 800-858-4998, www.seniortheatre.com Copyright 2011

4 FREEVIEW WARNING COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL! MAISIE AND GROVER GO TO THE THEATER By Tony Vellela CAST MAISIE: A woman in her late 70s. GROVER: A man in his late 70s. Maisie and Grover, in their late 70s, wander into the theatre after the audience has been seated, and the lights have gone down. A dim spot, or area lighting, catches them as they make their way down the aisle and stand at the front. Grover is waving two tickets in the air. MAISIE: Give me those! You know you can't read printed numbers any more! (she snatches the tickets from him.) GROVER: What are you hinting at? MAISIE: Hinting at? Your eyes are shot! You can't tell sixes from threes from eights. Just this morning, I asked you to look up the phone number for the drug store and when I dialed what you told me, I got a tattoo parlor! I finally realized what kind of place it was when they asked me if I wanted a free rose, and when I said 'yes,' they said 'on your tit or on your butt?' GROVER: Phone company's tryin' to save money by printin' phone book numbers smaller - fit more to a page. MAISIE: Only thing getting smaller is your brain. Now, let's see here...(looks at tickets.)

5 GROVER: What're we even doin' at a play anyways? A play for corn's sake! MAISIE: I already told you, just after you ran the car over the rosemary at the side of the house. GROVER: Rosemary who? MAISIE: The herb. GROVER: I ran over two people? Who are Rosemary and Herb? MAISIE: My mistake. They got away. I already told you - the tickets are a gift for our wedding anniversary from the kids. GROVER: But a play!! MAISIE: It's their clumsy way of getting us out of the house while they set up the surprise party. When we get back, they'll all be there. GROVER: Oh, hell. All of them? Even June Anne's latest husband, that...termite salesman? MAISIE: He don't sell termites. He sells the stuff that kills termites. GROVER: Maybe he'll test some of it on himself. MAISIE: Speaking of little pests, I need to talk to you. GROVER: Me? A pest? MAISIE: Yes, you. A pest. The best pest. World-class. Once we get home, and the party gets going, don't keep takin' bites of stuff then spittin' them back into your napkin. People see that, they give me this 'can't you do anything with him? kinda look! GROVER: Yeah? Well, don't you follow me around tellin' me not to suck on my ice. I'm 79 years old - I'll suck on anything comes my way. MAISIE: Grover, the kids and grandkids organized this party to celebrate our sixtieth anniversary, and before I let you ruin it, I'd sooner dance naked at the

6 church picnic. Now, close up those Polident choppers of yours before I glue 'em shut. GROVER: You're right, darlin'. I don't wanna go messin' things up. Is that all? MAISIE: Well... matter of fact, no. Tomorow morning, after... here. Lemme fix that. (she pulls one suspender away from his shirt and smoothes out shirt and collar.) Tomorrow, after everybody's gone, and we're alone... GROVER: Yes, dear? MAISIE: I want a... di-vorce. (she pronounces it dee-vorce, accenting the first syllable. She lets suspender go, and it snaps hard against his chest, nearly knocking him over backward.) GROVER: Whaaa? You wanna... howzat again? MAISIE: A di-vorce. It's over, Grover. Over. (she looks at him closely.) C'mere, c'mere. You're collar's messed up. (he instinctively listens, walks closer, and she fixes his collar.) Now. All set. GROVER: All set? Didn't you just say...? Oh, I know. You said you want a sea horse. MAISIE: A sea horse? Who do I look like -- Esther Williams? You sure ain't no Fernando Montalban. GROVER: A di-vorce? But, why... sixty years of marriage and now you... after all this time, how do you figure that... MAISIE: (she whips a pocket calculator out of her bodice.) Here's how I figure, Fernando. (calculating.) We have been married...sixty years. That's 21,900 days... and nights. Now - if you take away fourteen weeks each for the time leading up to the kids being born, eleven days when you was in the hospital having your bladder flushed, and the time I went with the Ladies' Auxiliary to Indianapolis to see Englebert Humperdink - the Big Humper! - that comes to... 502 days... and nights apart. That means, Grover McDonald, that I have 'experienced' sweating and sliding and moaning and huffing and groaning and puffing and teasing and squeezing and pumping and even, yes, humping - lying on my back, staring at that same bedroom ceiling... 21,398 nights - with the same man! Phew! Don't

7 know about you, Grover, but it started to get kinda monotonous about evening number forty-two, and it's been downhill ever since. It's time for a change! GROVER: A change? What's wrong? MAISIE: Have you been sniffin' the Vicks Vapo-Rub? If I stood here and counted out everything that's wrong, I'd be here 'til Kraft runs outa things to smother with Velvetta. GROVER: Oh, yeah? Well, you're no bargain yourself. Always treatin' me like I can't take carea myself. MAISIE: You still boil two quarts of water to make one cup of Instant Sanka. You still lose a pair of clean socks between the dresser and the bed. And you still... GROVER: Me? What about you? Every morning, since we bought the Motorola, while I'm havin' my Sanka in the recliner, you got that Today show on. Who gives two hoots what the weather is in Kokomo? Who gives even ONE hoot what new movie Bruce Willis is in? MAISIE: There's a real man! GROVER: A real man? Does he have to listen to those talk shows of yours? Doctor Pill? Oprah Chin-free? MAISIE: Learned a lot watching those shows. Changed my life. Women today stickin' up for themselves every place. In the courtroom. In the boardroom. GROVER: Belong in the bedroom. Women fools. MAISIE: You're the fool, if you think I'm gonna throw what's left of my life at the feet of some -- insensitive male. END OF FREEVIEW You ll want to read and perform this show!