UNCANNY VALLEY BY THOMAS GIBBONS

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UNCANNY VALLEY BY THOMAS GIBBONS DRAMATISTS PLAY SERVICE INC.

UNCANNY VALLEY Copyright 2015, Thomas Gibbons All Rights Reserved CAUTION: Professionals and amateurs are hereby warned that performance of UNCANNY VALLEY is subject to payment of a royalty. It is fully protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America, and of all countries covered by the International Copyright Union (including the Dominion of Canada and the rest of the British Commonwealth), and of all countries covered by the Pan-American Copyright Convention, the Universal Copyright Convention, the Berne Convention, and of all countries with which the United States has reciprocal copyright relations. All rights, including without limitation professional/amateur stage rights, motion picture, recitation, lecturing, public reading, radio broadcasting, television, video or sound recording, all other forms of mechanical, electronic and digital reproduction, transmission and distribution, such as CD, DVD, the Internet, private and file-sharing networks, information storage and retrieval systems, photocopying, and the rights of translation into foreign languages are strictly reserved. Particular emphasis is placed upon the matter of readings, permission for which must be secured from the Author s agent in writing. The English language stock and amateur stage performance rights in the United States, its territories, possessions and Canada for UNCANNY VALLEY are controlled exclusively by DRAMATISTS PLAY SERVICE, INC., 440 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10016. No professional or nonprofessional performance of the Play may be given without obtaining in advance the written permission of DRAMATISTS PLAY SERVICE, INC., and paying the requisite fee. Inquiries concerning all other rights should be addressed to the Susan Gurman Agency, 14 Penn Plaza, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10122-1701. Attn: Susan Gurman. SPECIAL NOTE Anyone receiving permission to produce UNCANNY VALLEY is required to give credit to the Author(s) as sole and exclusive Author(s) of the Play on the title page of all programs distributed in connection with performances of the Play and in all instances in which the title of the Play appears, including printed or digital materials for advertising, publicizing or otherwise exploiting the Play and/or a production thereof. Please see your production license for font size and typeface requirements. Be advised that there may be additional credits required in all programs and promotional material. Such language will be listed under the Additional Billing section of production licenses. It is the licensee s responsibility to ensure any and all required billing is included in the requisite places, per the terms of the license. SPECIAL NOTE ON SONGS AND RECORDINGS For performances of copyrighted songs, arrangements or recordings mentioned in these Plays, the permission of the copyright owner(s) must be obtained. Other songs, arrangements or recordings may be substituted provided permission from the copyright owner(s) of such songs, arrangements or recordings is obtained; or songs, arrangements or recordings in the public domain may be substituted. 2

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The playwright gratefully acknowledges the following for help in the development of this play: InterAct Theatre (Seth Rozin, Producing Artistic Director); PlayPenn (Paul Meshejian, Artistic Director); and TACT/The Actors Company Theatre, NYC. 3

UNCANNY VALLEY was produced in a rolling world premiere, as part of the National New Play Network s Continued Life of New Plays program, by the following theaters: UNCANNY VALLEY was produced by Contemporary American Theater Festival in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, opening on July 11, 2014. It was directed by Tom Dugdale; the set design was by Jesse Dreikosen; the lighting design was by John Ambrosone; the costume design was by Therese Bruck; the sound design was by Elisheba Ittoop; the dramaturg was Adrienne Sowers; and the stage manager was Cat Wallis. The cast was as follows: CLAIRE... Barbara Kingsley JULIAN... Alex Podulke This production moved to 59E59 Theater in New York City, opening on October 2, 2014. The cast and production team were the same with the following exception: The stage manager was Lori M. Doyle. UNCANNY VALLEY was produced by InterAct Theatre Company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, opening on April 8, 2015. It was directed by Seth Rozin; the set design was by Nick Embree; the lighting design was by Peter Whinnery; the costume design was by Susan Smythe; the sound design was by Christopher Colucci; the dramaturg was Kittson O Neill; and the stage manager was Tom Helmer. The cast was as follows: CLAIRE... Sally Mercer JULIAN... Frank X 4

UNCANNY VALLEY was produced by San Diego REPertory Theatre in San Diego, California, opening on April 18, 2015. It was directed by Jessica Bird; the set design was by Robin Sanford Roberts; the lighting design was by Kristin Swift Hayes; the costume design was by Michelle Hunt Souza; the sound design was by Kevin Anthenill; the dramaturgs were Dawn Moore and Danielle Ward; and the stage manager was Heather M. Brose. The cast was as follows: CLAIRE... Rosina Reynolds JULIAN... Nick Cagle UNCANNY VALLEY was produced by Capital Stage in Sacramento, California, opening on June 17, 2015. It was directed by Jonathan Williams; the set design was by Stephen C. Jones; the lighting design was by Ron Madonia; the costume design was by Mari Carson; the sound design was by Ed Lee; the literary manager was Stephanie Tucker; and the stage manager was Jack McDowell. The cast was as follows: CLAIRE... Jessica Powell JULIAN... Michael Patrick Wiles UNCANNY VALLEY was developed by TACT/The Actors Company Theatre, New York City. 5

CHARACTERS CLAIRE a neuroscientist, seventy years old. JULIAN an artificial human in his mid-thirties. PLACE Claire s office. TIME The not-distant future. NOTES Each scene should be followed by a blackout, as brief as practicable. The play should be performed without an intermission if possible. Clothing and furniture, for the most part, should be as they appear today. The design should gesture at the future without being ostentatiously futuristic. The cell phone and tablet in the play will have been superseded; I ve included them for convenience, but other possibilities may work. There are no restrictions on race or ethnicity for either character. 6

We will be there when the brass head speaks. Warren S. McCulloch, Where Is Fancy Bred?

UNCANNY VALLEY Scene 1 Claire s office. A wooden desk and chair. On the desk are a lamp, a computer, a box of tissues, a few pens, and various papers. Nearby is a coat rack on which hang a briefcase, scarf, and coat. A large carpet covers most of the floor. A door upstage. A bookcase holds various objects: a flute, a phrenologist s head with the mental regions mapped, an artificial female head, several framed photographs. In one corner is a floor lamp. Upstage, sunlight streams in through a curtained window. Hanging on one wall are two framed diplomas. The other walls display more photographs and a couple of small paintings. Claire sits in a chair facing a richly-carved antique wooden table a few feet away. Seventy years old, she is dressed in tasteful, muted clothing. On top of the table is a black rectangular base three or four inches high. The base supports Julian, an artificial human consisting of a head, neck, and shoulders. The neck and shoulders are clothed in an open-collared shirt. Julian s head is male, lifelike, indistinguishable from a person s. He has the appearance of being in his early thirties. His hair is moderately long and dark. His eyes are closed. Claire gazes at him for a few moments, then speaks. 9

CLAIRE. Open your eyes, Julian. (Julian opens his eyes.) Blink. (Julian blinks his eyes. From now on, he blinks normally.) Open your mouth. (Julian opens his mouth wide, then closes it.) Raise your eyebrows. (Julian raises his eyebrows, then lowers them.) Smile. (Julian smiles. Claire smiles back and announces brightly:) We begin! Scene 2 CLAIRE. Turn left, then right. (Julian turns his head to the left. He turns it to the right. He returns to his original position.) Watch me, then try it again. (Claire turns her head left, right, and back in one continuous, fluid movement. Julian performs the same movement smoothly.) Good. Now let s put everything together. (Pause.) You ve just entered a crowded room. There s a gathering of some kind a party or reception. You scan the room, looking for anyone you know. Then an old friend approaches me whom you haven t seen in a while. You raise your eyebrows in recognition. You smile. You open your mouth to greet me. (Pause.) Convince me. 10

UNCANNY VALLEY by Thomas Gibbons 1M, 1W Drawing on current research in artificial intelligence and robotics, UNCANNY VALLEY charts the relationship between Claire, a neuroscientist, and Julian, a nonbiological human. As Julian is born a few body parts at a time over the course of the play, Claire teaches him how to be as human as possible: mirroring people s speech, engaging in small-talk, playing a musical instrument. Their deepening friendship and Julian s growing humanity lead to the revelations of an unhealed sorrow in Claire s personal life and, ultimately, the purpose for which Julian has been created. UNCANNY VALLEY explores the painful divide between creator and creation, the inherent unpredictability of consciousness, and how we are redefining what it means to be human in the twenty-first century. cerebrally challenging Gibbons creates a fascinating scenario. The questions the play raises can, for instance, a robot s consciousness attain a level of sophistication that qualifies as sentience? compel one to consider whether like the Tin Man, a manufactured being might actually someday possess a heart. until the very last blackout, we remain tantalized by the mystery of what courses through Julian s circuitry. The Washington Post Thomas Gibbons s futuristic two-hander UNCANNY VALLEY [is] a techno take on the Pinocchio story: [Julian] is only a simulated human, and there may be a void where his ethical compass ought to be. But we re sort of rooting for him just the same. The New York Times [A] riveting exploration of robotics and the relationship between the creator and the creation The reversals and inversions explored in UNCANNY VALLEY play tricks with your head when Claire goes into clipped professional mode, in contrast, Julian becomes touchingly human. But what does that mean? Is feeling and emotion what makes us human? Or is it the act of creation to take an idea, a divine spark and make it real? DCTheatreScene.com Also by Thomas Gibbons THE EXHIBITION DRAMATISTS PLAY SERVICE, INC.