I CAN DO THIS. Gary D. Rademan.

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I CAN DO THIS By Gary D. Rademan grademan@new.rr.com

2 FADE IN: EXT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - NIGHT The gray skies of a Milwaukee evening fade into the gray urban sprawl. The Hollywood Club, a rundown building outlined in pink and blue neon lighting, offers a splash of color at the corner of 26 th and State Street. Cars dot the patched parking lot. TWO MEN sit in an old rusted car. INT. PARKED CAR JACKSON (late 20s), serious beer gut, sits cramped behind the wheel. Beer in hand. A perpetual sneer mars his face. DWEEB CARSON (late 20s), a tall, thin man with wide glasses, sits shotgun. A plastic bottle of water cradles on his lap. Not many people here. You ready? It s early. Another minute. Okay? Hey man. How are you gonna hold it together? I can do this. Dennis fidgets. An OLD DRUNK slams the hood and screams unintelligible insults. Dennis and Mark watch him run off. Nice neighborhood. EXT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB NIGHT Mark and Dennis exit the car and head across the littered parking lot.

3 The club door has a handwritten sign taped to it: SCREENWRITER OPEN MIC NIGHT I can do this. My script is good. My best friend is here. I m all good. Mark holds the door. With a bow and a sweep of his arm, he motions for Dennis to enter the club. INT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB - NIGHT Dennis and Mark walk in the club and stop to survey. You ever see a club like this? Just like an old Miami Vice poster. My eyes hurt from all the pink and blue. Let s get a beer. That looks like where I ll be reading. Dennis points at the old wooden riser in a dark corner of the club. Another handwritten sign is taped to the microphone: SCREENWRITERS REGISTER AT BAR Mark and Dennis head to the bar. INT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB - THE BAR JOE (40s), a stocky bartender, waits to take their order. Damn. This bar top is sticky. I like it. Hey Joe, I ll have a tapper.

4 And I ll have ice and diet water. Clean glass please. JOE Bottled water diet enough for you? Dennis nods. What can you tell us about the lady screenwriters? Maarrk. What? A guy likes to look even if they won t let him touch. JOE (to Dennis) Name and script title. No fee, no prizes. So how long can I read? JOE Beth will explain it all when she starts up around 11 pm. Thanks man. Name s Dennis Carson. My script is called Deader. JOE Yeah I got it. The boys sit on their bar stools. From the rear, they look like a modern version of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Dweeb, are you sure you re gonna hold it together? I can do this.

5 So you keep saying. I wanted to be an artist... Mark sighs. He s probably heard it before. But my college professor told me I was long on technique and short on... talent. So now you re an accountant. Making big money. Quit whining. The nicest thing anybody ever said was At least that doesn t totally suck. So this is like payback, right? Yes. I mean no. I don t know. I am just afraid I ll suck at this too. INT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB - OFFSTAGE Several PEOPLE enter and sit at the small tables and chairs offstage. Mark sits calmly. Dennis fidgets in his chair. It s almost show time. I count ten other wannabes here. I can do this. You know, Dennis, you have been my best friend since the fourth grade. But I gotta tell you... Your short scripts suck!

6 Mark gulps his beer and places the empty glass on the table top. At the other tables, a head or two lean closer towards Mark and Dennis. No they don t. How can you be so sure? I checked off the Big Seven! And they are... Mark counts on his fingers. (CONT D) Dopey, Sleepy, Grumpy-- --Oh, very funny Snow White. The seven deadly sins of screenwriting are: Dennis starts moving from the waist up. A chair dance. Denis sways to an imaginary beat. (CONT D) (singsong) Don t annoy with ambiguity. Don t cramp the characters. Don t dis the dialogue. Don t forget the format. Don t grate the grammar. Don t stifle the story. The chair dance stops. Dennis takes a deep drink of his diet water for dramatic pause. Mark flips Dennis the finger. Mark smiles but doesn t mean it. And lastly, don t asphyxiate the audience.

7 Mark pats Dennis on the back. (CONT D) (mocking) And thank you for noting the nearly flawless alliteration. Thank you. No. Thank you. Nervous anymore? (smiling) You know, you ve been an ass your entire life. (unconvinced) And you re a wannabe. Don t add loser to it. Mark watches Dennis head for the stage. One of the WANNABES, (late teens), lanky and wearing a pullover hat, gets up from a nearby table and walks over to Mark. Hi. I m Dexter. Your guy seemed kind of nervous. He ll do fine. He s pumped up now. Mark glances around. No one else to talk to. That chair dance was max funny! Those seven deadly things he sang to you, are they like official or anything? I think they are. It s just how he remembers them. Your guy is in for a real roast for his first read.

8 INT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB - STAGE Yeah, I ll tell my guy you asked. Discarded scripts and empty beer cans clutter the corners of the stage. Dennis waits for his introduction. (early 20s), rail thin, slouches as she stands with the mic in hand. Beth walks slowly and barely acknowledges Dennis before stepping into the pink spotlight. Mark notices Beth is not unattractive. He smiles then tries a drunken wave at her. She can t see him because the spotlight shines in her eyes. (deadpan) Hello everyone. I m Beth. There are three rules for tonight. Rule number one is... WANNABE #1 You can read for five minutes. And rule number two is... WANNABE #2 Two people give feedback. One pro, one con. And rule number three is... All together now. AUDIENCE Be respectful! Wonderful. The small crowd settles down. I can do this.

9 Our first SW tonight is Dennis Carson, reading from his short screenplay Deader. (softly) Like this place could be any deader. Dennis steps into the pink spotlight. Beth nods at Dennis before listlessly walking offstage. Dennis pulls at his collar and reads his script. Almost five minutes later. (quavering) Fade in. Exterior, Old West Graveyard, dusk. The gravedigger, DIGGER (20s)... (stronger)...father Mack s odd looking ring reflects in the candle s light. Fade out. The end. Nothing from the audience. Dennis looks hopeful and can t see Mark. Broken, Dennis starts the walk of shame back to his seat. Then a single clap for a few moments. Gradually, more claps until everyone near the stage claps. A confused Dennis finds Mark. Dweeb, they were hazing you! Dennis finally gets it and flashes a smile so wide it threatens to cut his thin face in half. His smile fades as he sits down. This isn t over yet. Anybody want to do the con review? CLIFF (30s), an immaculately dressed man with a pointed beard, stands at his table and walks to the stage. The audience makes some noise for Cliff.

10 What a surprise. It s Cliff. CLIFF I must say, I m glad your short was really short. The audience chuckles. Cliff smiles with overly white teeth before resuming. CLIFF (CONT D) You have a terrible flashback and flat characters that play ping pong with clunky dialogue. And just how many times can you say deader? The audience laughs a little bit louder now. Oh man! Cliff you radically ripped him a new one! I wonder if throwing up would be against rule number three. Cliff smiles again, waves and leaves the stage. The crowd makes some more noise. Mark and Dennis cross their arms in protest. Anybody want do the pro review? Again, silence from the audience. Hey man, I ll do the goody two shoes review. Dexter leaps on stage and grabs the mic. When he speaks, Dexter bobs his head and moves his arms in rhythm to his phrasing. Hey everybody. It s me Dexter. My next script is called Better Than Deader. The wannabes hoot for one of their own.

11 Oh, please. Let it be something positive. Mark arches an eyebrow at Dennis. Dexter reflects for a moment. Well, Dennis. I found your script to be one of a great potential not fully realized. I am totally intrigued by your premise. Rewrite and bring it back so we can grok on it again. (CONT D) Screw that, fellow screen writer. Just follow your own List of Seven and you ll be golden my man. Dexter holds up his hand and does a feeble impression of Mr. Spock. Dexter scrambles offstage. (CONT D) Read scripts and prosper. Dexter out. INT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB - OFFSTAGE What? Yeah. He overheard your list earlier. Seems to like it. No, I mean what was that venom spewing out of Cliff s mouth? Dennis shakes with indignation.

12 (CONT D) Where s the love? The handy tips. The camaraderie. Cliff sure isn t giving it up. Everyone in the bar looks at the defiant Dennis as his shoulders gradually drop. We most definitely need another brewski. A defeated Dennis follows as his comrade Mark waddles back to the bar. INT. HOLLYWOOD CLUB - THE BAR After returning to their bar stools, Joe serves the duo up refills. In the background, the SWs chant and laugh. What are they saying? Sounds like shitter to me. I don t care. Look, I am sorry your feelings are hurt-- --Ishtar. It s Ishtar! Cliff walks back from the little screenwriter s room and veers toward Dennis. Here comes Cliffy! Joe you got some stones we can throw? Joe smirks and holds up his empty hands. CLIFF Dennis. Please, don t take what I said personally. It was feedback to help not hinder. Mark gets up in Cliff s face.

13 You know pal... You re an arrogant ass. Lay off already! Dennis puts a restraining hand on Mark s shoulder. Mark shakes it off. Mark sits down but still looks pissed. CLIFF Well. OK then. Which review helped you the most? My venomous spewing or Dexter s rambling so we can grok again? Venomous spewage. CLIFF Tell you what. Dexter told me about your List of Seven. Why not stick around and tell us about them? Cliff scratches his beard as if he can t wait to get home and trim it. Mark ignores him as Cliff heads back to the stage. Nice guy. Kind of. Yeah right. What does grok mean anyhow? Ask Dexter. He s on his way over here. So your guy did fine tonight? And he s gonna do better next month. Right Dweeb? I ll be back with a rewrite but I ll let all the suggestions grok in my brain first.

14 Mark sits heavily on the bar stool. Quite drunk. Where s Beth? I want to meet her. Not tonight she doesn t. Mark accepts the advice then focuses on Dennis through bleary eyes. So. Dweeb. Was your art professor right about you? Yes. Yes she was. A thoughtful look crosses Dennis s face. His eyes open wide. Dennis slaps his open palm on the bar. Startled, Mark and Joe watch Dennis with renewed interest. I could write something more aspiring than skits. Perhaps ladder up to a full feature? Ladder up? Yeah. Write scripts of increasing length. Your scripts will still suck. You know Mark, sometimes you can really be an ass. Mark blows a drunk screw you kiss at Dennis. Dennis s expression changes from annoyance to satisfaction. He holds up his glass to make a toast. I will write what I write until it s right. I--

15 --Don t say it. I m begging you. I can do this. FADE OUT. THE END