DNA: Desperately Nutty Ancestors

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DNA: Desperately Nutty Ancestors By Craig Sodaro Performance Rights It is an infringement of the federal copyright law to copy or reproduce this script in any manner or to perform this play without royalty payment. All rights are controlled by Eldridge Publishing Co., Inc. Contact the publisher for additional scripts and further licensing information. The author s name must appear on all programs and advertising with the notice: Produced by special arrangement with Eldridge Publishing Company. ELDRIDGE PUBLISHING COMPANY histage.com 2013 by Craig Sodaro Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing http://www.histage.com/playdetails.asp?pid=2510

- 2 - STORY OF THE PLAY Eddie Poe is a direct descendant of Edgar Allan Poe and hoping to follow in his illustrious ancestor s flaky footsteps. He gets his chance when his girlfriend Lucy, a personal assistant to a very wealthy woman, tells him someone has stolen her boss s expensive jewelry. Fearing she ll be the prime suspect, Lucy begs Eddie to help her by attending a conference for people with famous ancestors. The attendees turn out to be a comical cross-section of world history with the descendants of Henry VIII, Molly Brown, Joan of Ark, Michelangelo, Davy Crockett, and others jockeying for center stage. When Eddie and Lucy spot fashion maven Ivana Trembell, descended from Ivan the Terrible, wearing the jewelry, they try to question her but the poor woman drops dead from poisoning. Eddie s frantic efforts to uncover the truth, thwarted at every turn by the dynamic gene pool in which he s been swimming, finally lead to a most surprising ending!

- 3 - CAST OF CHARACTERS (4 m, 7 w) EDGAR ALLEN POE: A descendant of the original. LUCY BAIN: His girlfriend. DONNY CROCKETT: A cowboy. MICHELLE ANGELO: A would-be artist. DR. JEAN POOLE: A professor of genetics. BESS TUDOR: A politician. IVANA TREMBELL: A high-powered fashion designer. MAGGIE BROWN: Descendant of the unsinkable Molly Brown. JOHN DARK: Psychic. LOU FRENCH: From hospitality. WENDY EARP: A police detective. SETTING The play is intended to be very fluid with no real change of set. It takes place in various locations, mostly at the Shadow Mountain Resort. A small desk and chair sit DSR holding a notebook or two and several pens or pencils along with a cell phone for Eddie s opening scene. At CS a number of chairs should be placed here and there in positions the actors find comfortable. A coat rack holding a few colorful coats sits USR, as if by the entrance to the resort. Two window frames hang against a dark US wall on either side of a rather grim, stylized portrait of a very melancholic young woman from long ago. Use UPS for the hallway from which actors break into Ivana s room. Define the door to Ivana s room for all actors so they each go to the same spot when entering her room. Be sure they all open the door the same way! If possible, lights can define various areas. Furnishings can be moved as desired to suit each episode.

- 4 - COSTUME NOTES Each character should wear something that conjures the image of the ancestor, or at least relates back to the ancestor, with the exceptions of Jean, Lucy, and Lou none of whom seem to have any prominent ancestors. Here are a few suggestions: EDDIE - frock coat, white shirt, dark pants, dark shoes, fancy tie. LUCY- modern, everyday outfit. DONNY - jeans, flannel shirt, cowboy hat, boots. MICHELLE - a very modern, artsy outfit that is almost over the top. JEAN - lab coat over a nice, modern outfit. BESS - a power suit. IVANA - a very nice older woman s dress with lots of jewelry. Perhaps a shawl to swing about. Later she ll wear a thick, hotel-style bathrobe. MAGGIE - jeans skirt, cowgirl shirt, boots, cowboy hat. JOHN - a sweater vest either argyle or with fleur de lis on it, long-sleeve shirt, dark pants. LOU - dark pants, dark vest, bow tie, white long-sleeve shirt. WENDY - pants, shirt, sensible shoes, perhaps a trench coat. Please see end of script for Sound Effects and Properties List.

- 5 - ACT I (AT RISE: EDDIE, wearing frock coat, sits at the desk DSR. He is trying to write, but struggles.) EDDIE: (Scribbling.) Once upon a midnight nasty while the wind was cold and blasty. (Stops writing.) Blasty? Is that a word? (HE punches the letters into his phone.) Blasty blasty VOICE FROM PHONE: Not a word, numbskull! EDDIE: (Punching phone viciously.) I hate you! (Noticing the audience.) Oh, not you. The phone. It talks back, and it doesn t have a shred of diplomacy. My name s Eddie. Actually Edgar. Edgar Poe. And to be perfectly honest, Edgar Allen Poe. Except my middle name is spelled with an e not an a like the really famous Edgar Allan Poe. You know, the guy who wrote The Raven, The Tell-Tale Heart, and the guy who figured out that an orangutan could make a pretty good villain. How d I get to be Edgar Allen Poe Junior? Easy my mom said that I m a real, direct descendant of Poe. I mean like bloodline and all that. So I was reading about Poe but it never said he had a kid. So? I asked Mom. She said history doesn t record everything. So here I am, Poe for the 21 st century, a hat that I wear with great pride. In fact, since I was really little I exhibited Poe s personality. (The following dialogue may be from offstage voices or actors can be spotlighted briefly.) NURSE S VOICE: Gee, Mrs. Poe, your little fellow sure cries a lot. TEACHER S VOICE: I ve never seen a kindergartner who loves to well, brood the way your little Eddie does. BABYSITTER S VOICE: Gosh, Mrs. P, Eddie made me read those buried alive stories three times. Gave me the creeps! MRS. POE S VOICE: Eddie, why are all your poems so sad?

- 6 - COACH S VOICE: Poe, quit thinking about it and throw the ball to first base! TEACHER S VOICE: Eddie, I think you ve really tapped into the dark side in your essay. EDDIE: (Rising.) The dark side. Indeed, my pendulum is stuck in the dark side. And now, with almost a degree in hand, my education almost complete, I I sit here in my parents basement apartment between my jobs at Starbucks and Target and I brood. What will become of me? How can I grow if I m already dead on the vine? But you know? There is a ray of hope. Lucy. My Lucy my best girl. We met in a class on the poetry of death. And Lucy was a real breath of life. Her spontaneous joy brought a smile to my face and a lightness to my heart that I d never known before. (LUCY races on SL, crying.) LUCY: Oh, Eddie! Eddie! (LUCY falls into his arms weeping.) EDDIE: (To Audience.) See what I mean? (HE notices LUCY S crying.) Oh, wait a minute! LUCY: Eddie, you ve got to help me! EDDIE: Hey, where are those bright eyes, that cheerful smile, those rosy cheeks? LUCY: They re gone, Eddie! Lost in the squalor of deceit larceny and ruin! EDDIE: (To Audience.) I should have known right there that Lucy was in big trouble. She s almost never poetic. (To LUCY.) I guess this hasn t been a great day. LUCY: (Crying loudly.) I guess you could say say that. EDDIE: You want to tell me about it? LUCY: You ve got to help me, Eddie! You ve got to! EDDIE: Okay. How? LUCY: We ve got to find it! EDDIE: Find what? LUCY: The the the Polar Star.

- 7 - EDDIE: Polar Star? That Tom Hanks Christmas movie about the train and the bells and Santa Claus? LUCY: That was the Polar Express! I m talking about the Polar Star. EDDIE: Let s look on Netflix. They might have it. LUCY: It s a a a diamond! EDDIE: You mean like in the rough? Netflix has some of those movies, too. LUCY: I mean a real diamond! EDDIE: You have a real diamond? LUCY: No! But Mrs. Crumstickle has. Lots of them. And the Polar Star is the biggest at least it was. EDDIE: Mrs. Crumstickle, the lady you work for? LUCY: Yes! EDDIE: (To Audience.) Lucy s a personal assistant for a very rich lady. That means Lucy does everything Mrs. Crumstickle is just too rich to do like grocery shop, call plumbers, and wrap birthday presents. (To LUCY.) I thought the old bag was gone for a couple of weeks. LUCY: She is! EDDIE: Well, maybe she took her diamonds with her. LUCY: She didn t! They were in her jewelry box last night but now they re they re gone. Including the Polar Star. EDDIE: She kept diamonds in a jewelry box? LUCY: She s rich but careless. I checked her bedroom this morning and the jewelry box was was on the floor empty! EDDIE: Did you call the cops? LUCY: No! No! Then Mrs. Crumstickle will find out what happened and she ll fire me or worse! EDDIE: What can be worse? LUCY: Eddie, I could have easily taken those jewels. EDDIE: Wow, you re suspect number one! LUCY: I know! I m too young to go to prison! EDDIE: Especially for something you didn t do. You didn t do it, did you? LUCY: Of course not! What would I do with a 75-carat diamond? EDDIE: Make a carrot cake?

End of Freeview Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing http://www.histage.com/playdetails.asp?pid=2510 Eldridge Publishing, a leading drama play publisher since 1906, offers more than a thousand full-length plays, one-act plays, melodramas, holiday plays, religious plays, children's theatre plays and musicals of all kinds. For more than a hundred years, our family-owned business has had the privilege of publishing some of the finest playwrights, allowing their work to come alive on stages worldwide. We look forward to being a part of your next theatrical production. Eldridge Publishing... for the start of your theatre experience!