
eBook - ePub
Miss Witherspoon and Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge
Two Plays
- 177 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
From one of theater's most outrageous comic talents, two playsāone a Pulitzer Prize in Drama finalist, the other a twisted take on Christmas classics.
In this book, Christopher Durang, the criminally funny author ofĀ Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You, presents two plays about death, religion, and a creamy Christmas pudding. InĀ Miss Witherspoonānamed one of the Ten Best Plays of 2005 by bothĀ TimeĀ andĀ NewsdayāVeronica, a recent suicide whose cantankerous attitude has not improved in the afterlife, discovers that the one thing worse than the world she left behind is having to go back for seconds. Ordered to cleanse her "brown tweedy aura," Veronica resists being reincarnated (as a trailer-trash teen or an overexcited Golden Retriever), only to find that she may be mankind's last, best hope for survival.
InĀ Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge, a sassy ghost once again attempts to shake Scrooge from his holiday humbug, but the whole family-friendly affair is deliciously derailed by Mrs. Cratchit's drunken insistence on stepping out of her miserable, treacly role. Morals are subverted, starving yet plucky children sing carols, and somebody's goose is cooked as Durang lovingly skewersĀ A Christmas Carol,Ā It's a Wonderful Life, and many more to create a brand-new, cracked Christmas classic.
In this book, Christopher Durang, the criminally funny author ofĀ Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You, presents two plays about death, religion, and a creamy Christmas pudding. InĀ Miss Witherspoonānamed one of the Ten Best Plays of 2005 by bothĀ TimeĀ andĀ NewsdayāVeronica, a recent suicide whose cantankerous attitude has not improved in the afterlife, discovers that the one thing worse than the world she left behind is having to go back for seconds. Ordered to cleanse her "brown tweedy aura," Veronica resists being reincarnated (as a trailer-trash teen or an overexcited Golden Retriever), only to find that she may be mankind's last, best hope for survival.
InĀ Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge, a sassy ghost once again attempts to shake Scrooge from his holiday humbug, but the whole family-friendly affair is deliciously derailed by Mrs. Cratchit's drunken insistence on stepping out of her miserable, treacly role. Morals are subverted, starving yet plucky children sing carols, and somebody's goose is cooked as Durang lovingly skewersĀ A Christmas Carol,Ā It's a Wonderful Life, and many more to create a brand-new, cracked Christmas classic.
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Yes, you can access Miss Witherspoon and Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge by Christopher Durang in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & American Drama. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
MRS. BOB CRATCHITāS
WILD CHRISTMAS BINGE
Mrs. Bob Cratchitās Wild Christmas Binge was commissioned by City Theatre in Pittsburgh, and premiered on November 7, 2002. Tracy Brigden, Artistic Director; David Jobin, Managing Director; Kellee Van Aken, Artistic Associate. It was directed by Tracy Brigden; set design was by Jeff Cowie, costume design by Elizabeth Hope Clancy, lighting design by Rick Martin, sound design by Elizabeth Atkinson. Song lyrics by Christopher Durang and music by Michael Friedman. Music direction was by Douglas Levine, and musical staging was by Scott Wise. Production stage manager was Patti Kelly, and hair design was by Elsen Associates, Inc. The cast was:
The Ghost of Christmas Past/Present/and Future | January Murelli |
Ebenezer Scrooge | Douglas Rees |
Mrs. Bob Cratchit | Kristine Nielsen |
Bob Cratchit | Martin Giles |
Tiny Tim | Darren E. Focareta |
Little Nell Cratchit | Sheila McKenna |
Cratchit Child 1 | Lauren Rose Gigliotti or Allison Hannon |
Cratchit Child 2 | Shane Jordan or Matt Lang |
Gentlemen Collecting for Christmas (Kenneth Lay, Jeffrey Skilling) | Jeff Howell, Matthew Gaydos |
Jacob Marleyās Ghost | Larry John Meyers |
Young Jacob Marley | Lauren Rose Gigliotti or Allison Hannon |
Young Ebenezer | Shane Jordan or Matt Lang |
Mr. Fezziwig | Jeff Howell |
Mrs. Fezziwig | Sheila McKenna |
Fezziwig Daughters | Darren E. Focareta, Elena Passarello |
The Beadle | Jeff Howell |
The Beadleās Wife | Sheila McKenna |
Edvar | Matthew Gaydos |
Hedvig | Elena Passarello |
Bartender 1 | Larry John Meyers |
Bartender 2 | Jeff Howell |
Clarence (the angel) | Larry John Meyers |
George Bailey | Matthew Gaydos |
Zuzu Bailey | Lauren Rose Gigliotti or Allison Hannon |
Monica (the angel) | Elena Passarello |
The Nice Mrs. Cratchit | Elena Passarello |
Serena the maid | Matthew Gaydos |
CHARACTERS (in order of appearance)
Young Jacob Marley (child)
Young Ebenezer Scrooge (child)
The Ghost
Ebenezer Scrooge
Bob Cratchit
Tiny Tim
Mrs. Bob Cratchit
Child 1 (Cratchit Child)
Child 2 (Cratchit Child)
Gentleman 1
Gentleman 2
Jacob Marley
Mr. Fezziwig
Mrs. Fezziwig
The Beadle
The Beadleās Wife
Edvar
Hedvig
Little Nell
Bartender
George
Zuzu
Clarence
The Nice Mrs. Cratchit
Lovely Irish Voice (woman)
Tessās Voice
Serena, a maid
ACT 1
SCENE 1
Christmastime. Dickens look, 1840s. A street in London. Two YOUNG BOYS, dressed in coats, hats, and scarfs, stand next to each other. One boy is singing.
BOY 1 (singing sweetly)
Hark the Herald Angels sing
Glory to the new born king
BOY 2 (irritated, negative) Bah, humbug! Bah, humbug!
BOY 1 (singing)
Peace on earth, and mercy mild
BOY 2 Phooey! Christmas stinks! Kaplooey!
BOY 1 (singing)
God and sinner reconciled
BOY 2 Bah humbug! Get me a good hamburger!
BOY 1 (continues with the song softly)
Enter the GHOST āa striking, theatrical black woman. She addresses the audience.
GHOST Even as a child, young Ebenezer displayed a pronounced antipathy toward Christmas. (to Boy 2) Merry Christmas, Ebenezer.
YOUNG EBENEZER Bah humbug! Give me some Christmas pudding. I want to put bugs in your hair! Bah humbug!
GHOST In later centuries, we would probably identify Ebenezerās repeated saying of āBah humbugā as a kind of seasonal Touretteās syndrome. However, in 1843, when our story is set, we hadnāt a clue what it meantāexcept he was a nasty little child.
YOUNG EBENEZER Bah humbug! I hate Christmas!
GHOST (to audience) Hello. I am the Ghost of Christmas Past, Present, and Yet To Come, including all media yet to be invented. If you get me on DVD you can click on Special Features, and see twenty-seven other hairdo choices I have. But weāre in a live theater presently, so youāll just have to accept my hair as it is.
YOUNG EBENEZER I want to put bugs in your hair!
GHOST Children are so difficult, arenāt they? You should see them backstage. Iām so glad Iām a ghost and I donāt have any children.
BOY 1 I like Christmas carols, but my friend Ebenezer is slowly convincing me to hate Christmas.
GHOST (points to Boy 1) This is young Jacob Marley. And he and Ebenezer will grow up to run a business together.
YOUNG EBENEZER I want to be very wealthy.
YOUNG JACOB Me too!
GHOST Oh you kids. Iād like to take a strap to you. But all you politically correct types donāt like that. A good spanking never hurt a child, unless it got out of control and killed him, in which case it did. But I donāt want to kill these children, I just want to make them behave. (screams at the children) BEHAVE!!! AND HAVE A BETTER ATTITUDE ABOUT CHRISTMAS!
YOUNG EBENEZER I hate Christmas. Bah, humbug.
GHOST You have Touretteās syndrome. You need to learn to be seen and not heard. (to audience) And now meet Ebenezer Scrooge, grown up.
Enter old EBENEZER SCROOGE. He is sour, grumpy, cranky.
Hello there, Mr. Scrooge. Merry Christmas to you.
EBENEZER SCROOGE Bah humbug! Iād like to put bugs in your hair!
GHOST Really, how strange. What kind of bugs?
EBENEZER SCROOGE Oh awful crawling kinds. Beetles. Spiders.
GHOST Uh-huh. Mr. Scrooge, Iād like you to meet your inner child.
EBENEZER SCROOGE What?
GHOST (to Young Ebenezer) Say hello to your grown-up self, Ebenezer.
YOUNG EBENEZER I hate you! (kicks him)
EBENEZER SCROOGE And I hate you, you little creep!
Ebenezer and Young Ebenezer struggle with each other. Young Jacob looks on, passively.
GHOST (to audience) What unpleasant people. I wonder if Iāll be able to make them appreciate the true meaning of Christmas before the end of the evening. What do you think? How many of you donāt care? Never mind, I donāt want to know. I have a job to do, and Iāve got to do it. Okay, you two, break it up.
EBENEZER SCROOGE You should be sent to the workhouse!
YOUNG EBENEZER You should be sent to a nursing home!
GHOST Isnāt it sad? Isnāt it poignant and ironic how much Mr. Scroogeās younger and older selves hate each other? (to Young Ebenezer and Ebenezer) Youāre dealing with self-hatred, you two, and you donāt even know it!
YOUNG JACOB Why donāt I have any lines?
GHOST Why does the sun come up in the morning?
YOUNG JACOB I donāt know.
GHOST Well, thatās why you donāt have any lines. Okay, enough of this scene. Letās move on to the next one. Ready, Mr. Scrooge?
EBENEZ...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- MISS WITHERSPOON
- MRS. BOB CRATCHITāS WILD CHRISTMAS BINGE