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The Voices Project: The Encore Edition
ATYP
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eBook - ePub
The Voices Project: The Encore Edition
ATYP
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Since its inception in 2011, ATYP's Voices Project has been cultivating the talents of the best young Australian actors and writers. Every year, twenty young Australian writers are chosen to each write a seven-minute monologue for a young actor, bringing to audiences the cutting edge of Australian theatre.%##CHAR13##%%##CHAR13##%This selection of seventeen monologues takes the reader through the themes that have been explored in the Voices Project over the years, varying from first love to food, telling the stories of Australia.%##CHAR13##%%##CHAR13##%By turns witty, touching and chilling, the monologues of the Voices Project explore, deconstruct and subvert our perceptions of modern Australian life.
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Sujet
LetteraturaSous-sujet
TeatroWE LIVE IN THE CITY, DONâT WE?
HOLLY BRINDLEY
Pause.
Sorry, fuck, fuck, that was a dickhead thing to do, to kiss yourâinstead ofâ
I didnât mean to kiss your head. You seem pissed off?
I wasnât sure what to do, I didnât mean to treat you like a little kid orâ
I know it was really fucked up and rude when I said I wanted you to leave and go home, but, I didnât say that because I donâtâŠ
Pause.
The thing is, what I want to tell you is thatâ
You make me feel sick.
In a good way! Donât go inside yet, please.
Itâs because, okayâ
Usually when Iâm fucking someone I donât realize that Iâm naked.
But when we fucked I did realize I was naked and it made me feel kind of sick. But also it made me more, sort of, it made me happy, as if all the other times Iâve fucked it wasnât really fucking. It was like I was fucking a thing, or, actually a someone, donât worry it was a someone. But it was just me. Not um, it wasnât me with someone else, being there together andâŠ
Your skin was so warm which made me realize that I have skin. Cause unless itâs really hot or really cold you donât usually notice that you have skin on your body and that it can feel things. But because your skin was so warm, it made me realize that I have skin.
And you have the shiniest hair, itâs slippery and kind of a mirror, Iâm, itâs hard to look in your eyes and explain, but I want to, becauseâ
I wish we could start this day over becauseâ
If I let my mind think, if I let it go off on its own, then it wonât ever stop thinking so I always do whatever I can to make sure that Iâm never left alone with my thoughts. Thereâs got to be noise all the time to drown everything else out, thereâs got to be noise or things to look at or things to do or someone to fuck and sometimes all that shit gets in the way of having a conversation with someone, of having a real conversation with you. I wanted you to go home so that we could start again because I think with you I might not mind so much if itâs quiet, orâ
I have to be drunk all the time. I like to be drunk so that all my conversations mean nothing but then Iâm also scared of getting too drunk because then my conversations might mean everything. So I go away and thereâs⊠things. Thereâs, see I want you to know that Iâm⊠I go away, I walk down the street right to the end where thereâs a car park, do you know it? No, you donât know it, and so itâs a car park but if you jump the fence into this one section of it thereâs a patch of grass which I love cause itâs just this patch of grass in the middle of the concrete which is crazy, so when I sit on it, on the patch of grass, I feel like, I dunno, like Iâm sitting on a magic carpet or something and I like to go there, itâs a patch of grass. Nobody knows. And if I squint my eyes I can see a lake in the distance which is weird because⊠we live in the city, donât we? I just sit there and, just sit there to be there.
And I can watch the cars going past on the road nearby and the speed limit is sixty which isnât that fast but itâs fast enough that it takes my mind away from my thoughts. There are heaps of things to watch and itâs not far from that road that has all those hookers, where all the hookers work. So sometimes they wander back up past the car park and I can see them and they look, I donât know, like theyâre always cold. Even if itâs a sunny day. Why donât they bring jumpers? And one time I thought about running over to one of them who was walking not far from me and she had her arms crossed and her head was down and she had the longest hair down to her waist and it was messy but it looked really clean and um, it was⊠so she seemed as if she might be cold and I thought about taking my jumper off and giving it to her. Iâd take it off and say, âArms upâ and sheâd put her arms up and Iâd slide my jumper over her hands, arms, head, chest, stomach and sheâd be wearing my jumper and it would probably be too big for her.
Donât you think? Do you need somewhere to go? I mean, please donât go in, donât leave, I asked because I donât know if youâre like me. I think youâre like me, I hope youâre like me, at least in some ways I do, in some ways I wouldnât wish that on you, because, anywayâ
I go to the car park and there I am. But actually Iâm not there, my mind is there, but look, my body isnât, my body isnât there on the grass, my body is not there on the grass. Itâs not. Because Iâm not there because thereâs definitely no lake and maybe, probably, definitely, no patch of grass actually because why would there be a patch of grass in the middle of a car park next to an apartment block?
My point is, that I didnât mean to...