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Людмила Ансельм - Короткие пьесы

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Название:
Короткие пьесы
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Дата добавления:
18 сентябрь 2019
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Людмила Ансельм - Короткие пьесы

Людмила Ансельм - Короткие пьесы краткое содержание

Людмила Ансельм - Короткие пьесы - описание и краткое содержание, автор Людмила Ансельм, читайте бесплатно онлайн на сайте электронной библиотеки mybooks.club
В Америке в настоящее время очень популярны короткие 10-минутные пьесы для многочисленных театральных фестивалей.Пьесы, представленные в книге, затрагивают животрепещущие проблемы: одиночество и любовь, брак и трудности в воспитании детей, переживания детей в однополых браках, отношения между дочерью и матерью, религия и вера в Бога. «Русский мастер класс» и «Миша Чехов» – ностальгическая дань русскому театральному искусству.Автор книги Людмила Ансельм россиянка, проживает в США, многие проблемы рассматривает с позиций русского менталитета, хотя старается понять американцев. Одна из пьес посвящена Американской мечте и отношению к этому мифу американцев.Пьесы на английском следуют за порядком пьес на русском, которые расположены по алфавиту. Пьесы: «Мать и дочь», «Попугай» и монолог «После развода» представлены в книге только по-русски.The short plays were written for “Ten Minute Play” Festivals that are popular now in America. The plays touch upon the problems of vital importance that have always been stirring: loneliness and love, marriages and difficulties in bringing up children, especially teenagers, children’s feelings in same-sex marriages, relations between mothers and daughters, religion and belief in God.“Russian Master Class” and “Misha Chekhov” are nostalgic tributes to Russia’s Theater history. The pieces “Mother and Daughter”, “The Parrot”, and the monologue “After the Divorce” are only in Russian.The author, L. Anselm, is Russian. She is living in Boston, although she tries to understand the American as well. One play is dedicated to the “American Dream”, and Americans’ attitude towards their “American Dream”. The pieces that were presented in “10 Minute Play Festivals” were translated by James Clinton.

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Короткие пьесы - читать книгу онлайн бесплатно, автор Людмила Ансельм

ANNA: You didn’t seem to know him well. Maybe you have met him at our office parties.

PETER: So I know him!

ANNA: There were lots of people there: you didn’t pay much attention to him.

PETER: Why, is he inconspicuous?

ANNA: Inconspicuous to you perhaps, you were more interested in chatting up the ladies.

PETER: Describe him to me maybe I’ll remember him.

ANNA: He is taller than you; his eyes are blue, and his hair…

PETER: Where did you meet?

ANNA: At work… in the office.

PETER: You used to tell me about your work friends in detail. You probably told me about him.

ANNA: I might not have told you much about him…

PETER: Why?

ANNA: It’s not important now.

PETER: Yes, it’s important, since you brought him up. It is important! How well do you know him?

ANNA: None of your business. You decided to have a divorce, and we separated. Now you have your own life, and I – mine.

PETER: Do you think that I don’t still care? After fifteen years!

ANNA: Fifteen years six months and two weeks.

PETER: Anna!

ANNA: Anyway, I don’t see him any more.

PETER: When did you stop?

ANNA: I can’t remember…

PETER: Think… Real… Hard…

ANNA: About a half of year ago, after he quit our office.

PETER: So it is «out of sight, out of mind». And what kind of relationship did you have?

ANNA: What kind of relationship can be between man and woman? Need me to spell it out?

Pause

PETER: You cheated on me…

ANNA: Yes.

PETER: And you told me none of this?

ANNA: I didn’t want to.

PETER: You found somebody and kept on living with me as if nothing had happened!

ANNA: And while living with me you didn’t waste time too…

PETER: That’s why we’re going to divorce. Why didn’t you tell me about him?

ANNA: Peter, if I had made up my mind to divorce you, I would’ve told you everything.

PETER: Why didn’t you want to divorce me?… May be he didn’t want to marry you?

ANNA: When we fell for each other, he was married.

PETER: I suppose, he didn’t want to divorce his wife. How long did your relationship last?

ANNA: I don’t remember exactly… about two…

PETER: What a two-timer you really are! And still I wonder…did you stop seeing each other when he got a new job?

ANNA: At first we met often, but then… He had to drive across the whole city. You know the traffic jams…

PETER: Traffic jams! Was it just traffic jams you blame? Couldn’t you make up anything more interesting? Say, a plane crash: your lover dies falling down from a huge height, or you are attacked by thugs, he defends you but is stabbed in the back, bleeding badly…

ANNA: Peter, stop mocking!

PETER: Ha! Who is mocking who? Your lover moves to the other end of the city, and then – end of love! I would’ve understood you if it was a real passion… but I don’t know what to call this. Some nonsense! Stupidity! Because of this nonsense our whole relationship goes to hell?

ANNA: Our relationship? What did I get? Just humiliation. Did you really love me? Every party you ignored me and quickly found a woman and started flirting. What chance did I have? Just to be a wallflower?

PETER: Did you do all that in revenge? If yes, then that’s different.

ANNA: It doesn’t matter whether I did this in revenge or not…

Pause.

He was extraordinary, very considerate, loved me, used to bring me flowers…

PETER: Considerate: traffic jams and end of love! Don’t you feel ashamed to tell me, your husband, all this? After fifteen years together…

ANNA: Fifteen years six months and two weeks.

PETER: Anna!

Anna (comes close.): Peter!

Peter (pushes her away.): Give me his phone number.

ANNA: What for?

PETER: I want to meet him… and his wife.

ANNA: And why his wife?

PETER: I’ll compare her and you! Give me his phone number!

ANNA: I don’t have it.

PETER: That’s a lie, Anna. You’re lying!

ANNA: I don’t have it… not since we parted.

PETER: Then – his last name. Well, come on!

ANNA: I won’t.

PETER: Oh, I understand, it means that you didn’t have anybody and any relationship. You’ve made up the whole romance. Nobody hankered after you, just your sick imagination: love, infidelity, traffic jams – all this is a lie. Our whole life together was a mistake.

ANNA: Peter, but we had such fun together.

PETER: Fun? Me? Never! What’re you talking about? All our life together was a complete and utter torture for me.

ANNA: Our “grunge” costume party…

PETER: Ya, friends still mention it, but that was different.

ANNA: Why?

PETER: I’ve never loved you, not a moment!

Anna (slowly): Full moon… Lake George… when we slipped off the paddle boat… You like to sleep touching me…

PETER: (pause) It was long ago.

ANNA: Peter, why did you marry me?

PETER: Your pregnancy.

ANNA: But it was a mistake.

PETER: I decided that I was committed to marry you…Well, I’ve come to see you on business. I finally wanted to dot all the “i”s. Now I understand everything. You’re a liar and disgusting trash! I feel suffocated! I’m divorcing you. I’ll complete the divorce agreement myself. Good-bye!

Peter leaves. Anna runs after him.

ANNA: Peter, wait stop! I told you a lie!

PETER: (stops at the door). More lies?

ANNA: Listen, I had a love affair and it ended when he, my lover, died in a car crash. He was hurrying to be with me when…(Anna swallows hard.) passed a bus and hit another car…

Pause.

PETER: Passed a bus? Passed… When did it happen?

ANNA: Six months ago.

PETER: Six months… It was Michael! My best friend!

ANNA: Yes, Michael.

PETER: How did it happen?

ANNA: He was hurrying to see me…

PETER: I introduced you to Michael! I was proud for you to see what a wonderful friend I had.

ANNA: He was really a wonderful…

PETER: You’re going to say “a lover”? I can’t believe… it can’t be true. If there had been something between you, I certainly would have noticed it.

ANNA: You and Michael didn’t meet so often lately… He was afraid that you would suspect us.

PETER: I respected him so much: joyful, full of life, and so tragically… We’d been friends as kids: at school, at college…he had always rescued me… when we were about twelve; a dog jumped out and grabbed my leg… Michael found a stick and beat the dog away. I still have the scar; I can show it to you.

ANNA: I’ve seen your “dog bite” a lot of times…

PETER: We used to be close friends… Used to read each other well, so quick on the uptake… How come I didn’t notice anything?

ANNA: You were busy… You so persistently hung round his wife.

PETER: It was nothing serious… (angry silence.) Oh, and she must’ve noticed that there was something between you. Women – they notice everything. I’ll call her right now…

Grabs his cell phone.

ANNA: Stop it! Can you really call a woman who lost her husband just six months ago and ask her about her husband’s infidelity?

Peter silently closes his cell phone and throws it.

ANNA: Didn’t you have an affair with her? I thought that you were seeing each other, especially after his death.

PETER: How could he? I cannot believe… My best friend…

Silence while Peter stares with confused interest at Anna.

ANNA: Why are looking at me like that?

PETER: Anna, what did he see in you?

ANNA: Think…

PETER: I don’t… Tell me, please…

ANNA: He loved me… It was real passion…

PETER: Amazing! So unexpectedly. He was striking, brilliant, so able…

Pause.

What now…

ANNA: Peter, you’ve come to agree about our divorce. Let’s start.

PETER: Anna, wait, wait… let me see…

ANNA: Just a second. I will get the agreement you sent me.

PETER: Anna, I don’t know…

ANNA: Since you’ve come, let’s do it. We need to dot all the “i”s…

PETER: I need time…I have to understand… Maybe, I’ve changed my mind…

THE END

WHY DOES NO ONE LOVE US?

CAST:

BOB: 14-year-old boy

MA: Peter’s mother

A living room. Curtains drawn over a window. At rise BOB’S hand is poised and eyes are staring at the phone he expects to answer any second. Ma enters in a rush and grabs for the phone. Peter deftly deflects her hand and grabs the receiver him self.

MA: Why did you do that? I have to call Aunt Gail.

BOB: Call her later.

MA: I want to call her now.

BOB: Can’t you see? I’m expecting a call.

MA: Who?

BOB: Emma will call. We agreed to go to the movies.

MA: Why don’t you call her?

BOB: It’s the Sabbath. Her family can’t use the phone until “first star”, like around sunset time.

MA: Give me the phone. Gail and I can certainly finish talking before sunset!

BOB: No! Emma will call any minute from a pay phone.

(Ma upset, falls into the sofa)

Call later after Emma and I go… or call her on your cell phone…

MA: I have to pay to use the cell phone before nine o’clock.

BOB: Call after nine… What’s the hurry?

MA: Aunt Gail owed me $100. She gave it back to me yesterday, but when I counted it, $10 was missing. Maybe this was her installment idea, or a mistake.

BOB: Why doesn’t Emma call? I asked her a week ago and I reminded her again yesterday. She promised to call. I hope… I hope…

MA: Try calling her yourself.

BOB: I did. No one answered. Maybe she’s sick.

MA: If she’s sick she certainly should have called you.

BOB: Look at me Ma. What’s different?

(Ma peers at BOB)

MA: You shaved! Why?

BOB: Girls were teasing me “Fuzz Face”. What do you think?

MA: That was such nice soft fuzz on your cheeks. I loved to stroke it. Where did you get the razor?

BOB: Uncle Ted, Aunt Gale’s boyfriend. He has an electric shaver.

MA: So soon…

BOB: I told you I wanted to shave.

MA: I know you wanted to shave for your date… Did you use an after-shave lotion?

BOB: No. Should have?

MA: All your pimples are bright red… Next time we’ll at least put some rubbing alcohol on your face after shaving…

BOB: I saw… I’m so embarrassed… Ma why doesn’t Emma call? She should…

MA: I don’t know… Instead of doing your homework you are wasting time shaving too soon and mooning over a girl. Silliness…

BOB: It’s not silly. I just want to go to the movies with Emma… Practically all the boys in my class have girl friends… I have nothing to boast about and, they don’t talk to me…

MA: And they won’t until you do better in school… Good marks get respect…

BOB: Girls don’t care about boys’ marks! They like boys who risk and clown and have to stay after school.

MA: Emma?

BOB: She’s smart…

MA: Then why don’t you work harder? Talk to her about hard homework…

BOB: There’s nothing I’m interested in…

MA: Now the school psychiatrist wants me to go and talk with him. Are you arguing with your teachers again?

BOB: They tell stories and stupid lies.

MA: What lies? Tell the truth now!

BOB: Mr. Small my biology teacher said that he’s reading Solzhenizin’s book “Archipelago Gulag” and that if a man peed outside in the winter cold the hospital could operate on his frozen penis without anesthesia!

(Pause)

I raised my hand and said this was stupid.

MA: How do you know that it was not true?

BOB: I didn’t, but I asked Uncle Ted and he agreed that it didn’t sound right.

MA: I really don’t care whether it can happen… tell me better about your session yesterday with the psychiatrist.

BOB (bored): He wanted me to put the words on some little wooden blocks in alphabetic order.

MA: So?


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