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    Three Plays: The Last Carnival; Beef, No Chicken; and A Branch of the Blue Nile

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    You know how long I ain’t open this thing?

      This good book brings back memories of a good man.

      The old man would sit there, in retirement,

      with a Bible on his knee, a collar with no button,

      looking out on the old road. Well, one day

      he went straight to heaven like a rocket.

      He didn’t say goodbye. All we saw was

      a rocking chair swinging by an open window,

      empty. He left this Bible. All you ready?

      DEACON

      Let the bride and groom draw near the counter, please.

      All you hold hands tight before you disappear.

      From reality to shadow, from the substantial

      to the insubstantial, we believe in our images

      instead of ourselves until everything that lives

      ain’t holy no longer but fully photographed,

      and the test of our creed is: “I saw it on TV.”

      And is why I let my bare foot take the road,

      running from my shadow till it catch up with me,

      and make me a midget; I go sleep here tonight,

      then the tractors go come, but I go be gone.

      ’Cause Lead Kindly Light ain’t battery-powered.

      And this is the message of the Church Itinerant.

      Now, to the same tune, “A Bride with Me…”

      For as much as it hath pleased Almighty God to take our

      dear brother Alwyn, dust to dust …

      [EUPHONY groans, sits at a table, removes hat and gloves]

      CARDIFF JOE

      Not yet, Cyril.

      MAYOR’S VOICE [offstage; loudspeaker] Dese are difficult times, ladies and gentleman. And dose of us …

      FRANCO

      Ohmygod! Oh, my heavens! In front of all those children! All my life’s work in vain. [Shouting] These are difficult times. Those of us … Blasted bulldozer!

      CARDIFF JOE

      Anybody here was ever married?

      MITZI

      It starts: “Dearly Beloved.”

      OTTO

      You should know.

      CARDIFF JOE

      “Dearly Beloved, Dearly Beloved,” Cyril …

      DEACON

      Same to you, Alwyn.

      CARDIFF JOE

      Don’t you remember anything?

      DEACON

      I do. That’s it. “I do.” You say that. Both of you.

      OTTO

      Hurry up, Euphony, before he forget.

      EUPHONY

      What’s the rush, I ain’t pregnant. [She ambles over to her place]

      CARDIFF JOE

      Wait a second. I nearly forgot. I’ll show you a trick. If I were to press this cash register now, the whole thing would detonate, and without a fuse.

      EUPHONY

      What fuse? Who ask you to do that? How you could do something so crazy, Alwyn?

      OTTO

      What you telling me, Alwyn? That there’s a bomb for true?

      CHILDREN’S VOICES

      [Reciting]

      Sweet Couva, loveliest village of the plain,

      where health and plenty cheered the smiling swain.

      Ill fares the land to hastening ills a prey,

      where wealth accumulates and men decay …

      CARDIFF JOE

      Maybe. We’ll see! Everybody complains. Nobody does a bloody thing. Blow it up and start again. I learnt one thing in the ring, mate. Move fast. Quick decision. It would make a hole in the highway bigger than the old silk cotton. Let them worry.

      FRANCO

      What you mean? They’re my children out there!

      CARDIFF JOE

      It would still be safe. Just a hell of a noise. I wrote the Mayor a note. I spent all night laying wire in the seams, covering it. The governments promise progress, but do they ever ask the people what kind of progress they want? If they want the kind that destroys the people, be it a new highway or a new bomb?

      FRANCO

      Where’s the wire? Where’s the wire? O God! The little monkeys are out there! Mercury, grant these feet wings. Go, Macaroni Socks! [Hurtles out the door]

      EUPHONY

      [At the window, waving] Run, Eldridge, run! God, look at him stride, he just jump a ditch, he jump another one, head up, glasses on, he’s following the fuse, go, go, Macaroni Socks, dirt flying behind him, he just miss a chicken, they are about to cut the ribbon, now he dived full-length in the dirt!

      DEACON

      Everybody ready? Dearly Beloved …

      [Burst of music drowning out the wedding ceremony, cars honking, applause, music under, then …]

      DEACON

      I now pronounce …

      MAYOR’S VOICE

      This highway …

      DEACON

      Man and wife …

      OTTO

      [Tears up MONGROO’s contract. He throws it over CARDIFF JOE and EUPHONY] Is better than rice. I prefer a sound sleep to a fat deal.

      [Bursts of applause. Triumphal march music]

      FRANCO

      [Enters] There was no bomb! No explosion. I wasted my courage! [Collapses in a chair]

      OTTO

      No! Give this man a Peardrax. Give him a case.

      [Congratulations all around, cheering outside, DRUSILLA and CEDRIC rush in, followed by the LIMER carrying equipment]

      CEDRIC

      Terrific, terrific! We got it all, Couva has entered the twentieth century! And that last dash by Franco!

      DRUSILLA

      Congratulations, Auntie; congratulations, Mr. Davies! Is Uncle Otto and Mrs. Almandoz next. I have a present for you, Deacon. [Exits towards her room]

      CARDIFF JOE

      [Removing his miner’s helmet and handing it to FRANCO] A present. So you can read in bed. Battery-powered.

      [DRUSILLA returns with her TV set and goes to the DEACON with it]

      DRUSILLA

      It’s a portable, battery-powered; please accept it as payment and my gift for Auntie’s wedding.

      DEACON

      I ain’t go watch it. It go watch me. No, thanks. [DRUSILLA places it in a corner] It’s getting dark so quickly.

      LIMER

      Is just like a disco. The highway is open.

      [Long silence. The headlights on the cars from the highway cross their faces in the dark café]

      DEACON

      Pretty soon there’ll be no country left. Nowhere to walk, nowhere to sit in the shade, whole place one big concrete suburb. Oh! Yes! It’s about McDonaldizing everything, it’s Kentucky Frying everything, it’s about going modern with a vengeance and televising everything, it’s hamming up everything, traffic-jamming up everything, it’s about neon lighting up everything, urban-blighting everything. I’m warning you. I seen it with my own two feet.

      MITZI

      A river of jewels. Our new highway. It’s beautiful, Otto.

      CARDIFF JOE

      Wait, Otto. Everybody, look out there. Is that my imagination or do you all see it, too?

      OTTO

      There’s no such thing, I tell you. There is no such thing. I refuse to believe it. Pure coincidence. I was the Mysterious Stranger. Not a spirit. It was me! Franco and me. We were that spirit!

      [A huge shadow crosses the stage]

      CEDRIC

      [Into a microphone] It’s an old woman, in a large black hat, in old country skirts, hobbling patiently against the glare of the headlights and the impatient honking horns, crossing from where the old silk cotton had died towards the bush on the other side, and on the wrong light, too. She’s gone, but she’s here. No camera can capture her shadow. The spirit of the countryside.

      DEACON

      I going over the hills to Maracas Valley tomorrow when the sun come up. I ain’t got nowhere to sleep. I could sleep here tonight, friend?

      OTTO

      Yes, Deacon. But tomorrow the wrecker coming to bulldoze this shop. The task force in their yellow helmets go walk all over this place. There go be noise, shouting, concrete pouring. They go bury the past here and pave it over, the hole where the cotto
    n tree was. And from tomorrow, Otto Hogan go be a conglomerate. Wait. Look there, the traffic stopped. To let that old woman cross. See her there, Euphony.

      EUPHONY

      I ain’t understand how a old wooden house could break your heart, or a back yard. What will happen to my poor little parlour, with the tables neat and the waxed tablecloths with flowers on them? And a wind off the yard tinkling the bamboo-bead curtains? You know when I liked it best? When nobody was in it. When it was either expecting a customer or one had just leave, leaving the bamboo curtain shaking. I used to sit down out there some afternoons and watch the sun going out on the row of sweet-drink bottles. I used to lean one arm on the windowsill and watch the pasture opposite. The clouds passing over, making different shadows. What go happen? Tomorrow, this time, the task force go be trampling all over it. Now it go belong to the bulldozers. And the dust. And our memories only. My sweet little parlour, goodbye.

      [Lights resume their revolve around the walls. The hum of traffic soars. They exit. The noise of various vehicles starting. The DEACON prepares to sleep in a corner. He makes his bed up under the counter, sees the TV set, moves it nearer, switches it on …]

      SCENE 3

      One corner of the parlour becomes a small TV set, with a news desk and a map showing Trinidad as the centre of the world. CEDRIC in a suit; DRUSILLA; SUMINTRA in a sari. Lights.

      CEDRIC

      Good evening. This is the Six o’Clock News. Cedric Hart reporting. Drusilla?

      DRUSILLA

      Two Couvans—sorry, that should be Cubans—have returned home from Havana on the grounds that the food there did not agree with them, they are allegedly connected with a payroll heist from the former Mongroo Construction Company. Cedric?

      CEDRIC

      An incriminating tape of the Borough Council meeting is being considered as evidence on a charge of corruption. Extraneous material in the tape includes a calypso and a shower bath and a free-for-all with the councillors. These, however, may be considered inadmissible evidence. Why, Sumintra?

      [Photo of OTTO holding up a can]

      SUMINTRA

      Because Otto Hogan, former proprietor of Otto’s Automatic Roti, of which I was the authentic, have announced his candidacy as Mayor of Couva. Because is better so. Cyril?

      CEDRIC

      Cedric. Now, with the new highway just opened with so far only a few worthwhile fatalities, we take you to Eldridge “Zip” Franco for the traffic update. Zip? Eldridge? Where are you, Zip?

      [FRANCO rushes on in a trenchcoat, felt hat, holding a microphone. Standing in a bright spot, traffic lights crossing his face, he speaks rapidly]

      FRANCO

      Zip Franco out here, folks, on the new Couva highway, dodging the fast lane, and in this light drizzle it’s bumper-to-bumper at the commuters’ hour through Chaguanas to Couva, backed up for easily two miles, due to a major accident with a water-buffalo cart, but we know that these things are part of downtown Couva’s development, so let’s all …

      [Furious honking cars bear down on him, their lights blinding as he steps lightly aside, smiling]

      Nimble as ever, hey, old Macaroni Socks? Radio?

      [LIMER comes out, in a spotlight as the station and FRANCO fade into silhouette]

      LIMER

      This morning as usual I get up sad,

      I was worried about the future of old Trinidad …

      [The DEACON, in a corner of the parlour, switches off the channel. Light and a flickering pattern. He leans against a wall. In the darkness the TV set glows like a bomb. A dog barks]

      [Fadeout]

      A BRANCH OF THE BLUE NILE

      A Branch of the Blue Nile was first produced by Stage One and The Nation Publishing Company at Stage One in Barbados on November 25, 1983, directed by Earl Warner, with the following cast:

      GAVIN FONTINELLE

      Clairmonte Taitt

      HARVEY ST. JUST

      Patrick Foster

      CHRISTOPHER

      Michael Gilkes

      MARYLIN LEWIS

      Norline Metivier

      SHEILA HARRIS

      Elizabeth Clarke

      WILFRED

      Monteith Douglas

      IRIS

      Monica Drayton

      BROTHER JOHN

      Christopher Moore

      PHIL

      Winston Farrel

      This revised version of the play was produced by Warwick Productions at the Tent Theatre in Trinidad in August 1985, directed by Earl Warner, with the following cast:

      GAVIN FONTINELLE

      Wilbert Holder

      HARVEY ST. JUST

      Maurice Brash

      CHRISTOPHER

      Errol Sitahal

      MARYLIN LEWIS

      Norline Metivier

      SHEILA HARRIS

      Joy Ryan

      WILFRED

      Noel Blandin

      IRIS

      Sandra Bushell

      BROTHER JOHN

      Errol Roberts

      PHIL

      Devindra Dookie

      CHARACTERS

      GAVIN FONTINELLE, actor, early thirties, slight American accent

      HARVEY ST. JUST, director, white, thirties, slight British accent

      CHRISTOPHER, actor, forty, Trinidadian accent

      MARYLIN LEWIS, actress, late twenties

      SHEILA HARRIS, actress, early thirties

      WILFRED, stagehand, twentyish

      IRIS, a young actress

      BROTHER JOHN, a young man

      PHIL, a derelict

      SETTING: The action takes place on the bare stage of a small theatre in Trinidad. The time is the present.

      ACT I

      SCENE 1

      SHEILA, MARYLIN, CHRISTOPHER, and GAVIN rehearsing Antony and Cleopatra. HARVEY seated.

      HARVEY

      Marylin, Chris, Gavin. Ready? Begin, Sheila.

      SHEILA

      [Turns to MARYLIN]

      “Give me my robe, put on my crown; I have

      Immortal longings in me: now no more,

      The juice of Egypt’s grape…”

      HARVEY

      [Claps his hands, goes to SHEILA, draws her away, whispers]

      What’s all this sexual hesitation, Sheila?

      You know how sensual his corpse is to her?

      SHEILA

      I’m not her, Harvey. I can’t play all that.

      HARVEY

      Play what you feel about Chris, not Antony.

      SHEILA

      Just leave my private life out of this, please.

      [They walk back to her position]

      HARVEY

      Christopher, Gavin. As we agreed. Correct?

      GAVIN

      “Saw you my lord?”

      CHRIS

      Your lord? No. He gone out.

      [Laughter. GAVIN controls his laughter, resumes]

      GAVIN

      “Was he not here?”

      [SHEILA opens her eyes, leaps up]

      CHRIS

      You deaf? He was disposed to mirth,

      But on the sudden a Roman thought hath

      struck him. Pow!

      SHEILA

      All of this is behind my back?

      GAVIN

      [Without breaking his pose]

      It gets better, Sheila.

      [SHEILA sits down]

      We throwing you out of the play. Go home.

      Whole entrance, or from here?

      MARYLIN

      Harvey?

      HARVEY

      Whatever.

      MARYLIN

      How you mean, whatever?

      HARVEY

      Whatever. Whoever. Wherever. [Silence] Wherever, Harvey. Christ, I just called you by my own name.

      SHEILA

      You cracking up, boy.

      HARVEY

      It’s only the first line, for Christ’s sake. If he wants to do the whole walk …

      GAVIN

      Ay, ay, I ain’t he. The name is Gavin.

      CHRIS

      God help you.

      GAVIN

      I’m going to g
    o back and come in, okay?

      HARVEY

      Whatever.

      GAVIN

      Would one of you care to ask Mr. Strasberg here what he means by whatever?

      HARVEY

      Repeat the entrance.

      GAVIN

      [To CHRIS]

      I’m going to be acting whatever, Chris, you hear. You ready?

      CHRIS

      Whenever.

      [The girls shriek with laughter. It becomes infectious. Everybody’s laughing. It goes on]

      GAVIN

      [Clapping his hands]

      Okay. Okay.

      SHEILA

      Whoever …

      [They laugh again. Then they settle]

      HARVEY

      Do the lines, all right? But standing. And keep the same diffidence.

      CHRIS

      Wha’ is diffidence, boy?

      GAVIN

      Diffidence is when you don’t give a shit.

      CHRIS

      [Clapping hands]

      Wait, wait, wait. Mr. Director. Gimme a break. Hold on. Hear this. Watch this. [He moves off. Turns] Gimme some room, Gavin. [Shouts] Clear the fucking stage, asshole.

      [GAVIN leaves the stage, joins the girls]

      GAVIN

      Gimme a cigarette, Sheila.

      HARVEY

      You won’t have time to smoke it, Gavin. Go ahead, show us.

      Bound to be some shit. Marylin, how you so quiet?

      CHRIS

      [Screams]

      SHUT UP!

      SHEILA

      [Shouts]

      QUI-EET!

      [CHRIS goes upstage, pauses, turns, then rushes downstage, playing two roles]

      CHRIS

      “Saw you my lord?”

      GAVIN

      Yes. He’s fucking Sheila.

      [MARYLIN screams with shock. Silence]

      Well, isn’t that true? Isn’t that what Antony’s doing?

      If you want to fuck around without rehearsing, so can I.

      [Silence]

      SHEILA

      Very funny. Except it’s my life.

      MARYLIN

      So. It’s a joke, Sheila. God! This is not the truth. This is the theatre. The sooner you remember that, the better.

      SHEILA

     
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