The Goddess of Filthy Things
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THE GODDESS OF FILTHY THINGS, 12 characters. A story inside a story inside a story inside a story. A dramatic labyrinth that attempts to bring the density of the novel and the fluidity of the movies to the stage. At its core—a mystery. What happened to Jerry Green, a writer? His daughter Jessica thinks if she can tell her father's story she'll find him and get him back. The only one who can help her is Jack, who, haunted by Jessica since she was a child, is writing a play about her—the play you're watching—about the obsessive nature and power of storytelling itself—what happens when a story seizes your imagination and becomes more real to you than your own life.
Edward Pomerantz
EDWARD POMERANTZ has written over 35 commissioned screenplays and teleplays, and is the recipient of two Writers Guild Awards. He wrote the movie CAUGHT, based on his novel INTO IT, released by Sony Pictures Classics and nominated for three Independent Spirit Awards. His play/feast BRISBURIAL was produced by Woodie King, Jr.'s New Federal Theatre and published by Magic Circle Press.
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The Goddess of Filthy Things - Edward Pomerantz
INTRODUCTION
Coming Home
When I was sixteen, my playwriting teacher at the High School of Performing Arts submitted the play I wrote to Samuel French. It was a one-act called The Garden, and I got fifty bucks for it. The next one, Only A Game, published a year later, made it official. The first was no fluke. I was the real thing—a Playwright, and got seventy-five bucks.
This was in the early 50’s, when the American Theater was an exciting place to find a home in. Until then, I was a movie kid, going to double features at my Washington Heights Loews and RKO every Saturday from the day I was born. But now, a drama student at a pioneering new public high school at Broadway’s epicenter on West 46th Street, I was a Saturday matinee kid, getting up at dawn to stand on line for standing room or the last row in the second balcony, where I had my heart broken by Julie Harris in A Member Of The Wedding and Bert Lahr in Waiting For Godot, my view of reality expanded by Jo Mielziner, his set for the bedroom in Cat On A Hot Tin Roof an open space, no pretending to look like a real bedroom, just Maggie the Cat in a white slip down left on a thrust stage, her husband Brick, drinking, on a bed up right, nothing
but isolation and distance between them.
I was lucky. It was Jacob Weiser, the playwriting teacher, who saw a gift in me I didn’t know I had, and mentored me (every day after school in his parked convertible on Riverside Drive) through a long process of endless rewriting, scene by scene, line by line. It’s all Jack Weiser’s fault. Instead of the next Gene Kelly, I would have to settle for being the next Eugene O’Neill.
Then Time happened. After the one-acts, I expanded The Garden into a three-acter, and won First Prize in the Samuel French National Playwriting contest, which led to interest in the play by Kraft Television Theater and an offer to go to Hollywood to be a contract writer for one of the Studios, neither of which happened. Instead, I ended up with an MFA from the Yale Drama School, where I returned six years later, when Robert Brustein took over, to be a playwright-in-residence and write my play/feast Brisburial. By now, it was the late 60’s, and except for two one-acts in this collection and a production of Brisburial at Woodie King, Jr’s New Federal Theatre in the early 70’s, I didn’t write or have another play produced for over twenty-five years.
I did, however, remain a storyteller—writing two novellas and my novel Into It (Dial Press), and over thirty commissioned screenplays and television scripts, some of which have been produced (most not), some winning awards. Which jump-cuts me to the mid- 90’s, when Caught, the movie I wrote based on Into It, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was released by Sony Pictures Classics. It was around then, after 20 years (and drafts) fighting to get the movie made, I returned to The Goddess Of Filthy Things, a play in my head and on scattered pieces of paper that demanded my attention and jeopardized my sanity until I finally saw the forest for the trees
and figured out what all the voices and unconnected monologues, notes, stories-inside-stories were telling me. Most important, and we’re coming around full circle now, I figured out how to travel through the play--through open space, the space Mielziner opened for me when I was a kid in the second balcony watching Cat On A Hot Tin Roof forty-five years earlier.
With the writing of The Goddess of Filthy Things, I had come home. And home
is where I’ve stayed since then, writing all the plays in this collection (except for the two one-acts written in the early 70’s). I’ve also included Man Running, an original screen- play, which began many years ago when Bob Young, my treasured friend and director of Caught, brought me the gift of his idea for it. Decades later, it remains unfilmed. But that could be a blessing in disguise.
What you have here is the latest draft written in the last year (There’s always a scene, an inspiration, a truer and funnier way to do it that makes me and Bob laugh, keep working on it).
Play. Novel. Screenplay. I’ve written them all with the deepest pleasure and satisfaction. Why then, in these last years, has the stage become the only arena for my ideas? Stories? Imagination? Why now, when I close my eyes, it’s always that open space I see, giving me the same freedom movie writing gives me—to move fluidly through time and place—meeting and merging with what prose gives me—the music and density of language, the rhythmic force and driving flow of narrative. And even though the neighborhood movie palace was my cathedral, and the Josephs, Conrad and Heller, changed my life, it’s the Theater—the public event, the human voice—out there, filling the space, the happening now, right now of it--that keeps me coming back to it. It’s the space where all my writing—screenplays, novel, and plays-- intersect. The space where I can create what Matthew Ritchie, the painter, calls a landscape…designed to produce adventures inside itself, adventures of information,
where, like Ritchie, I can dream the whole thing up as a way to express just how much fun you can have thinking.
Adventure. That’s the key word here. Every play in this collection began with a question, a strong scene, image, or situation that haunted me, whose mystery could only be solved by writing it, moving step by step into unknown territory, emboldening me with clues and discoveries, as I moved forward, loving the danger of it, dancing on quicksand. We’re lucky,
William Carlos Williams tells us, when we catch the evasive life of the thing.
With these plays, and the one I’m writing now, I feel lucky to still be spending my days in pursuit of it.
Edward Pomerantz
New York City
THE GODDESS OF FILTHY THINGS, 12 characters. A story inside a story inside a story inside a story. A dramatic labyrinth that attempts to bring the density of the novel and the fluidity of the movies to the stage. At its core—a mystery. What happened to Jerry Green, a writer? His daughter Jessica thinks if she can tell her father’s story she’ll find him and get him back. The only one who can help her is Jack, who, haunted by Jessica since she was a child, is writing a play about her—the play you’re watching—about the obsessive nature and power of storytelling itself—what happens when a story seizes your imagination and becomes more real to you than your own life.
The Goddess Of Filthy Things
a new play
by
EDWARD POMERANTZ
"An untold story can be a terrible thing.
You have to tell it, if it kills you.
In this case it probably will..."
Jerry Green
Woodland Hills, California
For my daughters
Francesca and Alexandra
Characters
JACK GUNN, a writer and teacher, 20’s, 30’s, 40’s
JERRY GREEN, a writer and teacher, 30’s
JESSICA GUEST, Jerry’s daughter, 15, 19, 22, also FEMALE STUDENT, BRIGIT, YOUNG WOMAN (The Girl In Jake Gold’s Story)
JESTER GARDEN, a movie director, 20’s, 30’s, 40’s
MARGO, Jack’s wife, 30’s, 40’s
ELLEN, Jerry’s wife, 30’s
BERNIE CATES, a literary agent
YOUNG