Double Feature: One (NHB Modern Plays)
By Sam Holcroft
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About this ebook
This volume contains:
- Edgar & Annabel by Sam Holcroft
- The Swan by D C MooreIn Edgar & Annabel a young couple prepare dinner - but something isn't right. In a city not so different from our own capital, a group of freedom fighters attempts to stand up to an Orwellian establishment in increasingly perilous circumstances. The story that unfolds brings into question relationships, identities and the nature of reality itself'
The Swan is an examination of the ties that hold us together in a fractured society.
In a decaying pub in South London, preparations are being made for a wake. With only an hour before their guests arrive, a family begin to settle their accounts. The ghosts of lives lived and opportunities missed are laid to rest as new and ancient betrayals are confronted and forgiven.
The plays premiered in a specially converted space at the National Theatre in July 2011. They were performed alongside There is a War by Tom Basden and Nightwatchman by Prasanna Puwanarajah, published in the companion volume Double Feature: Two.
'startlingly imaginative... Clever, funny and disturbing' - Evening Standard
'Moore is one of the best thirty-something playwrights around, an expert analyst of half-truths and human weakness' - Evening Standard
Sam Holcroft
Sam Holcroft is a playwright, winner of the Windham Campbell Prize for Literature. Her plays include: A Mirror (Almeida Theatre, London, 2023); Rules for Living (National Theatre, London, 2015); The Wardrobe for National Theatre Connections; Edgar & Annabel, part of the Double Feature season in the Paintframe at the National Theatre; Dancing Bears, part of the Charged season for Clean Break at Soho Theatre and Latitude Festival; While You Lie at the Traverse, Edinburgh; Pink, part of the Women, Power and Politics season at the Tricycle; Vanya, adapted from Chekhov, at The Gate; and Cockroach, co-produced by the National Theatre of Scotland and Traverse (nominated for Best New Play 2008, by the Critics’ Awards for Theatre in Scotland and shortlisted for the John Whiting Award, 2009). In 2013, she wrote The House Taken Over, a libretto for opera, adapted from Cortázar, for the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence and Académie Européenne de Musique. She received the Tom Erhardt Award in 2009, was the Pearson Writer-in-Residence at the Traverse Theatre, 2009–10, and the Writer-in-Residence at the National Theatre Studio from 2013–14. In 2014, she received a Windham Campbell Prize for Literature in the drama category.
Read more from Sam Holcroft
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Book preview
Double Feature - Sam Holcroft
DOUBLE FEATURE:
ONE
EDGAR & ANNABEL
Sam Holcroft
THE SWAN
DC Moore
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
Title Page
Original Production
Edgar and Annabel
The Swan
About the Authors
Copyright and Performing Rights Information
Double Feature: One was first performed at the Paintframe, a specially converted space at the National Theatre, London, on 18 July 2011, with the following casts:
EDGAR & ANNABEL
THE SWAN
Set, Costume
EDGAR & ANNABEL
Sam Holcroft
Characters
NICK, male, late twenties
MARIANNE, female, late twenties
MILLER, male, older than Nick and Marianne
TARA, female, late twenties
MARC, male, late twenties
ANTHONY, male, late twenties, similar in appearance to Nick
CLAIRE, female, late twenties, similar in appearance to Marianne
Setting
The action moves between Edgar and Annabel’s kitchen and various meeting places.
Note on Text
Dialogue in [square brackets] is unspoken.
Scene One
EDGAR and ANNABEL’s kitchen.
Someone has gone to great lengths to artfully blend old with new. Clear signs of affluence sit next to bohemia. There is a recycling bin. A kitchen table with chairs stands in the centre of the room.
MARIANNE stands at the countertop mixing fresh herbs into a decanter of salad dressing. She licks her fingers. She hums contentedly to herself.
A key is heard in the lock. MARIANNE smiles and whisks her dressing. The door opens and NICK enters wearing a raincoat. He carries a heavy shoulder bag, an umbrella and a plastic shopping bag.
NICK. Hi, honey, I’m home.
MARIANNE. Hi, darling.
On seeing him she stops short. He meets her gaze. They stare in startled silence. Eventually NICK tries to break the silence.
NICK. Something smells good.
Beat.
Is that fish?
Beat.
Is that fish?
Pause.
Is that…?
MARIANNE. Chicken.
NICK. Fish?
MARIANNE. Chicken.
NICK. Fish.
MARIANNE. Fish.
NICK. I thought so. Smells delicious. No, don’t kiss me, I’m soaking wet. It’s raining cats and dogs out there.
NICK retrieves two bound documents from his bag and offers one to MARIANNE. She stares at it.
(With emphasis.) I’m sorry I’m late. But I had to stand in a doorway for fifteen minutes.
MARIANNE takes the document. It is a script. Unless stated otherwise, from hereon in they both read from the scripts.
My umbrella blew inside out.
MARIANNE doesn’t say her line and so NICK continues with his.
You know how that always makes you feel like a right idiot? (Beat.) I know, it’s so embarrassing. (Beat.) Yeah, I did.
MARIANNE. Did… did you get the salad?
NICK (relieved). Yeah, I did.
MARIANNE. You remembered?
NICK. Yes, of course.
NICK hands her the plastic bag. She takes it.
The checkout is a nightmare during rush hour; the queue stretched all the way down the aisle.
On opening the plastic bag MARIANNE appears confused. She then scans her script and, understanding, she reads on.
MARIANNE. I asked for salad.
NICK. Yeah, I know. I bought a bag of salad.
MARIANNE. These are stir-fry vegetables.
NICK (feigning surprise). What? No…?
MARIANNE. This is a bag of stir-fry vegetables.
NICK. It can’t be, it looks like salad.
MARIANNE. It’s a bag of stir-fry vegetables. Here, it says on the front, ‘Shredded vegetables for stir-frying’. Did you read the front?
NICK. I… I…
MARIANNE. Did you even look at what you were buying or did you just grab the first bag that you saw?
NICK. I… I was in a hurry.
MARIANNE. Edgar, can you look at what you’re buying?
NICK. Yes.
MARIANNE. Can you please look at what you’re buying, Edgar?
NICK. Yes.
MARIANNE. Can you?
NICK. Yes, Annabel.
MARIANNE. Thank you.
MARIANNE opens the oven and removes the roasting dish inside. They both turn the page; NICK fails to do this quietly.
I have a job too.
NICK. Yes, I know.
MARIANNE. I work just as hard.
NICK. You do.
MARIANNE walks the roasting dish to the table. NICK follows, helping her to hold her script and read.
I’m sorry.
MARIANNE. But I still find time to read the labels on your food.
MARIANNE places the roasting dish on the table; in it sits a large roasted chicken.
NICK. Delicious. Is that…?
MARIANNE. Salmon.
NICK. Delicious.
Pause.
So. How was your day?
MARIANNE. I got some more recycling bags.
NICK. Great.
MARIANNE. I hate having to throw all that plastic away. I don’t know how people do it.
NICK. Is there any mayonnaise?
MARIANNE. It’s such a waste.
NICK. Mayonnaise?
MARIANNE. It only takes two minutes. It makes me so angry.
NICK. In the fridge?
MARIANNE. Yes, but it’s not home-made. I’ll get it. (Approaching with an electric carving knife.) Would you please carve… the salmon?
NICK. Sure. The news today must have had you spitting?
MARIANNE slows to a stop.
MARIANNE. What, in the papers?
NICK. No, on the news.
MARIANNE. I didn’t see it.
NICK. They’re saying the level of plastic in the ocean is killing a million seabirds a year.
MARIANNE. A million?
NICK. Every year.
MARIANNE. That’s awful.
NICK. Isn’t it? And just this afternoon the police arrested five more people on charges of anti-government conspiracy. (With emphasis.) That’s right, five of them.
MARIANNE stares in alarm.
But don’t worry, if it’s anti-government charges we won’t be seeing them again. Not a single one. I expect they were conspiring to scare us out of our own city. Well, I’m never leaving this neighbourhood, this is my house now and I’m here to defend it. Against troublemakers.
NICK switches on the carving knife. The sound rings out. NICK motions to urgently make haste. Covered by the sound, he passes her the shoulder bag and a set of documents. He mouths the words ‘Hide them. Hide them now. Where do they go?’ MARIANNE is paralysed.
(Unscripted.) Annabel. I can’t carry this; I’m trying to carve. Help me.
Finally MARIANNE takes the bag from him. She hides the bag and documents behind various false panels and in unexpected places in the kitchen. NICK switches off the electric carving knife. They stand in silence a moment before returning to their scripts.
MARIANNE. Right then. Shall we sit?
NICK. Napkins?
MARIANNE. Yes. They’re clean out of the wash.
She grabs a roll of paper towels and moves to the table. They both sit.
MARIANNE coughs to cover the sound of tearing strips of kitchen towel.
NICK. Hungry?
MARIANNE. Starving. And I do so love salmon… sliced.
Scene Two
A meeting place.
MARIANNE and MILLER alone.
MARIANNE. Where is he?
MILLER. He’s gone.
MARIANNE. Where is he?
MILLER. Where are any of them, Marianne?
MARIANNE. Who else?
MILLER. I can’t give you their names.
MARIANNE. There were four others.
MILLER. You don’t need their names; they’re not coming back.
Beat.
MARIANNE. How?
MILLER. They were in a café and they were overheard.
MARIANNE. What were they saying?
MILLER. Nothing specific.
MARIANNE. Carl didn’t talk about the house?
MILLER. They were talking about the election, making jokes. That’s anti-government conspiracy now.
MARIANNE. You sure that’s all they said? I’ve spent the last two days expecting the police to kick my door in.
MILLLER. They’re not going to kick your door in; nothing was said about the house, about any of the houses. They were just talking and they were unlucky. We move on.
MARIANNE. But what if they break him, what if they link Carl to me?
MILLER. The paper trail leads nowhere and he’s trained, Marianne, he’ll withstand it.
NICK enters.
Were you followed?
NICK. No.
MILLER. You sure?
NICK. I wasn’t followed.
Beat.
MILLER. Okay, listen up. I don’t have long. These arrests were meant as warning. And they won’t be the last. They’ll be