Authors: Mark Ravenhill
Augusta
I know nothing of motherhood yet. I thought marriage first, as happens in all the best families.
Exit
Augusta
.
Phil
shakes the baby.
Phil
Come on. Please. Come on.
(
Taking baby to
Cardew
.) Can’t you make him breathe?
Cardew
No, John. Dead to me now.
Phil
shakes the baby
.
Phil
Come on, cunt. Breathe. Come on.
He puts the baby down. Lights a cigarette.
Breathe – you.
He burns the baby’s skin with the tip of his cigarette. It cries.
There. See. Can breathe if you try. Good.
Enter
Constance
.
Constance
This is mine. This came from me. What it feels, I shall feel. Here. Here. To me. Give me the child.
Phil
Yes. Alright.
Constance
Oh yes. Come here. Come here. Let me feel something.
She takes the baby.
And now, of course, it should flow through me. Now I should feel overwhelmed by a mother’s love.
Phil
And what do you feel?
Constance
Nothing.
Phil
Here. Give him to me.
Constance
No. It will come. Hold him long enough and it must come. Don’t want to look down and see – what? – little square bundle of feet and teeth and eyes. That is not it, is it? No. No. No. Should see love. That is quite the proper thing to see. So why? Feed him. Feed him. That will do it. Yes. That will do it.
Enter
Moncrieff
and
Prism
.
Moncrieff
Oh my love. No. No. Come.
Constance
Must do my duty.
Moncrieff
Not the duty of an animal.
Constance
Must be as one with the child.
Moncrieff
Not like this. Come.
Now – hand the child over. Cling to the child and the child will cling to you.
Constance
hands the baby to
Prism
.
Moncrieff
Now we will go about our business. My billiards, your piano. And from time to time the child will be shown to us and we will be shown to the child. And so the proper degree of affection between parent and child will grow. You understand?
Constance
Yes.
Moncrieff
Good.
Exit
Moncrieff
and
Constance
.
Prism
You were born in quite the wrong family, were you not? Neither father nor mother to care for you. So, why should I?
She sits and works on her novel. Baby cries.
I’ll thank you for a moment’s silence. Please. If I could just enjoy a moment’s silence.
Phil
Here. I’m good with him. I’ll . . .
Phil
takes the baby.
Prism
Well, that is a little better.
Really, how am I to deal adequately with fiction when reality keeps making such rude interruptions on my time? Because, really, you are a single infant. You really won’t make one bit of difference to the world.
Whereas this is a novel. Think of the emotion and instruction contained in a three-volume novel and think of the thousands of readers.
I have just reached the part where she goes into the night, out into the storm to challenge the ghost . . .
Phil
Isn’t breathing.
(
Taking baby to
Prism
.) Isn’t breathing.
Prism
I must have peace. Peace. I don’t want you. Why won’t someone take you away? Why won’t the bogeyman or anyone take you away?
Cardew
Might I be allowed . . .
Prism
Mr Cardew. I thought they had driven you from the town.
Cardew
I will be leaving London shortly. I will begin again. I thought the coast. Worthing, I think. Nobody much bothers what happens in Worthing.
Prism
But you will still have your boys?
Cardew
If I cannot care for another what am I? But I have been too liberal with my charity, my care has been too ostentatious. Now I shall care for just one lost soul, one boy.
Prism
A child in need of care? A child ignored and forgotten by its parents?
Cardew
Exactly. Might I have . . . ?
Prism
Bags become so easily muddled at Victoria Station. It is quite possible, in a moment of mental abstraction, I should place my manuscript in the perambulator and the baby in this handbag. What a confusion. And that, similarly abstracted, you should mistake my bag for your own.
Cardew
Victoria Station? Which line?
Prism
The Brighton line.
Cardew
Thank you, thank you.
Exit
Cardew
.
Prism
To he who needs the child, the child shall be given. That is what justice means.
Exit
Prism
.
Phil
Oh no. Can’t get me like that. Know how to make you start again. See I know how.
He stubs the cigarette on the baby. Nothing.
Come on. Come on.
Stubs the cigarette. Nothing. Again. Again. Again.
Come on. Come on.
He pushes the cigarette into the baby’s eyes.
Just gonna be awkward? Just not gonna breathe, eh? Alright. Alright.
He sits, looks at the baby. Long pause
.
He puts the baby in a bin-bag.
Enter
Cardew
with handbag. Sets it down carefully. Opens it. Brings out a baby.
Cardew
My own.
Enter
Lorraine
with shopping bag. Puts down shopping bag. Goes to cradle. Sees it is empty.
Phil
I did a bad thing. I . . .
Lorraine
goes to bin-bag, picks it up.
Cardew
My own one.
Lorraine
cradles the bin-bag.
Cardew
cradles the baby.
Phil
howls.
Some Explicit Polaroids
, produced by Out of Joint, was first performed at the Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmunds, on 30 September 1999 prior to a run at the New Ambassadors, London. The cast was as follows:
Tim | Russell Barr |
Nadia | Fritha Goodey |
Helen | Sally Rogers |
Nick | Nick Dunning |
Jonathan | David Sibley |
Victor | Matthew Wait |
Directed by
Max Stafford-Clark
Designed by
Julian McGowan
Lighting by
Johanna Town
Sound by
Paul Arditti
Helen
Nick
Nadia
Victor
Tim
Jonathan
A slash in the dialogue (/) is a cue for the next actor to start their line, creating overlapping dialogue.
Helen
’s flat
Nick
and
Helen
.
Nick
is very wet.
Helen
Nick. Fucking hell. Nick.
Nick
Hello, Helen.
Helen
Fucking hell.
Nick
I tried to ring you.
Helen
You’re / wet.
Nick
Wet. Yeah. It’s raining.
Helen
Right.
Nick
I tried to ring you. Let you know. But I was there and I couldn’t work out how to get the money in and there’s a girl behind me and she says ‘they only take cards’ and I’m like cards? What the fuck does she mean ‘cards’?
Helen
Listen, I have to –
Nick
I’m soaked. I need to change my / clothes.
Helen
Nick, I was on my way out.
Nick
I thought maybe you still had some of my gear . . .
Helen
Sorry?
Nick
Something I could change into?
Helen
Nick. I threw it all away.
Nick
What? All of it?
Helen
All of it. Years ago.
Nick
Right. Right. I see. You look smart.
Helen
I’ve got a meeting to go to.
Nick
Kid in the lift tried to sell me smack. Must have been about seven. I said: ‘You shouldn’t be selling drugs at your age.’ And he said: ‘How else am I gonna buy a PlayStation?’
Helen
There’s a lot of that goes on.
Nick
What the fuck is a PlayStation? How’s your mum?
Helen
Dead.
Nick
Right. Right. But the council let you –
Helen
I bought it.
Nick
Yeah?
Helen
Yes. I bought the flat from the council. Alright?
Nick
Fucking hell, Helen.
Helen
Yeah. Propertied classes me. So, what you going to do to me? Firebomb through the letter box? Picket the entryphone. Or maybe you’re going to kidnap / me and do all sorts of terrible things to me?
Nick
No. No. No. I’ve changed.
Helen
Well good.
Nick
I really want to change out of these clothes. I think I might get flu or something.
Helen
Nick –
Nick
Maybe if I just –
Helen
I haven’t got time for this.
Nick
starts to take off his clothes.
Helen
Nick.
Nick
There’s no ring. You’re not / married.
Helen
No.
Nick
I think that’s a good choice. Not to tie yourself down like that. Keep your independence. Play the field a bit when you fancy it. I think that’s a really good choice you’ve made there.
Helen
There was someone.
Nick
Right.
Helen
For a few years but in the end she moved.
Nick
She?
Helen
Yes. She moved to America.
Nick
Really? / She?
Helen
She’s in computing. I still get the odd card from Silicon Valley.
Nick
So you’re a . . . ? What? You’re . . .
Helen
There’s been a few blokes / as well.
Nick
Right. Right. You still look great.
Helen
I look middle-aged. I am middle-aged.
Nick
No, you’re . . . So, nobody actually around at the moment?
Helen
Maybe. No . . . It’s none of your business actually, is it?
Nick
No toy boy in the bedroom? No lady wrestlers behind the sofa?
Helen
Yeah. But they all hid when they heard the door go. Which doesn’t mean I’m up for it, okay?
Nick
I wasn’t asking.
Helen
Alright. Just in case you were thinking of . . . Don’t.
Nick
Alright then.
Helen
You’re going to have to put those on again. I’ve got a meeting and I’m already running late.
Nick
Yeah.
Helen
You caught me on my way to a meeting.
Nick
What sort of meeting?
Helen
Council meeting. I’m a councillor.
Nick
Yeah?
Helen
Yes. Nowadays I’m a councillor, hence . . .
Nick
Smart clothes.
Helen
Hence smart clothes. Look. There’s some jeans and a T-shirt Finnoula left. She was quite a big girl. You can have them.
Nick
I need somewhere to stay.
Helen
Oh.
Nick
I’m sort of stuck and I need somewhere to stay and I thought you might just put me up until . . .
Helen
I’m sorry, Nick.
Nick
For a short time.
Helen
No.