bye bye birdie - Putnam County Playhouse
Transcription
bye bye birdie - Putnam County Playhouse
EDWARD PADUTA presents BYE BYE BIRDIE A Musical Com.dy Bookby MICHAEL STEWART Musicby CHARLES STROUSE Lyrics by LEE ADAMS Music & Lyrics- dt"r?fi &it8i *[:tffit":::XXt Lee Adams Property of Tams-Witmark Music Library, Inc. 560 Lexington Avenue New York, NY I0A22 (2t2) 688-2s2s Cast of Characters in early thirties, ATBERT PETERSON Young man ROSE ALVAREZ Albert' s secretary, principal dancer HELEN MRS. MAE PETERSON singer, nonspeaking Original cast had 0 girls and 7 boys A hyper-enthusiastic dark haired teen f riend and neighbor of Kim's 15 years oId, she is very pretty and quiie self-possessed Mother of Kim and Randolph Father of Kim and Randolph Albert' s mother, the quintessential CONRAD BIRDIE Rock Star HUGO PEABODY Kim's Itsteadytt ONE GIRL Member POLTCEMAN f n N. TEEN CHORUS 1- MACAFEE MRS. DORIS MR. and singer Teenage URSULA MERKLE KIM President of Almaelou Music Corp. MACAFEE FIARRY MACAFEE trMammatr of TEEN GIRLS chorlls. Speaks Act T, Scene 4 Y. train statiorf.. Speaks Act f, Scene 4 REPORTERS N.Y. & Ohio train stations. First Reporter, Third Reporter speak. Second Reporter is a nonspeaking cameraman MAYOR Of Sweet Apple, Ohio MAYOR'S WIFE Edna. Member of quartette, Act !, Scene MRS. MERKLE Ursu1a's mother RANDOLPH MACAFEE Kim's younger brother NA}ICY Teen chorus. Speaks Act L, Scene GLORIA RASPUTIN A big broad, tap daneing f'secretary,', Mae's choice to replace Rosie ED SULLIVAIV'S VOICE Of TRAVELER Part of crowd in N. Y. train station. Speaks Act I, Scene 4 only' 5 fstage 9 MUSICAL ACT NU}4BERS ONE . OVERTURE nA'r (Orchestra w/TEEN GIRLS) A. Alternate OVERTURE ,Brr (Orchestra w/ OPENING CURTAIN (Orchestra) II$[ ENGLISH TEACHER'' (NOSIE) 3 1 1 2 CONRAD & TEEN GIRLS) AN ENGI,ISH TEACHER TAG (NOSIE) "THE TELEPHONE HOUR" (renlt CHORUS) THE TELEPHONE HOUR PLAYOFF (OrChCStra) ''HOW LOVELY TO BE A WQIVIXIqII (KIM) PENN STATION TRANSTTION (Orchestra w/TEEN CHORUS) ''PUT ON A HAPPY FACE" (ar,eERT) o "A HEALTHY, NORMAL, AMERICAII BOY" (aLeERT, ROSTE, TEEN & ADULT CHORUS) 10. PENN STATION TO SWEET APPLE (TEBN & ADULT CHORUS) 1]-. SWEET APPLE BA}ilD (IUEN CHORUS) 7-2. "ONE BOY" (XrM, TWO GrRLS & ROSrE) 13. SWEET APPLE STATION (Orchestra underscoring) L4. 'IHONESTLY SINCERE'I (CONRAD & CHORUS) 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 15. 15. L7 . 18 . 19. WOUNDED (URSULA, DEBORAH SUE & MARGIE) ''HYMN FOR A SUNDAY EVENING'' ED SULLIVAI\T (TUU & 4 MacAFEES CHORUS) HUNDRED WAYS BALLET (OrcheSTrA) T. V. THEME (FAMARE) (Orchestra) ''ONE LAST KISSI' (COTTIRAD, MALE QUARTET, ALBERT, TEEN CHORUS, PRINCIPALS & ADULT CHORUS) ACT II . 2 0A. 2L. 22. 23. 24. 25 . 25 . 27 . 28. 29 . 30. 31. 32 . 20 ENTR'ACTE rtArr (Orchestra) Alternat.e ENTR', ACTE il B il (Orchest ra w / TEEN GIRLS ) "14fi[f DrD r EVER SEE rN HrM" (ROSTE & KrM) SEE IN HIM UNDERSCORE (OTChCSITA) SEE IN HIM REPRISE (NOSIE) IIA LOT OF LIVIN' TO DOII (CONRAD, KIM & TEEN CHORUS) r' . & MRS . MaCAFEE ) KIDS Scene Change (Orchest,ra ) |'BABY, TALK TO ME'' (er,eERT & MALE QUARTET) TRANSITION TO SHRINER'S (Orchestra) BALLET (Orchest,rA) SHRTNER, S SHRINER'S PLAYOFF (Orchestra) GLORY HALLELUJAI{ (OrCheSIrA) KIDS REPRISE (AOULT CHORUS, MR. & MRS. MacAFEE & & RANDOLPH) LAMONT CRANSTON TO ICdHOUSE (Scene Change Orchestra) ICE HOUSE LIVIN' (TEEN CHORUS) AIV ENGLI SH TEACHER REPRI SE ( ROS I E ) il KrDS (mn 33. 34. 35. g (nOS IE ) 35. 't PffrJI SH ROSE " (orchest,ra) i7. MORNTNG 38. HAND CAR (TNEN CHORUS GIRLS) (AT,EERT & ROS IE 39. 'I ROS IE '' (Orchestra) 40. FfNALE 4]-. BOWS AIUD EXIT MUS IC (Orchest,ra ) ) SCENES ACT I Scene 1 : Office of Almaelou Music, New York Scene 2: Sweet Apple, Ohio Scene 3 : MacAf ee Home, Sweet, Apple Scene 4: Pennsylvania Station, New York Scene 5: Railroad St,ation, Sweet Apple Scene 6 : Courthouse Steps, Sweet. Apple Scene 7 z MacAf ee Home, Sweet Apple Scene 8 : Stage and Backstage Office, CettLra1 Movie Theatre, Sweet Apple Scene 9 : St,age, C€ntral Movie Theatre, Sweet Apple ACT II Scene 1: MacAfee Home, Sweet Apple Scene 2: Street Outside MacAfee Home Scene 3 : MacAfee's Back Door Scene 4: Maude' Scene 5: s Roadside Retreat Private Dining Room, s Roadside Retreat Maude' Scene 6: Back Door, Maude's Roadside Ret,reat, Scene 7: The Ice House Scene B: Railroad Stat,ion, Sweet Apple TIME Present, ACT b/ ONE ovERTURE "A" Film strip and TEEN GIRLS. As the OVERTURE begins, we see fronL drop with shot of CONRAD on it. As music starts to build, w€ cut to various rapid shots of details of CONRAD's face and body, interspersed with shot,s of Kf DS reacting singLy, in groups, and f inally in mobs. KIDS screaming, shouting, dancirg, fainting, cLutching, tearing, jumpi*9, clima>Gd by a close shot of CONRAD himself, sideburns, wild hairdo, half-closed eyes, pouting lower lip Then BLACKOUT. and all. TEENS (From pit with orchestra) WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH, YES WE DO ! WE IOVE YOU CONRAD, AND WE'LL BE TRUE ! WHEN YOU'RE NOT NEAR US, WE'RE BLUE ! OH, CONRAD, WE LOVE... (Orchestra and film strip continue) WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH, YES WE DO ! WE LOVE YOU CONRAD, LL BE TRUE ! WHEN YOU'RE NOT NEAR US, WE'RE BLUE ! WE LOVE YOU. AI\TD WE, ACT ONE Alternate N Ovef t.ure OVERTURE ''BI' CONRAD and TEEN GfRLS. In a production where the film clip indicated in 1-0-1 is not feasible, we substitute OVERTURE B Near end of OVERTURE music suddenly cuts out . . and over t,heatre P . A. we hear highly amplified recording of Conrad Birdie as HE wails HIS way through the last, eight bars of an almost unrecognizable rock and rol I selection. AlI t,he groans, sighs, grunts, etc. , forced through an echo chamber and accompanied by a twanging electric guitar. A f ew f rant ic seconds of thi s , t,hen orchestra picks up the t,heme, a crash of music , cI imax, and BLACKOUT. . TEENS (From pit with orchestra) I^IE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH, YES WE DO ! WE LOVE YOU CONRAD, WE'I,L BE TRUE ! WHEN YOU'RE NOT NEAR US, WE'RE BLUE ! OH, CONRAD, AI\TD WE LOVE... wE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH, YES WE DO ! WE LOVE YOU CONRAD, AIVD WE'LL BE TRUE ! CONRAD (Uighly- ampl i f ied, over t,heatre CH, MY BABY ! OH YEA}I OH, MY BABY ! OH YEAI{ ! ! WELL, YA GONNA BE SINCERE, WELL, YA GONNA BE SINCERE. (Orchestra aI fine) P . A. syst,em) 1--1-1 8 ACT ONE Scene -1 THE OFFICE OF ALMAELOU MUSIC CORP. f in New YorK. AT rise, ALBERT PETERSON, a nervous young man in HIS early thirt ies, i s t,alking excitedly on phone, standing C. E oPENTNG cuRTArN (orchesrra) ALBERT that , sir, but think of t,he disastrous ef f ect, this might have on the morale of the American teenager ! No, I am not, suggest ing the boy doesn' t want Lo go into t he Army I I t ' s just, that,...No, I'rTr not t,rying Lo...Wefl, it seemed t,o me that. . . Two weeks f rom today? AE the Induct,ion Center? He'11 be t,here. (Hg hangs up as ROS IE bri skly ent ers ) Rosie, thank God you've come ! This is the end of the A1maelou Music Corporat.ion ! Conrad Birdie is going int,o the Army I . . . f know ROS And your f aithful IE secretary is hereby submitting. . (Sf apping let,ter down on HIS desk) . . . her resignation ! (Starts to Jeave) . ALBERT Hah? ROS IE I j ust dropped in t,o say goodbye, Albert , darl-ing. (Sge btows HIM a kiss) . . . Lots of luck (SHe goes to door. ALBERT stops HER) ! ALBERT Rosie, you can't ! Not today of all days (Runs to HIS desk. Looks f rant, ical ly t hrougrh drawers The l itt le whi-te ones I take where are my pi 11s My pills, when I'm overwrought, ! ) . ROS Here IE (Picking up bottle from desk and handing HIM one) I-L-2 9 Not, so much. Break it ALBERT in half . ROS . IE You're t,hirt,y-three years ol-d, Albert. aspirin. You can take a whole (Un takes it, f rom HER. SHE goes UL t,o waLer pitcher, sLarts pouring a glassful ) ALBERT I am not, thirt,y-three; I'm a long way from thirty-three; won't be t,hirt,y-three till tomorrow... Wat.er! (Handing it to ROS I IE HrM) It,ts no use, Albert,. My mindts made up. Irve been with Almaelou eight years now and as you well know I've been a lot more than j ust a secret,ary to you . Rose ! Those were moment ALBERT mad.ness s of ROS ! IE Well bet.ween t.he moments of madness and the of f ice I've put in a good. ninet,y hour week. * ALBERT get. I You want a raise. r r -5:::' ALBERT Rosie , if yourre referring to anything of a more permanent nat,ure bet,ween you and me, I'rTr not ready for it. Besides, t,here are religious dif ferences. Spanish is not, a religion ROS IE ! ALBERT And if it, ' s part of the company you're af Ler, t,he answer is no to that, too! A1maelou is me, Mdmma, and Lou....And any change in it would kill that wonderful woman who bore me. ROS IE Nothing coutd ki 11 your mot,her, Albert . bull-et, ! 5 Except maybe a s i lver 1-L-3 L0 ALBERT (Hg rises and goes to HER) And I won't drop poor o1d Lou either. ROS He loved you, Rose ! IE I loved Lou, too, stf re he was warm, he was loyal, he was loveable, but he died six years ago and, besides, he was a wire-haired terrier. (Hn walks L) Anyhow , I don't want a part of the company. This is somet,hing much more import,ant. . . ALBERT (Turns) , Lf you're going to discuss what I think you're going to discuss, I'rTr in no mood to discuss it (Sits at HfS desk) Rosie ! (Goes to HIM) ROS IE There' s nothing to discuss, Albert, . eonrad Birdie' s going in the Army; I've quit . There's nothing you can do but give up the business and go back to college and get your.... ATBERT (Interruptirg) ...Rosie, I'm up to my ears in debt! Conrad's got a fiftythousand dollar guarantee which I can't pay! And I've just taken a severe overdose of aspirin. . . A1bert, this may be (uusic b_/ ROS IE your last chance! ) "AAI ENGLTSH TEAcHER'' Will you listen ROS IE to me, Albert . . . . I'm serious HTS GOING TN THE ARMY IS THE BEST THING HE COUTD DOI NOW YOU'RE FREE TO START TO DO WHAT YOU WAI{TED TO. ALBERT? ALBERT! AL BERT! I REMEMBER HOW YOU TOLD ME I SHOULD TRUST YOU FOR A YEAR, IT WOULD 'JUST BE FOR A YEAR, BUT TT'S EIGHT YEARS, ALBERT ! EIGHT LONG YEARS, ALBERT! ! a-r-4 11 ALBERT Rosie, it takes time to build a business! IT ROS WAS ONLY A SIDELINE, IE THAT'S I'IHAT YOU SAID, YOU JUST NEEDED SOME MONEY, THAT, S IIIHAT YOU SAID. YOU WERE GOING TO COLLEGE, AIID GET ATIEAD I INSTEAD OF BEING A MUSIC BUSINESS BUM, YOU WERE GOING TO N. Y. f'. ADID BECOME. . . (SUn runs to door. ALBERT dashes af ter HER. Music cont,inues under dialogue) . Don't say it, ALBERT Rosie ! ROSTE (Shouts out the door) An English teacher! Rosie ALBERT ! ROS IE And furthermore, he wrote poetryl AI,BERT Rose, please. . . ROSIE Closes door, backs HIM to center) And in the N.Y.IJ. yearbook for L952 under I'AIbert Peterson's favorite piece of literature, I' you know what it says? ( Litt, le (Into the Women! phone) I ALBERT (Sinking into desk chair) f'm ruined in show business. ROSTE AI\T ENGLISH TEACI{ER ! AIV ENGLISH TEACHER, rF ONLY YOU'D BEEN AIV ENGLISH TEACHER ! 1-1-5 WE'D HAVE A LITTLE APARTMENT YOU'D GET A SUIqMER VACATION, A}TD WE WOULD KNOW WHAT LIFE IN L2 QUEENS, MEA}TS. A MAN WHO'S GOT HIS I\4ASTERS IS REALLY SOMEONB HOW PROUD I'D BE IF ! YOU HAD BECOME ONE ! IT COULD HAVE BEEN SUCH A WONDERFUL LIFE I COULD HAVE BEEN MISSIS PETERSON, ! MTSSIS ALBERT PETERSON, MI SS I S PHI BETA KAPPA PETERSON, THE ENGLISH TEACHER'S WIFE. OPTIONAL CUT IT WAS GOODBYB, GEOFFREY CHAUCER, HELLO, WILLIAM MORRIS, GOODBYE, N. Y.IJ. HELLO, ALMAELOU, 'CAUSE WHEN YOU WROTE CONRAD'S LAST HIT ''UGGA BUGGA BOOI' THEN I KNEW THIS WAS IT YOU WERE THRU WITH ENGLISH FOREVER. A}T ENGLISH TEACHER IS REALLY SOMEONE, HOW PROUD f'D BE IF YOU HAD BECOME ONE. IT COULD HAVE BEEN SUCH A WONDERFUL LIFE, ] COULD HAVE BEEN MISSIS PETERSON, MISSIS ALBERT PETERSON, MISSIS PHI BETA KAPPA PETERSON, THE ENGLISH TEACHER'S WIFE. (Uusic out f or dialogue ) ALBERT Suddenly ri s ing ) . . . Rose , T' 1l make a deal with you ! St,ay with me, help me get t,he money to pay Conrad' s guarant €€ , and as soon as I'm out, of t,he red... .I' II dissolve the company and go back to the academic life ! ( ROS IE Albert, You're on (enO sHE goes to HER desk, picks up smal l file drawer) ! Of course it may take at the latesL, we' 1l . ALBERT a whi Ie , but aa (SHn s lams the file ....What,ts that? I ' m sure that, by 1973 or ' 7 4 on HIS desk) 1-1-5 13 ROS IE Somet,hing that 's going to push that date up a few years. a name. Pick what, name ? Pick ALBERT What are you t,alking about, ? ROS IE Al I right , I' 11 do it f or you . (SHn picks card) . . . .MacAfee. Kim MacAfee. Age f ifteen, president and recording secretary Conrad Birdie Fan CIub Number 27 48 of Sweet Apple, Ohio. (Picking up phone) Mary, would you get me Sweet Apple, Ohio. The numberrs.... (neads from card) . . . . Capitol 7 double eight two oh. And call me right back. ALBERT (nising,'as ROSIE hangs up) Now wait a minute! What's going on here? Whateverhername is? ROS Who' s Kim IE Kim MacAfee, Albert, is what's going to send you back t,o college wit h the biggest hit song t,his business has ever seen ! fL's called "One Last Kiss!rt I never heard of it.. ALBERT ROS IE You havenf t. writt.en it, yeL . (f-,eads HIM to piano , seat. s HIM) . . . But when you do and when that one last kiss is from Conrad Birdie on his way into the big cold Army for two long years and when he gives that kiss to one of his fans chosen at random f rom one mi I l ion two hundred thousand hyst,erical teen- agers , it ' 11 make Mr. Birdie the hottest soldier since Joan of Arc ! (nuring speech SHE has placed a blank piece of sheet music on t,he piano) ALBERT (nises) Rose, I tm beginning t,o see it ! York. * Take Apple ::::ad, ROS IE We cut the record here in that greasy bongo-playing car-thief Let him kiss the kid. ALBERT 6 to Sweet New L-L-7 ROS L4 IE And release the record. ! (sgs goes to HER desk, HE goes left ) you' Albert, 11 make enough money to stay in college the rest of your life ! (sHe sits at HER desk) ALBERT (ttg goes right, leans over piano to ROS IE , Lt's wonderful I And I promise you, ds soon as this thing is settled, it'll be just the two of us, Rosel In perfect bliss ! f '11 get a job teaching English and. . . (rr hirs HrM) . . . Bliss ! Kiss ! That rhymes (nu sirs I wonder if anyone's ever used it before? (nnthusiastic again) . . . Oh, what difference does it make ! ft'II be great for the song! Oh one last kiss; it gives so much b1iss. . .what is your dentifrice ) Rose . ! ) ! (lvtusic) ENGLISH TEACHER No, that's - TAG (ROSIE) ALBERT too clinical . . . (ana as HE works away furiously at the piano ROSIE looks at HIM and sof t ly begins to sing) o ROS IE A}U ENGLISH TEACHER, AI\I ENGI,ISH TEACHER, SOME DAY HE MAY BE AI\T ENGLISH TEACHER. (The PHONE rings . ROSIE Xes L and answers it ) Yes? WeII, every phone in Sweet App1e can't be busyr what's going on there? Kim MacAfee just, got pinned to who? Never mind, M?ry, keep trying and call me right back. (SuE hangs up) THEN WE WOULD HAVE SUCH A WONDERFUL LTFE! THEN T MIGHT BE MISSIS PETERSON, MISSIS ALBERT PETERSON, MISSIS PHI BETA KAPPA PET.ERSON, THE ENGLISH TEACHER'S WTFE ! (f,fGHTS FADE as units move off L and R) L-2-8 1-5 ACT ONE Scene _2 Immediately up on FIRST TEEN-AGER on phone. Through number lights pick up different KIDS, each indescribably contorted into positions that de fy gravity and physiology. THEY are each seated in different cubicles of a large multi - colored j ungle g1rm. Each cubicle has a phone so that KIDS can be assumed to be talking to each other over a giant egg-box shaped complex. Their voices are young, piping, and f ul I of excitement Something big has happened in their set, and THEY can hardly wait t,o pass the neuts. . rt ftt HELEN HI HI , NAIICY ! , HEIJEN ! NAIVCY HETEN $IHAT'S THE STORY, MORNING GTORY? 1^11.11T, S THE TALE, NA\ICY NIGHTINGALE? TELL ME QUICK ABOUT HUGO ArVD KrM HI , ! ALICE [,[,;ARGIE ! MARGTE HI , ALICE ! hIIIAT'S THE STORY, MORNING GLORY? ALTCE 14191T'S THE WORD, HUMMINGBIRD? HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT HUGO A}UD KTM? r-2-9 T6 HELEN, NAIICY, ALICE & MARGIE DTD THEY REALLY GET PTNNED? DID SHE KISS HIM A}TD CRY? DID HE PIN THE PIN ON? OR WAS HE TOO SHY? WELL, I HEARD THEY GOT PINNED. YEAFI r FREDDIE & I(AFL , YEAH. WAS HOPIN' THEY HELEN, NA}ICY, ALICE & MARGIE WOULD ! FREDDIE & I(ARL UH HUH. HELEN, NANCY, ALICE & NOW THEY'RE HE'S LIVTN' AT LAST. MARGTE FREDDIE & I(ARL GONE. HELEN, NANCY, ALICE & MARGIE GOIN' STEADY FOR GOOD ! IARVEY ! MISTER HENKEL, THIS IS HARVEY JOHNSON, CA}] I SPEAK TO PENELOPE-ANN? HELLO IS IT PENELOPE TRUE ABOUT KIM? HARVEY Penelope . I JUST IOIEW IT ! HARVEY About the prom. I PENELOPE SOMEHOW PENELOPE MUST CALL HER RIGHT UP. HARVEY SaLurd ay? PENELOPE r CAIV'T TALK TO YOU NOW GOIN' ! GIRLS STEADY ! r-2-10 L7 YOU KNOW GOIN MAN! GIRLS I STEADY ! BOYS IT'S GOIN BOYS IT! CRAZY I MAN! ! GIRLS STEADY YOU KNOW ! BOYS IT! SUZ TE IT WON'T LAST ! NOT A PRAYER ! SHE I S TOO COOL ! HE'S TOO SQUARE ! HARVEY HELLO, MTSSIS MILLER, THIS IS HARVEY .TOHNSON, CA\T I SPEAK TO DEBRA SUE? BOYS HIYA, HUGO ! HIYA, STUPID ! WHAT JA WANNA GO GET PINNED FOR? GIRLS WELL, I HEARD THEY GOT PINNED! BOYS HEY, YA I MEATHEAD ! GIRLS WAS HOPINI THEY WOULD! BOYS LOST YOUR W\RBLES? GIRLS NOW THEY'RE LIVIN ' AT LAST I BOYS ARE YA NUTTY? GOIN I GIRLS STEADY FOR. . . I I-2-r_1_ 1'.8 HARVEY HELLO, MRS. GARFEIN IS CHARITY HOME FROM SCHOOT YET? SOME GIRLS DID THEY REALLY GET PINNED? OTHER GIRLS STEADY ! GOIN' BOYS SHE SAW HIM ! I SOME GIRLS WAS HOPIN' THEY WOULD ! OTHER GIRLS STEADY ! GOIN' BOYS SHE DUG HIM ! SOME GIRLS NOW THEY'RE LIVTN' AT LAST ! OTHER GIRLS STEADY ! GOIN' BOYS SHE NAILED HIM ! GIRLS GOIN' STEADY FOR GOOD. IF BOYS YOU GOTTA GO THAT'S THE WAY TO GO! BOYS WHEN THEY GOT GIRLS YA o-o-o-o-H ! WHATCHA GONNA DO! WHATCHA GONNA DO! o-o-o-o-H ! GIRLS & MIXED COUPLES WELL, I HEARD THEY GOT PINNED! BOYS OH, MJ\N ! OH, MAN! OH, MAN! THEN YOU'RE HOOKED REALLY COOKED I WAS THINKING THEY WOULD ! NOW THEY'RE LIVTN' AT LAST GOIN' STEADY FOR GOOD ! GOIN' STEADY, GOIN' STEADY, GOIN' STEADY, STEADY FOR GOOD! ! ooH ! ooH ! ooH ! ooH BUH DEE DOO, L-2-L2 19 GIRLS & MIXED GOIN' GOIN' GOIN' BOYS & MIXED COUPLES COUPLES UH DOO WAI{, UH DOO STEADY, STEADY, STEADY, DOO WAI{ OOH BUH DEE DOO. STEADY FOR GOOD! ALL GIRLS HE'S IN LOVE WITH KIM, KTM'S IN LOVE WITH HTM ! GIRLS WHE-ELL WELL. BOYS GOTN' STEADY, GOIN' GOrN' STEADY, STEADY, DOO OO STEADY FOR GOOD! TELL GOTN' STEADY, GOTN' STEADY, GOIN' WHE-ELL WELL. DOO OO STEADY, STEADY FOR GOOD! TELL ALTOS & BASSES THAT'S THE WAY IT SHOULD BE ! THEY'LL BE HAPPY , T KNOW! GOIN' STEADY'S FOR ME. THAT'S THE WAY YOU SHOULD GO! GIRLS STEADY, STEADY, STEADY FOR GOOD! GOIN' GOIN' BOYS & GIRLS YEAII ! TELEPHoNE HoUR & TENORS GOIN' GOIN' BLACKOUT N SOPRANOS YEAI{ OH, YEAI{ OH, YEAII oH, GOTN' STEADY, STEADY, STEADY, STEADY ! OH OC ! BOYS GOTN' STEADY, GOTN' STEADY. GOIN' GOIN' GOIN' OO ! PLAYoFF (orchestra) STEADY, STEADY ! 1-3-1-3 20 ACT ONE Scene 3 As l ight, s come up , we see URSULA a dark-haired, hyperenthusiastic young lady of about, fifteen, sitting in a window DL talking excitedly on the phone. MERKLE, URSULA . . . Kim MacAf ee, what do you mean you' re resigning f rom t.he Fan CIub I f mean j ust because Hugo Peabody gave you his pin doesn't mean you have t.o retire from aII social lif e ! Going steady is ve ry import ant but t,here are some things more important t,han very important and the Conrad Birdie Fan Club is one of Ehem ( fn event of a technical problem and MacAFEE house is not, in DS position, SHE may add: ) I mean , af ter a1I, where else can we girls gat,her toget,her to worship that wonderf ul creat,ure ? I mean , do you real i ze what you'd be giving up, Kim? (the MacAFEE HOUSE has moved DS, the scrim is up and we see KIM UR in HER upst,airs bedroom. House is a Lwo-st,ory affair, bedroom upstairs, combination famify room and kitchen downstairs. KIM is a month or two older t,han URSULA, very pretty, quite self -possessed) KIM Into phone) I ' m so rry, Ursula , but, my mind' s made up . Of course , I' 11 still play his records, but things like the Pledge and t,he Conrad Birdie Scream are past me know. ( URSULA You're giving up t,he scream? You mean when Conrad Birdie singrs, on t,elevision , You'rd noL going t.o go M! (Tragical ly) ....oh, Kim! (Downstairs, MRS . MacAFEE has crossed L and fifLed the telephone through the last of above . SHE now put, s i t down and cal l s upstairs ) MRS. MacAFEE Kim Dear, would you please get off the phone. r've got calls to make. some 1-3 -74 2T A1 I right , (Cal l ing down Mot,her ! KIM to HER. ) (fhen back into phone . . . . Sorry, Ursu1a , T 've got to hang uD . Ycu' 1I explain everyLhing t,o the ot,her kids , won ' ts- y:u ? ) UR.SULA I suppose I' 11 have t,o . 'Bye , K:n. . (SUf hangs up . KIM hrangs utr) URSULA leans out windcw) . . . Kim, are you sure? I mean af ter all ! are you absolutely sure? . . I mean realIy, KIM THEY eviCent Iy l ive right next, door t.o each ot her ) Af ter al-I, I'rTr f if teen years old and it's (ef so leaning . Positive. sett led down. time I (Through t,he course of f ol lowing song, KIM puts on jeans, huge sweater, socks and baseball cap) E "How LovELY To BE A woMAN" KIM WHEN YOU'RE Kim, A SKINNY CHILD OF FOURTEEN WIRED WITH BRACES FROM EAR TO EAR, YOU DOUBT THAT YOU COULD EVER BE APPEALING. THEN HALLELUJAI{ I YOU ARE FIFTEEN A}TD THE BRACES DISAPPEAR A}TD YOUR SKIN IS SMOOTH AI{D CLEAR AND YOU HAVE THAT HAPPY, GROWN-UP, FEMALE FEELING HOW LOVELY TO BE A WOMAN! THE WAIT WAS WELL WORTH WHILE, HOW LOVELY TO WEAR MASCARA, A\TD SMILE A WOMAN'S SMILE. HOW LOVELY TO HAVE A FIGURE THAT'S ROUND INSTBAD OF FLAT, WHENEVER YOU HEAR BOYS WHISTLE YOU'RE WHAT THEY'RE WHISTLING AT ! IT'S WONDERFUL TO FEEL THE WAY A WOMAN FEELS, IT GTVES YOU SUCH A GLOW JUST TO KNOW YOU'RE WEARING LIPSTICK A\TD HEELS ! r_-3-15 22 KfM (Continued) HOW LOVELY TO BE A WOMAN, A\TD HAVE ONE JOB TO DO: TO PICK OUT A BOY A}ilD TRAIN HIM, ARE THROUGH, YOU'VE MADE HIM THE MAN YOU WAIVT HIM TO AI\TD THEN WHEN YOU LIFE'S LOVELY WHEN YOU'RE A HOW WONDERFUL TO KNOW THE THINGS A WOMAN KNOWS ! HOW MARVELOUS TO WAIT FOR A DATE IN SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL CLOTHES WOMAN BE LIKE ME ! ! HOW LOVELY TO BE A WOMAN AI\TD CHANGE FROM BOYS TO MEN ! AND GO TO A FAI\TCY NIGHT CLUB, AND STAY OUT AFTER TEN! HOW LOVELY TO BE SO GROWN-UP AIVD FREE ! LIFE'S LOVELY WHEN YOU'RE A WOMAN LTKE ME. (As song ends lights come up on downstairs portion of house and MRS. MacAFEE goes to We also notice MR. MacAFEE foot of stairs. quiet ly reading HIS paper, SR, orl stool ) MRS. MacAFEE Kim, there' s a call for you. The operator said she' s been trying to get through for nearly three-quarters of an hour! .. . KIM (Gets up. Puts on slippers behind bed so audience does not see them) Thank you Doris. f'11 take it down there. MRS. MacAFEE She said it was long-distance and I can't imagine who. . . (SHe stops) ...What did you say? KTM (es SHE start s downstairs ) I said, thank you Doris. (We see HER cLearly now and not,ice that, SHE is we aring those enormous, shaggy pink f ur scuf f s ) . . . There's no need to look so upset . It t s modern to call your mother by her first name. ft makes the mother and daught,er more like pals. And your father? MRS. MacAFEE 1-3-15 23 KIM f ' 11 cal l him Ha rry, natura I Iy . (Un . MacAFEE looks up f rom paper, mut,t,ers trYgffirr, then laughs mirthlessly) . . .By the way I think llarry t,ook the news about Hugo and I awf uIIy we 11 , don ' t you , Dori s ? has to sit down. Meanwhile, KIM has gone to phone) o . . This is she. Yes , I ' 1I wait. (MRS. MacAFEE MRS. MacAFEE I don't know. Yesterday I was a mother. Today f 'm a pa1 (Cets up and heads f or stairs . . .Are you sure you wouldn't like t,o call me Mom? That' s . ) moderll . KIM I'm sorry, but times are changing and you've got t,o go along with them or be lef t, behind with t,he old f olks (then casually) . . .By t,he way, Doris, have you goL a cigarett,e? I seem to have run out. ! (UnS . MacAFEE hurries upsLairs, Lrying MR. MacAFEE to hold back a sniffle. has risen from stool in kitchen SR, put down HIS newspaper and crossed to KIM) I'm not an old MR. MacAFEE man! (SadIY) ,.. . I was eighteen in World War fI. (ana HE exits. KIM has been listening on phone through this and as MR. MacAFEE exits we see HER expression change from that of a poised woman to a dazed child. Slowly SHE put,s down the phone. Then in a very smal1 voice. . . ) KIM Conrad Birdie. . . is coming here. . . to kiss (Then weakly) Dori s . (a bit louder ) Mother. o. (a shout ) . . . .Mg$sl4-!MRS. MacAFEE Baby ... . (Running downst airs ) ! (Grabbing KIM in HER arms) Baby, what is itZ ! Wirat' s wrong? ! me? 1-3 -L7 24 It' s Conrad Birdie, KIM Mommy I He' s going to kiss me ! MRS. MacAFEE That's nice, dear. Now you just put your head on shoulder. (rHnY sit, on steps Mommy's ) You don't, understand! KIM Conrad Birdie is coming here to SweeL Apple to kiss rne goodbye ! Oh, Mommy, Mommy I MRS. MacAFEE I never thought I'd say it. . . But God Bless Conrad Birdie (the HOUSE is moving US, the Lf GHTS FADE, NO. 1 brown border comes on and we begin t,o hear...) E pENN srATIoN_jrRANSrrroN (orchesrra) I r-4-18 25 ACT ONE 4 Scene n_/ PENN STATION TRANSITION (Cont inued) Three plaintive VOICES shrilling wild1y in the BLACKOUT. SPOTLIGHT comes up DR and we see three identj-calIy dressed TEEN AGE GIRLS, their Conrad Birdie but,t,ons on their 1apeIs, t,heir heads f lung back as THEY sai I int,o the f ort ieth chorus of the same song. TEEN TRIO & TEENAGE CHORUS WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH YES WE DO! WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, WE'LL BE TRUE ! WHEN YOU'RE NOT NEAR US WE'RE BLUE! OH, CONRAD, WE LOVE YOU! AI\TD (lrGHTS have come up and we find ourselves in f ront, of TRAIN GATE, PENNSYLVAI{IA STATION. TEEN TRIO continues singing loudly as ALBERT hurries on) ALBERT Hi girIs, sorry I'm late. Now let's go over the Birdie song once more before we go down to the Lrain. (the TRIO move C2 to join other TEEN GIRLS waiting f or CONRAD. ALBERT not ices cloud of smoke, t akes cigarette out, of ONE GIRL' s m,outh, drops it on f loor and stamps it, out ) . . . Remember t,he Conrad Birdie Creed, dear . No smoking t, i 1 you're fourteen. A1l right now, shall we try it? GIRLS them) (as HE conduct s WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH YES WE DO ! wE LOVE YOU, CONRAD. . . . . (Suddenly, ALBERT not,ices SAD LITTLE GIRL sLanding al-one DL. HE stops the singing and calls to HER) L-4-1-9 26 ALBERT Oh, l-itt1e girl ! You can sing with us if you want. . , . What' ( Sttg doesn' t answer) s the matter wit,h her? ONE GIRL Oh she's just sad because Conrad's going into she' 11 be too o1d for him when he gets out . the Army and ALBERT (Looking again. SAD GIRL is no more than thirt,een) I think she still has a few good years lef t, . Look, why don't you girls go on down t,o Track L2 and I ' 11 t alk to her (T}tgY go. HE shouts af ter THEM) . . . And stay ouL of t,he bar ! . (Uus ic st,art s ) (Then HE turns t,o t,he SAD GIRL. Starts to HER) Hi! I'm Albert Pet,erson, Conrad's manager. (No reaction) . . . . Come on, now, that' s no way to be ! Things can't be that black ! Smile (luothi*g) gi LiEt, le tI , t,his is an adult, speaking ! I order you to smile . (SttU t,urns away f rom HIM HE Xes L of HER. Gently) ! . . . Please. ba ITPUT oN A HAPPY FACE" ALBERT GRAY SKIES ARE GONNA CLEAR UP, PUT ON A HAPPY FACE ! BRUSH OFF THE CLOUDS AI\TD CHEER UP, PUT ON A HAPPY FACE ! TAKE OFF THE GLOOMY MASK OF TRAGEDY, rT, S NOT' YOUR STYLE ! YOU'LL LOOK SO GOOD THAT YOU'LL BE YA DECIDED TO SMILE ! (Takes HER hand and XR to C) PICK OUT A PLEASAI{T OUTLOOK ! STICK OUT THAT NOBLE CHIN ! WIPE OFF THAT FULL-OF-DOUBT LOOK ! SLAP ON A HAPPY GRIN ! (UB kneels, hat, in hand) GLAD a-4-20 27 ALBERT (Continued) AAID SPREAD SUNSHINE ALL OVER THE PLACE JUST PUT ON A HAPPY FACE ! (ltg sets HER on HIS knee but rises and moves DR, still SHE ! sad) ! (gn f oIlows HER R, Lhen. . . ) PUT ON A HAPPY FACE ! (SHg moves L to RC; HE follows) ! PUT ON A HAPPY FACE ! (He sLrikes John L. Sullivan Pose ) TF YOU'RE FEELING CROSS AIID BICKER] SH, DON'T SIT AIVD WHINE ! A}TD (f,eaning to HER L ) THINK OF BANANA SPLITS AIVD LICORISH, (t,eaning to HER R) AI\TD YOU'LL FEEL FINE ! (Taking of f HIS hat and creasing it,. . . ) I KNEW A GIRL SO GLOOMY SHE'D NEVER LAUGH OR SING! SHE WOULDN'T LTSTEN TO ME, (Hg puts HIS hat, on HER head) NOW SHE'S A MEA}U OLD THING ! (SHe preens s1ighLly and moves L. HE follows and retrieves hat ) SO SPREAD SUNSHINE ALL OVER THE PLACE, JUST... (Un .pulls hat down over HIS head and. mugs ) . . . PUT ON A HAPPY FACE ! (ana as music conLinues, ALBERT dances with t,he SAD GIRL in an attempt t,o cheer HER up. When HB finally manages to part,ially do this, HE turns R and f inds a SECOND SAD GIRL in a similar costume, wit,h a similar long face. ALBERT squares HIS shoulders, dances wit,h them both. EXf TS with SECOND SAD GIRL near end, then comes back to find FIRST SAD GIRL as gloomy as ever. It is only when HE gives up, start,s of f L, and bumps int.o the proscenium t.hat SHE finally laughs. ALBERT is triumphant, HE twirls HER around, SHE sits happily on HIS lap as t,he dance ends ) ALBERT (Continued) (es catL , loaded with luggage start, s out f rom R2 ) . . .My gosh, there's our luggage ! Hurry up, Jittle girl; you'd bet,t,er get down to Track Twelve if you want tc see Conrad before he goes ! r-4-2r 28 (SAP GIRL runs of f L2 aS ALBERT crosses t,o luggage cart which has started DS pushed by someone invisible behind aI l- t,he suitcases ) ALBERT (Continued) get that stuff down t,o Track Twe1ve on the double . . (Cart st,arts L in 1 and HE sees that it is ROSIE pushirg) ....Rosie! What, are you doing Wou1d you Oh, boy ! ! ! ROS IE Get,ting our t,hings down to the station without any help from you, AlberL . Rose, I 'fiI sorry. t,hings u.p. . ALBERT I don'L suppose a generous tip would make . ROS IE the briefcase) Albert , just take your briefcase and go down t,o that train before any of those reporters talk to Conrad alone. You know what, happened the last t, ime (Hands HIM ! (tneINMAN has entered from L2 and removed baggage cart t,hrough L2) ALBERT (Handing briefcase back to You hang onto it, ROS IE Speaking of your mo!,her, AIberL dissolving Almaelou I coul-dn' Of what? t Rosie HER) Rose. I've got to wait here for . . Mamma. have you t.ofd her about ! ALBERT Yesterday was the anniversary. ROS IE AI,BERT (taking of f HIS hat ) Lou. Six years ago he was hit on 1-81st St,reet and Broadway by a loaded beer truck. (.lust t,hen an ear- splitting "YOOHOO" is heard off R) Do you suppose that's Mamma? ROS IE It,' s either her or the all -c1ear. 1,-4-22 29 (Ent,ering Yoohoo MR.S R2 . PETERSON ) ! (SUn is a Mamma in eveyy sense of t,he word. SHE wears a faded pink dress, a f abulous f uI I - length beige mink coat, and brown walkover shoes. SHE shoves HER way through a group of TRAVELERS) Sonny ! Mamma ! What' s t.he matter? (fHgY embrace. SHE staggers) ALBERT MRS. PETERSON Don'.t worry about, me, sonny. I'm just, a lit,tle thg subway.... faint, from ALBERT Mamma, I told you to take a taxi Taxi ! What, Mamma, you know Rose Alvarez MRS. . PETERSON do I need wit,h taxis? I' 1I leave the taxis f or rfty successful- son. A mother can ride crowded in a dirty subway full of foreign people wouldn't give you a seat if your life depended on it, but, what's the dif f erence; nowadays a mother is lower than dirt, an)rway ! Here's t,he money I saved f rom not taking the taxi; buy some candy wit,h it, . (Looks at ROSIE) Who's she? ALBERT f rom MRS. the of f ice. PETERSON This is Rose Alvarez? Pretty lit,t, Ie Rose Alva rez? I can, t believe it.... (fhen with an agonized shout) ....Rose, what happened? You had a sudden shock or something? ROS IE (Trying to get out, crosses L) Excuse me, Albert; I think I' 1l go see if Conrad's here . MRS. PETERSON By all means, Miss Alvarez . (Putting HER arm around ROSIE) . . . . Look at her, sonny. How nice she l-ooks. It's a wonder to me some older man doesn't, snat,ch her of f . A personabl-e maLLon like that with brains and a few dollars. What, a catch you'd be for a convalescent . Goodbye, Rose (Extends hand . ROS IE t,akes it ) . L-4-23 30 ROS Goodbye, Mae. CalI MRS. me Mrs. Peterson. (nOSIE exits IE PETERSON ) ALBERT what I wanted to discuss wit,h you is sort of about Rose. Maybe you'd better sit down. Mamma, MRS. PETERSON Why? I know my Sonny. He loves his mamma. to say anything t,hat would break her heart. ( . . . What Leve 1IY) Rose? He isn' t going Go ahead, dear. about WeIl, it's ALBERT about Lou, too. MRS. PETERSON (es if struck. Calling t,o heaven) Where are you, Lou? Struck down by a beverage f . ...Lou. consumed f aithfully (To for thirty-two years. ALBERT) What about Lou? ALBERT WeIl, Mamma, Rose Almae IoLr . (MRS. thinks, and I agree, that I should give up PETERSON Mama? What's the matter, staggers MRS. ) PETERSON Nothing' s the maLter. You killed me , that' s all (Looking up) . . .Lou, I'fiI coming. f tm on my way up. ALBERT You don't understand, Mdmma. It's mean I thought....I mean... just that Rose t,hought . . . I (Giving up) Look, M?mma, here's some money. Take a cab home. The subways are too crowded. MRS. PETERSON Not,hing is Loo crowded f or a mother. I' 1I take the I . R. T. That's the worst subway (A1te.rna-te_ Ii4e Jor locales too Lar f rom New York: ftl'l-I go during the rush hour. That' s the worst t,ime . " ) Wait a minute, how many blocks is it after all? OnIy a hundred and seven. r' 11 wa1k. L-4-24 31 ALBBRT Mamma. . . MRS. PETERSON (as SHE leaves, filoving R) Enjoy yourself, son. Take care. Wear your heavy coat. Be careful crossing the street,. Keep your money in your inside pocket. Wear your rubbers. And eat a hot lunch. . . (SHg i s gone DR . ROS IE has ent,ered L2 through train gate in t,ime to witness HER exit ) ROS ... IE .AlberL, I thought you were going to break it to her senLly. ALBERT ( Sheepishty) WeII, as a matter of f act, Rosie , T didn't teII her at, aII . I mean, she was so upset about my^ leaving I thought I'd beLter wait . (Uus ic start, s) You mean you didn'E. . . .? ROS IE POLICEMAN Rushing in L1 ) He's comingl He's coming! Conrad Birdie's ( coming! ALBERT on, Rosie ! Conrad' s coming ! And we can't let him t,alk t,hose reporters alone ! Come ROSiE But Albert, you promised me that. . . . (I(f DS, REPORTERS rush by saying t'Hef s coming! Conrad's cominq!") Later, Rosie ! ALBERT Conrad needs me. Lat,er. . . . (Screams and cries fill the air as PEOPLE rush back and forth and now CONRAD BIRDIE and HIS GUITARMAN ent,er DL surrounded by KIDS, REPORTERS, POLICE. THEY pause CS A REPORTER start s to take HIS picture; CONRAD shoves HfM away. AJJ action is suspended as HE takes a comb from HfS pocket, combs HIS pompadour, then signals HE is ready to pose. FLASH BULBS pop) . t,o L-4-25 32 FIRST REPORTER Hey, how about answering a coupla questions, Conrad? Like do you feel about, going into the Army? desperately shoulder their way through the crowd j ust, as CONRAD is about to answer) (ROSIE and ALBERT E ''A HEALTHY NQRMAL AMERICAI\T BOYI' ALBERT HOW DOES HE FEEL? YOU ASK HOW HE FEELS? HE'S MUCH TOO SHY TO TELL YOU SO I'LL TELL YOU HOW HE FEELS, HE FEELS BRAVE AIVD EAGER ! STRANGELY HUMBLE ! PROUD TO BE A PLAIN G. I . ! ROS IE HE WTLL GLADLY FACE THOSE BULLETS, FOR HE' S NOT AFRAID TO DIE. TEENS FOR HE'S A FINE, UPSTAIVDING, PATRIOTIC, NORMAL AMERICA\I BOY ! ALBERT And that' s why he volunt,eered f or. . . . FIRST REPORTER Volunt,eered? I t,hought he was draf ted And he appealed (To TEEN TRIO) Sing ! THIRD t,hree t,imes ROS ! REPORTER ! IE TEEN TRIO WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD ! oH, YES WE DO ! wE LOVE YOU, CONRAD ! AIVD WE'LL BE TRUE ! WHEN YOU'RE NOT NEAR US, WE'RE BLUE! oH, coNRAD, WE LOVE YOU ! Very nice (Applauditg) ! ALBERT HEALTHY, how L-4-26 33 What ' FIR.ST REPORTER FicI lywood st,arlet s t,he pitch on t,hat t,wo engaged? , Conrad? Are you ROSIE IS HE ENGAGED? IS CONRAD ENGAGED? THERE'S ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO THE RUMOR HE'S ENGAGED ! ALBERT SHE'S A REAL PAL, LIKE A SISTER, BUT IT DOESN'T MEAN A THING ! AI\TD IT THAT EIGHTEEN- CAIU\T DIAMOND . WAS .JUST A FRIENDSHIP RTNG ! TEENS FOR HE'S A FINE, UPSTA}IDING, PATRIOTIC, NORMAL AMERICA}T BOY HEALTHY, ! THIRD Then why was her husband so (to Sing REPORTER mad? ALBERT TEEN TRIO) ! TEEN TRIO WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD OH, YES WE DO ! WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD AI{D WE', ! ! LL BE TRUE, HIrM. . . ALBERT (as TEEN TRIO cont,inues hummirg) I' 1l never forget Conrad's first words when he heard he' s been accept,ed into the Armed Forces . 'r Say, Mr . Petersofl, " he cried eagerly, I'Do you suppose I can get assigned to the f ront - l ine t,renches ? That way I ' 11 be sure to get me one of those dirty j erries . . . t' Albert . . . . Or ROS IE ! whoever's dirty ALBERT this time I TRAVELER (Coming DLC) Hey, Mr. Peterson , give us the real scoop: drinking a lot ? Is Conrad still L- 4 -27 34 ROS (Quickly crossing LISTEN HERE ! THAT GOSSIP MUST STOP ! HE GOES TO CHURCH EACH AND HE DOESN'T TOUCH A IE L) NOW SUNDAY DROP ! ALBERT HE'S AS DECENT AS A MINISTER ! HE' S AS SOBER AS A .JUDGE ! HE SUBSCRIBES TO EV'RY CHARITY ! AND HIS HOBBY'S MAKING FUDGE ! TEENS FOR HE'S A FINE UPSTANDING, PATRIOTIC, NORMAL AMERICA}U BOY HEALTHY, ! (ELEERT and ROSIE force t.o HIS knees CONRAD ) TWO REPORTERS n unison, ONE to ALBERT, ONE to ROSIE) Is it, Lrue that, you found Conrad in a reform school? (f THAT IS A LIE ALBERT and ROSIE ! A LIE THROUGH A}ilD THROUGH I'LL TELL YOU WHERE HE CAME FROM, HERE'S THE STORY, AIID TT'S TRUE! ! ALBERT ROS IE HE WAS BORN TN INDO-CHINA, HE WAS BORN IN OLD VIRGINTE, SON OF MISSTONARIES THERE, ON A THOUS$TD-ACRE FARMI VERY POOR A}UD VERY HUNGRY, FROM A LINE OF WEALTHY WHAT A CRUEL LIFE TO BEARI THEN HE DRIFTED DOWN TO HONG KONG, TO A WATERFRONT SALOON! PLATUTERS, FULL OF GENTEEL, SOUTHERN CHARMI EV'RY EVENING BY THE RTVER, IN THE MOONLTGHT, THEY WOULD CROON ! WHERE I HEARD HIM THAT'S WHERE CONRAD STARTED INGING , S INGING, DIRTY HONG KONG THAT 'NEATH 'NEATH THAT SWEET PLAATTATION THAT IS S MOON MOON! ! ADULTS, ALBERT & ROSIE TEENAGERS wE LOVE YOU, CONRAD oH, YES, WE DO ! WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD AIfD WE'LL BE oH, oH, TRUE ! ! OH, BEAUTIFUL ! FOR SPACIOUS SKIES, FOR AMBER WAVES OF GRATN L-4-28 3s TEENAGERS CONRAD WE LOVE YOU ADULTS, ALBERT & ROSIE AMERTCA, AMERICA, GOD SHED HTS GRACE ON THEE, ! WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD WE'LL BE TRUE ALL FOR HE,S A FINE, UPSTAI\TDING, AV' RAGE, MODEST, PATRIOTIC, HEALTHY, NORMAL, AMERICA\T, AMERICA}I BOY ! ! TRAINMAN All Aboard (CROWD waves; KIDS clutch at CONRAD as HE, ROSIE and ALBERT and GUITARMAN move UL and board rear platform of t,rain now in view as masking leg flies . As the song continues, the set begins to change from PENN STATION IO IhC RAITROAD STATION aT SWEET APPLE, OHIO. Raincoated CROWD of TRAVELERS, REPORTERS and KIDS gives way to wel-coming CROWD of brightly dressed KIDS and TOWNSPEOPLE waving pompoms . A ff Welcome Birdie " banner f lies in. VOICES change from the fulI sound of CROWD at PENN STATION to shrill voices of the KIDS as THEY singr . . ) N PENN STATIoN To SWEET TEENAGERS APPLE ADULTS WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD ! OH, YES, WE DO! WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD! A}TD WE'LL BE TRUE ! oH, oH, FOR SPACIOUS SKTES, FOR AMBER WAVES OF GRATN. . . WE LOVE YOU, WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD AMERICA, AMERICA, GOD SHED HIS GRACE ON THEE, CONRAD WE'LL BE TRUE GOD BLESS ! ! AMERICA OH, BEAUTIFUL FOR HE'S A FINE, UPSTAI\TDING AV' RAGE, MODEST, PATRIOTIC, HEALTHY, NORMAL, ALL AMERTCAIV, AMERICA}U BOY ! ! 1_-5 -29 36 ACT ONE 5 Scene SWEET APPLE RAILROAD STATION. URSULA (On baggage wagon which comes in from R, with KIM as singing ends ) ...Conrad Birdie, welcome to Sweet Apple! Now before we escort you to t,he Town HalI where t,he Mayor himself is waititrg, I would like to introduce to you the girl upon whom you have chosen to bestow your f inal kiss upoll . . .and who wil] now lead us in reciting the Conrad Birdie Pledge ! Kim MacAfee ! (TEEN GIRLS scamper int,o position below URSULA) KIM ANd TEEN GIRLS (Cfapping their hands over their hearts) I , Kim MacAf ee, (EACH GIRL gives HER own name) of sound mind and body, do hereby promise to loya1 , courteous, steadf ast and t,rue, to Conrad Birdie both indivisible, and the United States of America with l iberty and j ust, ice f or al l . . . being ! (a greaL cheer, MUSIC, and TWO MEN step orward, lif t, CONRAD to their shoulders, circle and go off L, followed by TWO DRUM MA,JORETTES and CROWD, AtL singing...) f N SWEET APELE BA}TD KIDS (TEEN CHORUS) FOR HE'S A FINE UPSTANDING, PATRIOTIC, HEALTHY, NORMAL, AMERICAII BOY ! ( Repeat ) ALBERT (es music cont,inues ) I ' m going wit,h Conrad Ros ie , you stay here . But Albert ROS IE ! be 1-5-30 37 ALBERT I 've got to make Conrad' s speech f or him ! You get t,he bags , stack ' em, and bring ' em to t,he house . If I see a t,axi I' 11 send it back. . . FoR ''Jl: f";ffi';;r;i*"};5: l (ana ROSIE sighs, puts down HIS brief case and through f oI lowing picks up t,wo of t he seven bags placed cent,er stage by t,he TRAINIvIAN and puts them on baggage wagon. KIM and last TWO GIRLS start, off left after the OTHERS. As THEY do , a BOY who has been standing apart from CROWD steps forward) .. .Ki*, before you HUGO go , eould I talk to you for a minut,e? KIM I'm in an awful hurryl Right now? I mean, couldn't it wait? HUGO I don' t think so, Kim. It' s important . DEBORAH SUE Hugo Peabody, what's so important that you have Lo talk t,o her right now? HUGO (eursting forth) hlhat's so important,? I'1I tell you what's so important I The day after I give her my pin she goes around kissing someone else , that,' s what' s so important, ! I want you t,o know f 'm quite upset about, this. I've already had several headaches and a nosebleed ! ALI Why CE Hugo, T believe you're actually jealous of Conrad Birdiel Me j ealous? HUGO I'm the opposite of j ealous . f'm very j ealous And I have every right t,o be . Kim' s my steady ! I KIM That's just it, Hugo, I'fil your steady! Oh I may admire Conrad Birdie as one admires a f ar - di stant and unattainabl-e ideal But f 'm pinned to you, Hugo, and I don't, care how common and ordinary you are, that' s how I'm going to stay . I HUGC You're noL just saying that. to make me f eel bett.er? 1-5-31 38 (music in) M "oNE BoY'' KIM I mean eve ry word of it, Hugo. Conrad Bird.ie is j ust a f ling. A st,eady is f orever. . . (nnusic up and KIM sings as ROSIE sit,s on suitcase and quietly listens) . ONE BOY, ONE SPECIAL BOY, ONE BOY TO GO WITH, TO TALK WITH, AIVD WALK WITH, KIM & ONE LITTLE GIRL * ' oNE BOY, THAT'S THE WAY IT SHOULD BE. THAT'S THE WAY IT TWO GIRLS * SHOULD BE. KIM & ONE GIRL ONE BOY, ONE CERTAIN BOY, ONE BOY TO LAUGH WITH, TO JOKE WITH, HAVE COKE WITH, ONE BOY, NOT TWO OR THREE. KIM ONE DAY YOU FIND OUT THTS IS WHAT LIFE IS ALL ABOUT, YOU NEED SOMEONE WHO IS LTVING .JUST FOR YOU. TRTO (KIM & TWO GIRLS) ONE BOY, ONE STEADY BOY, ONE BOY TO BE WITH, FOREVER AND EVER, ONE BOY, THAT'S THE WAY THAT'S THE WAY IT IT SHOULD BE, SHOULD BE. HUGO (as music cont,inues ) . . . .Oh Kj-m, I feel so much bet,t,er now! A11 t,hought,s of nosebleed have utterly vanished ! * Opti-onal : ALICE & DEBORAH SUE a 1- 5 -32 39 KIM to worry, Hugo. Conrad Birdie may be a great, public figure but he doesn't make me feel all dizzy and faint when I t,hink of him. Only my steady does t,hat, . Why even when I say his name I don't f eel a thing. Listen. Conrad Birdie Conrad Birdie. (ena it hits HER. Huskily) Conrad Birdie. . (as SHE wavers, the other TWO GIRLS step down on eit,her side and take HER arms) You were silly I . KIM & ONE GTRL ONE BOY, ONE STEADY BOY, ONE BOY TO BE WITH, FOREVER, AIVD EVER, KIM & TWO GIRLS ONE BOY. THAT'S THE WAY TT SHOULD BE, (es THEY start of f L1) THAT'S THE WAY IT SHOULD BE. HUGO (stilf dazed) The boy she loves is the boy who makes her dizzy and a]-most faint.... (fo a surprised ROSIE) you ... .Arf.d heard her, Iady! That boy is me! (ana HE whirls a confused ROSIE around then drops HER and st,art,s af ter Kf M. ROS IE is al-one , st,anding LC, sti 11 holding ALBERT's briefcase. SHE looks off L and sings...) ROS IE ONE DAY YOU FIND OUT THIS IS WHAT LIFE IS ALL ABOUT, YOU NEED SOMEONE WHO IS LIVING .]UST FOR YOU. ONE GIJY, ONE SPECIAL GUY, ONE GIJY TO LTVE FOR, TO CARE FOR, BE THERE FOR, (efuesy-strip music sneaks in and ROSIE dances as SHE begins HER usual j ob of loading the luggage. Piece by piece SHE 1-5-33 40 dances them f rom the pi le st,age center to t,he luggage cart R . SHE has a hard t ime with the heavy one, does a few bumps and grinds as SHE carries over t,wo smal l make -up cases , finally comes t,o ALBERT's briefcase which is the last it,em lef t, . SHE picks it up, dances tenderly wit,h it, then suddenly becomes angry, hurls t,he brief case down, then regrett, ing what SHE has done, hurriedly picks it back up. SHE st,ares at it, becomes angry again and slings it of f L . ALBERT, rushing on , cat,ches it ) ALBERT (as music cont inues ) what's the matter ! ? Rosie, ROS IE I was j ust t,hinking of you, Albert Never mind thinking of In the briefcase. .... ALBERT ! My speech! Where is it? me ROS IE ALBERT Good (cives it to HER) Bring it along; the Mayor's almost finished talking. I Come on ! (Hg dashes off L) ROS IE (Sings as SHE follows , carring the briefcase ) THAT'S THE WAY IT SHOULD BE. (nOSIE, carrying brief cas€, hurries af ter HIM. Through this the seL begins to change, and various PEOPLE come rushing by on their way to t,he big event,. We hear fragments of conversations in the gathering darkness) N SWEET APpLE srATroN (orchesLra underscoring) REPORTER I' 11 go to the courthouse. REPORTER I' 11 make Sure we've got a wire to New York. Come on, Alice I FRED Conrad's over here ! 1- 5 -34 4T ALICE Fred, did you bring the box for me to stand on? URSULA Mother, I'm going to t,ake you back home. ft's MRS. too crowded! MERKLE You'l1 have to drag me by t,he hair I (lllusic out. More PEOPLE pass by. We just hear VOICES and see the glow of their f lashl ight s ) LEE Phy1lis, you know the doctor said you shouldn't go out in crowds. (From offstage PHYLLIS R) Shut, up and keep pushing that wheel chair I (By now t,he scene has changed and find ourselves in front of the we ) r-6-35 42{ ! 3 $ { I ACT ONE Scene 5 STEPS. Nothing other than a few steps, some columns, and an improvised platform up center. CONRAD, the M;\YOR, and the MAYOR'S WIFE are on it . COURTHOUSE MAYOR . ..An,C so it is with great prid'e and prejudice, usual pomp and circumstance, that I welcome you ds to city and present you with this fourteen-carat solid generously donat,ed by men at t,he Sweet Apple Brass as I present this key to you, Conrad Birdie well as the our fair gold key so Works. And URSULA (Wit,h a wild shriek) zuUU{! He said it! He said the name! W! MAYOR What happened? All I said was Conrad Birdie ! TWO MORE GIRLS ruuuurAl{ ! If you girls MAYOR don't stop that I can't finish my speech! URSULA Who (Running forward) cares about your speech! (SUn Screams We want to hear from Conradl as the CROWD shouts approval) to us, oh beautiful one ! Tel-I us how you make that glorious sound that even now, in anticipation of iL, has reduced me to a snarling , Ta.ging, pdnting jungle beast ! . . . Speak M 'THoNESTLY srNcERE" (CONRAD looks at GUITAR MAN R who strikes a chord and CONRAD huskily sings) CONRAD YOU GOTTA BE SINCERE! (The MAYOR'S WIFE utters a weak little scream and keels over) 1--5-35 43 MAYOR Edna ! (t<neeling beside What' t, the matter? HER) CONRAD YOU GOTTA BE SINCERE ! MAYOR (Trying to revive HIS Wf FE. Pulls HER up, SHE collapses wit,h rubber legs t,hrough following) Mr. Birdie ! What are you doing? CONRAD YOU GOTTA FEEL TT HERE , CAUSE IF YOU FEEL TT HERE, WELL THEN YOU'RE GONNA BE HONESTLY SINCERE ! IF WHAT YOU FEEI TS TRUE, (REALLY FEEL IT) YOU MAKE THEM FEEL TT TOO, (WNITE THIS DOWN NOW ! ) YOU GOTTA BE SINCERE, HONESTLY SINCERE, MJ\N YOU'VE GOTTA BE SINCERE ! MAYOR Edna (es HIS WIFE whom HE has finally managed to revive , faints again) ! (Now and the guitar is really whanging away, starts to move HIS body) CONRAD IF YOU'RE REALLY SINCERE, IF YOU'RE REALLY SINCERE IF YOU FEEI+ IT IN HERE, THEN TT'S GOTTA BE RIGHT ! CONRAD ooooH, BABY ! (CHORUS Screams) OH, HONEY! CONRAD (CHORUS Screams) CONRAD HUG ME! (CUORUS Screams ) (Shouts) 1- 5 -37 44 CONRAD SUFFER ! (CHORUS Screams ) (KIM has entered R, followed by HUGO, who t,ries t,o get HER to leave . SHE waves HIM away and is drawn to CONRAD) CONRAD (Moving down a step, sings) rN EV'RYTHING I DO MY SINCERTTY SHOWS THROUGH! r LOOK YOU IN THE EYE, DON'T EVEN HAVE TO TRY, IT'S AUTOIqJ\TIC! I'M SINCERE! (Un goes back to top st,ep, Lhrows a bump at MAYOR'S WIFE who goes over stiff as a board this time) I SING ABOUT A TREE, REALLY FEEL THAT TREE ! WHEN I SING ABOUT A GTRL, I REALLY FEEL THAT GIRL, I MEADI I REALLY FEEL S INCERE WHEN I (rcfU screams and faints ! into HUGO's arms) IF rF IF YOU'RE REALLY SINCERE ! YOU'RE REALLY SINCERE ! YOU FEEL IT IN HERE, THEN IT'S GOTTA BE RIGHT ! CONRAD (SHOUTS) OH, BABY ! (CHORUS Screams) oH, CONRAD HONEY ! (CHORUS Screams) CONRAD OH HUG ME ! (CHORUS Screams ) CONRAD SUFFER ( ! CHORUS Screams ) L-5-38 45 (COIURAD slowly moves down steps to throughout the following, wreaking havoc as HE goes. Again singi*g) DSC CONRAD YOU GOTTA BE SINCERE, OH, OH, OH, YOU GOTTA FEEL IT HERE, OH, OH, OH, MY BABY ! OH MY BABY, OH YEAI{ ! OH MY BABY, OH YEAI{ ! (l bars orchestra under dialogue ) IVIR. JOHNSON Harvey! Harvey! What are you doing? MRS. MERKLE ! Ursu1a I Ursu1a ! Come back here t,his minute ! (es MRS. MERKLE goes af ter URSULA, L,hen turns, gets a look at CONRAD and faints also) CONRAD WELL YA GONNA BE SINCERE ! WELL YA GONNA BE SINCERE ! TEENS YEAI{ ! CONRAD WELL YA GONNA BE SINCERE! WELL YA GONNA BE SINCERE! TEENS YEAII ! WELL YA GONNA BE SINCERE ! WELL YA GONNA BE SINCERE! TEENS YEA}T ! CONRAD OH MY BABY! OH YEAI{ ! OH MY BABY! OH YEAFI ! WELL YA GONNA BE S INCERE WELL YA GONNA BE S INCERE OH MY BABY! OH YEzu{ OH MY BABY! OH YEAi{ OH MY BABY! OH YEAi{ OH MY BABY OH YEAII ! YEAI{ ! YEAH I , ! 1--5-39 46 (By now the stage is littered with bodies. Last to crumble is the MAYOR himself. As HE sinks down, ROSIE and ALBERT ent,er from L. SHE takes the key from HIS extended hand and gives it to CONRAD. As applause starts to go, ITlusic cue f or s low segue into next number) BTACKOUT 1,-7 -40 47 ACT ONE Scene 7 Behind the MacAfee scrim, which shows outside of MacAfee house, ds by torchlight we hear the MEN of SWEET APPLE bring home their wounded and maimed. Music continues under dialogue into vocal. Harvey, where are yolJ. . . . MAN'S VOICE ANOTHER VOICE Somebody help me with the Mayor's wif e ! THIRD VOICE There' s a lady with slacks lying in the gutter. belong to? Me. And leave her there. FOURTH VOICE GIRL'S VOICE I got a lock of somebody's hair ! Ethel . No it isn't, Who does she I wonder if it's his. MAN'S VOICE And give me my hat ! (ana as VOICES f ade of f , another set of begin to be heard. As lights begin to come up, w€ f ind ourselves OUTSIDE THE MacAFEE HOUSE early next morning. MARGIE, DEBORAH SUE & URSULA sit huddled on the ground wearily singing into the dawn) VOICES N wouNpgp MJ\RGTE, DEBORAH SUE WE LOVE YOU CONRAD, OH YES WE DO! WE LOVE YOU CONRAD, A\ID WE'LL BE TRUE. I ' m tired, Ursula . We've been here all night MARGIE DEBORAH SUE ! & URSULA L-7 - 4I 48 UR.SULA promised to sing the Birdie song ten thousand t j-rnes didn' t, we? Well we've goL f ive thousand two hundred and sevent y- six t,o go. So sinq ! We (ana the three VOICES are raised in song again as l ight,s come up behind scrim arid we find ourselves in MacAFEE HOUSE. The dining room t,able is elaborately set for breakfast for one. Gleaming silver, sparkling china , a huge vase of flowers, the works. Downstage of this festive board, MRS. MacAFEE is hovering anxiously over MR. MacAFEE who is eating a hurried breakfast, on a small TV table. As the scrim goes up, KIM comes down the stairs) KIM , T wish you'd hurry. I want to have all t,his cleared away before Conrad comes down! . . . .Daddy mess MR. MacAFEE (Wit,h contained bitt,erness as HE looks at the elaboraLe table beside HIM) This mess, as you call it, Kim, happens to be my breakfasL And I int,end enj oying it . t MRS. MACAFEE Your f ather has a right to enj oy his eggs , Kim. But, f 'm sure he won' t mind if we j ust, quiet It start clearing away some of these other t,hings . . (ana as MR. MacAFEE tries to eat, KIM and MRS. MacAFEE begin snatching up bredd, butter , jam, salt, pepper, sugar, milk, and all the utensils . MR. MacAFEE makes futile grabs at disappearing it,ems as MRS . MacAFEE rattles on) . . . . f know the house is a bit hectic this morning, but, Kim's gone Lo a lot of t,rouble t,o f ix a special breakf ast f or Mr. Birdie and f want to make sure everything's ready and waiting for him when he comes down. Af ter all he is a nat,ional f igure and I want, to show these New York people we know how to treat a national figure here in Sweet Apple. Of course it realIy doesn't mean that, much to me personally but. for Kim's sake I.... (Through lasL of above THEY've pretty well gotten everyLhing of f the t,able. KIM removes the table itself . MR. MacAFEE reaches for the table, and manages t,o grab Hf S two fried eggs. HE is holding them in HIS hands when talking, reaches over and MRS. MacAFEE, still snaps t,hem up in a silent but, ler) There we are I A11 done I Did you enj oy iL, de ar? Good (Takes empty plaLe from HIM) Now if you' JI j ust, hurry along. . . ! . L-7 -42 49 MR. MacAFEE (e pronouncement Doris, I am not, budging from this room til smoke a cigarette, and read my paper ) I get my coffee, ! MRS. MacAFEE I didn' t have t,ime to make your cof f ee, this morning. How about a nice warm Seven-Up? (SHg goes to cabinet to get one) Oh I'm sorry, dear. RAI{DOLPH (f f M' s brot,her, aged ten, coming down sLairs) Morning, PB. Here's your paper. I hope you don't mind but I cut out a f ew st,ories about Conrad. (Ana HE hands MR. MacAFEE a folded newspaper. MR. MacAFEE opens it . It is in shreds . Quietly HE puts it, down and turns to HIS FAMILY) MR. MacAFEE have t,ried t,o run this house on a democratic basis . I have extended the privilege of self -determination t.o both the woman I have martied, and t,he children I have sired....The vote has been denied no one for reason of age, sex, or polit,ical af f i I iat iorls . There has been no taxat ion without, represent,ation, and open covenants have been openly arrived at ! (With mount ing angrer, risos , moves to above table) Last, night I gave up my room t,o a guest who repeat,edly referred t,o me as rrFat,s. rr Telephone calls were made on my phone to New York, Chicago, Fairbanks, Alaska, and Hong Kong. I slept in a camp cot with my feet in the fireplace and my head in an ashtray. Outside my window three harpies shrieked We Love You Conrad f our thousand seven hundred and twent,y- three t imes I . . . I have j ust lost t,wo f ried eggs . (tn ringing tones ) . . . Gent1emen, the democracy is over ! Parliament has been dissolved; the Magna Cart,a is revoked, and Nero is back in t,own ! And you don't of f er an emperor a warm Seven-Up I .. .I ALBERT (From upstairs) Oh, Mr. MacAf ee ! I hope you won't mind keeping of f the phone for a f ew minutes. We're expect,ing a long-dist,ance call f rom New York. MR. MacAFEE (es HE exits R) Pe rfect Iy al l right . I' 1I go out, and burn MoLher, what's wrong? KIIVl Rome . I-7 - 43 50 MRS. MacAFEE Nothing, dear. Your father's here, that' s all . just excited about Conrad.'s being RANDOLPH has Xed L to bottom stairs of through above) He' s coming ! He' s coming (Who ! He' s coming ! KIM I ' 11 get t,he eggs ! Mother, you call the kids I MRS. MacAFEE Girls, him eat (Calling off right) he's coming! You'd bettbr hurry if you want to watch ! URSULA (untering R with MRS. MERKLE and the MAYOR's WIFE. OTHERS peer through screen door and window) Here we are, Kim! MRS. MERKLE I'm sorry, Doris, but we just had t,o come, too! quietly back here. We'11 st.and RANDOLPH Here he is (From bottom step) ! (Ana attired in a leopard-skin bat,hrobe, comes slow1y down, crosses to beautiful table, looks at it, pushes HIS way to sink, CONRAD f inds can opener, takes beer can out, of pocket, punches it open. NOTE: Use warm beer and shake it up so it realIy shoots up like a geyser. Drains entire can, burps, hands can to MRS. MacAFEE) CONRAD CaIl me for lunch. (as HE crosses L, HE passes MR. MacAFEE who has j ust, re - entered UC) ....Hi, Fat.s! (ana HE is gione up the stairs ) MR. MacAFEE (Xing R to MRS. MacAFEE) Now look here, Doris . About, t.hat, boy. . . MRS. MacAFEE Ptease, Hdrry, he's just shy. . . . I-7 - 44 51 werl, if you ask me. RS ' MERKLE . MR. MacAFEE Af ter all , Doris , Kim is only f if teen and I don' t, want her . . . KIM Please, Ddddy. Not in front of everybody! MRS. MERKLE Ursula, we'd better go ! (SUn drags URSULA out R door and OTHER NEIGHBORS go with them) I don't care who's here. MR. MacAFEE No ilI-mannered lout is going to. . . (UnS . MacAFEE shepherds ALICE, MARGIE and PENELOPE out UC door. Following speeches all run t,ogether) Te11 'em, RANDOLPH Pa ! MR. MacAFEE You shut, up ! (He turns back R to MRS. MacAFEE, but RANDOLPH L sleeve) continues tugging at MRS. MacAFEE Harry, you have no right to say t,hat. and.. HIS The boy is our guest . (ro MR, MacAFEE KIM) This is my house and until But, Daddy... (To RANDOLPH) I said shut up ! ( furns t,o KIM) Unt,il you're eighteerl .. o. But Daddy.... you're eighteen. . RANDOLPH MR. MacAFEE RANDOLPH MR. MacAFEE (To RANDOLPH) Will you leave me alone I ? I . L-7 - 45 52 ALBERT (From upst,airs landing) ....Mr. and Mrs. MacAfee! Kiml Randolphl Is this want seventy-five million Americans to see you?l What are you the way you MR. MacAFEE t,alking about ? ALBERT stairs, goes Lo MR. MacAFEE) You' re all going t,o be on television with Conrad. (Comes down On te levi s MR. MacAFEE ion? ALBERT I just got the confirmation from New York. himself . From Ed Sullivan MR. MacAFEE You mean we're going to be on the Sullivan Show? The Ed SuI livan Sul l ivan Show? ALBERT right . They' re going to cut in on Sweet Apple this night at 8 :05, and you're all going to be on. That' s why I beg you to put aside all petty differences. To that great audience out there you're an American dream come true. And for the free world's sake, Mr. MacAfee, don't destroy_t,hat, dream (eLenRT exits ULC door; MR. MacAFEE is still dazed) ThaL' s Sunday ! MR. MacAFEE Me on the Ed Sullivan Show.... (e chord, and transf ixed HE sings ) M A suNDAy EVENTNG', (Ba sullivan) "HyMN FoR MR. MacAFEE ED SULLIVAN Me, . . ! (Sti11 not believing HIS ears) Harry MacAfee. . . appearing with. . . (enother chord) . ED SULLIVAI\T (lnnS are ! MacAFEE j oins Hf M. HER eyes 91 azed as SHE s ings : ) . L-7 - 46 s3 MR. & MRS. ED.... ED SULLIVAI\T MacAFEE ! U steps bes ide them and j oins singirg) ED.... ( Xf ED SULLIVAIil ! (RANDOLPH is caught too) RANDOLPH MR. & MRS. MacAFEE & KIM ED SULLIVAI{ ! ED SULLIVAT{ ! AI{ ATI ALL ED, ED, SULL, SULL, ED SULLIVAI{, ED SULLIVAIV, WE'RE GONNA BE ED SULLIVAI\T ! MaCAFEES ON MRS. MacAFEE & KIM HOW COULD AITY FAM'LY BE, I{AtF AS FORTUNATE AS WE ! ALL WE' LL BE COAST-TO-COAST, MacAFEES WITH OUR FAV'RITE HOST, ED SULLIVASI ! (UnS. MERKLE and OTHERS move reverent Iy in to j oin the I'4acAFEES ALL MacAFEES & ED SULLIVA}T, ED SULLTVA}I , THEY'RE (WU'RE) CONNA BE ON ED SULTIVAI\T ) CHORUS AI{HHHH- - (THEY sustain note as ) MR. MacAFEE I've got a wonderful wif e now, this ! ALL SOME DAY WE, LL RECATIL THE GREATEST DAY OF ALL, two swell kids a good j ob and, r-7 - 47 54 MR. MacAFEE Ed. f love you! ! ! ALI, ED SULLIVAIV! ! (Orchestra, or1 appLause, plays a short TAG which fades out as next scene is ready) BLACKOUT 1-8 -48 55 ACT ONE Scene 8 BACKSTAGE THEATRE. AT THE CENTRAL MOVTE A single work light illuminates it. ROSIE and ALBERT are aJone. ROS It l-ooks great , you about.... IE Albert. . . .What do you thlnk? Well, this is it, ALBERT Rose ! Now there' s something I want to talk to ROS TE Interrupt irg) Course it's been used as a movie house for the past thirty years but I think it' 11 be f ine f or t,he TV show. ( It' 11 be swell, ALBERT Rose (Again) ! Now what I wanted to say . ROSIE They're shipping down the cameras and lights whatever costumes we need we calf.. . o . (f inally was . . . today, and ALBERT taking HER by the shoulders) Rose , I ' rTl sure everything' 11 be pe rfect ! (Leading HER left as BACKSTAGE OFFICE starts in from L; it is a cramped little dressing room outfitted with a tlpewriter) ...Now, if you'll just forget about the Sullivan Show for one minute and come into the office there' s something very important f want t,o tell you I About, . . . about you and T, Rose. ROSIE (By now THEY are inside OFFICE) You and me , Errgl ish teacher . ALBERT Rose, I'rt serious. I want, t,o tell you t,hat, I'm very glad you and I...and me...are out, here toget,her. Being away from New York, Rose...has made me see all kinds of t,hings in a different, light, . That's why I want, you to know I wrote Mamma and t,old her no matter what, happened. . . I have decided to give up Almaelou ! L-B -49 55 ROS ly embraces AlbetL, you didn't, (Happi IE HIM) ! ALBERT Yes, I did, Rose. I wrote her the day we left, which leaves three days and t,hree night,s for her tc get in touch wit,h me and so f ar not, a word! If you ask me, she's accept,ed t,he whole t,hing by r1ow. (as HE Xes L above ROS IE , there is a knock at, the door. ROSIE sit,s at desk) Come in. MRS. PETERSON (Staggering in) . . . .Three days and three nights on a Trailways Bus, but what's the difference, I'm only a Mother and for a Mother a Trailways bus is good enough. (SHe pushes ROSIE out of chair and sits. ROSIE moves R above HER, and sit,s on high stool R through f ol lowirg) ALBERT Mamma, what are you doing here? MRS. PETERSON Did you think I wouldn't come? A woman gets a letter obviously written under the influence of drugs and she should stay at home ? ( Sttg di splays let L er , wrings bucket of water out, of it ) It's only a mot,her's tears. . . . Pay no attention. (SttB unf olds it and reads ) 'rDear Mom: This is to let you know that Almaelou is dissolved. Your friend, A1bert. (to ALBERT) Almaelou is dissolved? Dissolve me I Who am I anyw ay? A sick old woman, probably won't last, the night. I just, want a simple Molher. And don't, stone, with one word carved on it...Al-bert's hire a limousine to get me to the final resting place. I' 1I rr wa1k. ALBERT Mamma ! MRS. PETERSON that Spanish f riend of yours I forgive her. knowet,h not, what, she doneth And tell ! Mamma, Rose is right here ALBERT ! rises as MRS. PETERSON turns to HER. (ROSIE ) She 1-B-50 57 MRS. PETERSON This is Rose? I can't believe it. She looks like Margo when they took her ouL of Shangri-La. (SHg leads ROSIE to small st,ool below desk) For her own sake, AlberL, send her back to Tibet. And don't worry about, a secretary. It, so happens I met on the bus a perfect, secretary. A wonderful ref ined girl on her way to Akron only I persuaded her t,o get of f here. (SHB opens the door. GLORIA RASPUTf N enters. SHE is a sensat,ional and very large broad dressed in tight flowered slacks with a matching bag and dangling a long white fox fur). ....Sonny, say hel1o to Gloria Rasputin. Hi, Al ! GLORIA Hey , you're cuLe. ALBERT (Xing R few steps) But,, Mamma, I don't need a secretary; I have Rosiel MRS. PETERSON (Looking at ROS IE , now seat,ed on l-ow stool of f plat f orm DL) What, does Rosie need a job for? In a year or two she'l-I getting Social Security. be GLORIA WelI, lisLen. . . I don' t, j ust t.14>e . ALBERT (Int,erest,ed) You. . . do other things? GLORIA I tap dance ! I figured r could help you with the secretary stuff , and you would help me get int,o show business. Hotd this, honey. (SHg hands fur piece and bag to MRS. PETERSON, crossing R to C) . . .Mae, ean you hum Suwannee River? ft' s my favorite MRS. selection. PETERSON GLORIA Get a load of this, A1 (ena SHE tap dances as MRS. PETERSON gaily -hums . Sort of Ruby Keeler- ish steps with a Iot, of f eet - sf apping . SHE does . t--B-5r58 turns, each t,ime stopping with back to audience, finally ending in a fuII f lying split , hand t,o f orehead in salute ) many MRS. Bravo ! PETERSON HER) (App1auding, ALBERT j oins Bravo ! GLORIA (Looking at ALBERT, big smile) ....We11, do I get the job? ALBERT I do.n't know. f mean, you cert,ainly have wonderful qualifications but . . . . (Very subtly, GLORIA tries to get herself l;p...a wiggle here, a tiny push there. No soap) little . . . . I'm used to working with Miss Alvarez. However, as you say, Mdmma, w€ are faced with a certain amount of extra work and ' ' ' ' (Hg has become aware of HER. SHE smiles casually) Do you have to stay down t,here? GLORIA For a f ew minutes. Mae , gimme a hand, will from the other side . Easy now. . you? A1 , 1rou push . (UnS. PETERSON and ALBERT HER up) work to get MRS. PETERSON Sonny, for the movies, they can always cut away while t,hey jack her up. (GlOnIA stands triumphantly erect ) A1bert,, why don't you t,ake Gloria somewhere and see how f ast she types. ALBERT WelI, I do have all these releases to get out, and Gloria could do them. IJnless it makes any dif f erence to you, Rosie? ROS IE Why should it, make any dif ference to me? ALBERT Atta girl, Rosie. You just keep working and T'It go along with Miss Rasput in . MRS. I'11 f ind you a typewriter. (SHg goes out) PETERSON l- - B -52 s9 ALBERT (to GLORIA) Do you use the touch system? Whenever possible. (SHE exits. GLORIA ALBERT looks back at ROSIE, gives a silly laugh, then goes out closing door) ROS IB I could ki 11 him . I could j ust ki 11 him (the LIGHTS begin to f ade, there is a dim rattle of drums in the disLance and as MUSIC comes up and the BACKSTAGE OFFICE goes off L we begin the HOW TO KILL A MAN BALLET . In the course of the bal l-et , ROS IE dances out HER desire to revenge herself on ALBERT. First SHE has HfM before a firing squad; then guillotined by an angry French mob , circa A Tale of Two Cit ies; then alternately poisoned, st,abbed, and bombed; f inally 'rubbed out' by a gang of mobst,ers; and over his visible prot,ests, buried and sent f lying of f t,o heaven. At t,he end of t,he BALLET, ROSIE is sitting alone on stage, ALBERT J. PETERSON having been dispatched at last. . . . in HER mind at leasL. SHE is sitt.ing smiling to herself as HUGO comes on L3 ) . M oNE HUNDRED wAys BALLET (orchestra-) HUGO Miss Alvarez, but, I'm looking for Kim MacAfee. I just want to tell her that she is not to kiss Conrad Birdie on that Sullivan Show tonight because if she does, I'1l-. . . . (ROSIE hasn't moved) Miss A1varez .. . . fs anything wrong? . . . .Excuse me, (He becomes alarmed) me ! Hugo Peabody ! Miss Alvarez ! It,' s you, Miss Alvarez? ROS IE Can f do anything f or Slowly t,urning and looking at him) . . . .Yes, Hugo , I think you can. ( BLACKOUT N r.v. THEME (r'axFARE) - (orchest,ra) 1,-9-53 50 ACT ONE Scene 9 In t,he darkness, the is heard. . . VOICE ED SULLIVAN , SULLIVA}T remember: Your surest way t,o the best, in color slides is to insist on the new Kodak ! And now, the young man you've aII been wait, ing to see . As you know, in j ust about f ourteen hours, one of show business' brightest talents is going off to play a Very special engagement. And tonight, before he gioes, he wants to leave a cert,ain lucky young lady wit,h One Last Kiss. Ladies and gentlemen, we take you to Sweet App1e, Ohio, where a t,ypical American f amity, Mr. and Mrs. Harry MacAf ee and their children, Rdndolph and Kim, are gathered to bid farewell to a typical American soldier. . . . Conrad Birdie ! (As the VOICE beqins, the followinq takes nlace verv rapidl-y: . . . . So The LIGHTS come up , a pipe of TV lights f ties in in land the No. 3 Brown Border flies out, to reveal that we are again Backstage at the Central Movie Theatre. The TV STAGE MJ\NAGER rusheS on St2 To E. TWO STAGE HANDS bring red-curt,ained frame from SR3 and place it on marks DSL, remaining in front of frame. THIRD STAGE HAND quickly enters SL3 (ten or twelve feet behind them) and Xes to SL3 and, with FOURTH STAGE HAND, brings second curtained frame from SL,3 and places it DSR. FIRST AUDIO MAN enters SR3 and SECOND AUDIO lfi\N enters SR1 wit,h boom. FIRST MAN Xes DS and THEY do audio-test,ing bit. FIRST WARDROBE WOMAN enters wit,h costumes f rom SL3, Xes to C to SM, who calls SECOND WARDROBE WOMiUI from SL1. SECOND WOMAN takes costumes from FIRST, Xes U and out SR3. FIRST WOMiU{ Xes and out SL1 . ThC FTRST TWb STAGE I{ANDS XC ANd OUT SL3 O The QUaRTETTE of TOWNSPEOPLE enter SR2 and XDS. SM takes them behind SL curtain frame. FIRST TWO STAGE I{ANDS re - enter SL3 with " Present Day" f lat which they open and set behind DSR frame. THIRD and FOURTH STAGE IANDS go t,o SLz for "RevoLut,ionary War'l flat which they open and set behind SL frame. MR. and MRS . MacAFEE, RANDOLPH and KIM enter SLI- . SM hurries them behind SR f rame. MAYOR'S WIFE (one of quartette ) comes from behind SL frame to C asking a guestion. SM pushes HER back. WARDROBE WOMAN 1-9-54 6T ent,ers SR with comb and X to MacAFEE' s to do hair touchups. WARDROBE WOMAN re-ent,ers SL3, X t,o MacAFEE's and FIRST WORDROBE WOMJU{ re-ent,ers SR3 and X t,o MacAFEE' s . STAGE HAND stands by to pull curtain of SR frame. AUDIO MEN push SM hurries to move boom int,o place. boom C. SM quiets group. STAGE HAND goes to SL2 and returns with hand mike which HE t,akes DC for CONRAD j ust as SULLIVAN VOf CE ends with t'Conrad Birdie . " ) MR. IvIacAFEE (sticking head between drapes of SR f rame) Where' s Ed? N (continued) T.v. THEME (TaNFARE) (f'anFARE. SM motions CONRAD, dressed in green-sequinned Army unif orm , from SRI-, places him in f ront, of SR f rame, cues drapes open and cues CONRAD t,o sing. KIM is in R of frame, RANDOLPH next to HER, MRS. MacAFEE seated next t,o HIM, and MR. MacAFEE stands to HER L. THEY are costumed sweet, Americana and the f lat behind t hem is a t,ypical Mid-western small-town home) M ''ONE LAST KISSII CONRAD (singitg) oH, oNE LAST KISS, OH, GIMME ONE LAST KISS, IT NEVER FELT LIKE THIS, NO, NEVER FELT LIKE THIS ! YOU KNOW UH UH I NEED YOUR LOVE, OH, GIMME ONE LAST KISS ! (SU cues KIM to step DR; CONRAD moves toward HER during the following: ) OH, ONE MORE TIME, OH BABY, ONE MORE TIME ! (es CONRAD moves R, HE clears MR. MacAFEE who, subtly at firsL, begins to be aware HE is on TV. HE nudges MRS. MacAFEE. First a smif e, then a slight wave of HIS hand) IT REALLY IS SUBLIME, OH, HONEY, SO SUBLIME, YOU KNOW UH UH I NEED YCUR LOVE, OH, GIMME ONE LAST KISS I 1,-9-55 62 (COIURAD slow1y moves back L and MR. MacAFEE moves MRS. MacAFEE and RANDOLPH further R so that CONRAD doesn't cover CONRAD HIM) (Continued) . . . . AA . . . . AA . . . . AA . . . BY, GIVE ME ONE LAST KISS ! BA. . . . AA. . . . AA. . . . AA. . . . BY, GIVE ME ONE LAST KISS ! BA OH, ONE LAST KISS, OH, GIMME ONE LAST KISS ! IT NEVER FELT LTKE THTS, (Un. MacAFEE can rest,rain himself no longer. HE steps down bet,ween KIM and CONRAD and waves a big hello) NO, NEVER FELT LIKE THIS ! YOU KNOW UH UH OH, I NEED YOUR LOVE, GIMME ONE LAST KISS ! (SU cues cut of song , Lhe curtain closes and HE cues QUARTETTE who have come from behind SL frame to DC. While the QUARTETTE sing, the WARDROBE LADIES rush on and change costumes of IvIacAFEE' s to Revolut ionary War era. Stooping to be out, of camera range, CONRAD moves above QUARTETTE t,o stand in front of SL frame) MALE QUANTETTE TURN BACK HIST'RY'S PAGES ! GO BACK THROUGH THE AGES ! (fgnY move R to stand in front of SR frame) SEE HOW BRAVE SOLDIER BOYS OF YORE (tutacAFEE FAMILY are headed L to behind SL frame excepL MR. MacAFEE who escapes happi ly t o j oin CONRAD be low f rame . STAGE HAI{D grabs HIM and pushes HIM behind frame with f ami ly) SATD GOODBYE WHEN THEY WENT OFF TO ....WENT OFF TO WAR,...WENT OFF TO WAR, WAR., (ROSIE dashes in SLI- with HUGO, stations Hf M j ust R of SR f rame to pu1 I Crapes and SHE exit s SR) L-9-55 63 . . . .WENT OFF TO WAR ! raise lef t arms on f inal word. cues cut -of f of t.heir song; cues HUGO to raise drapes and cues CONRAD to sing. MR. MacAFEE and RANDOLPH wear Revolutionary War uniforms and white wigs and the WOMEN are in aprons and bonneLs. The f lat, behind them shows a murky troubled sky and a red angry sunseL (QUARTETTE SM ) CONRAD OH, ONE LAST KTSS, (Stt cues KIM DL) OH, GIMME ONE LAST KTSS, (Sltt cues CONRAD toward KIM. MR. MacAFEE gestures SM for permission to move down. SM gesLures rrnorr. MR. MacAFEE is temporarily dashed. . . ) IT LIKE THIS, (Iutoving L t,oward KIM) NO, NEVER FELT LIKE THIS ! NEVER FELT YOU KNOW I NEED YOUR LOVE, (Un. MacAFEE, smiling, ffioves bet,ween KIM and UH UH CONRAD) OH, (He j aunt,ily slaps GIMME ONE LAST KTSS CONRAD on shoutder) ! angrily shakes HIM of f and moves signals KIM to follow CONRAD) (COIURAD SM R. OH, ONE MORE TIME ! oH, BABY, ONE MORE TIME ! (ffU Moves R) IT REALLY IS SUBLIME, OH, HONEY, SO SUBLIME, YOU KNOW I NEED YOUR LOVE, (Mn . MacAFEE taps Kf M' s shoulder HER to move L so HE can take HER SHE obj ects, but does so) UH UH OH, GTMME ONE LAST KTSS ! and s ignal s place. 1-9-57 64 (Un. MacAFEE moves down. CONRAD f orces a smile as HE sings t,hrough clenched teet,h. MR . MacAFEE , smi l ing engagingly at, camera begins a jaunty lit,t1e dance st,ep) BA. . . . AA. . . . AA. . . . AA. . . . BY, GIVE ME ONE LAST KISS ! BA. . . .AA. . . .AA. . . .AA. . . .BY, GIVE ME ONE LAST KISS ! (Un. into a wild step; Lries to hit HIM but drapes are closed and WARDROBE PEOPLE pull MR. MacAFEE back through t,hem. CONRAD argues with SM unt, i I SM indicat,es HE i s lat,e f or next shot, . CONRAD dashes DC. QUARTETTE is CS above HIM. The SL frame has been moved UC and STAGE HANDS bring flat on which are painted a group of flags to SC as backing f or f inal vignet te ) MacAFEE breaks CONRAD (as CONRAD TEENAGERS (Continued) sing 'rAaaah" in background) OH, ONE LAST KISS, OH, GIMME ONE LAST KISS ! IT NEVER FELT LIKE THTS, NO, NEVER FEIT LIKE THIS ! YOU KNOW UH UH I NEED YOUR LOVE, OH, GIMME ONE I,AST KISS ! (SfX TEEN COUPLES have come down on either side of CONRAD to f orm a V. RANDOLPH and MRS. MacAFEE have followed them and stand just R of C. MR. MacAFEE then comes in firmly held bet,ween t,wo BRAWNY MEMBERS of the QUARTETTE. MRS. MacAFEE hastily spreads her skirt, trying t,o conceal HIS imprisoned wrists ) ALL (PNINCIPALS, ONE LAST KISS, ONE LAST KISS, OH , GIVE ME ONE LAST KISS ONE LAST KISS, ONE LAST KISS, oH, GrvE ME ONE, ! LAST.... (rcf U has ent,ered L2 to C and DS t,o CONRAD' s right . Music silent pause for dialogue ) QUARTETTE, TEENS) L-9-58 65 . . . . Okay, CONRAD brace yourself, chick (gn Lakes HER in HIS arms. HUGO who is right beside them, can bear no more) I HUGO Brace yourseJ-f, Conrad Birdie ! (He hits HrM; coNRAD goes Hugo! You hit him! ( fn f ront, of down) KTM HUGO cameras ) He was a. . . Et Thief He deserved it I (I(fU dashes of f L1 of Love ! , followed by HUGO) KIM Hugo Peabody, I never want to speak to you again I (UnS. MacAFEE and A RANDOLPH dash of f L1 . is attending CONRAD on floor SC. enters and comes D t,hrough frame C) DOCTOR ALBERT ALBERT (Fighting HIS way t,hrough CROWD) f demand to know who's responsible for t,his ! Who Iet, that kid in here? (Who I did Albert ROS has appeared IE DR) . ALBERT Rosie (Crossing down to HER) ! ROSIE It,'s a sort, of f arewell present to you and Miss Rasputin. it in good healt,h. (ana SHE start s out R ) ALBERT Frant i cal ly ) Rosie I come back ! You can' t leave me here alone ( RCS I ! E You' re not alone, Albert . You' re on t,el-evision ! (SHg exits R.. ALL f re eze. And ALBERT realizes what' s happened. Suddenly HE turns on a da zzTing TV smile t,hen sings desperately tc :he television audience. . . ) Wear L-9-59 65 (es HE tries .ooli:l5 in f ront fallen CONRAD) FOR HE,S A FINE, UPSTAI.IDING, of the PATRIOTIC, HEALTHY, NORMAL AMERICA}il BOY. (fhe SM has been dashing about frantically trying to get rid of the DOCTOR, to get CONRAD on HIS feet, to get CROWD to sing. THEY join ALBERT. . . ) FoR HE,S A FINE, UPSffi*DING, PATRIOTIC, HEALTHY, NORMJ\IJ AMERICAI{ BOY ! (as CURTAIN IS DEScENDING, MRS. PETERSoN starts doggedly in from L, clumps over to ALBERT and beams adoringly at HER Sonny-boy as MR. MacAFEE throws a tremendous Dinah Shore kiss to audience. . . . ) ENp OF ACT-ONq 2-L-! 67 ACT TWO PROLOGUE N ENTR'Acrq "A" (orchestra) LIGHTS DIM, ENTR'ACTE begins as on screen we go Lo. . . MONTAGE OF VARIOUS MEAXTS OF Beginning with stock shot,s of newsboys selling extras, telephone operators plugging wires into switchboards, telegraph wires humming. . . getting wilder and wilder as we go to stock shot of Wal l- St reet, in 1929 with everybody huddling around ticker tapes; wdr-time groups secretly listening to radios, lady receiving telegram and fainting; pi lot being handed message , t,hen rushing t,o t,hat, f amous cl ip of a canvas seven-winged bi -p1ane circa L9I2 , taking of f , then quiet, Iy folding up into nothing; so on anC so forth, 9€tting progressively j erkier and more old- fashioned speed as montage progresses. Building to climax as music does the same. erash of music. COMMUNICATION. BLACKOUT M ''8'' (orchestra w/TEEN GrRLS) NOTE: In case film proj ection is not feasible, use ENTR'ACTE B in place of above. ENTR'ACrE TEENS (From pit with orchest,ra) WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, OH, YES WE DO ! wE LOVE YOU CONRAD, AND WE'LL BE TRUE ! WHEN YOU'RE NOT NEAR US, WE'RE BLUE ! oH, coNRAD, WE LOVE YOU. (Orchestra aI f ine ) 2-L-2 68 ACT TWO 1 Scene At end of ENTR'ACTE, CURTAIN goes up on KIM'S BEDROOM IN MacAFEE HOME. Music up as ROSIE sits disconsolately on edge of t,he bed. ^L/ rr WI{AT DID I EVER SEE IN HIM? '' ROS IE EIGHT YEARS ! EIGHT YEARS ! THAT'S HOW LONG I WASTED ON HIM... THAT'S ALL ! I'M THROUGH ! ALBERT DEAR, TO PUT IT SWEETLY: TO HELL WITH YOU ! (nises, goes above bed) . . .That's right, the heIl with you! From now on it's just going to be me, Rosie, orr the town, singing, dancing, having a ball, making up f or eight years of being in love with a Mammaclutching , aspirin- split,t,ing six f oot tower of Jello ! (enA SHE heaves f irst suitcase on bed and begins t,hrowing clothes wildly into it ) WHAT DID I EVER SEE IN HIM? HOW DID I EVER GET IIIVOLVED THAT WAY? NOW THAT IT, S OVER I CAI\T SMILE A\TD SAY, WHAT DID I EVER SEE IN HIM? BOY, I WAS WAY OUT ON A LIMB ! NOW THAT r M SAFETY ON THE GROUND AGAIN, NOW THAT MY SENSES HAVE BEEN FOUND AGAIN, WHAT DID I EVER SEE IN HIM? IS HE TENDER? NO, HE'S NOT ! rs HE THOUGHTFUL? NO, HE',S NOT ! AM I CRAZY? I^II{AT, S HE GOT THAT I FOUND SO DA}4N APPEALING? WI{AT DID HE EVER DO FOR ME? WELL, TO BE HONEST, HE WAS SOMETIMES NICE, BUT STTLL IT WASN'T WORTH THE AWFUL PRICE ! IT WAS ROUGH, FROM THE START, BROKEN DATES, BROKEN HOW DID I EVER, WHY DID I EVER, WI{AT DID I EVER. . NAILS, BROKEN HEART... 2-r-3 69 (ena SHE is so angry, SHE can't go olt. KIM has come in at end of above and now tries to comfort ROSIE. Music silent pause for dialogue) KIM Don't be upset, Miss Alvarez . AlI men can't be like that ! IE Every one of theml Except maybe Albert Schwettzer. And I'm not his type. They're aII the same. From puberty to senility. . . from Benedict Arnold t,o Mussolini. . . ROS KIM I never understood why Ingrid Bergman married him in t,he first, place. Egotistical, ROS IE selfish human beasts ! KIM Then what are we poor women to do, Miss Alvarez? ROS Use them! IE (Xing t,o above bed) (uusic vamp in) Let them be our playthings I While we live ! Sip from the cup of life I Mix the potion full strong and drain it to the dregs ( SHg s lams down I id of sui t case Music out for next line) ...How do you like them apples, Mr:. Peterson! . KIM & ROS IE DO WE NEED THEM? NO, WE DON'T! DO WE WAIUT THEM? NO, WE DON'T! KIM WTLL WE LEAVE THEM? ROS IE NO, WE WON',T ! TELL ME, WHAT DID I SAY THAT FOR? KIM & ROSIE WHAT DID WE EVER SEE IN THEM? HOW COUTD WE EVER THINK THAT THEY WERE NICE TAKE IT FROM US, WE'VE PAID A}il AWFUL PRICE! IT WAS ROUGH, FROM THE START, BROKEN DATES, BROKEN NA]LS, BROKEN HEART... WHAT DID WE EVER SEE IN. . . ! ! 2-r-4 70 Hugo F. Peabody! KIM ROS IE Hah? KIM ! What, did I ever see in him? Why, he' s as bad as Mr. Peterson if not worse ! Hugo . . . Miss (Suddenly) Alvarez, f 'm coming with you ROS ! IE Kim, don't be ridiculous ! You're only fifteen ! KIM Ju1iet was fourteen when she left ROS home. IE And look vrhat happened to her ! Now look, Kim, why don't you have some milk and cookies and go to bed like a. . . KIM It's t,oo late for cookies, Miss Alvarezl I want, to livel We' 1I sip the dregs together I We' 11 help each other with our pot ions ! E JN H_rM - UNpERSCoRE (orchesr,ra) (But ROSIE has already fled in terror out the door and down the stairs as LIGHTS COME UP to reveal. . . ) sEE 2-2-5 71- ACT TWC Scene 2 DOWNSTAIRS IN TI{E MacAFEE HOUSE. As ROSIE starts downstairs, noise is heard outside and CONRAD sLarts in front door, followed by ALBERT and MRS . PETERSON. . . aII babbling. CONRAD (as HE enters) . . . For t,he last t,ime, AIberL , I 'm okay and I don' t, f eel like getting into bed! Now leave me alone ! ALBERT (es CONRAD starts toward kitchen R) Conrad, be reasonable! You've had a severe shock and the best thing to do is get upst,airs and (Un turns to point t,o stairs and sees . . . Aha I ROS IE ) There she is I The traitor heart while my back was turnedl ROS t,hat stabbed me in t,he IE (Trying to get past Get out of my way, Albert. MRS. HIM) PETERSON (Moving L to stand between THEM) Be careful, sonny! She may be armed! ALBERT (By this time, CONRAD has grabbed can of beer) I can handle her, Mamma. (CONRAD Xes L to stairs; opening can of beer, it squirts up in t,he a air) You go upstairs with Conrad and see that he get,s into bedl (UnS . PETERSON starts up sLairs af t er CONRAD) MRS. PETERSON Wait f or me, Conrad ! I' 11 make you a nice hrct cup of terramycin. ROS IE A1bert, for the last time, will you let me byl I': gioing on the town tonight, and I don't want to waste a:o::e: r.inute I 2-2-6 72 ALBERT (Quickly closing front door) Not until I 've had my say, Rose . I j ust want, to let you know that t,hanks to Mamma's quick thinking, Lhe kiss will take place af t,er al l- . Tomorrow morning at, the rai lroad stat ion j ust, before Conrad leaves. . (Ve ry sat i s f ied with HIMSELF ) . . . So it looks l ike you' ve f ai Ied, Rose . As anyone must, f ai I who tries to buck A1 Peterson, one of the giants, the titans, one of the King Kongs of the music industry. . . (lnusic comes up as ALBERT cont,inues boast,ing about what, a world leader HE is, in pantomime, and ROSIE j ust looks at HIM as SHE sings. . . ) WHAT DID T EVER SEE IN HTM? II REPRISE E, ROS IE WHAT DTD T EVER SEE IN HIM? HOW COULD T EVER THINK THAT HE WAS NICE? TAKE IT FROM ME I'VE PAID AN AWFUL PRICE ! IT WAS ROUGH, FROM THE START, BROKEN DATES, BROKEN NAILS, BROKEN HEART... (af oud) . . .Ar'r. Empire builCer! ALBERT A Colosseus ! (ana ROSIE has had enough) Out, of ROS IE my way. . .you def rocked English teacher! (ana SHE let,s HIM have it, in the arm with a suitcase. "@j-" he yel-ls ROS IE strikes out t,he door) WHAT DID I EVER SEE. . IN HIM as . ! (ROSIE hurries HER and window) after left as ALBERT limps bellcws off L through ALBERT Rosie , eome back ! Do you hear me? This is King Kongr calling Rosie ! Rosie, I need you. Rosie, please come back ! ROSiC! ...(AS MACAFEES ANd RANDOLPH enter f rom R, ALBERT'S t,one immediately changes ) ! 2-2 -7 73 ALBERT (Continued) ,..And I don'L care how you plead and beg, Miss Alvarezt you're through here at, A1maelou ! Not, only do I accept your res ignat ion, but f urt,hermore you' re f ired . And j ust remember one more thing. Sticks and st,ones will break my bones but, names will never harm me. You big rat (es HE starts back from window) Sorry to do t,his in f ront of you , folks, but I've had to let Miss Alvarez go. ( Phone rings T' 11 get Lhat, . ) . Probably Hong Kong again. MR. MacAFEE ALBERT (Picking up phone) Hello, this is Albert, Peterson speaking ! I 'm sorry, Mr . Lew- s but Miss Rose Alvarez is no longer with us. That' s right . . (through t,he l-ast, KIM , el-utching a heavy suitcase, has appeared at the head of t,he The following is interspersed as stairs. SHE st.art s down and ALBERT cont inues on the phone in pantomime) . Miss Alvarez KIM ! Wait for me ! I'm coming I MR. MacAFEE And where do you think you're going , yeung lady? KIM To drain deep t,he dregs and sip ful1 hearty brimming cup. To live ! With Rosie Upstairs ! MR. MacAFEE . KIM But, Daddy. . . Upst,airs t,he MR. MacAFEE . (then burst ing out,) you hear me? I said. . (Controlled again) Upstairs. . . .Do Miss Alvarez was right Mussol-ini. . . . KTM ! You're aII the same. From puberty to 2-2-8 74 MR. MacAFEE ...What's that? You dare to say 'puberty' in front of your own f at,her? Not to mention Mussolini? Doris . . . we've f ailed as parents (Hg f aIls into MRS . MacAFEE' S arms ) I never asked for much from my children. Just respect. A Iit,t, Ie respect. That's all I asked for. Respect . But did I get respect? I did not get respect. I got no respect. ! I respect, you, RANDCTPH P€r , Snarl ing ) want, your respect MR. MacAFEE ( ! You' re a chi ld . What, good is I don' t respect from a child ! Doris, take me upstairs, I'm not a well mall . ". (es THEY start up) . . . Certain words I didn't want to hear in t,his house . Puberty was t,he f irsL. . . and Mussolini was the second. . . (as THEY disappear) And respect was the third. . . ALBERT (Stil1 on phone. Aloud) , . . Now l-ook here , Mr . Lewis , no three - cent reporter can bulldoze me ! I happen Lo be Albert J. Pet,erson and you can print t,hat in whatever cheap paper you happen to represent ! ( Pause It's not a paper, it's a magazine. (another pause) And it's not Mr. Lewis... (sof t ly) It's Mr. Luce. (Then with a wail as HE hangs up) ...Rosie, T need you! ) MRS. PETERSON (From head of sLairs as ALBERT to door) Sonnyboy! Where are you going? starts ALBERT Nowheres, Mamma. Just out . thought. . . . . . To (Bravely) look for Rosie, Mamma It' s stuffy in here so I ! I love her and I want her MRS. PETERSON back ! s that, al l ? I thought it was something serious . By all means, sonny, f ind your Lady of Spain and bring her back here. (SgP crosses into kitchen) And by the way, dear, when you get back be sure to stop in the kitchen, take my head out, of t,he oven, and t,urn off the gas. . . f 2-2-9 75 (SUB has Lurned on gds, now get,s down on HER knees and ca1mly st,icks HER head in the oven) ALBERT (Crossing over and pulling Mamma HER out) ! MRS. PETERSON (Stopping to turn off gas ) It's a strange house. I don' t, want Lo run up a bill. ALBERT I've had enough of this! If you realIy l-oved me, you' d help me f ind Rosie before it's t,oo late . Don' t, you real rze what' s happened? That poor girl-' s gone out to make up for all the years she wast,ed on me. Who knows what low dive she' s in at this very moment. Mamma, MRS. PETERSON Oh, sonny, you' re right ! f '11 help you f ind her. bett,er give you the message from Conrad firsL. . . What message? Only maybe ALBERT MRS. PETERSON Nothing t,o worry about, darling. He just says he's going out tonight, and he doesn' t think he' 11 get back on time to kiss Kim tomorrow... Mamma, why didn't you teIl ALBERT me this before! MRS. PETERSON I tried to, darling sweet,heart, but you certain party from South of the Border. kept, bringing up a ALBERT Shout ing upst,airs ) I don' t, know what ' s t,he mat ter with him ! this means to me ! Conrad.! Conrad! ( CONRAD'S VOICE He knows how much Take it easy ! f'm coming. . . (ana CONRAD, dressed in t ight j eans , leather j acket and booLs, st,arts downstairs ) ...And before you start hollering, Albeyt, I just want you to know I made up my mind! I'm tired of getting up at nine every morning, having people watch me when I eat , and let t. ing kids poke me in t,he eye . I wanna have some fun I Go out ! Meet a couple of young chicks ! Don' t, you understand, Albert . I anr t,ense ! 2-2-10 76 ALBERT Mamma, don't just stand there! Do something! MRS. PETERSON (Pfanting HERSELF sexily in front of the door) Conrad, did you ever think in terms of a more mature (SHg shows a bit of shoulder) woman? CONRAD , T hope I never geL lhAt tense ! (as HE goes to RC) ...Now look, buddy boy, this is my last free night before I into the Army, and I am going ouF Man go ! (Goes to AI,BERT CONRAD) You can't go out without my permission! It says so in your contractl Mamma, g€L the cont,ract. It's in my... Never mind, I' LI get it myself. (es HE charges upstairs) . . . Conrad, you stay right here ! (l"lusic comes up) tt Nrt MRS. Conrad. . . PETERSON (SHE shyly shows HIM a bit of ankle, then is embarrassed and hurries out the door, UR) CONRAD THERE ARE CHICKS, JUST RIPE FOR SOME KISSTN'! ADilD I MEAI\T TO KISS ME A FEW ! [4AN, THOSE CHICKS DON'T KNOW WHAT THEY'RE MISSIN' I GOT A LOT OF LIVIN' TO DO ! ! STZZLIN' STEAKS ! ALL READY FOR TASTIN'! AND THERE'S CADILLACS...ALL SHINEY AIID NEW! GOTTA MOVE, CAUSE TIIVIE IS A-WASTIN'! THERE'S SUCH A l,OT OF LIVIN' TO DO! (And HE moves out of t,he house as ITIGHTS UP on a defiant KIM in HER bedroom) COME 2-2-11 77 KIM THERE ARE MEN OF NINETEEN OR TWENTY WHO ARE SUAVE AI.ID RECKLESS AI\TD TRUE OLDER MEN, WHO'LL GTVE A GIRL PTENTY ! I'VE GOT A LOT OF LIVIN' TO DO I ! (By now the MacAFEE HOUSE is moving of f , and we find OURSELVES. . . ) 2-3 -r2 7B ACT TWO Scene 3 IN THE STREETS OF SWEET APPLE. N 'rA Lor oF l,rvrN' To Do'' (continued) CONRAD THERE'S MUSIC TO PLAY! PLACES TO GO! PEOPLE TO SEE ! EV'RYTHING. . . FOR YOU AI\TD ME ! (Hg SeeS DEBORAH SUE and ALICE. Music continues under dialogue) Hey, you kids Live here, don't you? Yes, Mr. Birdie. DEBORAH SUE CONRAD What's the lowdown on this town? DEBORAH SUE Sweet, Apple who , Ohio, was f ounded in 1.852 by Jeremiah S . Apple , CONRAD I mean, what do you do here ? Where do you go t,o have a bal l ? ALICE I , t,here ' s t,he church basement and t,he Sweet Shoppe , and the older kids go to t,he ice house. Wel What,' s t,here? CONFAD ALICE I don' t, know. Ic€, I guess . KIM (Entering L) j It ust so happens, Mr . Birdie, that the ice house j-s where people go when they want to be alolte. CONRAD Hey , ain't you the chick I was supposed to kiss? KIM I am not a chick. I am a fu1ly grown woman and I insist, on being treated as such. As a mat,ter of fact, that's why I'm leaving home 2-3-13 79 CONRAD you're talking, Chick (Un takes HER arm) Come on, l-et's move ! We got things to Now ! do ! (Through the f ol lowing t,he SWEET APPLE KIDS gradually gather and j oin in as CONRAD sings) CRAZY CLOTHES ! AI\TD MOTOR BOAT RACES ! CONRAD & THREE GIRLS SOMEONE NICE TO CUDDLE UP TO! BROADWAY LIGHTS ! A}ilD WIDE-OPEN SPACES ! THERE'S SUCH A LOT OF LIVIN' TO DO! (uore KIDS j oin THEM) LOTS OF DATES, A\ID NO ONE TO SCOLD YOU! LOOP THE LOOP A}TD LAUGH AT THE VIEW ! MOONLIGHT SWIMS, AITD SOMEONE TO HOLD YOU! YEAII ! WE GOT A LOT OF LIVIN' TO DO CONRAD THERE'S MUSIC TO PLAY! KIDS YOU KNOW TT! CONRAD PLACES TO GO! YOU KNOW KIDS IT! CONRAD PEOPLE TO SEE EV'RYTHING. . . ! KIDS YEAII ! CONRAD FOR YOU AIVD ME ! OH, LIFE'S A BALL, ALL IF ONLY YOU KNOW TT! AI$D TT'S ALL JUST WAITING FOR YOU! ! WOW ! 2-3-L4 80 ALL YOU'RE ALIVE ! SO COME ON AND SHOW IT! OH, WE'VE GOT A LOT OF LIVING, SUCH A LOT OF LIVING, WHAT A LOT OF LIVIN' TO (Uus ic s i (off lent, pause f or dialogue ) MAYOR'S WIFE uR) A1ice, where are you? You know you were told to go straight bed! A1 ice! ! (I(IDS freeze at the sound of HER voice, then Music picks up scatter in all- directiorls. underscoring dialogue into next vocal ) MR. JOHNSON (Coming UC from L) Harvey Johnson , I want, you home this Einut,e (Un exit s DL) MRS. ! MERKLE (Bntering DR and exiting UC and R) Do you hear me, D€borah Sue? Mother's calling you, Deborah Sue ! Deborah Sue ! (Last TWO KIDS almost run over HER as THEY dash of f DR. FIARVEY JOHNSON dashes across from UC and out DL. CONRAD is alone on stage for a second and then the KIDS return, led by KIM) CONRAD THERE'S MUSIC TO PLAY! PLACES TO GO! PEOPLE TO SEE ! EV'RYTHING. . . KIDS YEAI{ ! CONRAD FOR YOU A\TD ME ! CONRAD ANd KIDS , LIFE'S A BALL ! rF ONLY YOU KNOW TT A}TD IT'S ALL JUST WAITING OH ! FOR YOU! YOU'RE ALIVE ! SO COME ON A\TD SHOW IT ! oH, wE'vE GOT A LOT OF LrVrN' , SUCH A LOT OF LIVTN' , to 2-3-15 81 CONRAD A LOT OF LIVIN' TO DO oo oo oo oo oo WHAT & KIDS (Continued) ! (ena Two BY Two, the KrDs spin of f Last to go are CONRAD and KIM, who dash off DR as HUGO call-s after . ) HUGO . Kim ! Kim , come back ! Kim. . . (Ana HE turns around and st,arts L aS CORNER Of MACAFEE HOUSE COMCS ON L and MR. MacAFEE st,eps out ) MR. MacAFEE ! Kim, where are (Seeing HUGO) ...Hugo, have you seen Kim? you? Kim HUGO (Xing to C) Don't ask me. Ask Conrad Birdie. . . MR. MacAFEE (xing to HIM) What are you talking about? HUGO They're ouL together having moonlight swims and mot,orboat, races and loop - the - loop I I ' m going to do t,he only sens ible t,hing Drink myself to death. . (Un Xes U and off L) . . Moonlight ...Doris, MR. MacAFEE swims . . . Motorboat, races . . . Loop-the- loop (fo MRS. MacAFEE who comes out, ! through this) get my gun. ALBERT (coming ouL of house ) Mr. MacAfee, you haven't seen Conrad, have you? MR. MacAFEE No, but I intend seeing him, Mr . Pet,erson. So if you have a message, I'11 be glad to deliver it right afLer I shoot him. Shoot him ! ALBERT Rosie ! I've goL to find Rosie (Hg dashes of f ) ! MRS. MacAFEE Dear, what are you talking about? You know you don't have gun ! a 2-3-15 82 MR. MacAFEE There's that Daisy Air Rif Le in t,he garage. That' s (Who has come mine, Pd. RANDOLPH out of t,he house ) MR. MacAFEE You shut up ! (xing C) I wonder where I can buy beebees this late at night. . . Anyway , it's MRS. MacAFEE broken, dear. . . Mr. MacAFEE That bow and arrow I bought you last Christmas with the suction tipsI Don't just stand there! My daughter has run off to loop-the-loop with a fiend I Get me a Then get me anything! wat,er gun ! (UnS. MacAFEE and E RANDOLPH go into house) 'rKrDs" MR. MacAFEE KIDS ! I DON'T KNOW WHAT'S KIDS TODAY ! KIDS WRONG WITH THESE ! WHO CA}U UNDERSTA\TD AI{YTHING THEY SAY KIDS ! THEY ARE DISOBEDIENT, DISRESPECTFUL OAFS NOISY, CRAZY, SLOPPY, LAZY LOAFERS A}UD WHILE WE'RE ON THE SUB.JECT, KIDS ! YOU CA\T TALK AAID TALK FACE IS BLUE ! KTDS TILL ! YOUR ! BUT THEY STTLL DO JUST WHAT THEY WAI{T TO DO ! WHY CA\I'T THEY BE LIKE WE WERE, PERFECT TN EV'RY WAY ! WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KIDS TODAY! MR.. & MRS. MacAFEE KTDS ! ! 2-3-L7 83 ( Instrumental ) MR. MacAFEE f don't mind the moonlight swims; itrs hurts ! the l-oop-the-Ioop that, BOTH KTDS Why ! MR. MacAFEE don't they lower the draft age. . . Lo about eleven? BOTH KIDS I didn't ! MR. MacAFEE know what, puberty was until f was almost past, it BOTH KIDS ! THEY ARE JUST IMPOSSIBLE TO CONTROL! KIDS ! WITH THEIR AWFUL CLOTHES ROCK AIUD ROLL WHY CAI\T ' IN A T A]\TD THEIR ! THEY DAI\TCE LIKE WE DTD? MR. MacAFEE ROMANTIC WAY? (Comes RANDOLPH out of house) Hey, Pop, here ' s my pea- shooter ! MR. MacAFEE A pea-shooter? What good's a. . . Give it to me BOTH WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KIDS (tUnY dash of f R. TODAY RANDOLPH BLACKOUT E KrDS - cHA\TGE (orchestra) 13 ! exits L) ! I 2-4-l-8 84 ACT TWO 4 Scene In one of Sweet Apple' s rrlow dives " . . .MAUDE' S ROADSIDE RETREAT, which is proclaimed on neon-sign. We notice sign above bar that says NO MINORS SERVED. Also , a door leading to a room UC, a small bar. HUGO, trying to look casual, saunters over to bar and sits on stool . BARTENDER ignores HIM, continues polishing glasses . Music fades out. HUGO I' 11 have a double rocks on the scotch. And put in it t,h:-s t.ime. Can you make me a vodka malted? ,. . How old are some rocks BARTENDER you? HUGO (Taking no chances) 32. BARTENDEF., Get, ouL . What about a beer? Beat, it HUGO BARTENDER . HUGO .fust let me sit here with an empty glass in front of me. BARTENDER Out. I demand t,o See the HUGO manager . Where' S Maude ? BARTENDER f'm Maude, Charles F. Maude. (Comes around bar to HUGO) you're not out of here in one minut,e, I'1l . . .And if by t,he scruf f of t,he neck and t,hrow you out, ! take you 2-4-19 B5 HUGO going.. (Xes L, Lhen turns) ...This is t,he last time I do my drinking in thi Okay, I ' fil . exits. At the exact. sLart,s in from R) (HUGO s place ! same momeot, ROSIE, st,i11 lugging t,he two suit,cas€s, ROS IE (as SHE dumps suitcases and st,rides to bar) . . . Double bourbon, scot.ch on the side , rro ice , and a che rry in it ! Make that t,wo cherries ! And bring on the dancing boys I Alvayez is t,he name but, I want you t,o call me Spanish Rose ! Siboney...Da da da da, da da da da da, da dum dum dum! Spanish MAUDE Rose ROS si. IE MAUDE Get ouL. ROS IE wait a minute ! You can' t throw me out, ! I 'm an American citi zerL and it' s my qonst,it,utional right t,o have a drink here if I so choose and get loaded here if I so choose and do any manner of wild and trashy things here if I so choose I This is Spanish Rose's coming out party and when I say coming out I Now mean coming out, ! * * No! MAUDE a man involved. . ROS IE A mamat s boy. And she hates That, means t,heret s * Mamars ^ boys' MAUDF mamas always do. So me 'whatts the problem? 6A/Spervrsu nosE [Revised] I IM JUST A ROS IE SPA}TISH TAII'U\LE, SHE LOVES TO SAY, RIGHT OFF A BOAT FROM THE TROPICS FAR, FAR AWAY... WHICH IS KTNDA FUNNY, SINCE I COME FROM ROMANTIC, EXOTIC. PITTSBURGH, P.A. ! She thinks I fm too Spanish I ever marry that mouse-- ! Oh L5 , eould I show her Spanish ! If 2-4-19a 85a ROSIE (Cont'd) I I LL COOK THE TACO AND THE ENCHILADA A\TD DAY AI\TD NIGHT MY CASTA}UETS WILL CLICK THE ONLY SONG I'LL STNG WILL BE ''GRANADA, II I'LL BE SO SPAI\TISH IT WILL MAKE HER SICK! SHE I LL VISIT IN OUR COZY HACIENDA, MY RED-HOT CHILI, IT ' LL MAKE HER CRY, THE DAIQUIRIS WILL POUR OUT OF MY BLENDA, A\TD THEN WE DANCE THE FLAMENCO, AI AI AI ! WATCH OUT FOR THE WILD SPA}UISH ROSE, THE WICKEDEST FLOWER TI{AT GROWS ! HER SKIRT SHE IS SPLIT, HER HIPS NEVER QUTT, TFIAT SPITFIRE, SPA\TISH ROSE ! MRS . P, BE MY MJ\}fl\CITA, REAL LATINA DAUGHTER I WILL BE, TCGETHER WE WILL SHOP AT THE BODEGA, AI\TD WATCH THE SPAI\TISH CHANNEL ON TV. . HEY, A A}TD THEN BEFORE LONG I . HOLA! SUPPOSE, YOUILL HELP US PICK OUT BABY CLO'ES, FOR JUAAT AND ENRIQUE, ROSA, AI\TITA, JOSE A}TD CARMEN, JESUS, CONSUELO- MJ\MJ\, YOU CA\] BET YOUR BOTTOM PESO SOMEDAY I MAKE HIM ONE TERRIFIC WIFE, IT GIVES ME MUCHO HAPPINESS TO SAY SO: WTTH ME YOUR SONNYBOY COULD HAVE A LTFE ! SO BOYS, NOW YOU I VE MET SPA}TISH ROSE, THE WICKEDEST FLOWER THAT GROWS, r I M WILD A}TD T 'M FREE, I IM WHAT I MUST BE, TBOUT DON I T WORRY ME- SPA}TISH ROSE ! (The phone rings. MAUDE picks up the phone. ) MAUDE o . . Yeah? (l,ight,s up on ALBERT ALBERT in the MACAFEE l-iving Hell-o , t his is Albert, J. Peterson speaking. t,here ? room, SL) Is Rose Alvarez MAUDE Who? Wait a second, I t.hink please ALBERT t.haL ' s her voice . would you put her . 1,7 on 2-4-20 85 M;\UDE Hold the wire ! Hey, Fidel Castro ! want,s to talk to you. (nOSIE Some guy named Pet,erson yells in the direction of t,he ROS You tell that weasely little gusLa l-a gusta. . . phone . ) IE rat I 'm not here! ...Oh, Cuant,o Ia ALBERT That proves she' s there ! Who else would know I 'm a weasely litLle rat ? (nOSIE grabs the phone out of MAUDE' s hand. ROS What ) IE ? ALBERT Rose, Itve got t,o t,alk to you! ROS It|s about, Conrad! IE And furt,hermore, €ven if I were t,his Ros€, which I am not,, t,he only t,hing that would certainly make me hang up is any ment,ion of anybody named Conrad! (ROSB puts t,he phone down on the bar. ) ALBERT ical Iy . ) No, Rosie, please don r t, hang up ! I wonr t mention Conrad ! We ' II talk abouL anyt,hing you want, ! You and me, you and I , anyt,hing ! Oh, Rosie, plea3e . . . (Frant, TALK TO ME'' m'BABY (UeUDE is 2nd Tenor in t,he backup male quart,et, . The 1st Tenor, Bari tone and Bass are the THREE LOCAL OLD GEEZERS. ) ALBERT QUARTET TALK TO ME, BABY, WON I T YOU TALK TO ME? I DON'T CARE WI{AT YOU SAY, BABY, TALK TO ME. MUST YOU BE OH, SO FAR AWAY FROM ME? IT SEEMS ALL WRONG THIS WAY, (nOSIE pushes phone away) TALK TO ME. AI\TD IF YOU MISS ME, MMMM. .. (the GEEZERS have risen from their seats and approach the bar. They listen to the phone which is lying t,here. We hear ALBERT singing through the phone. The 2nd TENOR-MAUDE starts singing.) 18 2-4-20 85 BARTENDER Hold the wire ! (fo ROSIE in middle of her "Ai-eee ! " ) Hey, Fidel Castrol I goL a guy named Peterson wanL,s to t,alk to you - fnto phone) TeII that weaselly littl-e ROSIE ( rat r, m not here ! ALBERT That proves she's there ! Who else would know I'm a weasel-ly littIe rat? (shouting) . . . Rose , I 've got to talk to you I IL' s about, Conrad I ROS IE (Grabbing phone) And furthermore, even if I were this Ros€, which I am not, the one thing that would certainly make me hang up is any mention of anybody named Conrad! (Frant ica1ly) ALBERT No, Rosie, please don't hang upl I won't mention Conradl We'II talk about anything you want ! You, rTr€ , I, anythinql (Uusic comes up. ROSIE light,s a cigarett,e, puffs it furiously through following) Oh, Rosie, please. . . m 'BABY,. TALK To ME'r is 2nd Tenor in the backup male quartet, DISHWASHER 1st Tenor, (MeUog FIRST CUSTOMER Barilone and SECOND CUSTOMER Bass) ALBERT QUARTET TALK TO ME, BABY, WON'T YOU TALK TO ME? I DON'T CARE WI{AT YOU SAY, BABY, TALK TO ,ME. MUST YOU BE OH, SO FAR AWAY FROM ME? rT SEEMS ALL WRONG THTS WAY, (ROSfE pushes phone away) TALK TO ME. AATD TF YOU MISS ME, MMMM. (Of SHWASHER ent,ers UC and j oins MAUDE and TWO CUSTOMERS AS THEY hum) . 2-4-2r B7 ALBERT TELL ME SO! ARE YOU LONELY? TELL ME SO! SAY YOU LOVE ME; TELL ME SO! (Continued) QUARTET (Continued) MMMM.. MMMM... MMMM... MMMM... O HONEY... LET ME KNOW. OOOH...HONEY! TALK TO ME, MMMM... TILL I PRESS OOOH!... TILL I YOU CLOSE TO ME ! THEN YOU'LL SEE. . . WE WON'T HAVE TO TALK PRESS YOIJ. . . AH . . . AI{. . AF{. . . O AT ALL! (OISHWASHER turns and QUARTET sings) MUST YOU BE OH SO FAR AWAY FROM ME, (ROSIE moves DS suitcase. MEN f to siL on ollow) HER BABY I DON'T CARE WHAT YOU SAY, TALK TO ME ! AI{D IF YOU MISS ME IT AIN'T ... OH. . ooH...ooH. ..ooH. . . OOH...OOH...OOH. . . HONEY! HONEY! .. ALBERT (rnNoRS) TALK TO ME TILL I PRESS YOU CLOSE TO ME ! THEN YOU'LL SEE SO ! LADY, LADY, TELL HIM sAy You LovE ME... TELL ME SO... KNOW. YOU LOSE, GONNA HURT ! CATT . TELL HIM ARE YOU LONELY? LET ME ! OH, BABY... TALK. . GO ON, WHAT HALF QUARTET HALF TALK, TALK TO ME AFI .. TALK TO TILL I . CLOSE TO ME ! THEN YOU'LL SEE & WE WON'T HAVE TO TALfrLBERT AI{. . . AFI . . . QUARTET AT ALL! (ROSE returns to DISHWASHER moves QUARTET TILL I PRESS YOU CLOSE TO ME. . sit on stool up to her L) . QUARTET US. ME PRESS YOU SO ! 2-4-22 88 THEN YOU'LL SEE. . ALBERT & QUARTET . TENOR (prSHWASUER) WE WON'T HAVE TO TALK. . . MAUDE ALBERT CUSTOMERS TALK. .. TALK. . . AII .. &2 . AI{. . . TENOR (NTSHWASHER) AT ALL! MAUDE TALK TO ME ! FIRST CUSTOI,IER TALK TO ME! SECOND CUSTOMER TALK TO ME! (nising) ALBERT TALK TO ME... ALL FIVE MMMMMM. .. ! ALBERT (Looking at phone, suddenly puzzLed) Rose , are you alone? ROS No, I'rr noL alone, A1bert . (SexilY) . . . See you later, boys. IE I'm with friends . ALBERT (as MEN start, in door UC) See you later, boys?! Rosie, you've got t,o help me find Conrad ! ROS IE only t,he beginning, Albert! From now on the sky's the limit . . .parties. . .ba1Is. . . dances ! AIvU\POLA, MY PRETTY AMA. . . What' s going on in there? (through above more MEN have Xed and gone into door UC) And that's BARTENDER No business of yours, lady. That' s a privat,e dining room ! 2-4-23 89 Private for ROS IE whom? For men only, that' s f or BARTENDER whom ! ROS TE ThaL's exact, Iy what I'm looking for! I've heard about what goes on in these small t,owns. Out of Spanish Rose' s Men only? way!! N rRANSrrroN To SHRTNER's (orchestra) BARTENDER Hey, Ia,Cy, waiL a minute I Even I ain' L allowed in t,here I Hey , Lady. . . ALBERT stop her I Don't let. her go in . Wait , Spanish Rose ! I' 11 be right down. Mamma, get my coat. . Somebody . (ana ROSIE pushes the BARTENDER through t,he door UC as lights come up t,o reveal . . .) 2-5-24 90 ACT TWO Scene 5 THE PRIVATE DINING ROOM. A long oblong table covered to floor with white cloth. Moose head above it. MAYOR ...And so, F€l1ow Shriners, wibh the power vested in me... (nOSIE runs in , followed by MAUDE. MAYOR stops speaking. ALL SHRINERS slowly t,urn and look at ROSIE. SHE does a wiggle or two to invite THEM to dance, THEY stare stonily. MAUDE gestures for HER to get out. SHE resignedly exits R) . . . Now before the Recording Secretary reads the minutes of Last week's meet,ing , I want to bring up a subject that I am sure is on everybody's mind tonight. . (Through this last, ROSIE has come stealthily back in frorn R. Music comes up softly as SHE surveys the t-able of SHRINERS, then with a wicked gleam in HER eye, SHE idly begins playing with the tassel on the fez of the . nearest (t"tus E sHRTNER MiUS) ic start,s ) BALLET (orchestra) (From tassel-twirling from to tickling, tickling to a few kicks, from kicks to grinds , from grinds to bumps, until ROSIE begins turning the quiet meeting into t,he SHRINERS BALLET , a sort of midwestern ver'sion of a Turkish orgy. The SHRINERS, gradually warm who are shocked at first, up as ties are loosened and shirt tails come out,. Under the long t,able slides ROSIE, and one by one the SHRINERS are pulled under with HER. Around the t,able, behind iE, and on it THEY dance, until as t,he music reaches its climax the t,ide has turned. The SHRINERS have gone wilder than ROSIE imaEined, and THEY toss HER from one t.c ancther as THEY whirl like dervi she s f ir:.a i- Iy di sappearing under the table once aga j-n . A f inal crash of mus ic , 2-5-25 91 a hand comes up; ROSfE is yanked with THEM) B L A C K.O IJ T N SHRfNER'S PLAY-OFF (Orchestra) down 2-6-26 92 ACT TWO 6 Scene THE BACK DOOR OF MAUDE'S ROADSIDE complete with t,rash cans, back fence, lamppost . ROSIE comes l imp1y out t.he door, we aring a red fez-. SHE collapses on box DL next, to garbage can. HUGO comes in C from R. RETREAT , (t"tusic f ades out ) HUGO .Miss Alvarez, f have a favor to ask you. Could you go back in there and get me some grain alcohol to go? .. Not for a million dollars ROS IE ! HUGO My whole world is collapsing bef ore me ! I can't get a drink; and Kim's run of f wit,h Conrad to the ice house. . . ROS IE ! Albert ! I 've got t,o phone Albert ! you stay right here. . (again) SHRTNEB's PLAY-OFF (orchestra) re-. . . Kim and Conrad Hugo, . ROS IE door into MAUDE'S . Instantly SHRf NERS burst f ort,h. SHE backs away. . . ) Now , fel-las ! Wait, a minute (SHg opens ! (THEY lift then R. HER and HUGO ALBERT comes it is ! HER madly dashing on from Music fades out . . . Here carry C, DR. ) ALBERT s Roadside Retreat (Opens door, shouts in) I'm coming, Rose ! Hurry, Momma ! (as off goes. into MAUDE'S, and Maude' MR.S. PETERSON ! aggers on af ter HIM) I don't know why we have to go running around aII nighL looking for someone it, would be bet.t.er noL to find in the SHE st 2-6-27 93 MRS . PETERSON (Continued) first place . If you listen to me, sonnyboy , you' 11 come home, have a nice cup of Post,um and go t,o bed. ALBERT (Xing R t,o HER) Mamma, I told you I fm not coming home tiII I find Rosie I Now if you want to leave, thatfs okay with me. (Stopping and t,urning) As a matter of f act, it, ' s not, a bad idea. . . (with a deep breath) ...Why dontt you go home, Mdmma. MRS. PETERSON What did you say, sweet,heart darling? ALBERT I said , "Why don't you go home, Mdmma. I' (ef ter a pause Wou1d MRS. PETERSON ) you mind repeating that once more, sunshine of my exi stence ? ALBERT I said, 90 home, Ma.mma. I don't need you any longer. (MRS . PETERSON sit s on a garbage can. ) *_ OA/ ''A MOTHER OOESN' T ITATTER AIUYITTORB '' " MRS. PETERSON (Spoken f reely over music: ) At, last it's comel The day I knew So... iL's come at, lastl would come at, last, has come at last ! My Sonnyboy doesnt L need me any longer. WeII, what are you waiting for? Get rid of me ! Put, me out, with the garbage ! throw me out with t,he used grapefruj-ts and t,he empt,y cans'Just of t,una fish. And never mind putting a lid on. Leave it, open so a hundred thousand pussycats can walk all over a Mother! . . . 23 2-6-27a 93a MRS. PETERSON (Cont'd) WHO BRONZED YOUR BABY SHOES? KISSED EV I RY LITTLE BRUISE? WHO PICKED YOUR DIRTY SOCKS UP OFF THE FLOOR? YOU COUGHED AI\TD WHO WAS THERE? IT'S .JUST TOO HARD TO BEAR. A MOTHER DOESN ' T MATTER ATTYMORE ! WITH BUNIONS ON MY FEET, I TRUDGED THROUGH SNOW A\TD SLEET, TO BRING YOU LIC'RICE FROM THE CORNER STORE. I SOLD MY TTFF'NY LAMP SO YOU COULD GO TO CAIVIP. NOW A MOTHER DOESN I T MATTER AI\TYMORE ! (Spoken over music: ) That's it. Irm ready to go. And I don't want you to spend a cent. Fancy funerals are for rich people. Just wrap me in a f lag and dump me in t.he river- - -on Mother' s Day. . . AITD PRECTOUS, BY THE WAY, THE DOCTOR CALLED TODAY, WHAT I GOTIS A CONDITION YES, HEIS SURE, THERE'S NOTHING THEY CAN DO, I'LL LAST A WEEK OR TWO, BECAUSE FOR A CONDITION TFIERE ' S NO CURE. . THAT TIME YOU HAD THE CROUP, WHO MJ\DE YOU CHICKEN SOUP, AI\TD READ YOU IISI\IvIBT II TILL HER THROAT WAS SORE? YOU SACRTFICE YOUR LIFE, THEN BAIUG ! YOU GET THE IO\TIFE, NO, A MOTHER DOESN'T MATTER ANYMORE!... (Spoken over music: ) There , I f eel- better now. Everything is as it should be A mother is lying on top of a sanitation truck bound for the City Dump and a son is running around with a floo zLe who came looking for a good time and stayed to ruin an American womanrs life!.., 24 . 2-6-28 94 MRS. PETERSON (Cont'd) WHO GAVE UP NIGHTS OF REST TO RUB VTCKS ON YOUR CHEST? WHO NURSED HER SONNYBOY TILL HE WAS FOUR? MY LIFE HAS BEEN IN VAIN, THTS COUNTRY I S DOWN THE DRAIN, -CAUSE A MOTHER DOESNIT MATTER, NO, A MOTHER DOESNIT MATTER, YES, A MOTHER DOESN'T MATTER A}TYMORE ! Are you finished, ALBERT Mama? MRS. Yes, Sonnyboy. Goodnight, PETERSON ALBERT Mama. MRS. Goodnight, Sonnyboy. My name's not Sonnyboy. PETERSON ALBERT MRS. PETERSON You're just like your father... You'd marry anythingl N GLORY HALLELUJAI{ (Orcheslra) off R as we hear the strains of t'Battle Hymn of the Republic. THEY grow louder as SHE is gone. ALBERT swells with triumphant pride. HE is thus transfixed as MR. and MRS. MacAFEE and RANDOLPH come hurrying on C from L) (SHg moves rr MR. MacAFEE .. .Mr. Peterson! Have you seen Conrad and Kim? ALBERT Ah there, Mr. MacAfee! A great pleasure to see you again. Unfortunately , T must telL you that, Conrad' s affairs no longer interest me. Irrn l-ooking for Miss Alvarez now to t,eII her that. . . (He hears it . . . Conrad and Kim? ) Theyrve run off together! MRS. MacAFEE MR. MacAFEE And if we don't, find them soon, Mr. Peterson, T int,end calling the FBMhors the head of it now, dear? Is it Peter Lawford yet ? 25 2-6-29 95 ALBERT il m sure there's nothing t,o worry about . . MRS. . MERKLE (Hurrying on C from L) Doris ! Harry! Have you seen Ursula? ALBERT Ursula? MRS. MacAFEE Is she missing too? MRS. MERKLE Since ten o'clock I And I've looked everyrhere. MR. MacAFEE (As MR. ,JOHNSON enters DR and speaks simultaneously) Mr. Peterson! MacAfee MR. JOHNSON ! You haven't seen my llarvey, have you? AIilOTHER PARENT (Hurrying in C from Or Roger! And Phyllis L) ! ATBERT They're probably all down at the drugstore. (erightly) . . .Maybe having one of those gang wars. . . .. MR. MacAFEE Gang Wars ! (as ALBERT realizes what HE'S said and sneaks off t) (panENTS all becomes a begin talking at once. jurnble; THEY all turn around and, ds one, sing. . . ) ft M REPRTsE: "K.rDS" ALL KIDS ! I DON'T KNOW hIHAT'S KIDS TODAY ! KIDS WRONG ! WHO CAIV UNDERSTAI{D AIVYTHING THEY SAY ! WITH THESE 2-6-30 95 RA}TDOLPH KTDS ! THEY ARE SO RIDICULOUS A]\TD SO IMMATURE I DON'T SEE WHY AI\TYBODY WAIITS 'EM ! ! MR. MacAFEE .TUST YOU WAIT AND SEE. . . RANDOLPH KIDS ! THEY ARE JUST IMPOSSIBLE TO CONTROL! SOON YOU'LL BE OLD ENOUGH TO BE.. t MR. MacAFEE RANDOLPH KIDS ! WITH THEIR AWFUL CLOTHES AIVD THEIR ROCK AND ROLL! MR. MacAFEE A}ilOTHER TEENAGE DELINQUENT ! RANDOLPH WHY CAII'T THEY BE LIKE YOU WERE, PERFECT IN EV'RY WAY ! MR. MacAFEE & WHAT'S THE MATTER hIITH KIDS TO RANDOLPH ALL KIDS ! WHAT THE KIDS KIDS DEVIL'S WRONG WITH THESE TODAY! ! WHO COULD GUESS THAT THEY WOULD TURN OUT THAT WAY! WHY CAI\T, T THEY BE LIKE WE WERE, PERFECT TN EV'RY WAY ! MR. & MRS. MacAFEE WHAT'S THE MATTER WTTH KIDS ! RANDOLPH WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KIDS ! ALL WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KTDS TODAY ! 2-6-31 97 (et Lhe end of the song, the door to and HUGO comes flying out) MAUDE'S opens HUGO Hi, everybody! Good oId Hugo here! (as HE falls into the ash can) ...Looped! MRS. MacAFEE Hugo Peabody, what have you been drinking? HUGO Milk. But, it worked I Anyhow , T 've got a perf ect, right to drunk. My girl's gone off with Conrad Birdie to the . . , be ALBERT (Entering hastily f rom L1 Lalking f ast ) . . . To the movies I Great double bill tonight,. . . "F1ying Down To Rio " and 'r Greed " ! Gosh, I ' 1l always remember t,hat, great cast. Dolores Del Rio. . . MR. MacAFEE (f'orgett ing HIS t,roubles And Gene Raymond.. And what a score ALBERT ! I' d f orgott,en t,hat (Sof t ) . MR. MacAFEE . ALBERT & MR. MACAFEE Iy, heads toget,her) Hey, Rio, Flying down t,o Rio. . . ROS .. .Albert IE (gnteringCfromRwit,haSHRINER in hot pursuiL ) ! ALBERT Rose, where've you been! I've been looking for you all night,! I have good news for you, Rosie ! I did it ! I sent Mamma home ! And f 'm a new man, Rose ! A world leader ! Albert, ROS IE Conrad and Kim have g'one to the ice house ALBERT (Un doesn'L know what, it The ice house? is) ! 2-6-32 98 MR. MacAFEE The ice house ! Doris, cal] the Mounted Police I (As CROWD starts of f in various directions Call Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons ! (et portal R) ) CaII the Shadow! Look him up under Lamont Cranston... (THEY rush off as the TIGHTS DfM, and we find ourselves. . . ) N L,AMoNT cRANsroN To TcEHoUSE (orchestra) 2-7-33 99 ACT TWO Scene 7 The light of a match flares; moonlight comes slowly up, and we see CONRAD lighting KfM'S cigareLte, in the ICE HOUSE, an enclosed, low, barn- like structure, wit,h one or two empty crates lying about. HE watches HER as SHE inhales. KIM that is refreshing. Of cours€, f do prefer a Murad, but these' 11 do. WelI, here we are, Conrad ! This is the ice house ! Fun, isn't it (SHg rises as CONRAD qits next t,o HER and puts HIS arm around HER) Of course, when you've been here as many times as I have... I ' ve been here wit,h j ust everybody, you know . IJrsuIa . . Deborah Sue. . . the Girl Scouts. (Sgn coughs on cigarettes) Stronger than the chocolate ones, aren' t they? (COITRAD rises and goes to HER) Conrad, you seem a bit nervous. Maybe a drag on this weed would relax you. Or how abcut, one of t,hose reefers I've read so much about? I can go out and get you a fix i,f you tell- me what it is. When you've had a donkey on your back as long as I have. . (COWRAD puts HIS arm around HER again, and SHE moves right,) . . . Conrad , you're trembling ! Just because you're a f ew years younger t,han I arn , I hope it, doesn' t make you uncomf ortable I'm twenty-seven or twenty-eight, you know. One of the two. So, 1rou see, I really know the score; I even know some of the words! Connubian, pre-marrial, jailbait... (fhe meaning of the last, word hits HIM. HE stiffens, turns and starts for the steps) ...Mmmm, ! . . . URSULA (Suddenly appearing at top of ladder) There you are, oh sensuous one ! for music to begin quiet, ly under dialogue and contine into vecal ) We've been looking f or you everyarhere ! (Cue CONRAD That' s nice . Now out of t,he way. f 'm laLe . . . 2-7 -34 100 URSULA (Coming down as KIDS st,art pouring in) But. you don't understand ! We're coming with you I yourself! We've got a lot of }iving to dol Now wait a minute. . . We' 11 earth Moonl CONRAD URSULA never go home again ! We' 11 follow you to the ends of the ! ight DEBORAH SUE swims ! Mot.orboat races ! Loop - the - loop Yeah! you said it HELEN PENELOPE ! ALL ! CONRAD (eacking L) Course that stuf f really ain't, as much fun as I made ou.t. . We can N URSULA sLart right now; Let's have an orgy! (Pronounced with a hard g) ICE HoUSE LIVIN' KIDS THEY puII CONRAD GOT A LOT OF LIVIN' ! SUCH A LOT OF LIVTN' ! (es (URSULA WHAT back t,o RC) spins HIM around) A LOT OF LTVIN'! leaps int,o HIS arms and KIDS are a spinning, dancing mass with CONRAD and URSULA it,s core. ALBERT and ROSIE ent.er (URSULA ALBERT S shouts lost, in noise ) What's going on here? Conrad! Conrad! (Hg and ROSE are embroiled in the (Uf mass ) L) . 2-7-35 10 WHAT WHAT A LOT OF LIVIN I A LOT OF LIVIN' t_ KIDS ! ! (An abrupt cut off of music as MR. MacAFEE and TWO POLICEMEN enter SL. MR. MacAFEE still carries HIS l-ant.ern) There he is ! MR. MacAFEE The depraved brute ! Arrest that man ! (Quick music tag as CONRAD drops URSULA. to HIM, MR . MacAFEE f oIlows ) POLI CE XR Well now, what, have you got to say, Mr. Birdie Thank CoC youtve come. ! CONRAD HUGO (gntering L) Hi everybody! Good old Hugo again. (Running to KIM who has entered L) Hugo, darling, you're just in t.ime! I canrt teIl humiliat,ion I 've .been made to suf f er. . . That ' s all HUGO you what MR. MacAFEE I need Lo hear ! Take him away ! (rhe POLICE exit L with CONRAD, f ollowed by cl-amouring KIDS and , finally, MR. MacAFEE with HIS lantern) ALBERT ing af ter THEM) ...Mr. MacAfee, I demand you release t,hat, boy! Mr. MacAfee! This is A1bert J. Peterson speaking * ROS IE Albert, Iet me handle this. Look, why don't you go back to the house and I'11 go down to the courthouse and try talking to the Mayor... * ALBERT Rose, I don't think you understand ! This is the new Albert . I told Mama goodbye (Shout ! ! 27 2-7 -3 6 10 2 ir-bert , yeu didn,t ROS IE ! ALBERT Ah, but I did! And Rose, the new Albert is going down to the courthouse and deal with t,he Mayor. And I'd appreciate it if you ' d meet me at, the train stat ion at s ix- thirt,y tomorrow morning... when I intend to be there with Conrad. And Rose, did I ment ion that, I loved you? (uusi-c in) Not, yet, Albert Well, I do. ...Conrad! N ROS IE . ALBERT (Bounding away) ''AI\T ENGLISH TEACHERII REPRISE ROS IE rT'S GOING TO BE SUCH A WONDERFUL LIFEI I 'M GOING TO BE MISSIS PETERSON, MISSIS ALBERT PETERSON, MISSIS PHI BETA KAPPA PETERSON. . (Bcstat, ical ly) . . . Oh, Rosie, nothingr can stop you now ! . MRS. PETERSON (Appearing at top of steps L) Hel1o, Rose. (trtusic out ) ROS He11o, Mae. IE (Not,hing can faze HER now) MRS. PETERSON So we're alone at IasL. Have you a minut,e to spare for heart,-to-heart wit,h an old friend? ROS IE I'11 always have time to talk with the evening I'I1 be able to caII. . . Don't say it, MRS. Rose PETERSON ! 28 woman who a by tomorrow 2 -7 -37 r_03 ROSIE (Very c1early, ds SHE puts I ' 11 be able to call Mother. MRS. HER arm around MAE) ' PETERSON The cruelest, word I ever heard ! (wit h a sigh) . . . To t,hink I would live to see the day f ' d have relat,ives in EI Salvador. ROSIE Not to mention Guatemala, Braz:-l-, Chile, Uruguay, and Chichi Costanango ! And as soon as Albert and I are married, I ' rTr going to stick a rose in my teeth, sit in front of my adobe hut on Central Park West and sell tortillas (Shaking HER hand) . . .Adios, Mama. ! MRS. Adios, Rosit,a. CaII me Mrs. Petersoll (uns. ROS PETERSON IE . PETERSON exits. ) BLACKOUT *Original vers j-on song number 36 , " Spanish Roserf has been delet,ed. Return to original script page 2-8-39, LO5. 29 2-B-39 105 ACT TWO Scene I SWEET APPLE RAILROAD STATION. Early next morning. Train L. A head pokes in from righL. zl / MORNING (Orchest,ra) ALBERT There's no one here ! Come on. . . (ana a FIGURE with a large black woman's coaL, purse and a veil comes on, ffiusic fades out) Now look, Albert. CONRAD ALBERT and on platform) f t took every cent I had to Shut up and get on that train! bai l you out , and I don' t want you seen t, i 11 we ' re out of t,hi s Now get aboard! state!... (Shoves HIM to train CONRAD wait a minute, buddy boy ! You saved my I j-f e, and whether you pay me no guarantee or not . . . you got a contract, with me forever. Now ALBERT Conrad, what are you saying? CONRAD (Hands HIM paper) Here's a blan\ piece of paper I signed my name to, Albert. just fill in whatever you want. (Who from Hel1o, Albert . MRS. PETERSON has come on through this DR) ALBERT Mamma ! ! MRS. PETERSON (Passes ALBERT, look up at CONRAD) Rose, you look good for a change . I know all about, you two. Don't, worry ! I won't, make a fuss . I' 11 do what any intelligent Mother has to do. . . & You 2-8-40 1-05 MRS . PETERSON (Continued) with ALBERT) ...Goodbye, dear. Don't worry about the coat. You'11 three mink stol-es as soon as the train passes over me. (SHe lies down on the tracks) (Shakes hands (Picks HER up have ALBERT puts HER on train; I have no time for goes inside) Mamma, get up and get on that train! SHE nonsense. . . any MR. MacAFEE (Offstage) . r.Just a moment, Mf. Peterson! (ena the MacAFEES followed by some KIDS and ADUTTS hurry on) I demand to know what you've done with Mr. Birdiel that j ail He's not in ! ALBERT How should I know where he is? I I'm just down here to say goodbye haven't seen him all night. to. . . to Rosie ! (Through this CONRAD has taken beer can out of coat and punched it open. It soars in the air. ALBERT hurries HIM into train) MR. MacAFEE Mr. Pet,erson ! MRS. MacAFEE , Ehere' s no point getting excited, dear ! Af t,er all, there's no real harm done. Kim and Hugo are back together Now again. As a matter of fact, the sweetest thing happened. proposed to her this morning, and she accepted him. MR. MacAFEE ryUUU\H ! MRS. Dear, what's wrong? MACAFEE MR. MacAFEE (es THEY go) . . . My life is over now. I' 11 seII the house and go into home. (The MacAFEES exit L) CONDUCTOR AII aboard! (tttus ic in ) a He 2-8-4r L07 CONRAD (Reappearing on train platform with MRS. . PETERSON) ..Hey, Albert, the train's leaving! Get (es KIDS spot Bye, Conrad. ALBERT CONRAD) MRS. (screaming) on! PETERSON A1bert ! ! ! E7 HAND cAR TEEN CHORUS GIRLS WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD OH YES WE DO! WE LOVE YOU, CONRAD, AIID WE'LL BE TRUE ! YOU'RE NOT NEAR US, WE'RE BLUE ! VruTEN oH, coNRAD WE LOVE YOU! (Train starts) .. .Albert, don't leave CONRAD me ! tries to climb over railing of observation car as it goes off L. ALBERT waves after THEM tiII the last scream from MRS. PETERSON fades in the distance. Then HE happily rips up the contract CONRAD gave HfM and 'sits scatters the pieces in the air as HE Xes R and on the luggage cart . ROSIE enters R2 ) (ena MRS. PETERSON ROSIE , here I am, Albert . Six- thirt,y on the button . the train? Well ALBERT It lef t at six twenty- f ive . . Albert,, you told With Conrad.., . ROSIE me to be here at. ALBERT .. Where' s 2-8-42 108 At six- thirt,y sharp . And ROS ALBERT Mamma. ROS .. . IE I know because . . , IE Albert, you wanted us to miss that, train I ALBERT It stands t,o reason, Ros€: Why get on a train to New York we've got ticket,s to Pumpkin Falls, f owa. ROS when IE What,'s in Pumpkin Falls , Iowa? ALBERT An opening in the teaching staf f of Pumpkin Falls ,Junior High School . I read about it in this morning's paper. They want someone to teach English and Domestic Science. And I hope you've brought your documents, Rose, because t,hey prefer the applicant to be marcied. ROS IE (Uusic in, SHE rushes to HIM, f lings HER arms about HIS neck) Oh, Albert ! ! Ros ie ALBERT ! (runY kiss) . . .Did anybody ever telI you that,'s the most the world? (Uusic up, and HE sings) M beautiful 'tRosrE'' I WAS NEVER CRAZY FOfrLFf,ffiERS, CONFESS THAT NOTHING LEFT ME COLDER. COULD WATCH A DAISY FOR HOURS, A}TD ALL T'D FEEL WAS SEVERAL HOURS OLDER. LILACS OR Lf Lf ES, AI\TY BLOOM YOU PLEASE, ALL THAT THEY DID WAS MAKE ME SHRUG OR SNEEZE. BUT NOW I LOVE EACH BLOSSOM TI{AT I SEE FOR A LOVELY LTTTLE ROSE LOVES ME. I I LIFE IS ROSY, I FOUND MY ROSfE. WITH A GIRL LIKE ROSIE, HOW COULD I BE BLUE? NOW MY STNCE name in 2-B-43 109 ALBERT (Continued) HAND IN HAND WE'LL MOSEY, ME AIVD LITTLE ROSTE. WE WILL BE SO COZY, BY A FIRE BUILT FOR TWO ! Pushing luggage ca.gt LC and D ) A POEM TUAT GOES, (Rocking cart back and forth) A ROSE IS A ROSE, IS A ROSE, WELL, T DON'T AGREE, TAKE IT FROM ME, (Rocking t,o and f ro again) ( OH, T ONCE HEARD THERE'S ONE ROSE SWEETER THAN AI\TY THAT (Pushing cart AI\TD I'M GROWS ! DL) THAT,S MY ROSTE, SO GLAD SHE CHOSE ME. (nocking the cart ) LIFE IS ONE SWEET BEAUTIFUL SONG TO ME ! (HB now pushes the cart, in a figure eight back and forth in 1 and. 2. THEY bot,h sing) ALBERT LIFE IS ROSY, SINCE I FOUND MY ROSIE. WITH A GIRL LIKE ROSIE, HOW COULD I BE BLUE? NOW MY ROS ROSIE OH, WE'LL BE HAPPY I KNOW, OFF TO THE PREACHER WE'LL SO, HOW COULD WE BE BLUE? IE (es HE pushes cart R) OH, WE'LL HAVE US A HOME OUT WEST, A NTCE LITTLE SPLTT-LEVEL NEST, AI\TD IN EV'RY ROOM, ROSES IN BLOOM... (Taking ALBERT HER hand as SHE rises) BUT THERE'S ONE ROSE SWEETER THAN ALL OF THE REST (TUBY dance L) A}ilD TFIAT'S MY ROSIE. . . I'M BOTH SO GLAD YOU CHOSE ME! (rurn) LIFE IS ONE SWEET BEAUTIFUL SONG (Dance LIFE IS .1 DRC) IS RIGHT, THEN WHAT COULD BE WRONG ONE SWEET BEAUTIFUL SONG TO ME ! WHEN LOVE I GO! 2-8-44 LL0 (THEY dance DC and Ut and to dead e. SHE puts HER arm in HIS and THEY start to walk down CS to curtain line, HER head on HIS shoulder. THEY turn and start, walking USC and. . . ) o / FINATE (orchestra) CI.TRTAIN COMES N Bows & IN Exrr MUSrc (orchestra) STOWLY