THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF SHAKESPEARE By Claudia Haas



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By Claudia Haas Copyright 2013 by Claudia Haas, All rights reserved. ISBN: 978-1-60003-714-6 CAUTION: Professionals and amateurs are hereby warned that this Work is subject to a royalty. This Work is fully protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America and all countries with which the United States has reciprocal copyright relations, whether through bilateral or multilateral treaties or otherwise, and including, but not limited to, all countries covered by the Pan-American Copyright Convention, the Universal Copyright Convention and the Berne Convention. RIGHTS RESERVED: All rights to this Work are strictly reserved, including professional and amateur stage performance rights. Also reserved are: motion picture, recitation, lecturing, public reading, radio broadcasting, television, video or sound recording, all forms of mechanical or electronic reproduction, such as CD-ROM, CD-I, DVD, information and storage retrieval systems and photocopying, and the rights of translation into non-english languages. PERFORMANCE RIGHTS AND ROYALTY PAYMENTS: All amateur and stock performance rights to this Work are controlled exclusively by Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. No amateur or stock production groups or individuals may perform this play without securing license and royalty arrangements in advance from Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. Questions concerning other rights should be addressed to Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. Royalty fees are subject to change without notice. Professional and stock fees will be set upon application in accordance with your producing circumstances. Any licensing requests and inquiries relating to amateur and stock (professional) performance rights should be addressed to Brooklyn Publishers, LLC. Royalty of the required amount must be paid, whether the play is presented for charity or profit and whether or not admission is charged. AUTHOR CREDIT: All groups or individuals receiving permission to produce this play must give the author(s) credit in any and all advertisement and publicity relating to the production of this play. The author s billing must appear directly below the title on a separate line where no other written matter appears. The name of the author(s) must be at least 50% as large as the title of the play. No person or entity may receive larger or more prominent credit than that which is given to the author(s). PUBLISHER CREDIT: Whenever this play is produced, all programs, advertisements, flyers or other printed material must include the following notice: Produced by special arrangement with Brooklyn Publishers, LLC COPYING: Any unauthorized copying of this Work or excerpts from this Work is strictly forbidden by law. No part of this Work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means now known or yet to be invented, including photocopying or scanning, without prior permission from Brooklyn Publishers, LLC.

THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF SHAKESPEARE A Ten Minute Comedy Duet BY CLAUDIA HAAS SYNOPSIS: Two teachers receive a grant to do Shakespeare in their middle school. But can they? Shakespeare is being banned! CAST OF CHARACTERS (2 Either) REGAN (m/f)... Middle school English teacher who has just had a conference regarding appropriate literature for middle school students. (49 lines) LEE (m/f)... Middle School art teacher who has just been awarded a grant to produce a Shakespeare play at the school. (49 lines) SETTING: A middle school classroom or teacher s lounge. A desk and a chair is all that is needed. It is late afternoon. The school day is over. PROPS Regan has a report of acceptable subjects in literature Lee has a grant-award letter 2

BY CLAUDIA HAAS AT RISE: REGAN is entering her classroom or lounge. She has just had a meeting with the principal and is clearly exasperated and overwhelmed. She is immersed in a folder of papers. She falls into a chair and slams the papers down. REGAN: Give me strength! I just want to teach. Following a classical mode of instilling self-respect and care for humanity within the pedagogy of English literature. (She thumbs through the papers.) Say what? Are you for real? REGAN hears her name being called as LEE blows into the room. LEE: Regan! REGAN! We got it! We got it! REGAN: What s it. I m not in the mood for nebulous pronouns. LEE: Two thousand dollars! Whoo hoo! Celebrate! REGAN: Two-thousand I like the sound of that. LEE: The grant to create a play right here at Harrison Middle School. We are funded! REGAN: I don t believe it. That night we went out and talked LEE: and talked about creating a theatre program here. It s happening! The Arts Board loved it! Where s that part. give me that We applaud your willingness to start from the bottom and create a program that will enrich the lives of all the students in the school. Theatre is made to be created and it is not merely enough to study it. We were especially grateful for the detail budget proposed and how you thought of every contingency. We look forward to being at your opening production. We agree that Shakespeare is best understood through a play production and not scholarly REGAN: What? LEE: -scholarly pursuit REGAN: Go back to the Shakespeare part. LEE: We wrote it in the grant remember? That we would use the grant to produce a Shakespeare play. It would tie in with the unit on Macbeth or Romeo and Juliet. Which do you prefer? REGAN: Neither. LEE: O-kay. He wrote a bunch of other plays. But what s wrong with Macbeth or Romeo and Juliet? 3

REGAN: They re banned. LEE: Don t be silly they re classic works of literature. We ve been using the plays for years. REGAN: I just came from a meeting. Apparently there has been a study that proves that many classic works of literature have an adverse affect on the delicate mentality of the middle school student. LEE: But the kids love Macbeth! It has blood, guts, action REGAN: Witches the occult death. LEE: All tragedies have death. That s why they re tragedies. REGAN: Kids are killed in the play. LEE: And the murderers get their comeuppance. REGAN: Then, there s the supernatural element. The study suggests that Macbeth is presenting students with an alternate religion. We cannot present religion in the classroom. LEE: Forget Macbeth. We ll do Romeo and Juliet. REGAN: Romeo and Juliet I know I saw the title somewhere oh here we go: Not violent, encourages promiscuity, promotes drug use, foul language, romanticizes teenage suicide, inspires teens to defy their parents. In a nutshell no don t think we re doing Romeo and Juliet. LEE: Okay we ll do Hamlet. That s considered one of the finest plays in the English language. REGAN: Aside from the fact that I don t see any middle school student learning much less acting the role of Hamlet here it is: Murder, suicide, dirty ditties by Ophelia, use of ghostly creatures. Nope. They don t approve. LEE: Midsummer? REGAN: Foul language, experimentation with the occult, includes kidnapping of wives, a scene with child abuse. That would be Egeus threatening Hermia. LEE: Julius Caesar has no sex. REGAN: Killing of a government official not acceptable. LEE: Tweflth Night! REGAN: Cross-dressing LEE: There goes As You Like it. REGAN: As You Like It is even worse. Not only cross-dressing but neglect.do child Copy 4

BY CLAUDIA HAAS LEE: Othello! REGAN: Politically incorrect race relations, conspiracy to kill. LEE: Is there any Shakespeare play we can do? REGAN: Let me see murder sex violence patricide fratricide suicide offensive to religion subordination of family values child neglect. They re all listed. All would be detrimental to our students. LEE: I guess we could try and fashion a play out of the sonnets.it would be difficult but I think we re up to the challenge. REGAN: No sonnets. LEE: No sonnets? But they re beautiful REGAN: They were from a man to a man and we do not want to encourage alternate lifestyles. LEE: It doesn t say that! REGAN: Right here. LEE: Okay. I still want to do theatre. Even if we can t use the grant money. This has me all fired up! If worse came to worst, we could do a fairy tale. REGAN: No. No fairy tales. No witches, fairies or elves. It s disrespectful of student s religion and may sway young teenagers towards the occult. Can t have that. Can t have our little darlings go to the dark side because they were in a production of The Shoemaker and His Elves. LEE: Santa is an elf a jolly old elf. REGAN: Santa s banned. LEE: What about leprechauns? I mean they re in the supermarket in the cereal aisle. REGAN: We are educators. We are held to higher standards than cereal boxes. LEE: Well what s left? Folktales? You know Anansi the trickster spider? Paul Bunyan? REGAN: No good. Middle school students are at an age where talking spiders would only confuse their outlook on the natural world. LEE: You re making that up! REGAN: Shh. I m not done. Teaching tall tales teaches young teenagers that lying is all right. 5

Thank you for reading this free excerpt from THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF SHAKESPEARE by Claudia Haas. For performance rights and/or a complete copy of the script, please contact us at: Brooklyn Publishers, LLC P.O. Box 248 Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52406 Toll Free: 1-888-473-8521 Fax (319) 368-8011 www.brookpub.com 6