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Dixon and Daughters (NHB Modern Plays) (eBook)

eBook Download: EPUB
2023 | 1. Auflage
104 Seiten
Nick Hern Books (Verlag)
978-1-78850-652-6 (ISBN)

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Dixon and Daughters (NHB Modern Plays) -  Deborah Bruce
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Mary has just been released from prison. She wants to come home and forget all about it - but Briana has other ideas. Over two tumultuous days, a family is forced to confront not only their past, but everything about themselves. Because the truth doesn't go away, even if you refuse to hear it. A powerful story of family and forgiveness, Deborah Bruce's play Dixon and Daughters was first performed at the National Theatre, London, in April 2023, directed by Róisín McBrinn and co-produced with Clean Break.

Deborah Bruce is a writer and theatre director. Her plays include: Dixon and Daughters (Clean Break/National Theatre, 2023); Raya (Hampstead Theatre, 2021); The House They Grew Up In (Minerva Theatre, Chichester, 2017); The Distance (Orange Tree Theatre and Sheffield Crucible, 2014; a finalist for the 2012-13 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize); Same (National Theatre Connections Festival 2014); and Godchild (Hampstead Theatre, 2013).

1.

Lights up on a modest house in Bradford – maybe like a doll’s house with the back taken off.

The house is still and empty, and tidy.

The front door opens, MARY enters with BERNIE.

BERNIE. In you come.

MARY has a quick glance around before going straight into the downstairs toilet.

BERNIE goes into the sitting room.

You hiding, because I wouldn’t bother.

Pause.

Ju.

JULIE steps out from behind the curtain.

JULIE. Where is she?

BERNIE. Toilet.

JULIE. Stop talking to us then.

BERNIE. I just said. Don’t bother! She’s in a right mood.

The strap on that bag broke, you’ll have to take it back, hope you’ve got the receipt.

JULIE. You know I haven’t, it’s off the market.

BERNIE. Well the strap broke.

ELLA stands up from behind the sofa.

ELLA. Mum. Stop talking to us.

BERNIE. I’m telling you, she’s not in the mood.

JULIE. What are we doing then?

ELLA. Go out!

BERNIE exits and closes the door.

JULIE and ELLA laugh.

JULIE. So. We hiding or what?

ELLA. Might as well.

They hide again.

BERNIE takes off her coat in the hall and adjusts her hair in the mirror.

The sound of a toilet flushing.

BERNIE opens the sitting-room door again.

JULIE jumps up.

JULIE. Surprise!

BERNIE. She’s just flushed.

ELLA stands.

BERNIE goes out and closes the door again.

JULIE. For fuck’s sake.

They hide again.

MARY comes out of the toilet, she undoes her coat but doesn’t take it off.

MARY. It smells funny in there.

BERNIE. Does it?

MARY goes into the sitting room.

JULIE and ELLA jump out.

JULIE/ELLA. Surprise!

BERNIE enters behind her, rolling her eyes, her face a mixture of ‘don’t bother’ and ‘I told you’.

MARY. What surprise, your coat’s over the banister.

BERNIE. Are you going to have a sit-down before you unpack your bag?

Look, Ella’s here to see you!

ELLA. Surprise!

BERNIE. That’s nice, isn’t it?

ELLA. Welcome home, Nana!

MARY. Yeah, well.

ELLA kisses her, MARY lets her.

BERNIE. You’re not in the mood, are you, Mum? / Didn’t I say she’s in a mood.

MARY. I told you, I’m car sick.

JULIE. I took the afternoon off work you know! / I can’t take pay for that

MARY. I’m not deaf, I can hear you.

JULIE. I know, I’m telling you, aren’t I?

MARY. What you shouting for?

JULIE. Who’s shouting? You’d know if I were shouting.

No one speaks for a moment. MARY looks around the room.

MARY. What’s gone on in here?

BERNIE. Nothing.

We’ve got you your favourites in, for your tea and your snacks. Julie tidied round for you.

MARY doesn’t say anything.

Gave it a hoover.

ELLA. Shall I make you a cup of tea, Nana?

BERNIE. She wants something to eat I expect. Shall Ella put a slice of toast in for you?

MARY. In a minute.

BERNIE. That’s it, no rush is there.

Just taking it all in, aren’t you? Adapting to being home.

JULIE rolls her eyes and leaves the room.

She goes into the kitchen.

MARY. She been staying here?

BERNIE. No.

MARY. She has.

BERNIE. Only for the odd night.

MARY. What’s wrong with her house?

BERNIE. I don’t know. She’ll have to tell you that herself, won’t she?

ELLA. Why don’t you sit down, Nana?

BERNIE. Yeah.

MARY leaves the room.

MARY goes upstairs into her bedroom, looks round the room and inside the wardrobe.

BERNIE and ELLA look at each other.

She doesn’t miss a trick, does she? God’s sake. She’s like bloody Poirot.

ELLA. What was it like? Did you have to wait ages?

BERNIE. Only half an hour or so.

ELLA. She looks old, doesn’t she?

JULIE comes in the room.

JULIE. She’s gone upstairs.

BERNIE. You better of put it all back the same.

Where you going to stay tonight?

JULIE. Here.

BERNIE makes a face ‘really?’

Just till I get sorted.

BERNIE. You won’t last five minutes.

JULIE. Jacko said I could stay at the pub if I’m desperate.

BERNIE. Jesus Christ, you’d have to be.

You can’t stay at ours I’ve got no carpet upstairs till end of the month and Sanj is using the back room for bubble wrap.

ELLA. She’s coming down.

No one says anything.

MARY comes back in.

JULIE. Alright, Mum?

MARY. No I’m not ‘Alright, Mum’ what’s been going on in my house?

JULIE. Nothing, what do you mean?

MARY. Well, you’ve been living here for a start, he kick you out, did he?

JULIE. No.

ELLA leaves the room.

ELLA goes into the kitchen and makes a cup of tea.

MARY. Who’s been messing about in my bedroom?

JULIE. No one.

MARY. Well, someone has, everything’s been moved around and put back wrong.

JULIE. No it hasn’t, like what?

MARY. All my pictures! All my bits and pieces. All my dresses and skirts have got mixed up in the cupboard, what’s been going on?

BERNIE. You must of remembered it wrong.

MARY. Don’t be making out it’s me, I’m not going mad /

BERNIE. I never said you were / going mad

MARY. My cushions on the bed are upside down /

JULIE. I changed your bedding, I made it all nice for you!

MARY. Well, it’s not nice is it? /

JULIE. Wish / I hadn’t bothered!

MARY. Being lied to by your own daughters and taken advantage of.

JULIE. You what?

MARY. It’s a miracle I haven’t dropped dead of heart attack the stress I’m under, I’ve been in there over three months you know /

BERNIE. Come on / sit down

MARY. Moved around, treated like a criminal.

BERNIE and JULIE exchange glances.

You wouldn’t last one night, you. You’d be screaming and shouting all sorts.

I get out and now what? I’m being treated like an idiot in my own home /

JULIE. I’ve took the afternoon off work for this.

BERNIE. Come on, / sit down.

MARY. I’ve been dreaming of my own bed, I’ve had no privacy.

BERNIE steers MARY to sit down.

What you been sleeping in my bed for?

BERNIE (to JULIE). Just tell her.

(To MARY.) You should work for MI5, you.

JULIE. I left him.

MARY. What for?

JULIE. Sick of it, weren’t I.

MARY. Sick of what? Oh don’t bother telling me I don’t want to know.

JULIE. Making me feel like shit all the time.

MARY makes a ‘so what?’ face.

MARY. Don’t be thinking you can move in here.

JULIE. It’s only till I get myself sorted.

MARY. Well, you can get yourself sorted somewhere else because you’re not doing it here.

JULIE. Right.

Thanks for your support.

MARY. You’ve had nothing but support, all your life. No one forced you to drink you know, no one lifted the bottle to your lips.

JULIE. Oh my god! Two minutes she’s been home!

MARY. No one’s supported you? / Who paid your car insurance when you nearly lost your job because of it?

JULIE. I never said no one’s supported me, I said thanks for your support.

MARY. Moving all my precious things around.

You drinking again?

JULIE. No.

MARY. That why he kicked you out, was it?

ELLA comes in with a mug of tea for MARY.

BERNIE. Ella’s come all the way across from Leeds, so are you going to behave or what?

MARY takes the tea.

MARY. Thank you, love.

ELLA. Is it nice to be home, Nana?

MARY. Oh yeh.

BERNIE. She’s in her third year now, aren’t you?

ELLA. Yeah. Gone fast.

BERNIE. You’re enjoying yourself, aren’t you?

ELLA. Yeah it’s good.

MARY. Not working too hard I hope.

ELLA. No.

MARY. That’s good.

BERNIE. Hey, she can come to the graduation, can’t she? You’d like that, wouldn’t you, Mum? Day out in Leeds.

MARY. When’s that then?

BERNIE. Summer, is it?

ELLA. I don’t know how many tickets you’re allowed, but yeah.

BERNIE. We only need three...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 20.4.2023
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Lyrik / Dramatik Dramatik / Theater
Schlagworte clean break • Drama • Family • Forgiveness • modern drama • modern plays • National Theatre • PAST • PLAYS • Prison • Prisoner • róisín mcbrinn • Truth
ISBN-10 1-78850-652-9 / 1788506529
ISBN-13 978-1-78850-652-6 / 9781788506526
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