Honus and Me - Plays for Young Audiences
Transcription
Honus and Me - Plays for Young Audiences
New Additions to the Catalog! Biggest Little House in the Forest................................8 The Brementown Musicians………………………………………10 Frankenstein………………….………………………………………….22 Hansel & Gretel (Kenny)…………………………………………….31 Iron Ring…………………………………………………………………….37 Penrod……………………………………………………………………….53 Pharaoh Serket & the Lost Stone of Fire…………………….56 Punch & Judy and the Three Sillies…………………….………60 The Railway Children………………………………………………….61 The Snow Queen (Way)……………………………………………..73 Tremendously Tall Tales…………………………………………....81 Ukrainian Tales………………………………………………………….83 Zagazoo……………………………………………………………………..88 Short Plays (continued) Jack...............................................................................38 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow & Rip Van Winkle...........41 The Lost Child………….....................................................44 One Dark Night..............................................................52 One Snowy Night…………...............................................52 Punch & Judy and the Three Sillies...............................60 Reeling…………...............................................................64 The Song from the Sea………….......................................73 A Special Trade…………...................................................74 A Spell of Cold Weather………….....................................75 Stepping on Cracks………….............................................76 Trouble….......................................................................82 Visiting Grandad….........................................................84 Walking the Tightrope…................................................85 Zagazoo…......................................................................88 SCT Drama School Summer Season Plays Written Specifically for Young Actors As You Like It…………......................................................89 Dracula…………...............................................................89 Dracula: Origins…………..................................................90 Gulliver’s Travels…………................................................90 Macbeth………….............................................................91 A Midsummer Night’s Dream…………............................91 Much Ado About Nothing…………..................................92 The Odyssey………….......................................................92 The Tempest…...............................................................93 Twelfth Night………….....................................................93 Short Plays (run time of an hour or less) Antigone…………...............................................................4 Bag Dancing…………..........................................................5 The Biggest Little House in the Forest............................8 Cinderella’s Sisters........................................................14 Cloud Pictures...............................................................15 The Elves and the Shoemakers.....................................19 Everyone Knows What a Dragon Looks Like……............20 The Gardener...............................................................23 Glittra’s Mission...........................................................24 Goldilocks and the Two Bears.......................................28 Multicultural The Adventures of Mottel…………....................................1 Average Family………….....................................................5 The Beggars’ Strike…………...............................................7 Boundless Grace…………...................................................8 Don Quixote………….......................................................17 The Dutiful Daughter....................................................17 Esperanza Rising………….................................................19 Everyone Knows What a Dragon Looks Like…………......20 Iqbal..............................................................................37 Iron Ring………….............................................................37 The Lost Boys of Sudan…………......................................43 The Monkey King…………...............................................48 The Nightingale…………..................................................49 Not Without Laughter...................................................50 Pharaoh Serket & the Lost Stone of Fire …………...........56 Red Earth.....................................................................63 Sinbad: The Untold Tale...............................................70 Snapshot Silhouette…………...........................................72 Ukrainian Tales...........................................................83 Wondrous Tales of Old Japan…………............................87 Musicals 6 or Less Cast Members (cont.) Animal Fables from Aesop…………...................................3 The Beggars’ Strike….......................................................7 Boundless Grace…...........................................................8 The Brementown Musicians.........................................10 Bunnicula…....................................................................11 Busytown…....................................................................12 Go, Dog. Go!..................................................................25 Harriet’s Halloween Candy….........................................32 The Hoboken Chicken Emergency…..............................32 Mad Meg: An Opera…...................................................44 Madeline and the Gypsies............................................45 Merry Christmas, Strega Nona…...................................47 Mister Pickwick’s Christmas…………...............................48 The Old Man Who Loved Cheese...............................…50 Peter and the Wolf….....................................................54 Peter Pan (Mason)…......................................................56 Pinocchio (Henry)........................................................57 Pippi Longstocking.......................................................58 Prince Brat and the Whipping Boy.............................…60 Puss in Boots…..............................................................61 Sleeping Beauty (Way)…...............................................71 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice…..........................................74 Stellaluna....................................................................76 Tale of a West Texas Marsupial Girl…...........................78 The Wind in the Willows............................................…86 The Dutiful Daughter…..................................................17 The Elves and the Shoemakers…...................................19 Everyone Knows What a Dragon Looks Like.................20 Eye of the Storm...........................................................20 Fairytales About Love....................................................21 The Flood......................................................................22 The Gardener................................................................23 Gentle Giant..................................................................23 Glittra’s Mission............................................................24 Go, Dog. Go!..................................................................25 Goldilocks and the Two Bears.......................................28 Grandad’s Big Adventure..............................................28 Hamlet.......................................................................29 Hansel & Gretel (Kenny)................................................31 Huck Finn......................................................................34 If You Give a Mouse a Cookie........................................36 Jack................................................................................38 The Little Match Girl.....................................................42 The Little Mermaid.......................................................42 Mad Meg: An Opera......................................................44 Nicky Somewhere Else.................................................49 One Dark Night..............................................................52 One Snowy Night..........................................................52 Peter and the Wolf.......................................................54 Peter Pan (Irvine)..........................................................55 Playing from the Heart..................................................59 Punch & Judy and the Three Sillies..............................60 Red Earth....................................................................63 The Reluctant Dragon...................................................64 Ricky of the Tuft..........................................................65 Rumpelstiltskin............................................................68 The Search for Odysseus...............................................72 Sinbad: The Untold Tale................................................70 Sink or Swim..................................................................70 The Snow Queen (Kenny).............................................72 The Song from the Sea.................................................73 A Special Trade..............................................................74 A Spell of Cold Weather................................................75 Stellaluna......................................................................76 Stepping on Cracks.......................................................76 Stepping Stones..........................................................77 Cast Size 6 or Less Cast Members Aesop’s Fables…………......................................................2 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland…...............................3 Apple to Grandma........................................................4 Bag Dancing…..................................................................5 Beauty and the Beast (Kenny)…......................................6 Beauty and the Beast (Way)….........................................7 The Brementown Musicians.........................................10 Bunnicula…....................................................................11 Cinderella’s Sisters….....................................................14 Cloud Pictures…............................................................15 Diary of an Action Man…..............................................16 6 or Less Cast Members (cont.) Stuck...........................................................................78 Tremendously Tall Tales................................................81 Trouble........................................................................82 The Velveteen Rabbit (Olson).......................................83 The Velveteen Rabbit (Janse).......................................84 Visiting Grandad.........................................................84 Walking the Tightrope..................................................85 Whiter Than Snow........................................................85 Zagazoo ........................................................................88 7 – 12 Cast Members Antigone…………...............................................................4 Average Family................................................................5 The Biggest Little House in the Forest............................8 Boundless Grace.............................................................8 The Boxcar Children........................................................9 The Canterville Ghost....................................................13 Cinderella......................................................................14 The Emperor’s New Clothes..........................................18 The Golden Goose.........................................................26 Goldilocks & the 3 Bears, and Little Red Riding Hood...27 Hansel & Gretel (Staffa)................................................30 Harold and the Purple Crayon.......................................31 Harriet’s Halloween Candy...........................................32 Honus and Me...............................................................33 The Hundred Dresses....................................................35 Iqbal.............................................................................37 Jack and the Beanstalk..................................................38 Kidnapped in London....................................................40 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow........................................41 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow & Rip Van Winkle...........41 The Lost Child................................................................44 The Magic City...............................................................46 Not Without Laughter...................................................50 The Old Man Who Loved Cheese.................................50 Once Upon a Forest......................................................51 Our Only May Amelia....................................................53 Pharaoh Serket and the Lost Stone of Fire...................56 Prince Brat and the Whipping Boy................................60 The Railway Children.....................................................61 The Red Badge of Courage............................................62 7 – 12 Cast Members (cont.) Rip Van Winkle..............................................................66 Rumpelstiltskin.............................................................71 The Secret Garden........................................................69 Sleeping Beauty (Musical).............................................71 Snapshot Silhouette......................................................72 The Snow Queen (Way)................................................73 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice............................................77 Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing.........................................79 The Tinderbox...............................................................80 Treasure Island (Gaines)...............................................80 The Velveteen Rabbit (Olson).......................................87 Whiter Than Snow........................................................89 13 or More Cast Members The Adventures of Mottel...............................................1 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer......................................1 Alice in Wonderland........................................................2 Animal Fables from Aesop..............................................3 Beatrix Potter’s Christmas..............................................6 The Beggars’ Strike..........................................................7 Boy with the Suitcase......................................................9 Busytown......................................................................12 A Christmas Carol..........................................................13 The Clown of God..........................................................15 The Devil and Daniel Webster.......................................16 Don Quixote..................................................................17 Dracula..........................................................................17 Dracula: Origins.............................................................18 East of the Sun and West of the Moon.........................18 Esperanza Rising............................................................19 Fashion 47.....................................................................21 Frankenstein.................................................................22 The Hoboken Chicken Emergency.................................32 The Hound of Baskervilles.............................................34 Iron Ring........................................................................37 Jason and the Golden Fleece........................................39 The Jungle Book............................................................39 King Arthur and the Magic Sword.................................40 Little Women................................................................43 The Lost Boys of Sudan.................................................43 13 or More Cast Members (cont.) Madeline and the Gypsies.............................................45 The Marvelous Land of Oz............................................46 Merry Christmas, Strega Nona......................................47 The Midwife’s Apprentice.............................................47 Mister Pickwick’s Christmas..........................................48 The Monkey King..........................................................48 The Nightingale.............................................................49 Oliver Twist...................................................................51 Penrod...........................................................................53 Peter Pan (Mason)........................................................56 The Pied Piper of Hamelin.............................................57 Pinocchio (Henry).......................................................57 Pinocchio (Mason).......................................................58 Pippi Longstocking........................................................58 The Prince and the Pauper............................................59 Puss in Boots.................................................................61 Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.......................................62 Red Red Shoes.............................................................63 Reeling..........................................................................64 Rembrandt Takes a Walk..............................................65 Robin Hood...................................................................66 Romeo and Juliet (Banks)..............................................67 Romeo and Juliet (Giomi).............................................67 Search for Odysseus.....................................................68 Sherlock Holmes and the Baker Street Irregulars.........69 Sleeping Beauty (Non-musical).....................................71 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice............................................74 Starry Messenger..........................................................75 The Story of Babar, the Little Elephant.........................77 Tale of a West Texas Marsupial Girl..............................78 The Three Musketeers..................................................79 Treasure Island (Mason)...............................................81 The Troubles: Children of Belfast..................................82 Ukrainian Tales............................................................83 The Wind in the Willows...............................................86 The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.......................................86 Wondrous Tales of Old Japan.......................................87 Young Jane Eyre............................................................87 Audience Age Recommendations Plays for All Ages Aesop’s Fables…………......................................................2 Alice in Wonderland........................................................2 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland..................................3 Animal Fables from Aesop..............................................3 Apple to Grandma...........................................................4 Bag Dancing....................................................................5 Beatrix Potter’s Christmas..............................................6 Beauty and the Beast (Kenny).........................................6 Beauty and the Beast (Way)...........................................7 The Biggest Little House in the Forest............................8 The Brementown Musicians.........................................10 Busytown......................................................................12 A Christmas Carol..........................................................13 Cinderella......................................................................14 Cloud Pictures...............................................................15 The Clown of God..........................................................15 The Dutiful Daughter....................................................17 The Elves and the Shoemakers.....................................19 Everyone Knows What a Dragon Looks Like.................20 The Flood......................................................................22 The Gardener................................................................23 Go, Dog. Go!..................................................................25 The Golden Goose.........................................................26 Goldilocks & the 3 Bears, and Little Red Riding Hood...27 Goldilocks and the Two Bears.......................................28 Grandad’s Big Adventure..............................................28 Harold and the Purple Crayon.......................................31 Harriet’s Halloween Candy...........................................32 The Hoboken Chicken Emergency.................................32 If You Give a Mouse a Cookie........................................36 Jack................................................................................38 Jack and the Beanstalk..................................................38 The Lost Child................................................................44 Madeline and the Gypsies.............................................45 Merry Christmas, Strega Nona......................................47 Mister Pickwick’s Christmas..........................................48 The Old Man Who Loved Cheese..................................50 Oliver Twist...................................................................51 Plays for All Ages (cont.) Plays for Age 6 and Up (cont.) One Dark Night..............................................................52 One Snowy Night..........................................................52 Peter and the Wolf........................................................54 Pinocchio (Henry)..........................................................57 Pippi Longstocking........................................................58 Puss in Boots.................................................................61 Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.......................................62 Reeling..........................................................................64 The Reluctant Dragon...................................................64 Rembrandt Takes a Walk..............................................65 Sinbad: The Untold Tale................................................70 Sleeping Beauty (Musical).............................................71 Sleeping Beauty (Non-Musical).....................................71 The Snow Queen (Kenny)..............................................72 The Song from the Sea..................................................73 A Special Trade..............................................................74 A Spell of Cold Weather................................................75 Stellaluna......................................................................76 Stepping on Cracks.......................................................76 Stepping Stones............................................................77 Story of Babar, the Little Elephant................................77 The Tinderbox...............................................................80 Tremendously Tall Tales...............................................81 Trouble..........................................................................82 Ukrainian Tales..............................................................83 The Velveteen Rabbit (Olson).......................................83 The Velveteen Rabbit (Janse).......................................84 Visiting Grandad............................................................84 Walking the Tightrope..................................................85 The Wind in the Willows...............................................86 The Wonderful Wizard of Oz........................................86 Wondrous Tales of Old Japan.......................................87 Zagazoo.........................................................................88 Cinderella’s Sisters........................................................14 Diary of an Action Man.................................................16 East of the Sun and West of the Moon.........................18 The Emperor’s New Clothes..........................................18 Fairytales About Love....................................................21 Gentle Giant..................................................................23 Glittra’s Mission..........................................................24 Hansel & Gretel (Kenny)................................................31 The Hound of Baskervilles.............................................34 The Jungle Book............................................................39 Kidnapped in London....................................................40 King Arthur and the Magic Sword.................................40 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow........................................41 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow & Rip Van Winkle...........41 The Little Mermaid........................................................42 Little Women................................................................43 Mad Meg: An Opera......................................................44 The Marvelous Land of Oz............................................46 The Monkey King..........................................................48 Nicky Somewhere Else..................................................49 The Nightingale.............................................................49 Once Upon a Forest......................................................51 Penrod...........................................................................53 Peter Pan (Irvine)..........................................................55 Peter Pan (Mason)........................................................56 Pinocchio (Mason)........................................................58 Playing from the Heart..................................................59 Prince and the Pauper...................................................59 Prince Brat and the Whipping Boy...............................60 Punch & Judy, and the Three Sillies..............................60 Ricky of the Tuft............................................................65 Rip Van Winkle..............................................................66 Robin Hood...................................................................66 The Snow Queen (Way)................................................73 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice............................................74 Starry Messenger..........................................................75 Tale of a West Texas Marsupial Girl..............................78 Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing.........................................79 The Three Musketeers..................................................79 Treasure Island (Mason)...............................................81 Whiter Than Snow........................................................85 Plays for Age 6 and Up: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer......................................1 Boundless Grace.............................................................8 The Boxcar Children........................................................9 Boy with the Suitcase......................................................9 Bunnicula......................................................................11 The Canterville Ghost....................................................13 Plays for Age 8 and Up: Plays for Age 11 and Up: Don Quixote..................................................................17 Esperanza Rising............................................................19 Hansel and Gretel (Staffa).............................................30 Honus and Me...............................................................33 Huck Finn......................................................................34 The Hundred Dresses....................................................35 The Little Match Girl.....................................................42 The Magic City...............................................................46 The Midwife’s Apprentice.............................................47 Not Without Laughter...................................................50 Our Only May Amelia....................................................53 Pharaoh Serket & the Lost Stone of Fire......................56 The Railway Children.....................................................61 Rumpelstiltskin..............................................................68 The Secret Garden........................................................69 Sink or Swim..................................................................70 Treasure Island (Gaines)...............................................80 The Devil and Daniel Webster.......................................16 Hamlet..........................................................................29 Jason and the Golden Fleece........................................39 The Red Badge of Courage............................................62 Red Red Shoes...............................................................63 Romeo and Juliet (Giomi)..............................................67 The Search for Odysseus...............................................68 Plays for Age 9 and Up: The Adventures of Mottel...............................................1 Average Family................................................................5 The Beggars’ Strike..........................................................7 Frankenstein.................................................................22 Iqbal..............................................................................37 Iron Ring........................................................................37 The Pied Piper of Hamelin.............................................57 Red Earth.......................................................................63 Sherlock Holmes and the Baker Street Irregulars.........69 Snapshot Silhouette.....................................................72 Stuck..............................................................................78 The Troubles: Children of Belfast..................................82 Young Jane Eyre............................................................87 Plays for Age 13 and Up: Antigone...................................................................4 Eye of the Storm.......................................................20 Fashion 47................................................................21 Romeo and Juliet (Banks)..............................................67 Plays for Age 15 and Up: The Lost Boys of Sudan.................................................43 Plays for Young Audiences (PYA) is a partnership venture between The Children’s Theatre Company in Minneapolis (CTC) and Seattle Children’s Theatre (SCT), the two leading theatres for young people in the nation. In July 2004, CTC and SCT created PYA to provide a centralized clearinghouse of scripts written for young audiences to professional theatres, amateur/ community theatres and schools. Both CTC and SCT are well known for commissioning productions that are topical, contemporary, fantastical, and written by today’s leading playwrights. PYA customers come from all fifty United States and numerous countries around the world. Through its service to the larger children’s theatre community, PYA is a catalyst to drive the field of theatre for young people to new heights. The Children's Theatre Company (CTC), located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, exists to create extraordinary theatre experiences, and to advance theatre as a means of educating, challenging and inspiring young people. Established in 1965, CTC has grown to become the leading professional theatre company for young people in North America, and among the three largest in the world. Recipient of the 2003 Tony® Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre, the Nickelodeon's Parents Picks Award winner for Best Children's Theatre in the Twin Cities, as well as numerous other honors, CTC is held in high esteem by its peers nationally and internationally, and serves as an innovator for the field. CTC serves 275,000 to 350,000 young people and families annually in five key program areas each year: stage productions, new play development, community partnerships, theatre arts training, and an annual regional tour. For more information on CTC, go to www.childrenstheatre.org or call (612) 874-0500. Seattle Children's Theatre (SCT), located in Seattle, Washington, is the second largest resident theatre for young audiences in North America, as listed in Time Magazine. Founded in 1975, SCT has developed and improved the caliber of plays available for young audiences in the United States and abroad, developing and producing over 100 new works. The mission of SCT is to provide children of all ages access to professional theatre, with a focus on new works, and theatre education. SCT reaches over 250,000 patrons each season. For more information on SCT, go to www.sct.org or call (206) 443-0807. The Adventures of Mottel Author: Sholom Aleichem Playwright: Thomas W. Olson/Judith Sher Music: Alan Shorter 58 pgs. 13 Male, 11 Female Originally produced in CTC’s 1985-86 season Audience Recommendation: 10+ Synopsis: A story of adventure and misadventure set in Russia in the year 1905. A Jewish boy named Mottel meets, with wit and good cheer, the trials of living under the rule of a cruel Czar. Mottel has many adventures, such as causing the whole town to sneeze, dying the river (and in effect all the laundry) blue, and eventually travelling to America. We are able to experience what life was like for Jews in Russia at this time while being entertained by the mishaps of a young boy. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote Buck Busfield, Michael Gallager and ensemble Photo by Sal Skog. The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Author: Mark Twain Playwright: Timothy Mason 84 pgs. 3 female, 14 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1976-77 season Run Time: 1 hour, 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The loveable Tom Sawyer and his pals take us back to the sweet summer days when sternwheelers commanded the mighty Mississippi. A time when kids fished, teased schoolmates, and stole kisses in the schoolyard. From the opening flourish of the fiddle to a closing joyous leap into the Mississippi, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is a winning combination of adventure, humor and nostalgia. “[The Adventures of Tom Sawyer] is good story-telling and it rings with authenticity, even in these more cynical, hyped-up days.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune John Peitzman, Travis Fine. Photo by Gianetti Studios. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 1 Aesop’s Fables Playwright: Mike Kenny 33 pgs. 4 characters Originally produced by Sherman Theatre, UK, in 2002 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Wolfie, Syd, Barry, and Harriet invite you into their magical world where anything is possible when you use your imagination. Whether it's The Tortoise And The Hare or The Boy Who Cried Wolf, everyone knows at least one of Aesop's great fables. In this spellbinding production, storytellers use song, dance, and drama to bring these famous fables to life. “A ground breaking theatrical experience for children” -Wales on Sunday, UK Illustration by Will Hayes. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Alice in Wonderland Author: Lewis Carroll Playwright: Sharon Holland Music: Victor Zupanc 61 pgs. 4 female, 23 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1981-82 season Run Time: 1 hour, 15 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: The “curiouser and curiouser” story of Alice’s fall down the rabbit hole, where she has tea with the Mad Hatter, is counseled by a sassy Caterpillar, befriends a grinning Cheshire Cat, and tries to avoid being beheaded by the Queen of Hearts. Alice in Wonderland reminds us to question what is conventional and believe what can be extraordinary. Sarah Agnew as Alice. Photo by Rob Levine. “Alice in Wonderland is a triumph of imagination in which nonsense cavorts with meaning in a celebration of language.” –Chanhassen Villager, MN Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Production-quality CD available for an additional fee. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 2 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Author: Lewis Carroll Playwright: Deborah Lynn Frockt 74 pgs. 6 actors Originally produced in SCT’s 1995-96 season Run Time: 1 hour, 10 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: It’s a very ordinary and rather boring day for Alice, until she spots a White Rabbit with a pocket watch whizzing through a world that’s beyond imagination! Her insatiable curiosity draws her into a madcap adventure in which she meets remarkable characters like the Caterpillar, Talking Flowers, a Duchess and her Cook, a Gryphon and Mock Turtle, a Mad Hatter and a March Hare. When Alice finally catches up with the White Rabbit in the Queen’s Court, she’s in for her biggest adventure of all. The wonder-filled world of Alice is a fantastic journey for the adventurous of any age. Jane Ryan, Chris O’Connor, Julyana Soelistyo, and Allen Galli. Photo by Chris Bennion. “This big, color-splashed show retains Carroll’s wonderfully imaginative and familiar characters, and much of his playfully nonsensical verse.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Animal Fables from Aesop Author: Barbara McClintock Playwright: Marisha Chamberlain Music: Roberta Carlson 34 pgs. 15 female, 15 male (Doubling possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1994-95 season Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: A play-within-a-play operetta led by the narration of a goat. We are swept into a peaceable kingdom where the players at a country fair weave together 16 of Aesop’s enchanting fables. We learn the classic morals of “slow and steady wins the race” and “practice makes perfect,” along with the more obscure “shun the quack” and “fancy dress cannot change the body inside,” and are rewarded with real life lessons in a fun and exciting setting. Leif Jurgensen, Bridget O’Flaherty, and Bruce Thompson. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 3 Antigone Author: Sophocles Playwright: Greg Banks 32 pgs. 5 female, 6 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2002-03 season Run Time: 55 minutes Audience Recommendation: 13+ Synopsis: It takes guts to stand up to the most powerful man in the country. Especially when you're 15. After both of her brothers kill each other in opposing sides of a war, Antigone dares to defy her uncle, King Creon, by burying her ‘traitor’ brother. When Creon discovers that Antigone has performed the burial despite his command, he orders her to be walled up in a cave alive, thus starving her to death. Creon does not listen to the pleadings of Ismene, Antigone’s sister, nor his son Haemon, who is engaged to Antigone. Haemon goes to Antigone’s cave, sees that she has hung herself and kills himself as well. Hearing this, his mother also takes her own life at the fateful end of this Greek tragedy. “Call the fire department. Antigone is hot, loud and explosive.” - Minneapolis Star Tribune Sonja Parks as Antigone. Photo by Rob Levine “When [Antigone] casts those burning eyes into the audience and proclaims that ‘What a person can do, a person ought to do,’ it makes you want to run out and paint a picket sign for whatever you happen to believe in.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Apple to Grandma Author: Saskia Janse 28 pgs. 3 actors/puppeteers Originally produced by: Speeltheater Holland 2001 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Josie is very disappointed. Since her grandma had to move to a nursing home, she isn't allowed to stay overnight with her anymore. When grandma was still living in her own beautiful house they used to pick apples and Josie could bring them to the attic for her. Josie decides to make a beautiful painting for her grandma, and bring her an apple from the old apple tree, their favourite place. Performance at Speeltheater Holland Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 4 Average Family Playwright: Larissa Fasthorse 67 pgs. 3 female, 7 male Originally produced in CTC’s 2007-08 season Run Time: 1 hour, 21 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Two families. One reality TV show. Who will survive three months as an 1840's frontier family on the Minnesota prairie? Will it be the urbane Rubidoux’s, from Minneapolis? Or the no-nonsense, live-off-the-land Monroe’s, from the North Shore? Soon enough, both families find they've more to overcome than just the elements. Elaine Patterson, Raven Bellefleur. Photo by Rob Levine. It's an adventure (all caught on confession cam!) fraught with laughable predicaments and harrowing incidents. And when one family reconnects with their Dakota culture, it leads to startling revelations for all, inspiring the true spirit of generosity. "[Larissa FastHorse] smartly uproots many of the stereotypes surrounding American Indians...The playwright is breaking new ground here, and, in the process, establishing new life in theater ." - Twin Cities Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Bag Dancing Playwright: Mike Kenny 33 pgs. 1 female, 1 male Originally produced by Blah, Blah, Blah, UK, in 1988 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Bag Dancing explores the touching relationship between Imelda, a bag lady, and Neville, a hotel caretaker. Both are advanced in years and they develop a warm friendship. While one is forever going somewhere, the other has nowhere to go. Through their conversations we learn about their lives and experiences, their personal and social histories. Their tales are both humorous and poignant, challenging many preconceptions about old age. Illustrated by Kyle Schuler. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 5 Beatrix Potter’s Christmas Author: Beatrix Potter Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Anita Ruth 47 pgs. 17 female, 14 male (Doubling possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1986-87 season Run Time: 1 hour, 40 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: The imagination of young Beatrix Potter comes alive when we find her home for the holidays with nothing but her brother, Bertram, and her imagination to make Christmas as wonderful as it should be. Her dreams and drawings come alive in the form of Peter Rabbit, Jemima Puddle-Duck, and many others as they all work together to imagine the best Christmas possible! Leif Jurgensen and Stephen Alexander. “Beatrix Potter’s Christmas is a musical with enough whimsical characters to make Scrooge smile.” –Daily News, MN Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Beauty and the Beast Author: LePrince de Beaumont Playwright: Mike Kenny 50 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced by Oxford Touring Theatre, UK, in 2005 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: This is a refreshing, funny twist on a classic tale. Beauty is a spoiled girl who has never had to work. To teach her a lesson, her fairy Godmother creates a series of challenges that ultimately trap Beauty in the estate of Beast. It is when Beast releases Beauty that she realizes she loves him, and returns to Beast’s castle just in time to save him from death. “The story that we came to tell of the ugliness that beauty hides where only love can break the spell and show the person that’s inside.” Katie Matthews and Dominic Gately. Photo by Keith Pattison. “Mike Kenny’s script takes both Beauty and her Beast on a voyage of self-realization. As ever with Kenny, there is nothing twee. He makes his audiences think and feel and chuckle.” – The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 6 Beauty and the Beast Author: LePrince de Beaumont Playwright: Charles Way 78 pgs. 3 female, 3 male Originally produced by The Library Theatre, UK, in 2001 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Cassandra is wild and loves freedom; her sister Belle is timid and afraid of Robert Vernon and Bethan Walker. the world. Their Father, George Godwin, loves them both. On the day of Cassandra’s engagement, he learns that all but one of his ships has been sunk, and in a desperate attempt to protect it from looters he rides from London across Dartmoor little knowing what fate holds in store. When his horse throws him, George is offered sanctuary in a strange house; he is told he can take anything he wants but not to pick any of the roses. Glad to be alive, but not realising the true nature of the master of the house, he disobeys. The moment he picks the rose a great beast appears, half man half wolf. The terrified merchant promises to send one daughter to the house in return for his life, and thus he returns to London. The deadly promise makes George a sick man, and it is Belle who goes to fulfil her father’s promise and save his life. She is met at the gate by the housekeeper, who unbeknown to Belle, is a woman who once loved the man inside the beast and in her rage at being scorned put on him a dreadful curse. This is a story of overcoming fear and finding true love. “The love story builds to a mesmerising scene of dance and musical rhythm where Belle and the Beast run together through the forest with the wolves. By the time Belle’s kiss transforms the Beast, the children are wide-eyed while adults are left panting for more.” - Manchester Metro, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The Beggar’s Strike Author: Aminita Sow Fall Playwright: Carlyle Browne Music: Kysia Bostic 75 pgs. 6 female, 9 male Originally produced in CTC’s 2001-02 season Run Time: 1 hour, 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: An Islamic West African community is caught between the pressures of traditional and contemporary values. The government wants to increase tourism as a source of revenue and so decides to rid the city streets of the ragged beggars. But Nguireane Sarr and ensemble. Photo by Rob Levine. the beggars are essential to the spiritual life of the community, and they know it. As the government plans to remove them, the beggars decide to strike. The farcical conclusion includes an avalanche of mistaken identities, hilarious chaos and befuddled orders. “The Beggars’ Strike…is that rarest of theater shows: a sweet, cheery farce whose sharp writing and sublime humor don’t leave a venomous aftertaste.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 7 The Biggest Little House in the Forest Author: Djemma Bider Playwright: Rosanna Staffa 18 pgs 7 characters (original production had 1 actor playing all parts with puppets) Originally produced in CTC’s 2009-10 season Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: When Bernice the Butterfly finds an abandoned house in the woods, she sets out to make it her home. Soon, she is joined by Millie the mouse, Fred the frog, Richie the rabbit, and Rudy the rooster. But when lovable Bartholomew the bear knocks on the door, chilled to the bone in the pouring rain, he Design by KNOCK, Inc. finds there is no room. Forced to warm himself on the roof near the chimney, the whole house collapses under his weight. Embarrassed, Bartholomew offers to build a new home for all of them, and soon they learn that everyone is welcome and there's always enough room for a new friend. *Available June 2010* Boundless Grace Author: Mary Hoffman Playwright: Charles Oyamo Gordon Music: Michael Keck 48 pgs. 8 female, 4 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1997-98 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Grace, a young spirited girl, longs to see her father again, who she dreams is an African prince. Out of the blue, Grace gets a letter from her father, Tariq, with two roundtrip tickets to Gambia, West Africa. Grace and her Nana go visit Tariq and his new family, but things don’t go as well as Grace imagined. She is sad that her father is not the prince she envisioned, and is disappointed that he has started another family. In the end, Grace learns to love her family in Africa, and learns that “family is what you make it.” Briana Kennedy-Coker. Photo by Sal Skog. “Boundless Grace emphasizes the idea that a family is what you make of it – that family’s love can be as ‘boundless’ as a river, mountain, ocean – or even Grace’s imagination.” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 8 The Boxcar Children Author: Gertrude Chandler Warner Playwright: Barbara Field 90 pgs. 4 female, 4 male Originally produced in SCT’s 1999-2000 season Run Time: 1 hour, 35 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Generations of young readers have cherished the spirited Depression-era adventures of The Boxcar Children. Now, in a worldpremiere adaptation, the Alden children’s story comes to life on stage. Orphaned and in danger of being sent to different foster families, the four siblings run away and make their home in an abandoned railroad boxcar. Pursued by the authorities and a mysterious stranger, the children discover the rewards and perils of life on the run, as well as the joy of keeping their family together. Jonathan Kuhn, Jennifer Sue Johnson, Alban Dennis, Alexis Chamow. Photo by Chris Bennion. “Though the central story is the same, Field’s script amplifies the psychological and social dimensions of the book considerably… With all the added material, The Boxcar Children has grown into an extended, more instructive and informative tale.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Boy with a Suitcase Playwright: Mike Kenny 59 pgs. 3 female, 10 male Originally produced by SNAP Theatre, UK, in 2004 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Naz’s homeland is an oppressive place. When his parents send him to his brother’s safekeeping in London, the boy fancies himself like Sinbad, a man of many voyages and endless stories. On Illustration by Diana Chao. his journey, Naz befriends Krysia, who helps him dodge soldiers and stay safe. Indeed, armed with his stories and his new friend, Naz is able to make his way to his brother’s house. Despite the fact that his new life is not the “heaven on earth” he expected, Naz realizes that happiness will always be with him as long as he keeps his stories alive. “[Boy with a Suitcase] throws a spotlight on the real dangers faced by children in other parts of the world... Writer Mike Kenny has lifted this story with humor and spirit.” –Kilkenny Advertiser, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 9 The Brementown Musicians Author: Grimm Brothers Playwright: Allison Gregory Music: Hummie Mann 72 pgs., 3 female, 3 male Originally produced in SCT’s 2009-10 season Audience Recommendation: 5+ Illustration by John Fretz. Synopsis: Billy, the goat, Slim, the pig, and cat Nell, overhear when Farmer and his Wife decide that their donkey, Donny, is past his usefulness and his time is up. It’s up to them to warn Donny of his fate. Poor Donny! And he’s such a dreamer, too. In fact, he has a dream of becoming a famous musician one day. That’s it! He’ll leave the farm and follow that dream right to Brementown, the music Mecca. As he starts his journey, he encounters Minnie, once a prize show dog, now no longer the pick of the litter. Minnie decides to throw her lot in with Donny, and the pair sets off. It isn’t long before Nell catches up with them. Recognizing the writing on the wall back at the farm, she decides to take her chances on Donny’s big idea, too. Of course, just because it was Donny’s idea doesn’t mean the others don’t have their opinions, as well. Their cacophonous attempt to make music jars the nerves. As the animal friends bicker and squabble their way along, we see foul things afoot in Brementown. The newly selfappointed Mayor of the town, Fritz, and her brother, Karl the Crusher, have decided to banish music from Brementown forever. Rusty, the operatic rooster, is flabbergasted. However will he be able to share his gift with the world? As Karl the Crusher tries to, well, crush him, Rusty uses his wits, and witty word play, to flee the clutches of the sour-tempered siblings. Soon Rusty stumbles upon the trio of furry friends. This is it! This is how Rusty can get help to stop Fritz and Karl’s anti-music madness. He talks the friends into letting him join their band. Without mentioning the new regime in Brementown, Rusty promises the animals that his connections will ensure them a chance in the spotlight. Since Donny, Millie, and Nell have no idea what’s been happening in the once-bustling burg, they readily agree. Once in Brementown, it becomes clear, very quickly, that something is not quite right. Where are all the people? Where is all the music? Why is that songbird tied up with its beak glued shut?! They discover that Rusty has tricked them, but the friends realize that only they can save music. With their individual talents pooled together, they are able to thwart Fritz and Karl and bring sweet song back to Brementown. *Available May 2010* www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 10 Bunnicula Author: James Howe Playwright: Jon Klein Music: Chris Jeffries 24 pgs. 2 female, 4 male Originally produced in SCT’s 1996-97 season Run Time: 1 hour, 31 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: It’s a dark and stormy night and Chester and Harold sit waiting for their owners to return home from the movies. Chester, the Monroe family cat, and Harold, the family’s dog, are more than just pets, they’re good friends too. When the Monroe’s finally get home, they come bearing a surprise; they’ve found a bunny in the movie theatre. This is no ordinary rabbit; this is the extraordinary Bunnicula. When the family’s produce starts losing its juice, Chester thinks he knows what’s causing the fantastic phenomenon. Bunnicula is a vampire! Or maybe Chester’s imagination is getting the better of him. Singing and dancing their way through this hilarious mystery, the furry friends find room in their hearts, and in their home, for one very unique bunny. “This semi-musical is a fanciful, non-scary Halloween treat for the kid inside all of us.” –Talkin’ Broadway “Readers of all ages can rejoice in Seattle Children’s Theatre world premiere of Bunnicula, a clever, careful stage rendering of Deborah and James Howe’s much-beloved classic.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script and piano/vocal score for your cast. Reference CD available upon request. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 11 Busytown Author: Richard Scarry Playwright: Kevin Kling Music: Michael Koerner 44 pgs, 6 female, 22 male +ensemble Doubling is possible (5 actors in the original production) Originally produced in SCT’s 2007-08 season Run Time: 1 hour, 5 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Busytown is always buzzing with activity. But what do people do all day? That’s where Huckle Cat comes in—he’ll take us on a tour of his great neighborhood. And there is so much to see and do, so many wonderful friends to visit. Huckle shows us how Farmer Pig and Grocer Cat work together to bring food to the town. Construction Worker and his crew build new houses, and Firechief and the gang keep them safe. Isn’t it wonderful how everyone works together to keep Busytown busy? Matt Wolfe, Lisa Estridge, Khanh Doan and Allen Galli. Photo by Chris Bennion. "There is much physical humor in "Busytown" and the production is charming. It is just good theatre." -Tacoma Weekly "This world premier radiates with simple, silly joy while bringing to life the impossible physics and interspecies harmony of Richard Scarry's world." -Seattle Weekly "Through vibrant singing and dancing, and amazing puppetry, Scarry's imaginative world is brought to life and allows us to think about even the smallest of daily exchanges as interesting adventures. It promotes a very simple message: Everyone in Busytown relies on one another, and every job has an important role." -Queen Anne News Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script and score for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 12 Canterville Ghost Author: Oscar Wilde Playwright: Marisha Chamberlain 74 pgs. 3 female, 5 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1991-92 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Oscar Wilde’s classic tale told with whimsical humor and charm. For three centuries, the Canterville Ghost has been perfectly happy rattling chains, clanking armor, and generally haunting Canterville. Enter the Otis family – Yankee upstarts with thoroughly modern ideas. Frightening these nonplussed American tenants proves to be not only infuriating but almost impossible for the temperamental British ghost. Yet, through the courageous friendship of one of the young Otis children, the Canterville Ghost finally finds peace. Joylane Berg, Adam Kolman Marsak, Dustin Weil. Photo by Giannetti Studios. “High-spirited Americans take a good natured shot at the British stiff-upper-lip in…The Canterville Ghost.” –Country Messenger, Stillwater MN Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. A Christmas Carol Author: Charles Dickens Playwright: Frederick Gaines 47 pgs. 10 female, 21 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1968-69 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Ebenezer Scrooge as you’ve never seen him before! No evil tyrant here, our Ebenezer is a gentle, old man with a few unfortunate issues to deal with. A great character study, this classic holiday treat has all your favorites but is a reenergized hit. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 13 Cinderella Author: Charles Perrault Playwright: Charles Way 74 pgs. 5 female, 4 male Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Explore the healing power of love in this timeless romance. Cinderella must overcome grief and find a new life in rapidly changing times. With the haunting melodies of Mozart weaving throughout, this beloved fairy tale will have the audience mesmerized. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. “This adaptation of Perrault’s timeless version of the world’s best loved fairytale is not to be missed. A Christmas treat for all the family, whether one is five or 95.” -Morning Star, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote Cinderella’s Sisters Playwright: Mike Kenny 58 pgs. 2 female Originally produced by Catherine Wheels Theatre, UK in 200 Run Time: 50 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The wicked stepsisters of Cinderella have been misunderstood! Pam and Penny are daughters of the ultimate stage mother. Though they love to dance, they are continually pushed to a level of excellence that’s painful. After their father Illustrated by Kyle Schuler. runs off with a redhead, Pam and Penny’s mother marries a man named Frank, who has a daughter of his own, Sophie (but you can call her Cinderella). Even though they dislike their new stepsister, Sophie loves to watch Pam and Penny dance. Imagine their surprise and dismay when Sophie wins first prize at the big dance contest. Sometimes funny, sometimes sad, this take on a familiar favorite is entirely captivating. “The girls in Mike Kenny's Cinderella's Sisters are neither fat slags nor paragons of slim-line beauty. They are a pair of lively young women trying to work out the mixed-up emotions of adolescence. Their admiration for their stepsister comes across as spite, their love as aloofness and their passion as competitiveness. If their actions appear to be ugly, it is not how they feel on their vulnerable inside.” – The Scotsman, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 14 Cloud Pictures Playwright: Mike Kenny 24 pgs. 1 female, 3 male Originally produced at Polka Theatre, UK, in 2004 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Theo and Beeny are friends. Better than that - best friends. And they have been friends for a long time. Although their houses and parents are different, they enjoy playing in each other’s bedrooms and looking out of the big window where the clouds float by. Their favorite game is Cloud Pictures, and they play it every day. When Beeny moves away Theo is quite sad. He cannot find a friend as good as Beeny. After a long time, Beeny comes back, though this time more than their houses and parents are different. Theo and Beeny are different too. So different that they don’t see the same things in the clouds anymore. But they find that they can still be friends, and find a new way to play their favorite game. Illustration by Diana Chao. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Clown of God Author: Tomie dePaola Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Steven Rydberg 58 pgs. 7 female, 15 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1980-81 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Giovanni is an orphan who leaves his village of Sorrento to join the Commedia dell’Arte, a travelling acting troupe. At first he is only an errand boy, but as he matures and perfects his craft, he becomes the star. He sets out on his own, soon to become the finest juggler in Italy. For Illustration by Tomie de Paola. many years, he travels throughout the country gaining wealth and fame. But time is cruel to the juggler and he can no longer perform the beautiful spectacles of his earlier days. He returns to Sorrento, where he is inspired to give the most magnificent performance of his life. In the end, he is an old man who finally finds peace when all that he had to offer, a simple gift of his art, is acknowledged as precious and is valued above all else. “Giovanni and his ‘family’ of Commedia players come alive as characters, relating to each other beyond caricature.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script and score for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 15 The Devil and Daniel Webster Author: Stephen Vincent Benet Playwright: Robert Schenkkan 61 pgs. 3 female, 17 male +ensemble Doubling is possible, original performed with 9 actors Originally produced in SCT’s 2005-06 season Run Time: 1 hour, 37 minutes Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: Every ghost story must find its own time and place, and have its prey—someone who doesn’t quite understand the mysteries all around him. For our needs, you couldn’t ask for a more opportune setting than New Hampshire around 1829, or a Alban Dennis, Peter Cook, and Sean G. Griffin. Photo by Chris Bennion. nicer, harder-working man than Jabez Stone. All he wants in this world is to save his farm, marry Abigail Stevens, and live a decent life. Sadly, Jabez is plagued with horrible luck, and Abigail’s father will have nothing to do with him. It’s enough to make a man want to sell his soul to the Devil for a new beginning. Careful what you wish for Jabez. After seven years of prosperity, it’s time to pay the Devil his due. He pleads with the prestigious orator and lawyer, Senator Daniel Webster, to lend a hand. Webster isn’t one to shrink from a challenge—he dares the Devil to take this case to a court of law. But there’s trials and then there’s trials. With the proceedings weighted against him, and the jury stacked with notorious American villains like Lizzie Borden, John Wilkes Boothe, and Al Capone, things look bleak for Webster’s case—but never underestimate the power of persuasion, and pragmatism, of a New Hampshire man. “The Devil and Daniel Webster is a fine companion to American history class, and riveting entertainment to boot.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Diary of an Action Man Playwright: Mike Kenny 57 pgs. 2 female, 3 male Originally produced by Graeae, UK, in 2002 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 7+ Synopsis: Diary of an Action Man follows Little Ezra who is on a mission – a mission to rescue his dad. He told his mate, Spud, that Dad was dead. That wasn’t exactly true, but how else can he explain why Dad isn’t here? Ten-year-old Ezra believes his father died a war hero, but dreams of his dad’s secret missions are suddenly shattered when he discovers his father is alive and well and living in Manchester. Ezra’s toy Illustrated by Kyle Schuler. action man springs to life when no-one’s looking. Escaping the clutches of his mum, his teacher and his incredibly irritating younger sister, Ezra and his secret comrade jump from helicopters and swim with man-eating sharks before embarking upon their big adventure to find Ezra’s dad. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 16 Don Quixote Author: Miguel de Cervantes Playwright: Amlin Gray 99 pgs. 6 female, 17 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1996-97 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Don Quixote chronicles the antic adventures of the aging, idealistic wouldbe knight and his rotund, down-to-earth companion, Sancho Panza. Their chivalric quest through La Mancha offers some valuable insights into society and human behavior as well as moments of truth, beauty, and rollicking humor. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Dutiful Daughter Playwright: Charles Way 62 pgs. 2 female, 4 male Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Ke Xin is a princess brought up by Hashi, Lord of The Island of Joy. One day a stranger arrives at the harbour, who claims to be her father. Is he mad or has Hashi not told the princess the truth about her background? Thrown into confusion, Ke Xin runs away with her student friend and lover, Li Yi. The two men, who both claim to be her father, set out in pursuit and find more than they bargained for. “The story has power and stature and much engaging humour – a deft script with wide audience appeal.” -The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 17 East of the Sun and West of the Moon Playwright: Tina Howe Music: Mel Marvin 75 pgs. 9 female, 12 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1994-95 season Run Time: 1 hour, 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Taken from a Norwegian folk tale, this story of a young girl sent away by her meanspirited mother to live with the trolls will enchant you. The girl falls in love with a prince, who is himself enchanted by a troll, and she follows him to the land east of the sun and west of the moon to save him from a dismal fate. Timothy M. Hughes and Katherine Ferrand. Photo by Sal Skog. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Emperor’s New Clothes Author: Hans Christian Andersen Playwright: Timothy Mason 58 pgs. 2 female, 5 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1979-80 season Run Time: 1 hour, 30 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Flo and Roscoe are the ultimate con artists, so when they stumble into a kingdom that bends to every fashion whim of its Emperor they know just what to do. They announce that they are the finest weavers in all the land, and produce a magical cloth. Of course, the stylish Emperor simply must have it! However, the cloth that Flo and Roscoe weave is not for ordinary folks; in fact, it’s endowed with magical powers that separate wise men from fools. The clothing is invisible only to those not smart enough to see it. None of the Emperor’s closest confidants want to be seen as a fool so they all claim to see the clothing. When the Emperor finally unveils his magical new dressing to the kingdom, the laughing townspeople REALLY have something to see. This hilarious classic tale is one the whole family will love. Illustration by Michelle Wright. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 18 The Elves and the Shoemakers Playwright: Mike Kenny 24 pgs. 1 female, 1 male (+ puppets) Audience Recommendation: 5 and under Synopsis: People always need shoes. But it’s hard to make shoes when you’re cold and hungry and you’re down to your last piece of leather. What will the shoemakers do? Help creeps into the shoemakers’ house in the dead of night, when the elves come out to play. “This wonderfully engaging piece tells the traditional tale of two kind elves who help a penniless shoemaker and his wife out of their troubles. Mike Kenny’s play gently explores themes of generosity and greed in the days leading up to Christmas.” –Kildare Nationalist, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Esperanza Rising Author: Pam Munoz Ryan Playwright: Lynne Alvarez Music: Victor Zupanc 88 pgs. 7 female, 7 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2005-06 season Run Time: 1 hour, 30 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Esperanza’s father was a wealthy landowner in Mexico, but when he was killed by bandits, her scheming uncle took over their farm. Esperanza is sent across the border to California to Melanie Rey and Erin Nicole Hampe. Photo by Rob Levine. find a place with family there. Not used to the hard life of migrant workers, Esperanza is desperately miserable. She eventually finds her footing, and even a skill at babysitting to earn extra money. Though she is faced with setbacks, the young girl’s determination and blossoming spirit help her to thrive in her new home. “Lynne Alvarez’s adaptation of Pam Munoz Ryan’s award-winning book is compelling and colorful.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 19 Everyone Knows What a Dragon Looks Like Author: Jay Williams Playwright: Bret Fetzer 72 pgs. 1 female, 9 male +ensemble (original production done with 4 actors) Originally produced in SCT’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 64 minutes Audience Recommendation: 5+ Synopsis: Long ago and far away, the orphan boy Han was all alone in the world, all alone except for his pet pig, Ping. The only thing poor Han wanted was a place to belong. His job, sweeping the gates of the ancient Chinese city of Wu, wasn’t the kind of future he was looking forward to. One day, a Monk arrived bearing news of the Wild Horsemen on their way to attack Wu. Sarah Harlett, Khanh Doan and Timothy Hyland. Photo by Chris Bennion. This marauding tribe was bent on forcing the entire citizenry to eat beetles and worms. Disgusting! Faced with this horror, the bumbling Mandarin, ruler of Wu, decreed that all should pray to the Great Cloud Dragon for help. When a Hermit arrived, announcing that she was, in fact, the Dragon herself, she was met with disbelief and ridicule. Han felt for the Hermit and invited her back to his ramshackle hut to weather the attack. Han’s, and Ping’s, generosity of spirit, touched the Hermit’s heart. She decided to save the city from the Wild Horsemen and reveal her true Dragon form. And then Han knew the future he wanted for himself—being a dragon. “Seattle playwright Bret Fetzer succeeded in expanding Jay Williams’ fairy tale into an engaging script, lacing it with liberal amounts of humor and beefing up the characters.” – Seattle Daily Herald Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Eye of the Storm Playwright: Charles Way 46 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced by SNAP Theatre, UK, in 1993 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 13+ Synopsis: Eye of the Storm is a retelling of Shakespeare’s The Tempest, which tells the story from Miranda’s point of view, as she struggles to grow up on a magic island controlled by her father, Prospero. When two other young people arrive on the island, Trinculo (a young sailor) and Stephano (who is really Stephanie but has dressed as a boy and run away from home), the underlying tensions and conflicts between daughter and father come to a highly charged, and often hilarious, head. “Teenagers all over the country have been enjoying this witty, perceptive and enormously entertaining play…capturing the eternal struggle of youngsters to grow up and fly the nest.” -South Wales Argus “The script has a perfectly easy relationship with its literary ancestor, is written in language which manages to be both basic and poetic.” -The Irish Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 20 Fairytales About Love Playwright: Saskia Janse 33 pgs. 6 Actors/Puppeteers Originally produced by Speeltheater Holland in 1998 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Somewhere in the Far North there lives a Princess. She has a heart of ice. In order to melt her heart, True Love must be found. In the search for True Love, we embark on a voyage around the world passing from one fairy tale to another. Does a fairy tale about love always end with 'And they lived happily ever after?' What's the story behind this True Love? Does it really exist, or does it only exist in fairy tales? Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Photo from Speeltheatre Holland. Fashion 47 Playwrights: Diane Paulus and Randy Weiner 35 pgs. 9 female, 11 male Originally produced in CTC’s 2007-08 season Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: 13+ Synopsis: 47 designers have already competed, and it's down to two. This is the season’s final episode of Fashion 47, where week after week designers compete to win top honors and national recognition for their clothing lines. The grand prize is a solo victory fashion show to be held at the hottest spot in town. So, the show begins with a video recap of winners and losers excerpted from the season and setting the scene for the final faceoff – the ultimate challenge! Robert Verhoye and Traci M. Allen. Photo by Rob Levine. Once the grand prize is awarded the drama is just beginning. One design team accuses the other of sabotage, and the seams of a revenge plot take shape. It’s only a matter of time before the a fashion coup d'Ètat rocks the industry, and has the audience on the edge of their seats. “The show amplifies one of the cardinal yearnings of teenage rebels – to be original, not to be a clone.” – Twin Cities Star Tribune “Few other companies are trying to work out the balancing act that will engage mercurial teen audiences in theater, so credit goes to CTC for a show that takes more than its share of creative risks.” – Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 21 The Flood Playwright: Charles Way 64 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced by Unicorn Theatre for Children, UK, in 1987 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: An ordinary middle class family faces another ordinary day, but it turns out to be a day like no other. Rain has begun to fall and will not stop. Martha has had a dream and believes the end of the world is near, but her businessman husband, Gerald, thinks she is ill and needs to see a doctor. Their Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. two children watch as the rain falls and their parents argue. Gerald refuses to believe Martha and goes to work while she blows their savings on a yellow boat. She orders the children to pack enough clothes and food for a long journey. Gerald reaches the boat just in time as the world is washed away, except for one yellow boat. Eventually, after much hardship, the family reach an island, and the children begin to rebuild their lives and create a new culture. As the play ends, we are given a glimmer of hope as they see another ship on the horizon. “Charles Way’s provocative play is magical, haunting, funny and tearful.” -The Guardian, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Frankenstein Author: Mary Shelley Playwright: Thomas Olson 43 pgs. 5 female, 12 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 83-84 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Through a series of flashbacks, Victor Frankenstein recalls the birth of his incredible creation. His monster searches for a companion and struggles to understand his place in the world. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 22 The Gardener Playwright: Mike Kenny 40 pgs. 2 male Originally produced by AJTC and Nottingham Roundabout, UK, in 2004 Run Time: 50 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: With a new baby sister in the house, Joe feels like no one wants to play with him anymore. Nobody wants to play with old Uncle Harry either, so together they begin to work on Uncle Harry’s garden. Even if Uncle Harry can’t remember ordinary things, he and Joe create a year to remember. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Illustrated by Will Hayes. Gentle Giant Author: Michael Morpurgo Playwright: Mike Kenny 30 pgs. 2 female, 4 male Originally produced by Royal Opera House, UK, in 2005 Run Time: 1 hour, 10 minutes Audience Recommendation: 7+ Synopsis: On an island lives a strange and forbidding giant – the nearby villagers are wary of him, but is he the reason that fish can no longer be Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. caught in the silver lake? Can the magic dust of the Stardust Seller help? One young girl discovers, quite accidentally, that the giant needs her help, and he, in turn, will help save the village. This charming story has been specially created for young children, and the adults in their lives, to discover the joy of opera and storytelling in theatre. “As well as encouraging us to treat outsiders with understanding rather than suspicion, the tale also conveys that, with a little insight, we can enable nature to heal itself.” -The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 23 Glittra’s Mission Author: Peter Pohl Playwright: Saskia Janse 39 pgs. 2 Actors/Puppeteers Originally produced in SCT’s 2004-05 season Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: 7+ Synopsis: Always thought that angels fluttered around in the clouds, all rosy and smiling sweetly? Think again! An angel has to work hard for its position among the stars up high in the sky. Particularly guardian angel Nanna has to work overtime, protecting Martin. This youngster loves Great Danger and he believes that every key conceals its own secret. Up until now, Nanna has succeeded in preventing disasters. Up until now… because just as she’s taking a short break, everything threatens to go very wrong. Jason Collins and Megan Hill. Photo by Chris Bennion. “[Saskia Janse with Speeltheater Holland] once again conjure an imaginative and intriguing world where actors, puppets, music and scenery are mercurial, constantly transforming mood and character.” -The Seattle Times “The unique theatricality of Glittra offers its audience a key no one should resist, one that unlocks their own imagination.” -Seattle Post-Intelligencer Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 24 Go, Dog. Go! Author: P.D. Eastman Playwrights: Allison Gregory and Steven Dietz Music: Michael Koerner 64 pgs. 3 female, 3 male +ensemble Originally produced in SCT’s 2002-03 season Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: P.D. Eastman’s classic children’s book comes to life on stage in an exploration of movement, color, and space. The dogs delve into life with gusto, creating a visual spectacle for the audience to feast upon. They snorkel. They howl at the moon. They ride a Ferris Wheel. They sing and dance and climb trees. A fantastic way for anyone, everyone, to spend the day. Dean Holt, Marvette Knight, and Steven B. Young. Photo by Rob Levine. Winner of the “2008 Best Children’s Theater Production” in St. Louis, MO, by the River Front Times. Production by Metro Theater Company. “With its gentle, bouncy humor and familiar situations, Go, Dog. Go! would make a fitting introduction to theater for even the youngest children, and has enough sly wit to satisfy older children and parents.” –The Columbus Dispatch “This play is adapted from a book renowned for its ability to generate fun, learning, adventure, and surprise with a minimum of text. It honors the joyous simplicity of the world around us. Therefore, in the making of this play, it is not our intention to ‘fill out’ or ‘open up’ the story in the style of many traditional adaptations. ‘Expanding the book’ in this way would, we believe, rob it of its essential wondrous and loopy anarchy. Instead, we hope to celebrate and explore the existing words and pictures; to look not "outside the book," but more closely within it - in the way that a child can page through Mr. Eastman's book night after night and find something remarkable and new with each subsequent reading. We have chosen, therefore, to play inside the story – to explore the buckets of bliss, wonder, longing, and discovery that are waiting for us, for all of us, there.” – Allison Gregory and Steven Dietz Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Go, Dog. Go! requires separate underlying rights from the Random House Children’s Books. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 25 The Golden Goose Author: Grimm Brothers Playwright: Charles Way 76 pgs. 4 female, 4 male (13 characters doubled) Originally produced by The Library Theatre, UK, in 2006 Run Time: 2 hours Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Once upon a time there was a boy called Dummling and everyone believed he was stupid just because of his name. One day, he met an old man in the woods and shared his humble supper with him. The man was, in fact, William Finkenrath and Paul Stocker. King of the Fairies, who was in search of a human king to save the forest. The Fairy King gives Dummling a magical golden goose to help him win the crown someday. When Dummling gets home his mother and brother try to take it from him, but once they touch the goose they find they cannot let go, and what’s more they find that they cannot stop running! Run they must, and run they do all the way to the palace. There, King Conrad has two daughters, Dajona who won’t laugh and Birgit who won’t stop. The King has sent out a proclamation that whoever makes Dajona laugh can have her hand in marriage, and thus be in line for the throne. When she sees the Golden Goose, with its entourage of running peasants, she bursts out laughing. The King is thrilled, until he discovers that Dummling is a peasant. So, the King sends Dummling on two ridiculous quests. With the help of the fairy kingdom, Dummling succeeds and thus becomes King, saving the Fairy Kingdom from destruction. “A colourfully embroided mixture of Folklore and fantasy.” -The Independent Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 26 Goldilocks and the Three Bears, and Little Red Riding Hood Playwright: John Clark Donahue 30 pgs., 6 female, 6 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1969-70 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Kevin and Amy discover the narrator’s trunk and they can’t help but open it. The narrator catches them and tells them the story of Goldilocks, a curious child just like them. Three bears—Papa Bear, Mama Bear, and Baby Bear— enjoy a relaxing life in their house in the woods. Papa Bear is the biggest, Baby Bear is the smallest, and Mama Bear is in between. One morning, the family goes for a walk so their porridge can cool and little Goldilocks stumbles across their cottage. She tries their porridge, their chairs, and finally their beds. When the three bears return from their walk they discover that their porridge has been eaten, that their chairs have been broken, and Baby Bear discovers Goldilocks sleeping in his bed. Goldilocks awakes and, seeing the bears, runs away. The bears would not have been mad if she just would have asked first. Kevin and Amy like this so story much, the narrator proceeds to tell them another tale. Once there was a little girl whose mother made her a red cloak with a hood to wear. She loved this cloak dearly, so her mother called her “Little Red Riding Hood.” Little Red Riding Hood’s grandmother was sick, so her mother sent Little Red Riding Hood with a basket of food to take to Grandmother’s house. Along the way, Little Red Riding Hood ran into the Wolf, who convinced her to go a different way to get to the house. Meanwhile, the Wolf snuck to Grandmother’s house himself, locked Grandmother in a trunk, took her clothes and crawled into her bed. When Little Red Riding Hood arrived, the Wolf leapt from the bed and tried to catch her. But Little Red Riding Hood was too quick, and managed to hide in the closet. Just then, the Woodsman arrived at Grandmother’s house and with the help of Little Red Riding Hood and Grandmother, they capture the wolf. At the end of this story, the children are so entranced they decide to go with the narrator to help him share his stories with other children. “[Goldilocks and the Three Bears, and Little Red Riding Hood] is, in sum, a gentle, imaginative little show, filled with activities that a child would recognize and also with an engaging theater magic.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 27 Goldilocks and the Two Bears Playwright: Saskia Janse 20 pgs. 1 actor/puppeteer Originally produced by: Speeltheater Holland 1985 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience recommendation: 4+ Synopsis: Dora’s hair is flaming red, so red her father calls her Goldilocks. Today Goldilocks is having a bad day. In school they tease her and her father isn’t around to help anymore. Dora decides things will be better in the woods. She comes to the house of the three Bears, (a Mother, a Father, and a Little Bear). She meddles with the bears' belongings, From Speeltheatre Holland. sampling their porridge (eating all of the baby's), sitting on their chairs (breaking the baby's), and then trying out their beds (falling asleep in the baby's). When they come home, Goldilocks finds out that Father Bear is gone, just like her father. Together with Baby Bear, she sets off to bring the little Bear’s father home. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Grandad’s Big Adventure Playwright: Charles Way 47 pgs. 2 female, 2 male (7 characters doubled) Originally produced by Chichester Royal Festival Theatre, UK, in 2002 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Christmas is no time to have an operation. But that is exactly when Tracy must have hers. Not only is she afraid to go under the anesthetic, she’s also worried she’ll miss Christmas altogether. Fortunately, she has her Grandad to keep her company. When they meet a strange lady who claims to be the wife of Father Christmas, who has refused to do Christmas this year, the adventure begins. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 28 Hamlet Playwright: William Shakespeare Adapter: Rita Giomi 89 pgs. 3 male, 2 female Originally produced in SCT’s 2007-08 season Run Time: 2 hours Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: “…I could a tale unfold whose lightest word Would harrow up thy soul, freeze thy young blood…” – The Ghost, Hamlet I.v Peter Crook, Amy Thone, Darragh Kennan, Connor Toms and Renata Friedman. Photo by Chris Bennion. Young Prince Hamlet returns to Denmark as strange and sorrowful times befall the country—his father, the King, suffered a murder most foul. The Prince is sure that blame lies with Claudius, lately his uncle and now his King and husband to his mother. This betrayal is more than the Prince can bear. Soon he is out of his wits, spouting “wild and whirling words” denouncing his love for the sweet Ophelia. Or is this madness merely a ruse to “catch the conscience of the king” so Hamlet may enact his revenge? Sensing the danger his nephew presents, Claudius conspires to slay Hamlet. And amidst the clashing of swords and passing of poisoned goblets, all the players fall prey to the treachery that stains the soil of poor Denmark. “Giomi’s directing credits include a lot of Shakespeare, and …her editing is conscientious and shows off her extensive expertise….An abridgement gives the play shape and pulls its diverse themes into a manageable bundle.” –Seattle Weekly “What is gained is a likeable, human-scale son of Denmark, a sort of ‘starter Hamlet’ aimed directly at adolescents – but not pandering to them with pop-culture shtick.” – The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 29 Hansel & Gretel Authors: Grimm Brothers Playwright: Rosanna Staffa Music: Ruth MacKenzie 56 pgs. 3 female, 4 male Originally produced in CTC’s 2004-05 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Hansel and Gretel may live with loving, caring parents but there is no food and the children are starving. They can’t even afford to burn their wood for warmth; no it must be saved and sold in hopes of buying food. Watching her children being raked by hunger is devastating Mother. She begs Father to take them away, with the last piece of bread in the house their only hope. Seeing this as a Nathan Barlow, Leah Curney and Carolyn Goelzer. Photo by Rob Levine. great game to distract them, they sing and dance and leave a trail of crumbs through the forest. Of course, the birds devour the crumbs and the children have no way of finding their way home. Sent by a bird to a glorious house made of every delicious thing, they dive in, eating everything they can get their hands on. This is just what the Witch was hoping for—now the delectable children are trapped! The children have a few tricks of their own, however, and eventually use the Witch’s gluttony to break free. Full of song, dance, laughter, and just a pinch of good-natured scariness, this fairy tale classic is sure to satisfy the entire family. “There is so much in [Hansel & Gretel] that is breathtaking and magical that it deserves the widest possible audience.” –Pulse of the Twin Cities Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 30 Hansel & Gretel Authors: Grimm Brothers Playwright: Mike Kenny 67 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced by Oxford Touring Company, UK, in 2008 Run Time: 1 hour, 35 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: It is dinner time and once again, and as usual, the children push around the food on their plate, complain, and act rudely. So, tonight instead of dinner, Mother tells the story of Hansel and Gretel. As the story of two hungry children abandoned in the forest by their parents and their capture by a wicked witch evolves, the family embraces their roles and find a Happily-Ever-After ending. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. “The sparkling re-telling of the familiar tale of breadcrumbs and wicked witches still retains an occasional chilling moment but provides great family entertainment with a few surprises and a fair helping of seasonal fun.” –North Wales Chronicle, UK “Kenny makes a fascinating parallel between the resources needed by a story’s characters and the storytelling imagination of the family members.” –Reviews Gate, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Harold and the Purple Crayon Author: Crockett Johnson Playwright: Myron Johnson 12 pgs. 3 female, 4 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1985-86 season Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: A favorite in the world of picture books gets even more exciting when it comes to life on stage! Meet the villain, Mr. Smudge, with his rainbow of crayons that aren’t purple, and watch as Harold goes to the circus, swims in the sea, and gets to be on television, all through the magic of his crayon and the wonders of theatre! Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote Illustrated by Crockett Johnson © 1955 The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 31 Harriet’s Halloween Candy Author: Nancy Carlson Playwright: Ann Schulman Composer: Chad Henry 86 pgs. 8 female, 6 male (Doubling possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 1 hour, 18 minutes Audience Recommendation: 5+ Synopsis: Harriet loves Halloween. She loves dressing up; she loves hanging out with her friends; and she loves getting all that delicious, gooey, chewy, chocolaty sweet candy. What she does Caety Sagoian, Auston James, Liz McCarthy, Jason Collins, and Nicole Boote. Photo by Chris Bennion. not love is having to share with her baby brother, Walter, even when her parents make her. Once back from her trick-or-treating, the very important sorting process begins. In theory, this is when Harriet will decide which of her treasures she will bestow on her brother. Licorice whips? Nougat bars? Marshmallow puffs? Tangy tarts? Chocolate drops? No!! They’re all too good to share. And they’re all hers. To keep her stash safe, Harriet tries hiding it, but what will she do when she has to go to school? Why, take it with her, of course. When her friends find out she’s been hoarding all the goodies for herself, they turn their backs on her selfish ways. Her obsession has landed her in a sticky mess. But with the help of her mother, Harriet proves that she knows nothing is sweeter than a true friend. “With Halloween ranking up with Christmas as kids’ favorite holiday, young theater-goers will no doubt relate to Harriet’s pursuit of all that is sugar, while parents will appreciate that Harriet eventually learns friends trump even chocolate.” – The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Hoboken Chicken Emergency Author: Daniel Manus Pinkwater Playwright: Chad Henry Music: Chad Henry 105 pgs. 8 female, 10 male +ensemble Originally produced in SCT’s 1988-89 season Run Time: 1 hour, 33 minutes Audience Recommendation: 5+ Synopsis: When young Arthur is sent out on Thanksgiving to find a chicken for his family dinner, he discovers Professor Mazzocchi and Mara Hesed, Jon Gentry, Erica Berghan, Felicia Vonshell Loud, and Hugh Hastings. Photo by Chris Bennion. Henrietta, a two hundred-sixty pound chicken with personality! Arthur and Henrietta bond immediately. When Arthur is forced by his father to return Henrietta, the chicken goes bezerk, terrorizing the town of Hoboken. Although an expert is brought in to take down the chicken, the town is saved only by learning to have love and compassion, even for extraordinary chickens. “[Chad] Henry’s songs are witty evocation of Broadway styles that were popular 60 years ago. ‘Hoboken’ brings to mind Irving Berlin like ‘Annie Get Your Gun’ and ‘Call Me Madam.” –Seattle Post-Intelligencer Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 32 Honus and Me Author: Dan Gutman Playwright: Steven Dietz 99 pgs. 2 female, 6 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 2005-06 season Run Time: 1 hour, 18 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Joe Stoshack loves baseball. It’s unfortunate that he is so bad at it. But he still loves the game, and he loves collecting the cards. To Joe they’re almost magic. When his mother makes him clean his neighbor’s attic, he never expects to find the card of all baseball cards—the T-206 Honus Wagner—the most valuable card of all time. But there is more to this card than what money can buy; with this card Joe is able to summon Honus Wagner himself, straight from 1909. Amazingly, Honus thinks Joe has potential at his favorite pastime. But it isn’t until they both go back to 1909, and the seventh game of the World Series, that Joe finds out just how good he can be. The confidence and self-esteem Honus helps Joe discover in himself is a gift that withstands the test of time. David Drummond and Gabriel Baron. Photo by Chris Bennion. “Based on Dan Gutman’s book, Honus and Me, adapted by Steven Dietz, is a wonderful look at the positive effect of mentors and support by parents.” –Tacoma Weekly “You don’t have to be a baseball fan to appreciate Honus & Me, a charming show about a Little Leaguer with big dreams.” –Seattle Post-Intelligencer “[Honus and Me] is a seamless blend of history, time travel, family tensions, economic problems, career disappointments, moral dilemmas and the power of love and dreams.” –Chicago Sun Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 33 The Hound of Baskervilles Author: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Playwright: Frederick Gaines 80 pgs. 2 female, 11 male +ensemble Doubling is possible Originally produced in CTC’s 1979-80 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Investigator Sherlock Holmes is on another case; a mystery involving a family curse. It is said that all future male heirs to Baskerville Hall will die a violent death upon the moors. And for several generations, the male heirs have been perishing from a vicious canine. It’s no surprise that the new heir to Baskerville Hall, Sir Henry Baskerville, wants answers to this prophesy. With the clever investigating of Holmes, the witty questions of his faithful pal, Dr. Watson, and a handful of suspicious characters, the conclusion of this mystery ends with an unexpected twist. Lawrence Santoro. “The agile, clear adaptation by Frederick Gaines is a version that loses little of Arthur Conan Doyle’s mystery, yet manages to turn what is anachronistic today into stylish wit and full-bodied humor.” –Minneapolis Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Huck Finn Author: Mark Twain Playwright: Greg Banks 43 pgs. 4 female, 13 male Doubling is possible. Original production done with 3 actors. Originally produced in CTC’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 1 hour, 15 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Huck and his pal Tom Sawyer just can’t stop getting into mischief. And when it turns out to be profitable, Huck’s Pa wants in on the action. So much so that he locks Huck in a shed. Managing to escape the makeshift prison, Huck decides he would be better off Dean Holt and Terry Hampleton. Photo by Rob Levine. floating down the river away from home. Along the way, he comes across Jim, a slave escaped from Huck’s aunt’s place. Opening Huck’s mind to the reality of slavery, the journey downriver with Jim is a real education for Huck. Full of adventure, good old-fashioned fun, and some vital life lessons, this American classic is a treat to share with your family. “Greg Banks’ innovative interpretation of this American tale creates a muscular and exciting theater experience.” – Insight : Journal for Community News, Business & the Arts Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 34 The Hundred Dresses Author: Eleanor Estes Playwright: Mary Hall Surface 93 pgs. 6 female, 5 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 2007-08 season Run Time: 1 hour, 38 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Wanda Petronski just wants to join the fun of having friends, like everyone else. But in 1930s small town America, a Polish immigrant doesn’t easily fit in. When Maddie’s best friend, Peggy, starts to tease Wanda, Maddie knows this isn’t right. When the teasing doesn’t stop and the Petronskis move to get away from the town’s prejudices, Maddie is wracked with guilt. She Sarah Harlett, Emily Cedergreen, Troy Fischnaller, Tim Gouran and Betsy Schwartz.. Photo by Chris Bennion. soon realizes that allowing her friend to be a bully can be just as bad as acting that way herself. Determined not to let her fear get the best of her again, Maddie braves the scorn of her classmates and stands up to them, making an unlikely friend in the bargain. “Everyone has been in Maddie’s situation. Everyone has faced peer pressure. These characters tell us that we, like them, can make the right choice next time.” –Teen Tix, Seattle “What sets the play…apart is its quiet, unexaggerated depiction of xenophobia, and how poverty comes in different sizes and shades.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 35 If You Give A Mouse A Cookie Author: Laura Joffe Numeroff Playwright: Jody Davidson 43 pgs. 2 male, 1 either (mouse can be played by either gender) Run Time: 70 minutes Audience Recommendation: 4+ Synopsis: “It all began so simply…” the Boy remembers, “Mom had gone to aunt Rose’s house to bring her over a batch of oatmeal chocolate chip cookies.” They’re the best cookies in the world, and she left some for him. He’s also got a new comic book, JUNGLEMAN, BEASTMASTER OF THE AMAZON, so he heads for the backyard. Then the Mouse shows up, hungry – talkative – and not to be ignored. The Boy gives Mouse a cookie, milk, and a straw to drink it with. After trying to tidy up, Mouse needs a napkin and a mirror, which leads to a haircut. What a mess! The boy begins to feel like he’s on a roller coaster ride, still on the way up. There’s no stopping this Mouse! Not only can he talk, cut his own hair and use a handkerchief, he can dance with his own reflection. And he’s only getting started. Dean Holt. Photo by Rob Levine. “For children, Mouse is a time for the free, joyful sort of chaos grown-ups frown on in real life. For grownups, it’s a freeing invitation to feel younger – even if just for a little while.” -Orlando Sentinel “The adaptation is original and infused with a dynamic, witty sense of the uniquely theatrical.” -The Off Off Broadway Review “Trying to single out a favorite moment in If You Give A Mouse A Cookie is kind of like trying to pick out the cutest puppy in the basket.” - St. Paul Pioneer Press “The show takes you on a journey of messy, side-splitting hilarity.” -Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. If You Give a Mouse a Cookie requires separate underlying rights from HarperCollins Children’s Books. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 36 Iqbal Author: Francesco D’Adamo, translated by Ann Leonori Playwright: Jerome Hairston 78 pgs. 2 female, 10 male Originally produced in CTC’s 2008-09 season Run Time: 1 hour, 12 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Inspired by the life of child-activist Iqbal Masih, this play celebrates the struggle and triumph of child workers in a Pakistani carpet factory. Under the harsh labor and stern eye of the factory master, Fatima and the other children discover ways to laugh and share moments of tenderness, but they have forgotten how to dream. So when a new boy joins their ranks and dares to rebel, he inspires them to help each other reach for a better life. J. Aritt, P. Shukla, S. Bijwadia, J. Jue, and A. Rivera. Photo by Dan Norman. “Playwright Jerome Hairston tells the story with poetic potency. Over the course of the play, his language evolves to parallel the children’s conditions, from stiff and stilted to free-associative fluidity and lyric metaphors.” -Minneapolis Star Tribune “I’m always thrilled by the amazing intelligence of children. Iqbal’s spirit and wit, his passion and fire charge us. With this play, we hope to give that same gift to our audience.” -Peter Brosius, Artistic Director, The Children’s Theatre Company Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Iron Ring Author: Lloyd Alexander Playwright: Charles Way 57 pgs. 4 female, 8 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 2009-10 season Run Time: 1 hour, 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: The Iron Ring is a thrilling Indian epic of daring adventure and deep humanity. Take an incredible journey with King Tamar and his sidekicks – a brave and beautiful milkmaid, a cowardly eagle, and a wily monkey – as they try to win back his kingdom. Rooted in the mythology of ancient India, the story follows the travels of young Tamar, who loses a game of chance with a mysterious stranger and finds himself on a voyage full of comedy, challenge, and adventure. Design by KNOCK, Inc. "The imaginative scope of the story and its philosophical complexities will make this an exciting journey." –Publishers Weekly *Available April 2010* www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 37 Jack Playwright: Mike Kenny 43 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced by Tutti Frutti, UK, in 2006 Run Time: 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: This version of Jack and the Beanstalk is a wonderfully creative work that follows the classic storyline, but adds a contemporary twist. Our story begins with Jack in a pot waiting to become the Giant’s dinner. As Jack recounts how he got himself into this predicament, he talks his way out of the soup and into Gertrude’s, the Giant’s wife, heart. She confides her feelings of neglect, while Jack describes the disappointment he has caused his mother. It is this relationship that helps both Jack and Gertrude find their way to happier lives. This fun, and funny, work will engross audiences, making them laugh and leaving them begging for more. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Jack and the Beanstalk Playwright: Chad Henry Music: Chad Henry 93 pgs. 4 female, 4 male (18 characters doubled) Originally produced in SCT’s 1993-94 season Run Time: 1 hour, 38 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: A dreadful giant terrorizes the ancient Irish countryside. When the lazy, boastful Jack learns that his late father may have been a king, he is determined to climb the beanstalk and rescue his family’s stolen treasure. Aided by Eileen O’Fenian, a bungling fairy trying to earn her Laura Kenny. Photo by Chris Bennion. wings, Jack has a hair-raising adventure in the giant’s castle which is filled with fantastical characters: a temperamental giant; his ogre-ish wife; her henchmen Oogedy, Boogedy, and Boo—as well as the singing harp and a dancing, golden egg-laying hen. Finally, Jack returns home to be crowned king, and Eileen earns her wings. With a rollicking, Riverdance-like score, this show is a delight for all ages. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 38 Jason and the Golden Fleece Author: Apollonius of Rhodes Playwright: John Olive 84 pgs. 5 female, 12 male Doubling is possible. Original played by a company of 5 actors. Originally produced in SCT’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 1 hour, 34 minutes Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: Treachery, betrayal, and vengeance—these are the hallmarks of Jason’s tale. When he was but a baby, his own uncle murdered his parents. Jason returns to Thessaly to avenge their deaths and reclaim the throne. Despite his youth and inexperience, Jason makes a bargain with his uncle—he will sail Shawn Telford, Lathrop Walker, Peter Crook and Renata Friedman. Photo by Chris Bennion. in search of the famed golden fleece in return for the crown. With his young crew, the untried Hercules and budding poet Orpheus, as ready as they will ever be, the sailors begin their voyage. This is the chance to become the heroes of legend, if only they knew what that meant or how to go about it. Their quest takes the three naïve warriors to lands cursed and deceptively sweet, where they must fight ferocious supernatural creatures. But when they finally make their destination, the land of the golden fleece, Jason finds his strength and captures his treasure. Once back home, Jason honors his bargain and hands over the prize. His uncle tries to betray him again, so Jason has no choice but to enter into a pitched battle of clashing swords. Realizing that he has become a hero after all, Jason vanquishes his uncle and is crowned king. In a noble gesture, Jason has the golden fleece destroyed, determined to rule his people by his own even hand. “[Jason and the Golden Fleece] is upbeat and suitable for those age 10 and above, with some straight-ahead messages about staying the course, believing in yourself and the power of stories.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Jungle Book Author: Rudyard Kipling Playwright: Thomas W. Olson 47 pgs. 5 female, 11 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1991-92 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The Jungle Book transports audiences to mystical India with the tale of the young “man-cub,” Mowgli, a boy raised by animals. Befriended by some and pursued by others, Mowgli is eventually forced to choose between the animal kingdom and the more “civilized” human world. Presented as a play-within-a-play, The Jungle Book uses masks, dance, and mime to create this amazing and wonderful adventure. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org Siua Hafoka PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 39 Kidnapped in London Playwright: Timothy Mason 50 pgs. 1 female, 7 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1969-70 season Run Time: 70 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Corin is the son of two shepherds in sixteenth-century England. While visiting London with his parents, Corin watches The Players of Blackfriars perform. He is so distracted by the play, he gets separated from his parents. Not sure of what to do, Corin sits down and starts to sing. Burbage, the leader of The Players of Blackfriars, sees the boy’s natural theatrical talent and asks if he would like to join the players. Corin declines – he just wants to find his parents, but Burbage insists and kidnaps the boy. While with the players, Corin meets Joseph, another young boy actor, who tells Corin that he should appreciate Burbage. However, Corin longs to go home. Burbage promises that if Corin performs for a while he will be set free. Time passes and Corin is still held captive. Driven to desperation, he plots to run away. Joseph agrees to help Corin escape by distracting Burbage. During the attempt, Burbage stabs and wounds Joseph and is sent to jail. The boys visit him, and Burbage tells Corin that he is finally free to leave. After all this time and these adventures, Corin decides that the theatre is his home and chooses to stay. “Timothy Mason’s ‘Kidnapped in London’ harkens back to the Elizabethan England when London’s streets were teeming with their own colorful theater, creating a sense of life that has been irresistible to us ever since.” Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. King Arthur and the Magic Sword Playwright: Frederick Gaines 48 pgs. 2 female, 12 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1985-86 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Set in 5th Century Britain, the Roman Empire is in disarray, and throughout Britain warlords continually battle for the right to be called Pendragon, chief ruler of the land. Raised by Merlin the Magician and destined for greatness, Arthur is the only one who can wield the powerful sword, Excalibur, and unite and lead his nation to victory. Jason McLean and Tim Barker. “King Arthur and the Magic Sword speaks to the special child (and there are many): the adolescent who sees grave wrongs in the ways of the world and vows to right them; the shining young spirit untarnished by adult (or peer) cupidity and power struggles, who believes that the strength and sincerity of his mission to banish injustices will cleave a path to human equality and harmony.” –Twin Cities Reader Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 40 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow Author: Washington Irving Playwright: Frederick Gaines 41 pgs. 3 female, 6 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1969-70 season Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Ichabod Crane, a bumbling eccentric schoolmaster, moves to a town haunted by a headless horseman. A Puritan who constantly quotes Cotton Mather, Ichabod insists he does not believe is such supernatural things. When a dark figure on horseback follows him home one night, Ichabod screams in terror, and shows that he is as superstitious as everyone else. The next morning, all that remains of Ichabod Crane is his small, tricorner hat and the sound of his voice. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow & Rip Van Winkle Author: Washington Irving Playwright: Bruce Hurlbut 52 pgs. 3 female, 9 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 1989-90 season Run Time: 52 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: After his twenty-year nap, Rip Van Winkle awakes with his story-telling capacity intact and begins the tale of Ichabod Crane and the Headless Horseman. Full of action and excitement, this play brings to life the rich language of the American past. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote Ron Menzel. Photo by Fred Andrews. The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 41 The Little Match Girl Author: Hans Christian Andersen Playwright: John Donahue 34 pgs. 2 female, 3 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1970-71 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Hans Christian Andersen’s tale of a poor little girl who is trying to sell matches on the coldest day of the year. Ill clad and shivering, she’s afraid to return home empty-handed for fear she’ll be beaten. The holiday merry-makers are too engrossed in their own worlds to pay attention to the ragged child as she slowly freezes to death. In an attempt to get warm, the girl lights her matches. With each one she makes a wish and sees visions of worlds known to her only from her dead grandmother’s stories: a street carnival, a toy shop, a holiday feast, a skating party, a grand ball, and a warm green meadow. In her final moments, she gets a vision of her grandmother, who takes her away to heaven. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. “The beauty and lyricism of this show…remains spiritually compelling and more than a little awesome.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Little Mermaid Playwright: Mike Kenny 34 pgs. 1 female, 1 male Originally produced by York Theatre Royal, UK, in 2005 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Far below the crashing waves of the ocean’s surface, and into its deepest depths, we meet a young mermaid on a quest to find love. Enthralled by the unknown world above the sea’s shell, the Little Mermaid finds herself falling in love with a mysterious human. After a vicious storm throws him from his ship, she manages to save him, sealing her fate—she cannot live without this man. She decides to take matters into her own hands and make a deal with the evil sea witch. The Mermaid will be granted legs in exchange for her lovely voice. If only she can make the man truly love her, a love that goes beyond the surface, then she can know real happiness. Illustrated by Will Hayes “Celebrated children’s writer Mike Kenny makes Hans Christian Andersen’s fable his own, adding plenty of magical touches to delight young theatre-goers.” – The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 42 Little Women Author: Louisa May Alcott Playwright: Marisha Chamberlain 125 pgs. 10 female, 3 males Originally produced in CTC’s 1985-86 season Run time: 2 hours Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Living in New England during the American Civil War, the March girls—pretty Meg, practical Jo, shy Beth, and vain little Amy— eagerly await their father’s return from battle. Jo, an avid writer, aspires to be a famous author and live an independent life someday. Meg looks towards a more traditional future as a wife with children. Sweet Beth is content to stay at home and play the piano. Amy wants the attention of her elder sisters and is quite mischievous when she is not included. All four girls are very different, yet they remain a close-knit family. Charity Jones, Nancy Wagner, Hilary Cooperman, and Jolayne Berg. “[Chamberlain’s Little Women] is a character melodrama, a play about good people discovering themselves, enduring hardships and even death, yet always strengthened by the security of family.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Lost Boys of Sudan Playwright: Lonnie Carter 129 pgs. 5 female, 16 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 1 hour, 42 minutes Audience Recommendation: 15+ Synopsis: A.I. Josh, T-Mac Sam, and K-Gar Ollie all meet in the worst way: fleeing the horrors of war. As they team up on a perilous journey to a refugee camp, they exchange heroic survival stories, song, and even laughter. Thus begins an extraordinary passage that eventually takes three boys of the Dinka tribe to, of Namir Smallwood, Andre Samples, and Samuel Roberson Jr. Photo by Rob Levine. all places, Fargo, ND. Where encountering drought, crocodiles, and guerrillas is replaced with malls, video games, and Skittles. If you can't imagine being a continent, a culture, and a language away from home, join three boys who couldn't either – at first. “Carter’s play builds layer upon layer of meaning through evocative language, humor and telling details that create a world that is simultaneously dreamlike and concrete.” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 43 The Lost Child Playwright: Mike Kenny 17 pgs. 12 characters, doubling possible Originally produced by Crucible Studio, UK, in 1989 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Fire keeps Tinker and his daughter, Rowan, safe from wolves. But as Tinker tells Rowan, “The fire is greedy. If we do not watch over it carefully, or if we feed it too much, the fire will become hungry for more. It will eat and eat and eat and grow into a monster Illustrated by Kyle Schuler. which will eat everything in its path.” When Rowan goes missing, Tinker declares that Fire is no longer his friend. After searching the air, water, and earth, Tinker finally relents and lights a fire. It is then he discovers Rowan is with the wolves. After he gives a special promise to them, he is finally reunited with his daughter. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Mad Meg: An Opera Playwright: Mike Kenny Music: Sam Paechter 21 pgs. 3 female, 2 male Originally produced by Interplay, UK, in 1997 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Mad Meg is a charming, poetic piece about two sisters: Martha, who was as warm as the sun, and Meg who was as moody as Illustrated by Diana Chao. the moon. When Simon shows up at their farm, Meg is immediately taken with the stranger. Simon, however, falls in love with Martha. This enrages Meg, who curses the town and stops the river. “The villagers now locked their doors, afraid of Mad Meg on the Moor. To their children they sometimes said, Mad Meg’ll get you if you don’t go to bed. They’d point at the moon up in the sky, look there’s Mad Meg’s eye. Mad Meg made the river dry.” Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 44 Madeline and the Gypsies Author: Ludwig Bemelmans Playwright: Barry Kornhauser Music: Michael Koerner 60 pgs. 24 female, 30 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2008-09 season Run Time: 1 hour, 48 minutes Age Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: When Madeline and her friend, Pepito, get lost during a visit to the carnival and end up being carried away by gypsies, their rousing adventures with a traveling circus begin! But poor Miss Clavel won’t rest until she has brought them safely home. This new musical bursts with daring circus acts, song and sweet silliness. Francesca Dawis. Photo by Rob Levine. "Eye-popping , world-premiere musical adaptation. ...The integration of circus onto the CTC stage is a little stroke of magic, making it very clear why the spunky Madeline and her friend Pepito would feel the tug of the canvas and greasepaint. ...If you love the books, love the circus or love seeing CTC work its magic, Madeline and the Gypsies hits the right marks." - St Paul Pioneer Press "Madeline captures all the magic of Ludwig Bemelmans' beloved 1959 book and fleshes out the characters and dramatic arc in a charming and convincing way. My daughter...was entranced by the sets, the costumes, the singing, the dancing, the slapstick comedy - basically all of it." - Minnesota Parent Magazine "Childrens Theatre Company goes for the magic...with Madeline and the Gypsies - full of surprises, nice moments about the search for family and home, and real circus thrills throughout. ...The play's message that both the world of order and creative chaos have much to offer each other - is played out gently and never gets in the way of the fun. There's plenty of the latter, and the balance is delightful to watch. ...A joyful escape for audiences of any age." - Talkin' Broadway Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 45 The Magic City Author: E. Nesbit Playwright: Joe Sutton 127 pgs. 5 female, 5 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 2004-05 season Run Time: 1 hour, 31 minutes Age Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Philip and his sister, Helen, have been on their own since their parents died. But now Helen has married and she and Philip are going to live in her new husband Peter’s house, with his daughter, Lucy. Once Helen and Peter leave for their honeymoon, Peter A. Jacobs, Reginald Andre Jackson and Jason Collins. Photo by Chris Bennion. the children are left alone with the nurse, who dislikes Philip and forbids him to play with any of Lucy’s toys. Having a kind heart, Lucy invites Philip to play with her toys when the nurse is out, and with them he builds a fantastic city. Once the nurse returns, she sees the city and sends Philip to his room, where he falls asleep and lands in the amazing city he built for Lucy. Philip soon discovers that the people in the city are living under an evil rule and have been waiting for Philip to rescue them. With Lucy’s help, Philip manages to slay a dragon, unravel a mysterious rug, and save the Island Dwellers from their own fear. When Philip finally awakes he is in his room with his new family, and feels that his life in this world will now be better than he could have imagined. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Marvelous Land of Oz Author: L. Frank Baum Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Richard A. Dworsky 59 pgs. 6 female, 12 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1980-81 season Run Time: 70 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Tip is a lonely boy who is forced to live with Mombi, an evil witch. After Mombi obtains some Powder of Life from the sorcerer, Tip takes it and uses it to create two friends: Jack Pumpkinhead and Sawhorse. The three friends decide to run away from Mombi. On their journey, they run into General Jinjur and her army, who are planning on taking over Emerald City. Jack and Sawhorse head to the Emerald City and meet the Scarecrow king and Jellia, his assistant, and they all become friends. Meanwhile, Tip heads to the Emerald City as well and warns the Scarecrow about Jinjur’s army, and heads off with his friends to find Glinda. Glinda tells them that the throne does not belong to Scarecrow, but to Princess Ozma, daughter of the late King Pastoria. Mombi tries to trick Glinda and fails. Glinda forces Mombi to tell them who Princess Ozma is—Tip! “The Oz books are still such favorites. They tend to be nonsensically funny, outrageously imaginative and spectacularly theatrical. This play thoroughly captures that spirit.” -Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 46 Merry Christmas, Strega Nona Author: Tomie dePaola Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Alan Shorter 45 pgs. 7 female, 12 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1987-88 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Long ago, near a little town in Calabria, Italy lived an old witch called Strega Nona, “Grandma Witch." She knew magic and loved to use it to help people. Big Anthony, Illustration by Tomie de Paola Strega Nona’s helper, didn’t like to work, never paid attention and almost always got into trouble. Every Christmas Eve, Strega Nona made a big feast for all the people of Calabria with no magic at all because she says, “No magic at Christmastime. Christmas has a magic all its own.” After Big Anthony nearly ruined Christmas by another one of his goofs, it seemed like nothing but a miracle could save Strega Nona’s feast. But Christmas is a time for miracles…and wonderful surprises too. “Tomie dePaola’s slim story of a benevolent witch and her vow to eschew magic for the holidays is enlarged, embellished and given a faithful yet new dimension on the stage.” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Midwife’s Apprentice Author: Karen Cushman Playwright: Constance Congdon 82 pgs. 7 female, 13 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 2000-01 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Set in Medieval England, we meet Brat, a young abandoned girl living hand-to-mouth with a cat as her only companion. Her journey begins when she becomes an apprentice for Jane, the stern village midwife. As Brat learns the secrets of midwifery she begins to realize her potential, transforming from nameless foundling to radiant Alyce. This engaging adaptation is brimming with intrigue, adventures, and compelling characters. Sherryl Rey and Sharva Maynard. Photo by Chris Bennion. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 47 Mr. Pickwick’s Christmas Author: Charles Dickens Playwright: Thomas W. Olson 51 pgs. 13 female, 16 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1982-83 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Wedding bells and yuletide greetings ring in the frosty air as Mr. Pickwick and company board the coach for Wardle Farm and a holiday of feasting, games, and a riotous iceskating party. A memorable country Christmas culled from the pages of Charles Dickens’ Pickwick Papers. George Muschamp and Wendy Lehr. “Thomas Olson’s adaptation is stunning in its details, preserving the fecundity of Dickens’ writing and the energy of his style.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Monkey King Author: Wu Chen-En Playwright: Shen Pei Translator: Jeffrey Hatcher 52 pgs. 8 female, 15 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2004-05 season Run Time: 1 hour, 41 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: In the Heavenly Palace, the Jade Emperor and the Jade Empress are holding a feast. Suddenly a monkey hatches from a rock and declares himself King, shaking the very foundations of Dean Holt and Gerald Drake. Photo by Rob Levine. heaven and earth. He even travels to the underworld and erases his death in the Book of the Dead. The Emperor tries to capture the Monkey, but the wily animal escapes, ending up in a showdown with Buddha himself! Buddha wins and thus begins the Monkey’s earthly adventures. He accompanies a monk on a pilgrimage, along with two traveling companions, a pig, Ba-jie, and a carp, Sha-sen, both of whom have been sent down to earth after causing trouble in the Heavenly Realm. As with every great quest story, the journey tests the character of the four travelers. To complete the mission, each must learn to recognize his weaknesses and understand their strengths. “The Monkey King is a beautiful synthesis of stylistic influences, from dance and Beijing Opera to cartoons, from martial arts to old-fashioned stage hamming.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 48 Nicky Somewhere Else Playwright: Saskia Janse 28 pgs. 5 Actors/Puppeteers Originally produced in SCT’s 2002-03 season Run Time: 1 hour, 13 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Nicky finds a photograph and discovers that he has a brother, Noel. But Noel is somewhere else. Nicky decides to visit Noel, and travels to the land of ‘somewhere else’, a beautiful land filled with mountains, rivers, spacious skies and raucous angels. Mara Hesed, Billy Seago, and Jason Collins. Photo by Chris Bennion. “Death may seem an unlikely subject for children’s theater, especially when the subject is the death of a sibling, and more particularly, a twin. But a willingness to confront that profound loss is what makes Nicky Somewhere Else special. And the ability to go about that daunting task with humor, creativity, immense charm and touching sensitivity is what makes it so worthwhile [to see it].” - New York Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Nightingale Author: Hans Christian Andersen Playwright: Marisha Chamberlain 24 pgs. 5 female, 17 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1983-84 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The majesty, grace, and poetic ritual of ancient China are vividly depicted in this enthralling tale of the Emperor who neglects the lyrical song of a humble nightingale for the artificial splendor of a mechanical bird. The real nightingale is banished from the empire. Years pass by unhappily, until the Emperor falls gravely ill. As the figure of death lingers near his bed, the Emperor cries out for music from the artificial bird. But the bird does not respond; there is no one to wind it. Suddenly, from the window, the song of the real nightingale fills the room. She has heard the Emperor’s suffering and returned to bring him hope and comfort. Death retreats from the Emperor’s chambers, and he rises from his bed, giving thanks to the nightingale. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 49 Not Without Laughter Author: Langston Hughes Playwright: Syl Jones Music: Victor Zupanc 104 pgs. 7 female, 4 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1996-97 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: Set in a small Kansas town at the turn of the century, Not Without Laughter is a poignant story of an Africa-American boy’s coming of age, and the harsh and painful realities of life in segregated America. The story is told from the perspective of Sandy, a ten-year-old boy. Sandy grows up under the watchful eye of his grandmother, who tries to protect him from bad Jackie Richardson and Adam Ward. Photo by Donna Kelly influences so he will not go astray. Sandy is an idealist, who has a voracious appetite for books. He dreams of using the power of words to change people. This is a story that weaves together the magical qualities of humanity – pain, love, laughter. “[Not Without Laughter] allows a glimpse into a secret place, the otherworld where a writer lives half his life.” –City Pages Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Old Man Who Loved Cheese Author: Garrison Keillor Playwright: Edward Barnes 25 pgs. 5 female, 5 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1999-2000 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: What happens when a man loves cheese more than his family? They all up and leave when the smell gets too bad, the police take him in, the judge gives a trial, and the experts agree this old man smells foul! The lone hope is butterscotch, the only weapon strong enough to combat a stinky man such as this! Illustration by Anne Wilsdorf © 1996 Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 50 Oliver Twist Author: Charles Dickens Playwright: Frederick Gaines Music: Michael Koerner 104 pgs. 7 female, 10 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1990-91 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: What do you do with a boy who asks for more? Feed him on cockroaches served in a canister? Oliver is an orphan growing up in 19th century England, and misfortune seems to befall him at every turn. He escapes the orphanage, only to be taken in by an evil man and his band of hooligans, including the Artful Dodger, leader of the pick-pockets! Exciting as it is harrowing, this Dickens tale is sure to keep audiences entertained! Adam Kolman Marshak. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Once Upon A Forest Author: Brothers Grimm Playwright: Moniek Merkx & Elissa Adams 46 pgs. 3 female, 5 male (characters interchange) Originally produced in CTC’s 2002-03 season Run Time: 1 hour 20 min Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The fairy tales in Once Upon A Forest come to us in parts, like a puzzle slowly coming together piece by piece. First, there’s a piece of one, then another, another piece of the first, a piece or two of a new one, and so forth, as we journey on. We meet Snow White, a fameseeking Tailor, a hedgehog boy, and one generous young Katy McEwen, Dean Holt and Emily Zimmer. Photo by Rob Levine. man. Bordering this intricately detailed puzzle is a dragon chasing a group of children. One falls behind and, whoosh, is gone. As the puzzle and dragon begin to merge, we see the characters, who have been wandering through a wood, congregate and unite against the fiery foe. They slay the dragon and each gets to wish for their heart's desire. “Moniek Merkx makes the game of engaging in her dip into the Grimm Brothers’ fairy tales in Once Upon a Forest irresistible.” –TalkinBroadway.com Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 51 One Dark Night Playwright: Mike Kenny 27 pgs. 1 female, 2 male Originally produced by Theatre Centre, UK, in 2004 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: One Dark Night is the story of a lonely child and his friend: a cheeky, mischievous shadow. The adventure really begins at bedtime, Illustration by Diana Chao. when the shadow disappears as mum turns off the lamp. The night, the stars and the moon may know where it is hiding. Through object and shadow puppetry the play illuminates a small child's big journey from fear to confidence; from standing alone in the playground at a new school to having the confidence to play with someone; from being afraid of the dark to being comfortable without the light. “There’s nothing like a magical piece of children’s theatre to remind us of the amazing power of the human imagination.” – Living Scotsman, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. One Snowy Night Playwright: Charles Way 41 pgs. 2 female, 2 male (7 characters doubled) Originally produced by Minerva Theatre Chichester, UK, in 2004 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: In an isolated part of Iceland at the beginning of the last Illustration by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. century, winter still has its grip on the land. Mother declares that she must travel to a safer place to have her new baby, and Father wants Nonni to stay home and look after the sheep, especially his favourite, Gullbra. Nonni is angry and upset and finds no comfort in the fact that Father leaves his favourite sheepdog, Titla, behind as company. Boy and dog are both displeased. After his parents leave there is a great storm and Gullbra runs off into the snowy wastes. Nonni is frightened of letting his father down and sets off after the sheep. Titla follows and an amazing event occurs, suddenly boy and dog can understand each other perfectly. Their journey in search of Gullbra leads them into an amazing landscape, both real and metaphorical. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 52 Our Only May Amelia Author: Jennifer L. Holm Playwright: John Olive 89 pgs. 5 female, 4 male Originally produced in SCT’s 2002-03 season Run Time: 1 hour, 25 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: In 1899, life on the Nasel River in Washington was hard for anyone, but especially for 13-year-old May Amelia Jackson, the only girl in all of the Nasel settlement. May Amelia’s Papa thinks that hunting, fishing, and working at the logging camp are all too rough for a little girl, but that doesn’t stop May. When her Grandmother Patience comes to stay with the family, May Amelia must learn to bite her Alban Dennis, Jennifer Lee Taylor and Christopher Guilmet. Photo by Chris Bennion. tongue or suffer the consequence – her Grandmother’s cane. Once May’s mother gives birth to a baby girl, it seems as though all of May’s prayers have been answered. After tragedy strikes and Grandmother Patience blames her, May runs off to Astoria to stay with her aunt. But living in the big city, despite the new and exciting things it has to offer, means that May has to act like a “proper young lady”. Life on the Nasel might be hard for a girl, but at least it is full of adventure – and family. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Penrod Author: Booth Tarkington Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Anita Ruth 71 pgs. 10 female, 15 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1984-85 season Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Penrod loves to daydream and write stories, but he also manages to get himself in lots of trouble. Penrod and his friend Sam meet Herman and Verman, two new boys who just moved into town. The four boys set up a carnival-type show Illustration by Gordon Grant © 1931 for the neighborhood kids. Penrod’s crush, Marjorie, comes over and asks Penrod if he will take her and her brother, Mitchy-Mitch, to the real carnival in town. Once there, MitchyMitch gets upset which makes Marjorie mad at Penrod, and they both leave him. Penrod is so sad that when he meets Rupe Collins, a carnival worker, he becomes convinced to run away and join the carnival. Later that night, when Penrod is running away with Rupe, Herman and Verman show up and defend Penrod from Rupe, who is secretly a thief trying to steal Penrod’s belongings. “[Penrod] is an Americana-type musical to boot, celebrating small town nostalgia… Olson’s script neatly and efficiently details a lot of the characters.” -Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 53 Peter and the Wolf Author: Sergi Prokofiev Playwright: Allison Gregory Music: Hummie Mann 72 pgs. 5 Actors Originally produced in SCT’s 2005-06 season Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Peter and his grandfather live in a house by a lush meadow and sparkling pond, overlooked by a sturdy tree and high stone wall. Grandfather warns Peter to stay out of the meadow because a wolf is on the prowl. But what little boy can resist playing outside on a beautiful day? After letting the duck loose on the pond, Peter is rushed back behind the wall by Lisa Estridge and Daniel Charles Dennis. Photo by Chris Bennion. Grandfather. Luckily, Peter keeps an eye out for his feathered friends and is able to warn the bird of the cat who stealthily approaches; too bad he couldn’t warn the duck when the wolf finally arrives. The bird and cat manage to escape into the tree but the poor duck gets too confused and ends up a snack for the wolf. Not wanting to see his other friends suffer the same fate, Peter devises a way to capture the wolf, before the hunters can shoot him. Together they deliver the wolf safely to the nearby zoo. “If you like old-style Loony Tunes cartoons, you’ll appreciate this play. It’s fun whether you’re four, 40 or four score and 10.” –The Herald, Seattle Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Peter and the Wolf requires separate underlying rights from G. Schirmer Inc. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 54 Peter Pan Author: JM Barrie Playwright: Douglas Irvine Music: Victor Zupanc 64 pgs, 6 Actors/Puppeteers Originally produced in CTC’s 2008-09 season Run Time: 1 hour, 20 minutes Audience Recommendation: 7+ Synopsis: Peter Pan, who comes to hear the stories Mrs. Darling tells each night, has lost his shadow. Tinker Bell, his fairy friend, helps him search, but it’s Wendy Darling that re-attaches his shadow in trade for a kiss. Peter flies Wendy, and her brother Michael, to Neverland so she can mother the Lost Boys. Brandon Weinbrenner. Photo by Rob Levine. The flight is the entrance to adventure! In Neverland they encounter pirates, led by the infamous Captain Hook, play with Peter’s friends, the Lost Boys, and rescue the Indian princess, Tiger Lily. Eventually, Wendy becomes homesick, and soon she and the boys ask to go back to London. Peter refuses to go, but sends them off. As he falls asleep below, the pirates capture all the others as they leave the underground house! As Peter sleeps, Tinker Bell sees Hook poison the medicine Peter promised Wendy he would take. When Peter wakes up, Tink quickly drinks the poison herself to save him, but if the audience believes in fairies they can save her life. Peter flies to rescue Wendy and the Boys, engaging Hook in battle just as he is about to make the children walk the plank. After an elaborate fight, the waiting crocodile eats Hook and Peter delivers the children home. He promises to return, and indeed he does, years later, to meet Wendy’s daughter, Jane, so that the story can continue. “I have loved the story of Peter Pan for as long as I can remember. The adventures of the Darling children in Neverland has excited, enthralled and moved not only me, but generations of children and adults alike. But what is it that makes it so appealing? To answer is like trying to catch a shadow! But I do know that bringing this modern myth and its much loved characters to life for the stage has been a rare privilege, and exploring the world of Captain Hook, Wendy, the Lost Boys, and of course Peter, has been like exploring the shadows themselves - scary, fun, poetic, silly, profound and elusive - yet very, very real!" -Dougie Irvine, playwright "...you can just feel your imagination grow." -St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 55 Peter Pan Author: JM Barrie Playwright: Timothy Mason Music: Hiram Titus 107 pgs. 9 female, 21 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1997-98 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The adventurous tale of the “boy who wouldn’t grow up.” Mr. & Mrs. Darling have tucked their children into bed. Peter Pan and Tinkerbell fly in through the window and whisk the children out into the night and away through the stars to the island of David Cabot and ensemble. Photo by Sal Skog. Neverland. Here the children encounter the Lost Boys, the exotic princess Tiger Lily, and the dreadful Captain Hook. The adventure comes to a climax when Captain Hook captures the Darling children and the Lost Boys, Tinkerbell is in trouble and Peter Pan must face the evil pirate to save his friends. “Timothy Mason’s concise, fast-paced adaptation does an exuberant job of story-telling…Mason’s text is bright, witty and doesn’t talk down to its child audience.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Pharaoh Serket and the Lost Stone of Fire Playwright: John Olive Pgs. 2 female, 5 male Originally produced in SCT’s 2008-09 season Run Time: 1 hour 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: The mysterious Zalira and sneeze-afflicted palace scribe, Bakneb, must aid the young and spoiled Pharaoh Serket if he is to escape death at the hands of his ever-present enemies. Together they journey deep into the desert to find the Lost Stone of Fire, a gem so mystical it is believed to grant its owner immortality. However, Serket’s quest brings him a treasure even greater. Anthony Leroy Fuller, Hana Lass, Renata Friedman, and Trick Danneker. Photo by Chris Bennion. “This world-premiere by John Olive is a little bit like an Indiana Jones flick…Add in some opulent visuals, some genuine suspense and some good laughs and you have an eventful yarn set in ancient Egypt that can keep a theater full of kids riveted.” –The Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 56 The Pied Piper of Hamelin Author: Robert Browning Playwright: Thomas Olson Originally produced in CTC’s 77-78 season 55 pgs. 6 female, 14 male +ensemble Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: During the plague in 14th Century Germany, a town infested with rats turns to a piper to get rid of them. But a cruel mayor leads to the Piper’s charge of payment – their children! Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Pinocchio Author: Carlo Collodi Playwright: Chad Henry Music: Chad Henry 4 female, 4 male (20 characters doubled) Originally produced in SCT’s 1996-97 season Run Time: 1 hour, 38 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: This fast-paced musical, set in colorful 19th Century Italy, tells the familiar story of an impish puppet who longs to be a real boy. Willful and disobedient, and easily led astray by the con artists Fox and Cat, Pinocchio runs away from the kindly Geppeto to see the world. Pinocchio’s wild adventures take him Leslie Law, Kevin Benedict, David Silverman. Photo by Chris Bennion. from a sinister puppet theatre to Busy Beeville, menacing Funland, and finally into the belly of a whale, where he barely escapes to return home, change his ways, and become a real boy. Filled with rollicking songs, comedy, suspense and warmth you’re sure to delight in seeing this classic come to life. Voted Best Original Score of 2002 by The Seattle Times. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 57 Pinocchio Author: Carlo Collodi Playwright: Timothy Mason Music: Hiram Titus 66 pgs. 8 female, 28 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1974-75 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The popular Italian tale of a puppet that can walk and talk like a real boy, with a long nose, which becomes even longer when he tells a lie. Pinocchio is easily convinced to join immoral adventures, such as going to a puppet show instead of school, and an island that seems to be a place of paradise but really is a trap for naughty boys. In the end, Pinocchio learns that being good and obeying his father are the keys to becoming a real boy. Gerald Drake and Steven Huke. Photo by Giannetti Studios. “The script is clever enough to amuse children with broad humor yet respect their intelligence with a note or two of dry wit.” –Pulse of the Twin Cities Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Pippi Longstocking Author: Astrid Lindgren Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Roberta Carlson 45 pgs. 6 female, 8 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1982-83 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: On the outskirts of town stands a ramshackle house. It may not seem like much 'til you peek through the railings...then, you see there's a horse on the porch, a monkey in the kitchen, and a freckle-faced, red-pigtailed, whirlwind of a girl in Jessie Shelton, Rebecca Lord and Amanda Grainger. Photo by Rob Levine. mismatched stockings presiding over all! This is the domain of – ready? – Pippilotta Delicatessa Windowshade Mackrelmint Ephraim’s Daughter Longstocking. Pippi is outrageously unsupervised and proud of it. Her father is a pirate captain off sailing the seas. Her mother is an angel watching over her from heaven. And neither the head of the Child Welfare Board, nor a couple of ne'erdo-wells who try to abscond with the gold in her pirate treasure chest can get the best of her. In fact, the adults who come in contact with her often are the ones who learn from the encounter. But it's not that she's unteachable. She cares more than she's willing to admit, and she finds that fun can go too far. She simply doesn't fit, and it's hard to imagine Pippi fitting in anywhere - unless you meet her, and then you can't imagine life without her. "Fast-paced action-packed staging...a delight for both children and adults...Pippi's zany antics infect everyone." -Artscape Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 58 Playing from the Heart Playwright: Charles Way 42 pgs., 2 female, 3 male Originally produced by the Polka Theatre, UK, in 1998 Run Time: 1 hour, 15 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Playing from the Heart is about the childhood of the world famous percussionist Evelyn Glennie. It’s a gritty, yet poetic, piece which tells how Evelyn became a musician despite becoming profoundly deaf between eight and twelve years old. The realistic narrative is linked by a series of imaginative set pieces, which explore the inner world of the deaf child. The play explores themes of family love, overcoming impossible barriers, and the very nature of art and music. It also provides a rich mix of movement, music, and text. Erica Siegel. Photo by Scott Suchman. “Way’s script- which has a seductive, memoir-style, no doubt because it was written with Glennie’s cooperation - chronicles the vulnerable young dreamer’s enthusiams and setbacks… It’s ultra-inspiring stuff, but Way avoids any power-of-positive-thinking triteness by anchoring the story firmly in a sense of artistic wonder.” –The Washington Post “Charles Way’s play is ingeniously conceived…” –The Washington Post “If it’s Charles Way’s innovative and inspirational Playing from the Heart, you get an absorbing and evocative biographical drama about a young woman both from and of the sticks who proved them all wrong to become the premier percussion artist of her generation.” –DC Theatre Scene Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Prince and the Pauper Author: Mark Twain Playwright: Thomas W. Olson 84 pgs. 5 female, 18 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1997-98 season Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Tom, a pauper, and Edward, the crown prince of England, come face to face. The similarities in their looks lead them to start a fanciful adventure of trading places. Tom experiences the magnificent lifestyle of royalty, while Edward discovers the daily struggles of the poor. But the temporary switch continues and each boy finds himself trapped in a life that does not belong to them. Jake Armour Photography. “Thomas W. Olson’s stage adaptation of Mark Twain’s classic children’s story is both compelling and meaningful.” – Pulse of the Twin Cities Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 59 Prince Brat and the Whipping Boy Author: Sid Fleischman Playwright: Sid Fleischman Music: John Engerman 86 pgs. 2 female, 8 male Originally produced in SCT’s 2000-01 season Run Time: 1 hour, 20 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Sid Fleischman’s Newberry Award-winning book The Whipping Boy translates perfectly to the stage with this hilarious musical adaptation. The play traces the unlikely friendship between horrible Horace, aka “Prince Brat,” and Jemmy, the Jason Collins, Hugh Hastings, and Jeff Cummings. Photo by Chris Bennion. street urchin who’s been brought to court and put in fancy clothes to take the Prince’s punishment for him. Though Jemmy has plans for a solo escape, he’s enlisted by the Prince as a companion runaway. The two soon encounter trouble from the outlaws Cutwater and Hold-Your-Nose-Billy, and Jemmy’s wit must save them. In the spirit of Twain’s Prince and the Pauper, this winning adventure is surefire fun. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Punch and Judy, and the Three Sillies Playwright: Timothy Mason 66 pgs. 2 female, 3 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1977-78 season Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Reggie, Ruby’s suitor, comes to visit Ruby and the Crimshams at their home. While visiting, Reggie comes to the conclusion that Ruby and her family are just too silly, and he breaks off the engagement, telling them that he may rethink his decision if he ever found three people sillier than they are. So, the Crimshams hatch a plan: they convince Reggie to spend the night and then pretend to be other people, sillier than themselves. Reggie falls for it and re-engages himself with Ruby. The second half of the play is a Punch and Judy sketch. Punch has encounters with Toby the dog, a doctor, Judy, the baby, the Hangman, and Scaramuch. The play ends with everyone pulling off their masks and Reggie and Ruby getting married. “Patterned conscientiously after English folk tales, pantomime and 17 th Century puppet shows, ‘Punch and Judy and the Three Sillies’ is true to its name – relentlessly and uncompromisingly silly.” –Minnesota Daily Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 60 Puss in Boots Author: Charles Perrault Playwright: Sharon Holland 80 pgs. 7 female, 17 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1981-82 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: This classic French tale has been transported to early 19th-century New Orleans, where Puss is the sassiest, brassiest cat this side of Bourbon Street. Fitted with a grand pair of red boots and a clever nature, Puss matches wits with an arrogant young Creole aristocrat, the social-climbing mayor of New Orleans, and Croque Mitaine, an evil voodoo bogeyman, all to bring title, wealth, and love to his astonished master. Nate Peterson. “The Children’s Theatre Company version of Puss in Boots may be the sassiest theatricalization of a fairy tale ever seen on stage. Also one of the happiest.” –Minneapolis Tribune “Playwright Holland has a knack for the witty one-liner, the funny turn of logic and ironic twist.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Railway Children Playwright: Mike Kenny 66 pgs. 5 male, 6 female Originally produced by York Theatre Royal, UK, in 2008 Run Time: 90 minutes Age Recommendation: 8 + Synopsis: Bobby (Roberta), Phyllis, and Peter lead us back in time to the year they were the Railway Children. When father mysteriously is called away and the family has to move from their mansion to a small cottage in the country, the children call upon their kind hearts and vivid imaginations to entertain them while mother is busy. They make friends with Perks, the Porter at the railway, and the Old Gentleman who waves from the 9:15 train every day. These three children save the day many a time, diverting trains from disaster, taking in Russian writers, and ultimately rescuing their father from his unjust imprisonment. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. “Mike Kenny has given the story excitement and imagination, and kept it anchored in the real world. His wit has appealing irony and the twee barometer barely registers. These Railway Children are on a journey of self-discovery.” – The Stage, UK “Mike Kenny's new adaptation banishes the whiff of tea-time serializations and reveals Nesbit's book as a radical work of profound, even Shavian moral purpose.” – Guardian, UK (5 Star Review) Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 61 Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Author: Kate Wiggins Playwright: Marisha Chamberlain 45 pgs. 9 female, 4 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1993-94 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Rebecca, a bright, outspoken young girl, leaves her farmland home to live with her two elderly aunts in the town of Riverboro, Maine. On the farm, Rebecca didn’t have to worry about conventional rules placed upon a young girl growing up during the early 1900’s. However, when Rebecca moves to the city, her independent nature is tested. Once she starts exploring the town of Riverboro, tongues start wagging. Rebecca’s Aunt Miranda is unamused when she finds out that Rebecca has spoken out of turn in class, sold soap door-to-door, and ruined the gingham dress made especially for her. This original adaptation focuses on the conflict between the strong-willed personalities of Rebecca and her Aunt Miranda and Rebecca’s struggle to please her elderly aunt while trying to find her own place in the world. “It is a wonderful story, good for children, and it is well told.” –Southside Pride Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Red Badge of Courage Author: Stephen Crane Playwright: Joe Sutton 115 pgs. 1 female, 7 male Originally produced in SCT’s 2004-05 season Run Time: 1 hour, 17 minutes Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: One boy must reconcile courage, fear, and duty as he marches to the battle that will shape his life. The year is 1863 and the United States is immersed in a bloody civil war. This was a time where honor was tested and patriotism redefined. Adam Twiss, Lathrop Walker, and Shawn Telford. Photo by Chris Bennion. Young Henry Fleming joins the endless marching drudgery toward battle, but flashes of panic interrupt this hard slog. After faltering and losing his way, Henry musters up what courage he has left and, with unforeseen fierceness, leads a charge that captures the enemy’s flag, just as he recaptures his own pride and honor. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 62 Red Earth Author: Saskia Janse 25 pgs., 3 actors/puppeteers Originally produced by: Speeltheater Holland/Sisonke Arts 2006 Audience recommendation: 10+ Synopsis: Every year a stork with many stories migrates from the North to deep warm South Africa. One of these tales is the true story about Nongqawuse, a Xhosa girl. A 15-year-old girl that radically changed the history of the Xhosa people. One day, Nongqawuse comes back from the river saying the ancestors appeared to her with the prophecy that the dead will arise, the white people and unbelievers will be driven into the sea, and the From the Speeltheater Holland production. once powerful Xhosa people will be as strong as before. To make this all happen, however, they have to kill all their cattle and burn all their grain. The prophecy brings hope, for the people are tormented by colonial wars and mysterious cattle diseases. It also brings discord, manipulation, and betrayal and at the end a terrible famine. Everyone points at Nongqawuse. But was she really the one who engineered all this? Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Red Red Shoes Author: Hans Christian Andersen Playwright: Charles Way 51 pgs., Cast size is flexible; can vary from 4 to 40 actor/dancers Originally produced by Unicorn Theatre and The Place, UK, in 2001 Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: Franvera lives in a country “so very near so very far away,” and on her birthday she is given a pair of red dancing shoes. When her country collapses into war and ethnic cleansing, the shoes become both her link with her old life and also a symbol of the trauma she suffers. Red Red Shoes won the Arts Council of England’s ‘Children’s Award’ in 2004 Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 63 Reeling Playwright: Barry Kornhauser 30 pgs. 4 female, 11 male ensemble of 50-60 Keystone Kops (a minimum of 15) (Doubling is possible) Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Without a single spoken word, Reeling tells the story of the Little Fellow, based on the film persona of silent movie great Buster Keaton. His marriage proposal turned down by Beloved, the Little Fellow heads to the big city to make something of himself, and winds up in a motion picture studio where he is mistaken for the big-shot director. Comic mayhem ensues with an impossibly happy ending, as our hero and his girl escape the chaos (literally) into the silver screen. Riffing off of Keaton’s genius, Reeling is not so much a silent movie on stage as a theatrical interpretation of the genre, a celebration of the human spirit and the enduring power of art. As CTC Artistic Director Peter Brosius Dean Holt. Photo by Rob Levine. noted: “What a great thing for kids to know, that no matter what befalls you – and things will befall you – you can keep putting one foot in front of the other [even in slap shoes] and find a way to laugh. …Through persistence, through laughter, through blind faith and a wee bit of optimism, you can make it.” “The show’s roots lie in the time-transcendent soil of the pratfall and the struggle of the little guy to make good. From that fertile ground comes laughter – and wisdom – that rings loud and clear.” – St. Paul Pioneer Press Winner of the 2006 IVEY Award for Playwriting Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Reluctant Dragon Author: Kenneth Grahame Playwright: Tom Poole and Jon Cranney Music: Michael Koerner 37 pgs. 1 female, 5 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1995-96 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: This charming play tells the tale of a boy who meets a kind and funny dragon on the edge of town. The boy and the dragon become friends and start spending a lot of time together. Then the people of the town find out about the dragon and send for St. George. The boy meets with St. George and takes him to meet the dragon. All three soon become friends and find themselves in a quandary. George doesn't want to kill the dragon and the dragon has no desire to kill George. A plan is hatched and at the end of the story everyone celebrates in a happy party. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 64 Rembrandt Takes a Walk Author: Red Grooms and Mark Strand Playwright: Constance Congdon Music: Hiram Titus 28 pgs. 9 female, 13 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1988-89 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Tom is not pleased to leave his TV and snacks to visit his boring Uncle Morton. There is nothing to do in his big house except look at the art, and that is boring! When Tom goes looking for a bite to eat, the only food he can see is in the paintings, which look very real, and even taste very real. Rembrandt hops from his painting to help Tom see art through different eyes, and Tom helps Rembrandt see the excitements of modern life! David Fenley and Billy Olson. “With humor that steers young viewers towards art appreciation...Rembrandt offers eye-candy and fullmeal theater in one concentrated dose.”– City Pages, MN Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Ricky of the Tuft Author: Charles Perrault Playwright: Saskia Janse 4/5 actors/puppeteers Originally produced by: Speeltheater Holland 2007 Audience recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: One bright day in early spring, three royal children are born. Baby-prince Ricky, unfortunately, proves so ugly that everyone casting a glance inside his cradle gets a fright. But ugly though he may be, his cleverness outwits everybody. In a neighbouring realm that same day, two princesses enter into this world. Isabel, the From the Speeltheater Holland production. first princess, is so beautiful that no room is left for any brains. Her twin sister, Claudia, on the other hand possesses all the cleverness the first one misses, but totally lacks any good looks. Fortunately, as is only possible in fairytales, a good fairy brings the solution. She makes two predictions. To ugly prince Ricky she foretells that he will share his intelligence with his future beloved. Isabel receives the promise that she will share her beauty when the due time has come. And that made an end to all problems. Or…did it? Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 65 Rip Van Winkle Author: Washington Irving Playwright: Frederick Gaines 42 pgs. 3 female, 7 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1970-71 season Run Time: 70 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Rip Van Winkle is the laziest man to live in the village of Falling Waters, under the Catskill Mountains. Though he is well-loved by those in his community, especially the children, he is constantly nagged by his wife for his slothful behavior. One night after a bad spat with his wife, Rip goes out on his own. He comes across a little man carrying a barrel of schnapps. As they arrive at the top of the mountain, more and more little men join them. It’s the ghostly Gerald Drake. Photo by Gianetti Studios. crew of Henry Hudson who plays ninepins with lightning bolt balls. The schnapps sends Rip to sleep for twenty years. When he finally awakens, everything in his town has changed. His son and daughter have grown, and his wife has died. However, Rip is able to keep his promise to his daughter, “though I go ten thousand miles, I will come back to you.” “The script by Fred Gaines…moves along nicely and gives each character strong, lively speeches, keeping a friendly rustic tone.” – Minneapolis Star Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Robin Hood Playwright: Thomas Poole Music: Michael Koerner 48 pgs. 2 female, 20 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1988-89 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The play opens with Robin Hood, the cherished outlaw, being held in custody by the ruthless Sheriff of Nottingham. Robin is about to be hanged and King Richard’s traveling judges insist on presiding with the trial, even though it happens to be May Day, with all the traditional festivities about to begin. The Judge then asks the townspeople (who see Robin as a hero) to reenact Robin’s exploits. The townspeople will stop at nothing to help Robin Hood, and with their reenactments the Judge finds out who is the real hero of this classic tale. “In the midst of these delights, what stands out most strongly is Poole’s lively, intelligent script. The result is a highly satisfying version of the tale of the outlaw and his merry men who robbed from the rich and gave to the poor.”– St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 66 Romeo and Juliet Playwright: William Shakespeare Editor: Greg Banks 46 pgs., 2 female, 11 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2008-09 season Run Time: 1 hour, 32 minutes Audience Recommendation: 13+ Synopsis: Shakespeare's immortal story of young love and rebellion comes to visceral, thrilling life in this brilliant new version by Greg Banks. Take to the streets as Romeo and Juliet's new found love ignites the passion and rage of all Verona. There you will be swept away by sword fights, mystified at a masquerade ball, and witness to fiery lover's trysts. “Romeo has just drunk his draught of poison and is bending down to give one last Lindsey Hartley and Matt Rein. Photo by Rob Levine. kiss to the not-really-dead Juliet. As their lips meet, Juliet revives and ardently returns her lover’s kiss…just before he dies in her arms. That familiar scene is always laced with bitter irony. But in CTC’s gripping and urgent staging of Romeo & Juliet it just about stops the audience’s heart along with Romeo’s.” -St. Paul Pioneer Press “With [Banks’] muscular and rollicking Romeo & Juliet, he has opened wide the soul of the Bard’s tragedy, and touched our own.” –Star Tribune Winner of the 2009 IVEY Award for Direction Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Romeo and Juliet Playwright: William Shakespeare Editor: Rita Giomi 58 pgs. 3 female, 17 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 1995-96 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: This classic tale of love and death is both lively and accessible to young audiences. Romeo Montague and pals sneak into a ball given by the rival Capulet family, and there he first glimpses the beautiful Juliet. Later, beneath her balcony, he declares his love, which she embraces fully. Then, a series of tragic events: Romeo’s kin, Mercutio, Amy Thone, Eric Salamon, and Sarah Getzoff. Photo by Chris Bennion. dies in a duel with Juliet’s cousin; Romeo kills in rash vengeance; Romeo and Juliet plan to marry in secret; Juliet fakes her death; Romeo does not get the message and kills himself; and then Juliet follows suit. This edited version deals with issues that have transcended time, such as youthful passion, parental disapproval, gang violence, and teen suicide. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 67 Rumpelstiltskin Author: Grimm Brothers Playwright: Mike Kenny 56 pgs. Cast of 6 doubled Originally produced by Theatre Powys, UK, in 1993 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: The Miller is overprotective of his young daughter and refuses to let her help with any work; despite her rare beauty, she is helpless when it comes to the mundane chores of everyday life. In an attempt to defend his daughter’s uselessness, he makes the mistake of falsely proclaiming that his daughter can spin straw into gold. Meanwhile, the Kingdom is in a predicament when the King suddenly dies leaving the young price to inherit the throne. As the years progress, the wealth of the kingdom is squandered on frivolous expenses, and the young prince quickly turned king, finds himself at odds with Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. his subjects. All that remains in the treasure rooms of the palace are piles upon piles of straw. The King, in dire need of wealth, seeks the assistance of the Miller’s daughter. He believes her to be capable of returning him to his affluent state by turning his piles of straw into gold. The story concludes with the characters facing lifealtering decisions, broken promises and an array of mysterious events. “Mike Kenny’s adaptation of the age-old story invokes the humor and the darkness of the original, engaging both children and adults alike.” – The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Search for Odysseus Playwright: Charles Way 79 pgs. 3 female, 3 male (14 characters doubled) Originally produced by Wales Stage Company, UK, in 1993 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: The Search for Odysseus tells the story of the Odyssey, from the point of view of Telemachus, the son of Odysseus. After the Trojan War, Odysseus does not return with the other soldiers, and Telemachus sets out to find him, and in so doing, embarks on a voyage of self discovery. From the Wales Stage Company production. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 68 The Secret Garden Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett Playwright: Thomas Olson 54 pgs. 4 female, 6 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1988-89 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: A dark spell of sorrow and mystery hovers in the air as the young orphan, Mary Lennox, arrives at Misselthwaite Manor, the Yorkshire estate of her uncle Archibald Craven. The desolation of the surrounding moors, the puzzling reticence of the servants, and the grim demeanor of her uncle provide a less than warm welcome for the spoiled, friendless child. Left to her own devices, Mary takes to exploring the grounds and comes upon a walled garden, locked for over ten years. One day, a friendly robin helps Mary discover the key. Once inside, she finds what must have been the most beautiful garden in all of England. Now, though, weeds grow where roses once bloomed. Mary decides that this place will be her secret refuge and she begins to tend the garden alone. Inside the manor, another secret lurks. At night, strange, haunting sounds echo down the empty corridors – is it the wind howling or a child crying? This mystery is so deep that is will take all Mary’s determination and courage to solve it. “Thomas Olson’s adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett’s familiar post-Victorian novel is a respectful one that effectively makes the point that love can erase the darkest experiences and memories .” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Sherlock Holmes and the Baker Street Irregulars Author: Arthur Conan Doyle Playwright: Thomas Olson 75 pgs. 7 female, 14 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1988-89 season Run Time: 1 hour, 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Out in the damp London streets at the river wharf, and in his comfortable apartment at 221B Baker Street, Sherlock Holmes is at work on a puzzling new case. In addition to his faithful friend Watson, Holmes has enlisted the cooperation of some ragged street urchins, known as the “Baker Street Irregulars.” Together they investigate the appearance in London of a derelict cargo ship and the poisonous giant rat of Sumatra, a royal kidnapping, the eruption of Krakatoa, and a pair of lethal pygmies. “Sherlock Holmes and the Baker Street Irregulars is a rich mélange of familiar Holmesiana and unlikely historical coincidences bound together in a slowly accelerating mystery of labyrinthine dimension.” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 69 Sinbad: The Untold Tale Playwright: Charles Way 60 pgs. 2 female, 4 male Originally produced by Theatre By the Lake, UK, in 2006 Run Time: 2 hours, 30 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Ancient Baghdad is a city full of life, color, and danger. Sinbad the porter, a young man who survives on his wits and not much else, is given a box to carry to the house of the famous Sinbad the sailor, who is now an old man. On arrival, the porter meets Ittifaq, Sinbad’s quarrelsome daughter, and their differences soon become apparent. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. Just as the porter is about to leave, the house is visited by the ancient Sorceress Jan Shah. Jan Shah places a deadly cloud over the city that threatens to kill all its inhabitants. The antidote is in a flower, in a cave deep beneath the sea, and Jan Shah challenges the old sailor Sinbad to go on one last adventure and save the city he loves. Sinbad the sailor knows he cannot do this and thus the task falls to the two youngsters. Their journey is daring, hazardous and involves a magic boat, a silent but deadly genie, and, most dangerous of all, a confrontation with Jan Shah, who wants nothing less than the blood of Ittifaq in order to become young again—and perhaps live forever. “This variation on the stories of Sinbad the Sailor is an original work by Charles Way...and set to become a firm seasonal favorite everywhere.” – The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Sink or Swim Playwright: Mike Kenny 34 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced at Quicksilver Theatre Company, UK, in 1994 Run Time: 90 minutes Age Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: In this witty, modern spin on the story of Noah’s Ark, a family bickers and banters as they try to cope with life on their boat. Along with their mute daughter, who remembers those left behind, and a huge assortment of animals, they ponder life before and after the unending rain. Will people live in harmony? Will there be an end to cruelty? Giant images of animals, birds and paradise are painted live throughout the show and fill the stage with a riot of color. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. "Sink or Swim delves beneath the symbolism of the story of Noah and his ark to explore the humanity of the lone survivors of the flood... A fine, innovative piece of theatre for children and their families." -Time Out UK Time Out ‘Best Children's Show’ 1994 Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 70 Sleeping Beauty (Musical) Playwright: Charles Way Music and Additional Lyrics: Chad Henry 84 pgs. 8 female, 4 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in SCT’s 2005-06 season Run Time: 1 hour, 35 minutes Audience Recommendation: 5+ Synopsis: This musical retelling of Sleeping Beauty maintains the classic fairy tale but tells it with a modern touch of humor and style—our princess has spirit and a will of her own. Once upon a time, a long, long time ago, two magical sisters watched over a land, Khanh Doan. Photo by Chris Bennion. a land so very far away. The sisters, Branwen and Modron, vied for the life of an innocent child found in the woods, Briar Rose. As a kindness, Branwen gave the baby to the King and Queen. However, Modron vowed that if she couldn’t have the girl no one could. Before night’s end on her sixteenth birthday, Briar Rose will be doomed to prick her finger on a spinning wheel’s spindle and fall to her death. Branwen was able to grant the family a reprieve; instead of death, Briar Rose would merely fall into a hundred-year sleep, with only the touch of true love’s kiss able to break the spell. Knowing that much can happen in sixteen years, Branwen sent the child a companion, Gryff, a creature half man and half dragon. Despite Gryff’s diligence, Briar Rose fell prey to the hex, and only her friend, the hapless Prince Owain, could save her. Filled with trepidation, Owain embarked on the quest to conquer the Spider King and enchanted fairies. But does he have the courage to vanquish Modron herself? “If you’re looking for children’s holiday entertainment with depth, the ancient art form of the fairy tale fills the bill.” –Seattle Post Intelligencer Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Sleeping Beauty (Non-Musical) Playwright: Charles Way 74 pgs. 8 female, 5 male (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2005-06 season Run Time: 1 hour, 39 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Here comes a bolder, funnier version of one of your favorite tales. Meet one of the more independent, headstrong, in-your-face princesses, Briar Rose (a.k.a. Sleeping Beauty). And Gryff, who’s half-dragon and total smart aleck. There’s Branwen, the really nice witch who tries to out-spell the evil Modron. And, of course, Prince Owain, who comes with the standard princely features, minus bravery, talent, and competence. In between the story you know is a deliciously funny and amazing adventure, replete with troublesome fairy folk and a riddle-challenging Spider King. Dean Holt and Sonja Parks. Photo by Rob Levine. “This is no Disney-fied romp. It’s the real deal. The witch is evil. The princess is angry…This show is the real McCoy – and really good.” –People Newspapers, Texas Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 71 Snapshot Silhouette Playwright: Kia Corthron 106 pgs. 7 female, 3 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 2003-04 season Run Time: 2 hours with intermission Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Najma, a Somali girl of 12, reads from her notebook memories of her home: people praying, the droughts, famine, and political upheaval that led so many to flee her country. As she recounts the story of her journey to Minneapolis, other students, particularly Tay C, a 12-year-old American girl with whom Najma lives, complain. Tay C is angry and grieving for the Amanda Granger, Sonja Parks , and Marie-Francoise. Photo by Rob Levine. loss of her sister, who was killed two years ago in gang crossfire. After school, Najma follows Tay C to the cemetery. All the buried dead there bring up memories of the unburied casualties of war in Somalia, and the deaths Najma has witnessed. Najma is waiting for her mother, her Hooyo, to come to America, but that becomes less likely as the political climate causes changes that make it difficult to get money to her in Somalia. The tension grows between Tay C and Najma until they even have a fist fight in their room. They harass each other constantly in every way they can find. When Najma's cousin and brother come to get Najma it brings Tay C and her mother closer, and at last, we get a glimpse of the two girls, each in new schools, but having reached an understanding - and beginning to discover a friendship. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Snow Queen Author: Hans Christian Andersen Playwright: Mike Kenny 35 pgs. 3 female, 2 male Originally produced by Graffiti Theatre Company, UK, 2005 Run Time: 1 hour, 17 minutes Audience Recommendation: 4+ Synopsis: An evil magician creates a mirror with the magic power of taking anything good and shrinking it to next to nothing. Beautiful landscapes look like deserted car parks. Nice people become nasty. Gerda finds the mirror and accidentally drops it, shattering it into a million pieces. Each little piece of the mirror holds the same power as the full magic mirror. Unfortunately, Gerda’s best friend, Kai, gets a piece of the mirror stuck in his eye and in his ear, and becomes cruel. When Kai meets the Snow Queen he is in awe. She kisses him, and they disappear into the sky together. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. Gerda then sets out to find and rescue her dear friend. Along the way, she encounters many interesting folks whose help she enlists to find Kai. With her tears, she releases the evil shards of mirror from him. The Snow Queen is then gone forever. This is Hans Christian Andersen at his mythical best. “Guaranteed to leave you feeling deliriously festive.” -Yorkshire Evening Post, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 72 The Snow Queen Author: Hans Christian Andersen Playwright: Charles Way 65 pgs. 3 female, 5 male Originally produced at Sherman Cymru, UK, in 2009 Run Time: 1 hour, 35 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The Snow Queen rules her magical kingdom with a heart of ice and a grip as cold as steel. When shards of an enchanted mirror fly into Cei's eye he falls under its spell. He becomes cold-hearted and the Snow Queen steals him away to her far-away land. With Cei as her helper, The Snow Queen has a chilling plan: to freeze the hearts of all living things and rule supreme over a world of snow and ice. Only little Gerda, Cei's childhood friend, believes he can still be rescued and sets out on a life-changing journey to save Cei and defeat the Snow Queen. Anna Mountford. Photo by Toby Farrow. “What distinguishes this show from much Christmas fare is that is never patronizes its young audience, or takes the obvious route when a more imaginative one is available. Way’s writing has a lightness about it that works delightfully. This is a magical story, very well told.” –The Guardian, UK “Funny, sometimes frightening and hugely entertaining. The Snow Queen is wonderful family entertainment for the festive season.” –South Wales Argus Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Song from the Sea Playwright: Mike Kenny 19 pgs., 3 female, 1 male Originally produced by Visible Fictions, UK, 2001 Run Time: 70 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: A spellbinding blend of puppetry, music and visual storytelling, this is the story of Josh, a little boy who lives in a noisy house with a busy family. One day, through the household din, he hears a faint yet beautiful sound calling out to him. So begins Josh's incredible aquatic adventure with his Gran. The story behind the song reveals a wonderful and moving tale full of hope. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. “A mesmerizing new show for children..the story is magical and absorbing.” -The Scotsman “Absolutely spellbinding.” –The Herald, UK “A stand-out family theatre experience.” -The Los Angeles Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 73 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice Playwright: OyamO Music: Carman Moore 63 pgs. 3 female, 10 male Doubling is possible. Original production done with 6-7 actors Originally produced in SCT’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 1 hour, 15 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Young, hungry, and on his own, Charles finds himself in a mystical wood with talking plants and animals—the prickly Jeremy Groundhog, Southern belle Ms. Orange Tree, the grounded Mr. Juniper Bush and more. Catching a glimpse of Marguerite, the queen of the forest, he is astounded as she makes everyday objects sail through the air, work in the garden, and seem to come alive. He has never seen a sorcerer before! Charles eagerly seeks to become her apprentice, but his arrogance, disrespect, and gullibility have him Khanh Doan, Leslie Law, Mo Brady, and Peter A. Jacobs. Photo by Chris Bennion. quickly run through the three chances that Marguerite granted him. After the third incident, the sorcerer’s trust in Charles is gone. In his desperation, he turns to Big John King, a flimflam artist, to convince Marguerite to take him back. Now things look bleak for Marguerite, but Charles comes to his mentor’s aid, fending off John’s giant and sinister minions in a spectacular battle. For his loyalty and bravery, Marguerite gives him another chance. He has finally learned to listen to others and is truly ready to be the sorcerer’s apprentice. “Judging by the amount of children’s laughter at Seattle Children’s Theatre, The Sorcerer’s Apprentice…is a definite crowd pleaser.” –TheaterMania.com Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. A Special Trade Author: Sally Wittman Playwright: Christer Dahl 22 pgs. 2 female, 1 male Originally produced in CTC’s 2007-08 season Run Time: 45 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Bartholomew and Nelly are not just neighbors, they're best friends. Every day, Bartholomew pushes Nelly in her stroller around the neighborhood. They especially like getting sprayed by Mrs. Pringle's sprinkler and going over Mr. Oliver's bumpity-bump-bump driveway. And when Nelly grows up and Bartholomew grows old, their joy in being together continues, no matter what. For this story of two people, from two generations, shows better than most, what it truly means to be friends forever. Leif Jurgensen. Photo by Michael Anderson. “[A Special Trade] is a winsome and lovely bit of storytelling, a gentle and empowering tale about friendship, and a theatrical experience as satisfying for its intended audience of preschoolers as it is for the grown-ups who bring them.” –St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 74 A Spell of Cold Weather Playwright: Charles Way 49 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced by Royal Exchange Theatre, UK, in 2003 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: The play is set on a farm, which is the home of two down-in-the-mouth farmers, Betty and Bob. They have lost touch with each other, their animals, and their own culture. In the time between Christmas and New Year, Betty and Bob get a surprise. Their little niece Holly needs to come and stay because her Mum is having an operation. When Holly arrives she feels very alone in a strange world with no friends. Things pick up, however, when she meets Tomos Trickman, a Puck-like fairy who explains to Holly how the two farmers have forgotten how to sing, dance, and play games. Worst of all they refuse to believe he exists and have stopped putting food out for him in the traditional manner. Together Holly and Tomos bring the farm back to spiritual health, and the play ends with an unforgettable, magical, New Year’s night party. Winner the Writer’s Guild Award for Best Children’s Play 2003 Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote Starry Messenger Playwright: Kari Margolis 65 pgs. 4 female, 14 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1999-00 season Run Time: 1 hour, 40 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The story begins with Galileo as a young boy, inspired and awed by the heavens, and it follows his incredible and visionary life to old age. Starry Messenger uses historical fact as a stepping stone to imagination, creating a fable that allows us to actually enter the mind of one of the world’s greatest scientists and give audiences unique access to the curious man who challenged society to view the world and the heavens in new ways. Jon Richardson. Photo by Giannetti Studios. “Starry Messenger…is a sumptuous celebration of light, media and movement. Kari Margolis’ script jangles with just enough rhyme to keep the audience listening hard.” – St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 75 Stellaluna Author: Janell Cannon Playwright: Saskia Janse Music: Guus Ponsioen 29 pgs. 5 Actors/Puppeteers Originally produced in SCT’s 1997-98 season Run Time: 42 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Baby bat Stellaluna's life is flitting along right on schedule until an owl attacks her mother one night, knocking the bewildered batlet out of her mother's loving grasp. The tiny bat is lucky enough to land in a nest of baby birds, but her whole world has just turned Lisa Estridge, Vickielee Wohlbach, Rich Gray, and David Silverman. Photo by Chris Bennion. upside down. Literally. Stellaluna's adoptive bird mom accepts her into her nest, but only on the condition that Stellaluna will act like a bird, not a bat. Soon Stellaluna has learned to behave like a good bird should - she quits hanging by her feet and starts eating bugs. But when she finally has an opportunity to show her bird siblings what life as a bat is like, all of them are confounded. Anyone who has ever been asked to be someone they're not will understand the conflict - and possibilities - Stellaluna faces. “[Stellaluna] even, if one dares say it, improves on the book, adding wit, humor and hummable tunes to this fable about being different yet fitting in.” – Seattle Times Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Stellaluna requires separate underlying rights from the Dijkstra Agency. Stepping on Cracks Playwright: Mike Kenny 20 pgs., 1 female, 1 male (and one Bear, played by either) Originally produced by West Yorkshire Playhouse, UK, in 2000 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: “Don’t step on the cracks or the Bears will get you”... This is the story of Billy and Bear. Billy's feeling bothered but does anyone care? His day has gone wonky, it's not looking good. And what's in the cave in the deep, dark wood? What does a little boy do when he's not listened to? He turns to the bears for help. Reality and fantasy blend with music, humor, and color in this delightful tale with which young audiences will identify. Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 76 Stepping Stones Playwright: Mike Kenny Music: Sam Paechter 31 pgs. 2 female, 2 male Originally produced at Interplay, UK, in 1996 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Stepping Stones is a play for young people with learning Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. disabilities and their families and friends. This story goes from high noon hilltop heat haze to a snow-bound moonlit beach. Cynth, a young woman on a journey of change, is determined to find the fallen star for her Mam. Mam doesn’t want Cynth to go, but Mam decides that she will help Cynth and secretly follows her on her journey. Both Cynth and her Mam encounter interesting characters on their journey, and find the home stone, the stepping stone, and the star stone. In the end, they learn that everything must grow and change. Winner of the ‘Best Children’s Play’ by the Writer’s Guild of Great Britain in 1997 Winner of the Arts Council of England Children’s Award in 2000 “…wildly funny and often moving as it works through a series of strongly charged theatrical images.” -Times Educational Supplement Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Story of Babar, the Little Elephant Author: Jean de Brunhoff Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Steven Rydberg 24 pgs. 12 female, 12 male (original production had a cast of 24, which included ensemble and doubling) Originally produced in CTC’s 1980-81 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Orphaned as a young elephant, Babar flees the forest and runs all the way to the city of Paris, where he is taken in by the generous Old Lady who teaches him the ways of the fashionable Parisians, buying him clothing, teaching him French, and indulging in the finest pastries and a shiny red car! The excitement evolves when his friends from the forest, Cousin Arthur and the lovely Celeste, come to the city to find him, and they all get to experience the differing cultures of city and forest life! Tony Gorzycki as Babar. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 77 Stuck Playwright: Mike Kenny 31 pgs. 1 female, 2 male Originally produced by Blah, Blah, Blah, UK, in 1995 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Eng and Chang were the Original Siamese Twins. Although they were met by fear and outrage at their birth, they grew to be accepted by the people of their village. When they met Robert Hunter, an American businessman, and joined a freak show, their adventure really began. Being surgically detached may kill them, but being stuck might drive them mad. Illustrated by Kyle Schuler. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Tale of a West Texas Marsupial Girl Playwright: Lisa D’Amour Music: Sxip Shirey 87 pgs. 15 female, 13 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 2006-07 season Run Time: 1 hour, 28 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: One day, somewhere in West Texas, a girl is born. She’s got beautiful toes, a beautiful nose, all her tiny fingers and all her tiny toes, but, holy puppy on a peach tree, she is something else! Something a bit like a kangaroo!! This girl is about 95% girl and about 5% marsupial. In other words, she’s got a pouch. It might seem that Ann Reichert and ensemble. Photo by Sarah Johnson. a built-in pocket would come in handy, but it doesn’t always work that way. The day the Marsupial Girl (MG) is born the town isn’t ready to accept this kind of different. MG does have a marvelous relationship with one precious friend, Sue, who knows some of the secrets of the wonderful pouch, but when Marsupial Girl goes to school their friendship falls on hard times. You see, MG can do things – like steal the voice right out of somebody’s throat, and put in her pouch. At first, she only steals meanness, but when everybody expects the worst of her, she stops trying to be her best, and soon she starts stealing whatever she can. She steals insults, questions, bubble gum, a Barbie doll, cigarettes, and ribbons right out of a girl’s hair. She keeps stealing until there’s nothing left but her and her – big – huge – pouch. Now she’s really lonesome. But Sue comes back. Together they put the world back in order, and in the process help other people understand that MG’s just plain different. And that’s a wonderful thing. “D’Amour is a complex, engaging writer known for her experimental works. Marsupial Girl…is her foray into the world of children’s theater. Its plot, about differences large and small, resonates.” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 78 Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing Author: Judy Blume Playwright: Bruce Mason 87 pgs. 10-12 actors Originally produced in SCT’s 1986-87 season Run Time: 1 hour, 8 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: Oh brother! Sibling mischief and best pal escapades are the problems Peter Hatcher faces in his attempts to deal with his impossible little brother, Fudge. Based on the popular title by perennial favorite Judy Blume, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing is a humorous look at family life and the troubles that can only be caused by a younger sibling. Daniel Midler and Andy Paterson. “One of the reasons we like this show so much is it allows kids who have siblings to recognize certain feelings they might be having…and realize it’s OK to have them.” –Kate Hanely, Tour Director of Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing at the Kennedy Center Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. One Act version also available. The Three Musketeers Author: Alexandre Dumas Playwright: Frederick Gaines 89 pgs. 5 female, 16 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1980-81 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: A corrupt cardinal seeks to disrupt the throne. He hires people to kill the musketeers and to steal the queen’s diamonds. The musketeers thwart him and gain justice for all. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 79 The Tinderbox Playwright: Charles Way 61 pgs. 2 female, 7 male (15 characters doubled) Originally produced by Gardner Arts Centre, UK, in 2005 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: The Tinderbox is an epic journey, from rags to riches, through war, political intrigue, the depths of despair to the heights of love and passion. It is a classic everyman tale inspired by the Hans Andersen story. Jonas, a handsome young soldier, discovers treasure beyond his wildest dreams when he finds a tinderbox which gives him power beyond other mortals. Jonas’ adventures explore friendship, betrayal and the importance of ”staying true” to one’s values. Exciting and touching, the story includes a fantastical range of characters—a witch, a king, a beautiful opera singer and a dog with eyes as big as saucers. “This is truly magical entertainment, a beautifully crafted show.” - The Stage Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Treasure Island Author: Robert Louis Stevenson Playwright: Frederick Gaines 72 pgs. 1 female, 9 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1970-71 season Audience Recommendation: 8+ Synopsis: An old and menacing sea captain, Billy Bones, tells Young Jim Hawkins to keep an eye out for a man with one leg who’s looking for the treasure map of Captain John Flint. When that man Illustrated by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson. finally appears, Bones entrusts the map to Jim’s safekeeping before collapsing. Jim shows the map to Dr. Livesey and Squire Trelawney, and they excitedly decide to put together a crew to collect Captain Flint’s haul from Skeleton Island. Pirates being pirates, the untrustworthy crew begin to plot a mutiny. Lucky for Jim, he and John Silver have begun to forge an unlikely friendship. When the crew lands on Skeleton Island, Jim runs into Ben Gunn, a crazy rhyming pirate from Captain Flint’s original crew, who has been marooned for three years. Meanwhile, having managed to return to the boat, Jim is forced to do things he never thought himself capable of. Luckily, the pirates’ greed and the help of Silver lead Jim to safety, and the treasure. In the end, Jim learns what it really means to live a pirate’s life. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 80 Treasure Island Author: Robert Louis Stevenson Playwright: Timothy Mason 80 pgs. 1 female, 23 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1975-76 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: The death of an old pirate lands a young boy in the middle of an adventure. The boy follows a group of pirates in search of treasure, never imagining that the young boy will be the one to save all of their lives! Vincent Kartheiser and Gerald Drake. Photo by Giannetti Studios. “What a wonderful tale this is. From the Admiral Benbow Inn…we have a cast of characters and a story that tickles the adventure fantasies in all of us.” – Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Tremendously Tall Tales Playwright: Patty Lynch Music: Victor Zupanc 65 pgs. 5 Actors Originally produced in CTC’s 1998-99 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Tremendously Tall Tales is a collection of four beloved American folk tales: Paul Bunyan the Lumberjack, Mike Fink the River Roarer, John Henry the Railroad Man, and Johnny Appleseed the Planter of Orchards. The frame of Tales is a story of a rag tag theater troupe crisscrossing the Midwest at the beginning of the century, called Eddie B. Brown’s All-Star Yokels. Tales is full of pratfalls, sight gags, and hat-tricks in the hilarious physical style of vaudeville. Douglas Neithercott, William Phillipp, and David Barrow. Photo by Steve Wewerka. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 81 Trouble Playwright: Mike Kenny 26 pgs. 1 female, 1 male Originally produced by West Yorkshire Playhouse, UK, in 2006 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Trouble, a toddler, and his Mum spend a lot of time in the kitchen together. He has a vivid imagination, and when Mum suggests going shopping, Trouble’s imagination takes flight. This tale uses music and puppets to celebrate children’s play, and much of the story is told through non-verbal communication. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Illustrated by Will Hayes. The Troubles: Children of Belfast Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Alan Shorter 57 pgs. 15 female, 16 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1987-88 season Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: This original production is based on the real-life struggle in Northern Ireland, and deals with the issue of civil rights. In the Protestant and Catholic ghettos of Belfast, men, women, and children awaken from their night’s sleep with the acceptance that they will live (or die) today…they will feel hate, sorrow, and confusion …for there is no true peace in Northern Ireland. The play paints a powerful portrait of children in conflict. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 82 Ukrainian Tales Playwright: Timothy Mason 39 pgs. 2 female, 2 male (14 characters doubled) Originally produced in CTC’s 1974-75 season Run Time: 55 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: The Bandurist, a central figure in Ukrainian folk culture, entertains, informs, and inspires people of his village. First, he tells a story of Pan Kotsky, a very fat cat. One day, his owner abandoned Pan Kotsky in the forest because he did not do any work. The fox decided that she would like to marry Pan Kotsky, so she does. The other animals in the forest are curious who this cat is, so one day they decide to hold a meal for the fox and him to attend. The fox tells the other animals that they must hide because Pan Kotsky is so ferocious. However, Pan Kotsky sees the boar’s tail and thinks it is a mouse, so he pounces on it. All the other animals think he is attacking, and they run away in fear. From then on, Pan Kotsky has the reputation of being the fiercest animal in all of Ukraine. Then the Bandurist tells the tale of The Chatterbox. This is a story of a man that has something to hide, with a wife that can’t keep a secret. The end result is funny tale that has many tongue-in-cheek moments. “Ukrainian Tales is original and consistently enjoyable.” –The Minneapolis Star Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Velveteen Rabbit Author: Margery Williams Playwright: Thomas Olson 37 pgs. 4 female, 3 male +ensemble Originally produced in CTC’s 1988-89 season Run Time: 70 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: A boy adores the stuffed rabbit he received as a Christmas gift. When the boy becomes sick, the rabbit gives him love and makes the boy well. In return for his good deed, a fairy grants the Velveteen Rabbit life. “[The Velveteen Rabbit] is a sweet but seldom sugary tale of the transforming power of love.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 83 The Velveteen Rabbit Author: Margery Williams Playwright: Saskia Janse 27 pgs. 2 actors/puppeteers Originally produced by: Speeltheater Holland 1990 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience recommendation: 5 + Synopsis: Jamie receives a Velveteen Rabbit for Christmas. As one of his many toys the Rabbit is thrown into the full toy cupboard. The Velveteen Rabbit is snubbed by other more expensive or mechanical toys; the latter of which fancy From the Speeltheatre Holland production. themselves real. From the Skin Horse, the Rabbit learns that real is not how you are made; rather, a toy becomes real if its owner really and truly loves it. When Jamie's china dog is misplaced, the Velveteen Rabbit takes the place as Jamie's constant companion. Even though the Rabbit becomes shabby, Jamie loves him no matter what. Jamie falls ill with scarlet fever and becomes too ill to play for a very long time. Upon his recovery, he is sent to the seaside on doctor's orders. Jamie wishes to take the Rabbit with him, but his doctor forbids him to take the germ-laden toy. Not only can he not take the Rabbit, but the doctor says it must be burned along with all the nursery toys in order to disinfect the nursery. While awaiting the bonfire, in which the Velveteen Rabbit will be burned, the Rabbit cries a real tear. This tear brings forth the Nursery Magic Fairy. The Rabbit thinks he was real before, but the fairy tells him he was only real to Jamie. She flies him to the woods, where he realizes that he is a real rabbit at last and runs to join the other rabbits in the wild. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Visiting Grandad Playwright: Mike Kenny 22 pgs. 2 male Originally produced by West Yorkshire Playhouse, UK, in 2001 Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Little Jack was sent to Grandad Jack’s house while his Mum went to work. Little Jack was certainly grumpy, ‘cause at Grandad’s house there’s nothing to do – or so he thought. When Grandad Jack reveals he is a pirate, he and Little Jack decide to find where Wildman Jacko hid Grandad’s watch, and the adventure begins! Little Jack realizes “inside I’m a pirate not just a boy, just like my Grandad Jack.” “...a tale with charm, humor, and real feeling.” – The Stage, UK Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 84 Walking the Tightrope Playwright: Mike Kenny 28 pgs. 1 female, 1 male Originally produced by New Perspectives, UK, in 2000 Run Time: 75 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: “Every year right at the end of summer just before the leaves turn brown and fall from the trees, Esme comes to stay with her Nanna and Grandad…” But this year something is different; Nanna Queenie is gone. Though Grandad and Esme do the fun activities they usually do, things aren’t the same without Nanna Queenie. Grandad can’t bring himself to say that Nanna has died, so he explains that Nanna has joined the circus. “She looked like an ordinary woman, but inside beat the heart of a tightrope walker.” Wayne Robson and Sharmila Dey. Photo by John Launer. “The story is a clever blend of the familiar reality of family love and the fantasy that many kids have had of running off to join the circus.” –Now Magazine “Walking the Tightrope is ambitious children’s theatre…The play walks its own tightrope between being lighthearted and energetic enough to keep the kids interested, and giving its subject matter the emotional weight it requires.” –Eye Weekly Winner of the 2009 Dora Mavor Moore Award for Theatre Direct’s Outstanding Production and Outstanding Performance in Theatre for Young Audiences Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Whiter Than Snow Playwright: Mike Kenny 65 pgs. 3 female, 3 male Run Time: 1 hour, 20 minutes Originally produced by Birmingham Repertory, UK, in 2006 Audience Recommendation: 7+ Synopsis: Meet Frieda and the Frantz family, the world-famous travelling performers of the best Snow White story you’ll ever see. But there’s a problem, Snow White has run off with the Prince! Just when it looks like the final curtain’s about to fall, the perfect leading lady turns up hiding amongst the mothballs. The show will go on, however, perfection is not always what it seems…This witty, insightful re-telling of the Snow White story takes you on a journey through dangerous and shifting landscapes, daring you to go beyond the fairytale. “Witty and hugely entertaining…exceptional, thought-provoking theatre with universal appeal.” -The Herald, Scotland Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $75 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 85 The Wind in the Willows Author: Kenneth Grahame Playwright: Thomas Olson Music: Roberta Carlson 106 pgs. 5 female, 15 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1994-95 season Run Time: 1 hour, 40 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Mr. Mole had no idea when he scurried out of his cozy underground home on a bright spring day, what marvelous adventures and good friends the day would bring. Inspired by the new season, the Mole is determined to leave his reclusive life behind and explore the world above ground. Mole’s explorations lead him to discover the River Bank, Wild Wood, Toad Hall, and even catch a glimpse of the Wide World. More importantly, he finds new friends: the dependable Water Rat, wise Old Badger, and the notorious Mr. Toad. David Fenly and John Middleton. Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Author: L. Frank Baum Playwright: Thomas W. Olson Music: Victor Zupanc 84 pgs. 14 female, 14 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Originally produced in CTC’s 1992-93 season Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Follow Dorothy and her loyal companions – a scarecrow stuffed with straw, a tin woodsman, a cowardly lion and many others – on their adventures through Oz, the Emerald City and beyond. “Thomas W. Olson gives [The Wonderful Wizard of Oz] a turn-of-the-century Americana slant, putting it into a time of fierce patriotism and exploration of the Wild West. …This Oz never descends into the land of Nod and instead is an invigorating take on a time-worn classic.” Illustrated by Mark Chikinelli. -St. Paul Pioneer Press Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $85 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 86 Wondrous Tales of Old Japan Playwright: David Furumoto 33 pgs. 2 female, 3 male (29 characters total, doubled) Originally produced in CTC’s 1998-99 season Run Time: 90 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: Wondrous Tales of Old Japan is a collection of amazing Japanese folk tales including worlds where ogres clash with heroes who are born from giant peaches, fishermen fall in love with dragon princesses, and magical dogs reincarnate. The tales include Momotaro, The Peach Boy; Urashimataro, The Enchanted Fisherman; Yuki Onna, The Snow Woman, and Hanasaka Jiji, The Old Man That Made the Trees Bloom. “…Wondrous Tales of Old Japan takes audiences to a place of shared imagination both exotic and familiar. The stories are funny, tender and amazing.” –Aberdeen American News Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Young Jane Eyre Author: Charlotte Bronte Playwright: Marisha Chamberlain 111 pgs. 31 female, 4 male Originally produced in CTC’s 1987-88 season Run Time: 2 hours Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Though an orphan, Jane Eyre is a spirited girl who loves learning and is determined to make her way in the world. At the age of 10, she finds herself sent away from her uncaring aunt’s home and thrust into the strange and harsh world of Lowood School. There, Jane is confronted with meager living conditions: little food, somber clothing, and strict rules. At first, she only finds joy in school books, but then she comes to know a kind teacher, Miss Temple, and a gentle classmate, Helen. It is through these companions that young Jane Eyre’s life is enriched. Many joys are discovered in her friendships. But above all, Jane learns to cherish life and look without fear towards her future. Raina Brody, Randy Latimer, and Pamela Orem. Photo by Giannetti Studios. “Marisha Chamberlain’s script remains close enough to the novel to retain the story’s captivating strength, but the play isn’t so wordy that it might lose a ten-year-old’s attention.” – Minnesota Daily Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 87 Zagazoo Author: Quentin Blake Playwright: Mike Kenny 22 pgs. 1 female, 2 male Originally produced by Nottingham Playhouse, UK, in 2003 Run Time: 60 minutes Audience Recommendation: All Ages Synopsis: One day, a package arrives for George and Bella. Opening it, the seemingly clueless duo discovers a little pink creature named Zagazoo. The couple is thrilled and spends happy days throwing Zagazoo from one to the other. Then, one day the parents awaken to find that Zagazoo has morphed into a screeching baby vulture. Each Illustration by Bethany Cynthia Knowles-Thompson day, Zagazoo continues to change into a new creature, including a mud-tracking warthog, a fire-breathing dragon, and a wailing bat. Zagazoo then turns into a hairy creature that gets bigger and hairier and stranger every day. He finally turns into young man with perfect manners who falls in love with a young woman. When Zagazoo and his beloved go to tell his parents that they wish to marry, they find that George and Bella have changed into a pair of pelicans. Isn’t life amazing! Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $65 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Requires separate underlying rights from AP Watt Ltd. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 88 Student Plays These scripts were originally developed for Seattle Children’s Theatre’s Drama School Summer Season, an acclaimed program in which student actors and theatre professionals come together to produce polished plays. The Summer Season scripts, inspired by classic works, were specifically written for students in grades 4 through 12 to develop acting and other theatrical skills. The Royalty Fee for all SCT Drama School Summer Season Plays: Classroom Reading Fee: $50 per classroom, per semester Amateur/Educational Royalty Fee: $50 per performance Professional Royalty Fee: please inquire for a quote The royalty fee includes permission to make copies of the perusal script for your cast. Each play has an approximate run time of 50-60 minutes. All photos in this section are from the Seattle Children’s Theatre Drama School Summer Season © Chris Bennion. As You Like It Author: William Shakespeare Editor: Don Fleming 55 pgs. 5 female, 10 male (25 parts doubled) Audience Recommendation: 10+ Synopsis: A tale of outlandish sibling rivalry, private love affairs, and secret identities. In this play “all the world’s a stage” ending with a joyous group wedding. Dracula Author: Bram Stoker Playwright: Don Fleming 64 pgs. 9 female, 11 male (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 13+ Synopsis: Based on Bram Stoker’s dark tale, this faithful, fast-moving adaptation tells the story of Dracula’s ultimate demise. The play begins with the arrival of Jonathon Harker at the Transylvania home of Count Dracula. Unaware of Dracula’s evil and bloody lifestyle, Harker facilitates the sale of a London estate to the Count, leaving England exposed to the reign of terror Dracula has planned. Dracula settles in at his new home, primed to find his next victim, Mina Harker, Jonathan’s wife. Meanwhile, Harker, having been left by Dracula to suffer the appetite of the horrible Transylvanian creatures, finally escapes from the Count’s lair and struggles to return home in time to stop the evil Dracula before it’s too late. Back in London, Dracula attacks Mina, but somehow she manages to resist the lure of her new vampire impulses. In the final struggle, it is Mina herself who saves the day by driving a stake through Dracula’s heart. All those once possessed by Count Dracula are now finally free, reuniting Jonathon and Mina once again. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 89 Dracula: Origins Playwright: Don Fleming 48 pgs. 4 female, 10 male +ensemble (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 13+ Synopsis: Vlad, a prince of Transylvania, struggles to keep his poor, mountainous land free from the clutches of Bazajet, the cruel and conniving Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. When Vlad’s father, Drac (the Dragon) dies fighting in battle, Vlad becomes ruler of Transylvania. He is now known as Dracula (son of the dragon). Due to the clever intrigues of the Turkish Sultan, Vlad finds himself forced to accept single combat with Kudret ad-Hem, the great Turkish warrior who killed his father. Knowing he cannot defeat Kudret, he persuades his wife, Mircea, to lead him to a cave of witches. The witches grant him strength, supernatural abilities, and freedom from death, by transforming him into a nosferatu, an undead vampire. Armed with his newfound power, Vlad meets Kudret ad-Hem in combat. After Vlad wounds Kudret, his vampiric thirst for blood overpowers him and he bites open Kudret’s throat to drink his blood. Both Turks and Transylvanians flee in terror. Mircea rejects Vlad as a monster, and falls to her death when he tries to embrace her. As the play ends, Dracula is left isolated in the Transylvanian mountains, facing a lonely immortality, and the witches celebrate the evil they have let loose into the world. Gulliver’s Travels Author: Jonathon Swift Editor: Don Fleming 71 pgs. 6 female, 6 male (65 characters doubled) Audience Recommendation: 6+ Synopsis: In this classic societal satire, we meet Doctor Lemuel Gulliver who has just discovered he has a grown son. In an attempt to get to know him, they settle in at the Star Tavern so Lemuel can recount his life story. Gulliver’s journeys took him to strange and distant lands. He encountered tiny Lilliputians, and visited Brobdingnag, the land of giants. From there, he traveled to Laputa, a floating island devoted to the arts and academics, though inhabited by residents who are out of touch with reality. In Laguda and Struddlebrug, he encountered singing beggars and senile immortals. In Gulliver’s fourth and final journey, he found a land inhabited by intelligent, speaking horses called Houhynhms. At the end of his travels, Gulliver lived the life of a recluse, speaking only to the horses in his stable. However, he now vows to teach his son the way of the Houhynhms. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 90 Macbeth Author: William Shakespeare Editor: Don Fleming 62 pgs. 6 female, 28 male (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: Macbeth, Shakespeare’s bloodiest tragedy, tells the story of a Scottish Army general who receives a prophecy from three witches–he will one day be the king of Scotland. Through Lady Macbeth’s persuasion and his own ambitious thoughts, Macbeth murders King Duncan and seizes the throne for himself. He then begins a reign of tyranny, and continues to commit more murders to protect himself. When the witches tell of more prophesies and Macbeth sees apparitions, it is the beginning of his demise. In a final battle with his rivals, Macbeth is beheaded and a new man, Malcolm, is crowned king. A Midsummer Night’s Dream Author: William Shakespeare Editor: Don Fleming 50 pgs. 9 female, 14 male (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: A Midsummer Night’s Dream is one of Shakespeare’s most popular love-entwined comedies. Demetrius and Lysander both want Hermia but she only has eyes for Lysander. Bad news is, Hermia's father wants Demetrius for a son-in-law. On the outside is Helena, whose unreturned love burns hot for Demetrius. Hermia and Lysander plan to flee from the city under cover of darkness but are pursued by an enraged Demetrius (who is himself pursued by an enraptured Helena). In the forest, unbeknownst to the mortals, Oberon and Titania (King and Queen of the faeries) are having a spat over a servant boy. The plot twists up when Oberon's head mischief-maker, Puck, runs loose with a flower which causes people to fall in love with the first thing they see upon waking. Throw in a group of laborers preparing a play for the Duke's wedding (one of whom is given a donkey's head and Titania for a lover by Puck) and the complications become fantastically funny. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 91 Much Ado About Nothing Playwright: William Shakespeare Editor: Don Fleming 49 pgs. 4 female, 19 male (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Intertwining honor, shame, and court politics with hilarity and multiple marriages, the tale begins with the meeting of Hero, the daughter of a nobleman, and Claudio, a soldier and nobleman. They instantly fall in love and decide to be married. When Claudio is tricked into believing Hero has been unfaithful to him, he publicly accuses her of lechery and abandons her at the altar. Hero and her family pretend she has died of shock and grief until the truth comes out. The villains are finally found and arrested, and everyone learns that Hero is innocent, including Claudio, who grieves for her. As punishment, Hero’s father arranges for Claudio to marry her “cousin.” At the wedding, it is revealed to Claudio that Hero is his actual bride. Hero’s cousin, Beatrice, is swept up in the joy and agrees to marry Claudio’s friend, Benedick, and everyone has a merry dance. The Odyssey Author: Homer Editor: Don Fleming 63 pgs. 5 female, 7 male (30 characters total, doubled) Audience Recommendation: 10+ Synopsis: The adventures of Odysseus have stood at the center of classical literature for centuries. This is the epic story of a great warrior who wanders the world, but also a tale of a loving husband's struggle to protect an enduring union with his faithful wife. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 92 The Tempest Playwright: William Shakespeare Editor: Don Fleming 45 pgs. 1 female, 12 male (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 11+ Synopsis: Prospero, the duke of Milan, is a powerful magician banished from Italy and cast to sea by his usurping brothers, Antonio and Alonso, the king of Naples. Prospero lives on the island with his daughter, Miranda, his servant monster, Caliban, and his helpful spirit, Ariel, who is his chief magical agent. A ship carrying Italian royalty, including Antonio and Alonso, crashes on Prospero’s island. Miranda and Ferdinand, Alonso’s son, meet and instantly fall in love. After foiled murder plots, a wedding, and the re-uniting of the Italian mariners, the play resolves when Prospero reveals to Alonso the site of Ferdinand and Miranda playing chess. Prospero then invites Alonso and his company to stay the night before everyone returns to Italy the next day, where Prospero will reassume his dukedom. Upon his departure, Prospero vows never to use magic again. Twelfth Night Playwright: William Shakespeare Editor: Don Fleming 56 pgs. 3 female, 15 male (Doubling is possible) Audience Recommendation: 9+ Synopsis: Twelfth Night is a comedy involving love and deception. Orsino, a nobleman, pines for the love of Lady Olivia, who will not marry, as she is mourning for her dead brother. Meanwhile, there has been a terrible shipwreck, in which Viola has been swept ashore. Certain that her twin brother, Sebastian, has drowned, Viola disguises herself as a man and begins to look for work. She is hired by Orsino and soon becomes his favorite page. Viola falls in love with Orsino. When Viola (as her male alter ego Cesario) delivers a love message to Olivia from Orsino, Olivia instantly falls in love with Cesario. As others trying to court Olivia discover Olivia’s attraction to Cesario, they challenge “him” to a duel. It is then that Sebastian appears on the scene. Sebastian gets into a scuffle, Olivia enters and, thinking Sebastian is Cesario, asks him to marry her. Viola (as Cesario) and Orsino come to Olivia’s house and, after some confusion, Sebastian appears and all is revealed. The brother and sister are joyfully reunited, and Orsino asks Viola to marry him. www.playsforyoungaudiences.org PYA 2009-2010 Script Catalog 93