category: one-act
genre: drama
running time: one hour, twenty minutes
setting: Rusalka’s garret in London; various
locations in an American city
period: the Victorian Age/contemporary
characters:
Leo, a young homosexual living in modern day America
James, his ex-boyfriend
Rusalka, a young Russian widow living in Victorian London
Damien, her deceased husband
The Doorman/Ted, a Victorian pimp/an aspiring sex daddy
Hunter, Max, Scott, Ian- Leo’s various tricks
The Gentleman, The Student, The Sailor, The Old Man- Rusalka’s
clients
story:
The stage is split between two stories, the tale of Rusalka,
a beautiful young Russian woman left to fend for herself in Victorian
Age London after the death of her husband, and Leo, a young American
man struggling to find his homosexual identity in the wake of an
amicable break-up with his lover. Each are heavily flirting through
self-destruction through sex, she by becoming a prostitute, he by
hooking up with an endless barrage of tricks arranged for him through
Ted, a sleazy quasi-pimp. Each are accompanied in this journey by
the source of their respective pain, with Rusalka’s husband,
Damien, appearing as a ghost outside her window each night and James,
Leo’s former lover, lurking in the corner as a concerned but
helpless friend. As the pair, in their respective time periods,
weave their way through a series of interconnected sexual encounters
they eventually build to a moment where they are able to cross time
periods and advise one another, finally gaining the inner strength
to throw off their pain by confronting it and moving on with their
lives. The action is bookended by two versions of the same story,
a fairy tale about a world cursed, covered with a blanket of eternal
night through which a bird, pecking with its beak, is ultimately
able to create the stars and the stars.
author’s comments:
This is an interesting little play that arrived at a very
key moment in my development as a writer. Based on my own confused
and often painful feelings over my personal romantic issues, it
was written in a single weekend and hasn’t been much revised
since. It did get a reading at the Old Pueblo Playwrights, where
it was not well received and actually resulted in my leaving the
group, but it’s never been produced and I’m not sure
that I ever expect it to- it’s really very, very dark, almost
relentlessly so, and the sex is so graphic throughout that only
a gay theater troupe might be interested and, frankly put, it’s
lacking on other fronts the stuff that usually gets those sorts
of groups involved- i.e. drag queens and jokes. I don’t think
it’s a bad play. Actually, I think it’s pretty good,
with some really beautiful dialogue and an almost perfect dramatic
structure, but the dual time periods commenting on each other is
something I pull off much better in Vincent of Gilgamesh and almost
everything else I’ve written is more audience friendly. Still,
I’d love to see it staged in my lifetime, but interestingly
enough, it’s not something I ever really want to direct and
while I do think my work is a lot more marketable than some people
give it credit for, this piece is, admittedly, kind of narrow in
appeal. One fun little bit of trivia: I reference this show in Troijka,
where a much more jaded and brazen Rusalka re-appears as one of
the whores in Madame Yvette’s brothel, and Leo is mentioned
as the name of the boy Jean is replacing. Were the two shows ever
run in rep, it might be interesting to have the same actress in
both roles, and whoever is cast as Armand in Troijka play The Doorman
in Life in Darkness.
|