Let’s
Grow!
By Rebecca Saunders
And members of the Holly Hill Farm players
(With
special thanks to Liz Adams, David Mulei, and, of course, Lin Haire-Sargeant.)
Dedicated to Jonny
Belber
Farmer, teacher, and an
inspiration to us all.
Let’s
Grow!
Characters
Jonny, age
40-ish
Cleo, age
14, Jonny’s daughter
Nadia, age
12, Jonny’s daughter
Nonny,
Jonny’s mother-in-law, grandmother of Cleo and Nadia
Lucy, age 8
Sam, age 6
Anna, any
age past 22. A farmer and assistant to Jonny.
She always carries a large tote bag where
she stores cups, water bottles, scarves.
Rather owlish, perhaps with large dark- rimmed
glasses.
Alice, Lucy’s
mother
Marie, Sam’s
mother
Thomas, Sam’s
father
Michael,
the school bus driver
Town
manager
First arguing
man
Second
arguing man
First
fireman, Bill
Second
fireman, Frank
Time: The present: January, then March-April
Place: A small town. A farm (Holly Hill Farm); in
the fields above ground and below ground; a fire station with a patch of
wasteland beside it. A town meeting. Nonny’s kitchen. The fire station grounds.
[All characters seated. Cleo goes to center stage before the curtain
in a single spotlight and recites]
Cleo: There once was a farmer called Jonny,
Who sang “Hey,
nonny, nonny” all day.
He farmed
with a passion
and taught
kids in his fashion
how to be
green all the way.
Scene I
[Cleo exits and sits down. The children, Jonny,
and Anna are seated. This scene is in the living rooms of two separate houses but with an
invisible wall between them. The
characters pace around their living rooms, reading a permission letter. They cross each other but they don’t see each
other.]
[Simultaneously]
Alice:
“Dear Parents of Lucy.” / Marie [reading
to Thomas, her husband]: “Dear Parents of Sam.”
Marie:
“We would like your permission for Sam to be allowed to go on a special field
trip organized by Farmers Jonny Belber and Anna Williams. Mr. Belber, as some of you know, is the
Education Director at Holly Hill Farms and
. . .”
Thomas: Oh, yes.
Jonny’s the farmer who goes to different schools and helps the children
plant gardens. I know him.
Alice:
“We will be going underground twice a week to observe firsthand the development
of plants, beginning in March.”
Hum. Sounds interesting.
Marie: “The
children will be turned into seeds so that they can inhabit the plants they are
studying from the hours of 3:00-5:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Fridays, beginning
March 14 and continuing until April 28.”
Alice:
“They will gain valuable knowledge with first-hand experience of growing
plants. There will be no need to pack an
after-school snack. Because they will
start out as seeds and will be in fertile ground, they will have plenty to
eat.”
Thomas: Sounds good.
Marie:
“Your child will be turned back into him/herself by 5:30 p.m. Please arrange to pick up him/her by 6:00
p.m. at the barn at Holly Hill Farm. As
a precaution, no peanuts or peanut products allowed.”
Thomas: That’s odd. I wonder why they don’t allow
peanuts.
Marie:
Well, Sam doesn’t much like them anyway.
[Simultaneously]
Alice/Marie:
“Please sign below and return this form to Mr. Belber by Friday, February 10.”
Marie: What
do you think, hon?
[Simultaneously]
Alice/Thomas:
Sure. Where do I sign?
[They sign the forms.]
[Parents exit and sit down.]
Scene II
[In front of the barn at Holly Hill
Farm. Jonny and Anna are surrounded by
the children.]
Jonny:
Great! It looks like everyone can go.
Anna has a packet of seeds for each of you to plant before you go underground.
That way, you can do some planting as well as becoming a plant yourself!
Nadia: Kind of two-for-one, huh, Dad?
Anna: [Hands out packets from her sack.] Here you are.
Make sure you only take one packet, so there will be enough for
everybody.
Cleo: Are they all lettuce seeds?
Jonny: These are.
But Anna has some flower seeds.
Nadia: You always plant lettuce seeds. You even talked the firemen at the firehouse
into planting lettuce!
Jonny: Don’t you like baby lettuce on your
hamburgers? Besides, there is plenty of
space around the firehouse.
[Each child chooses a line and says it
simultaneously with the others]
All: Oh, yeah. / I do! / Me, too! / Relish! / Mustard! . . .
.
Nadia:
Mustard? Naw. Ketchup . . .
Lucy: On a hamburger??? You’re crazy!
Sam: Can we go down and watch the lettuce
grow? [Sam starts digging a hole.]
Jonny:
Sure, but don’t dig now, Sam! We have a
plan for everyone to go underground. If
the plan works, you’ll become a plant!
How would you like that?
Lucy:
Become a plant?! You’re awesome, Jonny!
Jonny: First,
we’re going to the fields of Holly Hill Farm and be real farmers! Nonny, I mean my mother-in-law, has prepared
the method for going underground . . . she has created a special concoction for
you. I have been trying it out and it works.
Nadia: Ha, ha!
You just called my grandma
“Nonny”! That’s what I call her! So how can she be your Nonny? That would make us, let’s see, cousins?
Jonny:
Well, your mother-in-law is my Nonny
. . . no, no, no, I mean, my
mother-in-law is your Nonny . . . I mean . . . right?
Cleo: It’s a confusing world, isn’t it, Dad?
Jonny: Anyway, my mother-in-law, Cleo and Nadia’s grandmother Nonny, has prepared a drink
for going underground and letting us join in with the plants’ roots. Oh! I
almost forgot. She hasn’t quite perfected
it yet.
Cleo:
Meaning?
Jonny: We’re positive that you’ll all end up back as
yourselves. I just need to warn you
that we can easily go down underground but I can’t always tell where we’ll be when
we come back up.
Cleo: Oh, cool!
You mean we could end up in Spain?
I’ve always wanted to go to Spain . . .
Jonny: Oh,
no, not that far. At least, I haven’t
gone that far yet. I usually pop up
somewhere near here. You know, Scituate,
Hull, Cohasset . . . [to himself] even
the fire station, for some odd reason.
Sam: The fire station! The fire station! Oh,
boy! Can I ride in a fire truck?
Anna: Uh,
maybe not today, Sam. Do you all know
your parents’ cell phone numbers just in
case they have to come and get you?
All kids:
Yes, Anna.
Sam [singsong voice]: I’m gonna grow in a fire station!
Jonny: OK! Here comes Michael with the bus to take us
down into the fields. Everyone gather
round and let’s get started. Before you
get on the bus, please have some of this drink.
Anna [pours the concoction into paper cups. She hands them out.]: Everybody, take only one cup. Don’t take more than your share.
Jonny: My
mother-in-law, Nonny . . .
Cleo: . . . Very good, Dad. You got it right.
Jonny: . .
. guarantees that you will turn into a seed within, oh, say about a half an
hour, maybe forty-five minutes. That
will give us time to get to the field and for you to plant your lettuce or
flower seeds.
Jonny [takes the first sip]: Hum.
Needs more salt. Not bad overall.
[Each child drinks the mixture.]
Nadia: Pretty tasty.
Cleo: It tastes like Nonny’s soup. Well, no wonder. She invented it, after all.
Sam: Umm.
It’s good! I hope she has patented it.
My dad says . . .
Jonny: . .
. I’ll speak to her about that.
Lucy: What would happen if we all turned into seeds
while we’re still on the bus?
Sam: Nooo. What
about the Fire station . . .
Anna: Oh,
no! What if one of you falls on the floor!
Or worse! Into a crack in the
seat of that old bus! Oh, my! Oh, my!
Lucy: If I
turn into a seed and fall in a crack while we’re still on the bus, I’ll just
yell REALLY LOUD! You’ll hear me and
pick me up. Simple.
Anna: Good idea, Lucy. You’ve just put my mind at
ease.
Jonny: We
have plenty of time, if we all get on the bus in an organized way, one by one. [The kids try to pile on the bus at the same
time.]
Michael: Is
everybody ready? Hang onto your hats,
kids! It’s a pretty muddy road up ahead!
Lucy:
Hats? You never said anything about a bringing
a hat . . .
Sam: Real farmers wear straw hats!
Jonny: You’re right, Sam. I forgot about hats. Everybody
put on your pretend hat.
[Everyone puts on their pretend straw hat.
Michael leads the children in a circle
around the room to signify the bus trip. The children pantomime riding on a
rut-filled, muddy road while, grabbing on to each other for support, trying to
hold onto imaginary hats, and laughing.]
Michael [sings to the tune of “A hunting we will go…”]:
“A farming we will go / A farming we will go /
Hi, ho, the Derry O, the farmers’ life for me!” Well, here we are. [He lurches to a stop and everyone nearly falls over.]
Jonny: Okay! Everyone off the bus. Walk over there to the patch
where the farmers plowed the soil yesterday.
Notice the lumps of soil in a line. That’s because it’s been plowed
over.
Cleo: Is this where we’re going to plant our seeds?
I mean, ourselves?
Jonny: Yes.
Remember to plant each seed at least six inches apart. Make sure they don’t touch each other. Do like this. [He starts to dig a hole.]
Oh! What’s this now? [He
holds up a wiggling earthworm.]
Kids: Ew! That’s an earthworm!
Jonny [brings it up to his mouth]: An
earthworm, huh. Looks good! I think I’ll eat it.
Lucy: Jonny, no!
You don’t eat earthworms.
Nadia: Dad, don’t do it!!!
Jonny: Ok, ok, keep your hats on. What’s it for then?
Lucy [to Cleo]: Your father is so gross.
Jonny: Maybe I’ll be an earthworm today. Who can tell me what earthworms are for?
Nadia [reciting something she has memorized for
school while she digs]: They eat bacteria that are not good for seeds. They break down organic matter, like leaves
and grass, into things that plants can use.
When they eat, they leave behind, um, castings, I think, that are a very
valuable type of fertilizer.
Jonny: Earthworms are like free farm help.
Nadia [Pause, puzzled]: Are castings what I
think they are? Uh, oh.
Jonny: Yep.
Lucy: Poop?
Everyone:
POOP!!! POOP???? Earthworm poop?
Cleo: Earthworms are going to POOP right
here??? Where we are?
Lucy: I don’t want earthworm poop on me and that’s
that!
Jonny: Well, the poop, I mean the castings, are not
exactly on you. They end up in the
soil around you. Earthworms move about in the soil. They won’t
get that close to you, but you could run into a few. But, kids, think about it. Most good fertilizer is poop. Think of it as recycling.
Cleo: Oh. OK. [Thoughtful.]
That makes sense. I guess . . .
Lucy: If
you say so . . .
Jonny: Anyway, I’m going to be an earthworm today so
that I can wiggle around and keep an eye on everybody. But remember:
farmers need earthworms.
Cleo: I’m
taking this one on trust, Dad.
Sam: I
found one! [Picks it up.] Should I eat
it for my plant?
Everyone:
NO!
Nadia: Oh, Sam
. . .
Jonny: No, Sam, just carefully put it back. Let it do its own work.
[The children get to work planting their
seeds. The digging takes a few minutes.
Then suddenly. . . ]
Nadia [laughs nervously as she shrinks a little. Then she slides down into the hole she has
just made.]: Whoa! It’s
slippery! Hey, I’ve planted myself! Bye! [Underground
she takes the shape of a seed.]
Jonny: Good. It’s working. [Shouts down the hole] See you in a few minutes, Nadia!
Cleo: Lucy, are you ready? Let’s slide down together. This is fun!
[They hold hands and slide down.]
Sam: What’s
it like down there? I don’t think I want to go . . .
Cleo: It’s nice and warm. C’mon down.
It’s an adventure!
Sam: I like
adventures! Here I come. Somebody catch me?
Cleo [laughs]:
That always gets him. Tell him
it’s an adventure and he’ll do anything.
Sam: Somebody catch me! [He
starts to slide but clings to the earth around the hole.]
Lucy: I’ve got you!
By your knees.
Jonny: Here
I come! [Jonny slides down.]
Kids [simultaneously, each taking a line]: An
earthworm! You’re an earthworm.
Sam: [looks around.] Do you see anything that might eat a seed?
Jonny: I’ll protect you from anything that might
nibble at a seed. And Anna is still
above ground. She is pretending to be a
scarecrow to make sure no birds show up.
But remember to dig yourself in deep enough so that a bird won’t find
you. [To Anna] Hey, Anna, see any
birds up there?
Anna [She does a kind of scarf dance, rhythmically
waving her scarves.]: They won’t dare come near me! A woo, woo, woo! A woo, woo, woo! Ha, ha.
Jonny [to the kids]: OK. Since you’re all seeds now, can you feel your
outer coating? It’s sort of a shell
around you. You’re a little like an egg.
[Each child pantomimes feeling the casing
around them as though they were in a seed-shaped bubble. They create different sizes and shapes,
according to taste.]
Sam: I’m a little round seed. [Makes
himself as small as he can.]
Cleo: I’m a
big seed, a sunflower seed!
Jonny: Hey
kids! What do you think is in the seed
with you? [He takes a bite of one of the
lettuce seeds.] Umm. Tastes good.
All: Food!
Let’s eat!
[All pantomime scooping and eating the contents
of their seed casing.]
Nadia: Umm.
It tastes like whipped cream.
Lucy: Mine
tastes like honey!
Jonny: Protein!
I’ve always loved the smell of earth.
It tastes like it smells, like beets.
Lucy [to Cleo]: He doesn’t eat soil, does he?
Cleo: Only
when he thinks he’s an earthworm.
Nadia [slowly extends her leg]: Something’s happening to me. I feel something pulling at me. It’s so gentle.
Jonny [he wiggles over to her]: What happens to your body when you eat?
All: You grow!
[Slowly everyone pantomimes
growing one small root.]
Cleo: Are we growing roots? I don’t feel anything
yet. And I can’t see what the seeds
around me are doing.
Jonny:
You’re a big seed. Got a lot to eat
there. Then you too will start to grow.
Sam: Are you going to grow a root too, Jonny?
Jonny: No, earthworms like me don’t need roots. I move around so that I can help make more
air in the earth and water for you to have room to grow.
Sam: I’ve
eaten up my seed and now I can see everyone’s roots. [Big gesture pointing to the audience.] What are all those other roots doing there?
Jonny: They’re from the seeds you planted before you
changed into seeds. They just got a
little bit of a head start.
Sam: They look a little stiff to be roots. [To
audience.] Hey, all of you roots!
You better wiggle a little or you won’t grow very big. Watch me.
[He shrinks and stretches, shrinks
and stretches.] Now do like me! This is what roots do. See? Do like this.
[Audience imitates him.] That’s better. That’s pretty good. There’s hope for you.
Anna [shouts down into the ground]: OK, everyone, it’s time to come back up. You first, Sam. [One by
one, she helps the children back up through their holes.] Next time I’m going down with you, to show
you how weeds work. And here comes
Michael with the bus to take you back to the parking lot.
All: That was fun! [They all pile into the bus.]
Michael: Did you have a good time? I wish I could go. Ok, hang onto your hats! [Sings]
“Day is
done / gone the sun / from the lake, from the hills, from the sky”
Everyone [joins the singing, hanging on with all their might]: “All is well /
safely rest . . .” [Michael lurches the bus to a halt in the Holly Hill parking lot. The
kids jump out of the bus.]
Jonny/Anna
[Simultaneously]: Whew! It worked.
Jonny: I
knew it would.
Anna: Nonny
will be so pleased!
Scene III
The second trip
underground.
[The children, Jonny, and also Anna are all
underground. The children gradually grow
roots with their legs and stalks with their arms. All this activity goes on for
a minute or so, continuing through the next few lines. The children can make
what they do into a kind of dance, if they want to. Or they may send out roots and shoots
abruptly, according to taste. After a
while . . .]
Anna [Comes up first; looks around; alarmed]: Uh, oh. [Calls
down a hole to Jonny.] We’re not at the farm.
Jonny [sticks his head up out of the ground and
looks around. Big sigh]: I was afraid of this. Most likely we’re in that deserted lot next
to the fire station . . . I’ve come up here before.
Anna: Yes, I see the station. I’d better call
Michael. He’ll have to hurry. [Digs in
her bag for her cell phone.]
Jonny: Don’t worry.
We’ll get them back to the farm in time. It’s not far. [To the kids, who slowly stop their
growing.] Everybody ready for the
surface? Remember I told you that we won’t
always come up where we went down and, sure enough, we’re next to the fire
station.
Anna: Look! Here comes Fireman Bill. Hello, Bill! How’s it going? [Shouts down into the ground]. Don’t worry, kids, it’s OK. But hurry, we don’t want to keep your parents waiting.
Anna: Look! Here comes Fireman Bill. Hello, Bill! How’s it going? [Shouts down into the ground]. Don’t worry, kids, it’s OK. But hurry, we don’t want to keep your parents waiting.
[Jonny and Anna help all the children up to
the surface.]
Fireman
Bill: Hey, kids. What’re you all doing
here? Hey, Jonny! Have you come to check
on my lettuce? It’s not doing too well.
Jonny: Hey,
Bill. I come and take a look at it tomorrow.
Kids [simultaneously]: Where are we? / This isn’t the farm. / I’ve
never been here before. / Look, there’s the fire station!
Fireman
Bill: Yep. This is our fire station, all right.
Sam: Oh,
cool! Can I ride in your truck?
Fireman
Bill: Well, we don’t happen to have any fires going on right now, but . . .
Lucy: I guess seeds grow where they want to grow.
But I didn’t grow very much today.
Jonny: Let’s do a headcount. And here comes Michael.
Michael [screeches the bus around a corner and stops
at the fire station.] Hurry up,
kids! Parents are waiting! Hurry, get
on! [The kids scramble onto the bus.]
Jonny: We
won’t be very late.
Michael: I
don’t know. Some of the parents are mighty impatient! [Sings]:
“Round, round, get around / I get around, yeah, / Get around, ooh, ooh / I get
around. / I get around”
[The kids pantomime a fast drive back to the
farm, try to sing with Michael, then hurry off the bus.]
Parents [Overlapping]: Why are you so late today? / What was it
like? / Was it fun?
Kids [overlapping]: I was a sunflower seed. / I was a small
mustard seed. / I grew a root AND a branch!
Thomas [distracted, looking at his cell phone]:
A branch? Like a tree? C’mon, let’s get a move on. .
Sam: No,
like a stalk, right Jonny? I’m not a
tree!
Alice: What did you think, girls?
Lucy: I
love it! The ground was cool and soft. I want to be a plant!
Nadia: Ma, I don’t feel so good.
Scene IV
[Two weeks later]
Anna: Jonny, why are some of the kids feeling sick
after we go underground?
Jonny: They don’t feel sick for long. It’s a new experience for them. Probably made a few of them dizzy. Here they come. Everybody ready?
Kids: Yeah,
let’s go.
Jonny: Anybody feeling sick? Dizzy?
Nadia?
Nadia: I only felt sick for a little while. I feel fine.
Lucy: I
think I’m going to flower today! I almost did last time.
Cleo: I wish I could flower. [Sigh.]
Sunflowers take such a long time.
Sam: But they’re worth it. Just think. You’ll be
bigger than all of us. You’re almost up out of
the ground.
Lucy:
Jonny, you know when we end up near the fire station instead of the farm? There aren’t so many plants there.
Cleo: Yeah, and Fireman Bill’s lettuce looks, well,
terrible. Don’t tell him I said so.
Lucy: But
when we come back here to the farm, everything looks beautiful. Why? We come up and look around at so many
beautiful flowers among the baby lettuce . . .
Jonny: Good question, Lucy. I’m not sure yet. For one thing, the ground near the fire
station was not prepared like the land here at the farm. In fact, no one has cared for that land in a
long time. [Aside to Anna] I wish Nonny could figure out a way to make us come
back here and not that deserted lot.
It’s depressing. Who owns that
lot, anyway?
Anna: I
don’t know. Lucy’s right. It is a bit
blighted here. And that’s not the worst
of it . . . we end up making the parents wait!
Jonny: I
know, I know. I don’t think they really
mind that their kid is late for, well, for whatever she has next on her
schedule. At least the parents are
getting to know each other.
Anna: Ok, everybody! Ready to slide?
Cleo: Oh!
Down we go!
[All slide down underground and begin
pantomiming various stages of growing.
By now, some of their arms and even a head or two sticks up out of the
ground. The plants are growing.]
Sam [pantomimes a bulging shoot about to flower
and pulled towards the direction of the sun]:
I’m being
pulled by something. Jonny, can you hear
me?
Jonny [as earthworm]: Yes, and I can feel the pull, too! It’s the
sun. As I’m an earthworm, I think I’ll
go in the opposite direction. Earth
worms don’t like sun. But you’re leaning
toward the sun. That’s good: you need the light. [He
slithers away quickly.]
Cleo: Why
can’t I bloom? Other sunflowers are
starting to bloom. I’m getting nowhere. But I feel something in my legs.
Anna [stretching high, even up out of the ground]: Well, Cleo, today I’m a vine-like weed, and I
can see a bud forming on your stalk, way high up.
Cleo: Oh, cool!
At last!
Lucy:
Jonny! Anna! Help!
What’s tugging at my foot? I mean
my root. One of my roots, my left
root! What is it?
Jonny: It’s a weed and it’s growing fast. Hey, Anna!
Can you gently remove this weed?
It’s sheep’s sorrel and it’s
winding around Lucy’s foot!
Lucy: Anna,
hurry! It hurts!
Anna: Let’s see now. Lucy is an anemone. Aha!
There she is. Lucy, try to shake
your foot free as I pull. Gentle,
now. OK?
Lucy: Whew.
Thanks. That was scary.
Cleo: Oh,
no! I feel trapped too. Or rather, something just told me that I was going to be trapped. [Puzzled.] It was like a warning. I smelled it!
Something strong.
Jonny:
That’s Lucy, sending out chemicals to warn the other plants of danger. She
almost got caught by a weed. Plants
communicate by sending out chemicals.
That way the other plants know what’s going on. [To
Anna.] Never pass up a teaching
moment.
Anna: Duly
noted.
Cleo: Yikes!
Something has caught my foot, I mean my root! Ow, it hurts!
Anna: Here
I am, Cleo. I’ll be Sheep’s Sorrel so I
can check out all the other weeds. [To herself] Hum. But then how do I pluck myself? Good question. Must consult with Nonny. [With
great effort, she pulls away from Cleo.]
Cleo: Ow, ow, ow!
That was me you cut!
Anna: Sorry.
It’s hard to weed yourself!
Anybody else need weeding?
Cleo [her head is just barely above ground]: And I can see all of you! You're all popping up! I mean, sprouting. Hum. None of you look too good. Sam, there’s a
weed coming your way.
Anna: Let me get it. [Anna
pulls the weed away from Sam.]
Cleo: Anna!
Sam’s wilting! Help, Anna! And something
smells strong again! Lucy, stop it!
Lucy: I didn’t do anything. And I smell it, too!
Nadia: Phew.
Lucy!
Sam: Jonny, Anna!
My roots have
hit something. I can’t move. I push and push because I’m thirsty, too. But my
roots can’t get to the water. They were
drinking a minute ago . . .
Nadia: Dad!
Sam’s flower looks terrible!
Worst than Fireman Bill’s lettuce!
Anna: Maybe
he has hit a stone . . . I hope that’s all it is.
Cleo: Somebody help Sam! He looks terrible!
Jonny: Can you guide Sam’s root around whatever it
is, if it’s a stone? I’m only an
earthworm, you know.
Anna [searches for a place to get around the stone]: This is no stone, Jonny, it’s a pipe!
Sam: I feel
sick.
Jonny:
Don’t drink any more ground water, Sam, until we figure this out.
Anna:
Jonny, do you taste oil? Do your
earthworm thing and tell me if this is oil.
I’m drank some, and I don’t like this taste of this groundwater.
Jonny: It IS oil! It’s got to be. We’ve hit an oil pipe!
Kids [overlapping]: An oil pipe? / Down here?
/ I feel sick. / I’m not drinking any of that water.
Jonny: How
can there be an oil pipe here?
Anna: I
don’t know but let’s get out of here.
Everybody get ready to come up. [Anna
goes to the surface to help bring up the kids.]
Kids [Overlapping]: But I haven’t bloomed yet.
/ And Lucy’s blooming! / I’m thirsty. / Phew!
I don’t like this water! / I feel sick. / Look at Sam! Oh, no!
Anna [back up on the surface]: We’re in that blasted deserted field
again. [To the kids] Hang on, Sam. Up you go. One by one.
Lucy: Thanks for getting that weed off me. But my anemone was blooming.
Anna:
You’re lucky. You didn’t drink any of
the bad water. That’s why you could bloom.
Sam: I feel sick.
Anna: Here,
have some water. Drink as much as you can.
It’s pure rainwater; I collected it this morning.
Sam: Don’t want water.
Anna: You’ll feel better. You drank something unpleasant. This water will dilute it.
[She pulls Cleo up.]
Cleo: Can I have some water too?
Nadia [Half pulls herself up] Phew, phew,
phew. Man, am I glad to be out of
there. I’d love some water.
Anna [hands out water bottles from her sack to
everyone.] Everybody. Drink some clean rain water.
Jonny [Comes up]: Here I come. Everybody’s out now. Sam seems kind of sick.
We’d better get him checked out. Listen, we have an environmental disaster here
and Sam, you found it. Does that make
you feel better?
Sam: A
little. [He wanders off to the side and noisily throws up. Returns.]
Now I feel
a lot better!
Jonny: What you discovered is possibly an old oil
tank that got buried a long time ago and forgotten about. Sam, you’re a hero!
Anna:
Everyone, we have to do something about this.
Let’s think.
[Everyone sits on the ground and thinks.]
Lucy: I
know! We’ll all go underground here and
push real hard altogether and shove it out of the ground.
Jonny: That’s a good idea, Lucy, but this pipe is probably
connected to a big old oil tank. We
could never move it.
Nadia: What if we brought some fertilizer from Holly
Hill and made the ground better and safer?
And with Anna’s rain water . . .
Cleo: My
guess is that all the land around here is ruined. Look at it. Look at Sam! Nothing can grow here; I mean if we can’t grow,
nothing can. And we’re healthy.
Jonny: I’m afraid you’re right, Cleo.
Anna: Oh, my goodness! I forgot to call the Michael to tell him to
pick us up here! We’ll be late again!
Jonny: Here he comes now. He must have figured it out. Good ole Michael.
Michael [screeches the bus to a stop outside the fire
station and jumps out. He is closely followed by all the parents in their
cars. Angry parents get out of their
cars]: Kids! Go find your parents! [To
Jonny] What took you so long?! It
was all I could do to keep them from fighting last time over parking spots! And now it’s worse! Get those kids moving! They’re late for everything!
Anna: Oh,
no. We spent too much time thinking about what to do! Let’s go, kids.
Jonny:
Don’t worry. Calm down, everyone. When I
tell them what Sam found, that’ll distract them. This pipe is an environmental disaster.
[Kids scramble to meet their very irritated
parents.]
Alice: Lucy,
you were supposed to be at dance class fifteen minutes ago!
Marie: Sam, if you miss one more practice, just one, you’ll be off the team!!
First man: I can’t get out because this so-and-so has boxed
me in!
Second man:
Yeah? And where was I supposed to park when your truck takes up two spaces!
Alice: Please, guys!
We all have to go.
Jonny: Parents! Parents! I have an announcement to make that affects
all of us. Sam here . . .
Parents [Each chooses a line; they speak simultaneously]: Later, Jonny / Sorry,
Jon. Catch you later. / Thanks, Anna. Gotta go. / Lucy, get in this car! Now!
Second
Man: And you get out of my way! Now!
First Man:
Oh, yeah??? [The two fathers start to fight. Michael separates them.]
Michael: Fellows, please. We’re here and the kids are on their way.
Jonny: But . . . . But . . . . the pipe!
There’s a pipe down there!
[Kids and parents drive away in a hurry.]
[Pause]
Anna: Well, Jonny?
Now what?
Jonny: It’ll probably take a town meeting to get this
solved.
Scene V
Two weeks later
At a town meeting
The meeting is hot and
noisy; people interrupt each other
and talk over each
other. Improvise.
First Man [The same man the Second Man wanted to punch
in the parking lot]: I hope there’s
not a tank down there . . . . maybe a few rusty pipes . . . but . . .
Town
Manager: We don’t have the resources to
pay for a clean-up.
Jonny: I’m just saying let’s test it first and then
figure out how to pay for it.
Town
Manager: We don’t have the resources . . .
Second Man:
We aren’t even sure what’s down there. A
few pipes . . . . is getting rid of them
all that important?
Maria: My son Sam was made very sick by whatever it
is that’s in that field! He vomited for hours!
Second Man:
Then the solution is simple: Don’t go underground! Duh.
Town
Manager: As I have said, we don’t have
the resources. . . Do any of you realize how much something like this costs?
Maria: We’ll just have to find the resources!
Fireman Bill
[somewhat shyly]: I was hoping to grow lettuce in that field.
Town
Manager: What?! You wanted to do what?!
Fireman Frank: Jonny has sold him on the idea of using some
of the firehouse lawn for growing well . . . lettuce. Jonny says that lawns are expensive and
wasteful. Personally, I would have
preferred carrots. Bill here has a little
lettuce patch growing outside the station. Doesn’t do too well, though.
Jonny: We can talk about planting carrots . . .
Fireman Frank:
. . . gives the boys something to do, you know, when there isn’t much happening.
Jonny: . .
. if you’d like to meet and go over . . . I’m free Wednesday afternoon . . .
Town
Manager [Impatiently]: Can we get back to the matter at hand? We’ve got to be practical. Where are we going
to get the resources to pay for this thing?
Would someone tell me that?
Second Man:
. . . that land abuts my yard, and if I’m not particularly worried about a
tank, I don’t see why anyone else should.
Jonny:
Those pipes are probably leaching poisons into your land, you know. . .
First Man: My land abuts it too. My wife would like some
flowers. Come to think of it, she tried
to plant flowers near the creek, but nothing much ever came up.
Jonny: Maybe now we know why?
Anna: And
the leaking toxins are going right into the creek.
Alice: I for one do not want my daughter exposed to
anything like what made Sam so sick.
Second Man: Well, I have to have my say and I’m going
to! You liberals think that all
chemicals are out to kill us! That’s
just nonsense . . .
Michael: Am I going to have to break up another fight?
First Man [ignores him]: Oh, yeah? And you right wingers would let us destroy
the earth just so you can make a buck . . . And furthermore, I’ve noticed your
car isn’t exactly a . . . a . . . what-do-you-call-it?
Anna [sighs]: . . . a hybrid?
First Man:
. . . yeah, that’s it. A hybrid . . .
Second Man:
And you with your gigantic gas-guzzling. . .
First
Man: I’m a farmer, for Pete’s sake! Look what I have to haul!
Town
Manager: . . . Gentlemen, please! I
propose that we adjourn and study the matter.
First Man:
Organic, too!!!
Second Man: I second the motion.
Town
Manager: Meeting adjourned! Until further notice.
[Everyone dashes out of the meeting, leaving Jonny
and Anna. They look at each other and
sigh.]
Anna: Well,
that’s that.
Jonny: For now.
Scene VI
Later that night.
Anna, Jonny and Nonny
and a few of the children—
Cleo, Nadia, Lucy, Sam--
are seated at a table at Nonny’s house.
Jonny: Nonny, you have to think of something. The town meeting was a disaster.
Nonny: Hum, I wonder if I could make it so that
adults can go underground.
Jonny: But Anna and I go all the time. [To Anna.]
You don’t have any trouble going
underground, do you?
Anna: Well, no, not really. Have you?
Cleo: Anna, Dad, Nonny said grownups.
Nadia: You’re not quite the same thing.
Anna: Wait a minute! What do you mean?
Nonny: I didn’t mention . . . well, I guess I didn’t
think . . . it only works on children. . .
Jonny: That’s all right.
Nonny: Sorry.
Jonny: But
it’s an idea. Is there anything
different you could do? Maybe add something
to the mixture?
Anna: Would they even agree to drink it?
Jonny: Add
some whiskey, perhaps?
Sam: I
know! Let’s make it a contest. Then those two guys who always yell at each
other could slug it out. . . [pantomimes
a fist fight.]
Nonny: Hold on a minute, Sam. [She
thinks.] Hum. Maybe I could . . . or else add . . . or use
a little less . . .
Jonny: Everybody quiet. Let her think. And to help
her, let’s all think. [All go
into thinking positions.]
[Nonny gets up and paces around the room. She makes comments like “aha!” and “no, oh,
no, no” as she thinks. Suddenly, she runs to the kitchen.]
Nonny [shouts from the kitchen]: Back in a second, folks. Help yourself to the
cookies.
Jonny: Fingers crossed, kids. Think she can do it?
Kids [simultaneously]: Sure she can!
[Pause.]
Cleo: I’ve got it!
Everybody! Into a huddle! [The children
huddle. Improvise sounds such as “I can
. . .” or “Yes, that’ll get them” or anything else of that nature].
Anna: Looks
like we are grownups after all.
Jonny:
Looks like.
Nonny [shouts from the kitchen]: Could one of you get me some mint from the
garden? It might help with the taste.
Jonny: C’mon. Let’s go see what Nonny needs. [Exit
both]
Scene VII
The following Saturday afternoon.
An improvised outdoor stage
in the middle of
the blighted spot near
the Firehouse.
[The children are standing on the stage with
Cleo, Lucy, and Nadia, at the podium. They take turns using a microphone. Sam is
seated behind them at a table, looking very official (over-sized eyeglasses, pencils,
pads of paper, pitchers with glasses of water. He takes notes. Behind the table
is a banner that reads: “The Slickest Challenge.” The townspeople are gathered
around. By fluke, they have formed two separate groups. It becomes clear that
one group believes the toxins should be removed and the other group doesn’t think the problem is important. (Production
note: silhouettes of people out of cardboard?) The First Man and the Second Man
head up the respective groups, according to their temperaments. Lots of
improvised discussion, gesturing. Anna,
Jonny, and Nonny stand off to the side and watch nervously.]
Cleo [takes the microphone]: Ladies and gentlemen. Your attention, please.
Thank you for coming to our offering of “The Slickest Challenge.” What we have for you today is better than
reality TV. Can you do it? Do you dare try? Our challenge today is: Can you survive a trip
underground battling a gigantic, leeching oil tank? Can you face the evil? Can you save the environment?
Nadia [Takes the microphone]: Or is this menace real? Are there toxins beneath
our feet, under the very spot on which we stand? [Mysteriously.] Or are there not? Bid for your chance to go underground and find
out!
Cleo: Do battle with the toxins that threaten our
very existence.
Anna [To Jonny and Nonny]: So this is what
they’ve been up to all week!
Jonny: They’re setting up a bidding war! I don’t
believe it!
Lucy [takes the microphone]: $50. We start the bidding at $50. Do I hear
$50 for the chance of a lifetime? [Sam importantly takes notes of the bidding.]
First
Man: $50?? I’ll bid $200 that there’s poison down there! [One
group of townspeople cheer.]
Fireman Bill: $225??
Jonny [nervously]: And I raise that bid to $300. [More cheering.]
Second
Man: Oh, c’mon on. Let’s get serious
here. I’ll go $1000 that there’s nothing dangerous in that soil. [Townspeople
“ooh” and “aah.”]
Fireman Bill:
I guess I’m out.
First
Man: $2000 says there is!
Jonny [in a cold sweat]: I’ll go $2025.
Anna: [To Jonny]: Jonny, stop! We haven’t got anywhere near that kind of money!
Second
Man: $5000.
First
Man: I’ll match his $5000 and we’ll both
go!
[Jonny falls to the ground in a near faint.
Nonny and Anna help him up]
Lucy [at the microphone]: If there is no more bidding, we have not one,
but two winners. Going, going, gone!
Cleo [at the microphone]: And so, ladies and gentlemen, we have two
challengers ready and eager to encounter the unknown! Let’s give them a hand and wish them well!
Townspeople
[clap, whistle, stamp their feet, excited]: Good men! / Now we’ll find out. / What a service
to our town! / They’re heroes!
Nadia: Will the two contestants come forward please.
Lucy, will you do the honor of serving these two gentlemen each a cup of the
elixir? Sam, will you kindly escort them
to their places?
Nonny [To Anna and Jonny.]: Maybe you’d better take a sip too, so you can
keep an eye on them. I’m so nervous about this whole thing.
Jonny: Sure. [He
drinks and quickly spits out the concoction.] Nonny, this is awful!
Nonny: Oh, sorry. Wrong potion. That’s for adults
only. Oh, dear. Here, have some of this one. You too, Anna. They’ll need help coming back
up.
Anna: You’re sure it’s the kids’ potion? [Nonny serves Anna and Jonny the right
drink.]
Cleo: Guides and guardians Jonny and Anna, will you
step forward please? Places, everyone. Sam will give you the signal to start
planting lettuce seeds. You will feel a slight sensation of shrinking, then you
will discover that a kind of casing surrounds you. It’s a seed. Let yourself slide
down the hole you have dug. Stretch and move your limbs until you are out of
the casing and then stretch some more.
Sam: But be sure to eat some of the seed around
you. That’s where you get your power. You’ll be Supermen!!
Cleo: Head towards
the fire station. Jonny and Anna will guide you.
Fireman Frank:
Could you deposit a few carrot seeds on your way down?
Sam [pause]: Gentlemen, are you ready? Get set!
Go! And Godspeed!
Maria [turns to Alice]: Where’d he get that word?
Alice:
Whoa, smart boy!
[The townspeople cheer. The two men shake hands and start digging
ferociously. They start to shrink and then
slide down into the holes. Jonny and Anna follow.]
Lucy:
They’re off!
[Total silence from the audience. Nonny nervously peers into the holes. She is
the only one who can see down below; she reacts to every sound. (Production
note: Her reactions are how we know
what’s going on below.) Grunts and groans come from underground. Tension.
Sounds of battle. Nonny is nearly a wreck by now. Alice and Maria hold onto her
so she doesn’t fall to the ground.]
Anna [finally appears, exhausted, and comes up
from the hole]: I think they’re ready to come up now. [Shouts
down the hole.] Jonny, push them up.
Now! Hurry! Enough’s enough!
[Anna
helps the two men up out of the ground.
They barely crawl out, both looking green and sick. Jonny follows. Nonny falls to the ground.]
First Man [moans]:
I . . . I think . . . [He moves
off to the side and vomits]
Second Man
[even sicker]: He’s right.
[He moves off to the side and
vomits. The two men return and face
each other.] Are you all right?
First Man:
Thanks. I feel better now. That was rough.
Second
Man: I’ve never seen anything like it.
First
Man: If you hadn’t led the way, we never
would have found the tank.
Second
Man: And if you hadn’t helped me, I
wouldn’t have gotten out alive. You
saved my life.
First and
Second Man [Shake hands, say to each
other.]: Thank you. [They turn to the townspeople. Simultaneously]: That thing has got to go!!
[Children do high fives. Jonny, Anna, and Nonny embrace each other,
with Jonny and Anna supporting Nonny, who is still in a state of nervous
exhaustion. The townspeople cheer.]
Second
Man: I’ll be back in a minute. [Runs
off to the side and vomits again. The
First Man grabs a bottle of water from the table, follows, and helps him.]
Scene VII
Epilogue
Each character steps
forward and addresses the audience.
Jonny: And
so the tank and pipes are gone. Their
donations helped us get a grant from the state. We have gotten rid of the
problem.
Fireman Bill: And I got my garden! My lettuce is thriving!
Fireman Frank: And I got carrots!
Sam: And best of all, we made a play! Your tickets and donations go to the Frank
White Education Fund at the Holly Hill Farm.
Entire cast
simultaneously: Thank you for coming.
Give us your hands, please, if you we have pleased.
OR Just this:
Cast: Thank
you for coming to our play. We hope you enjoyed it. [They applaud the audience.]
Fini.