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A love story about transition, testosterone, and James Dean. Josh and Isabella are childhood sweethearts. They were meant to spend their gap year together, they were meant to be together forever. But Isabella has now become a boy. Evan Placey's play Pronoun was commissioned as part of the 2014 National Theatre Connections Festival and premiered by youth theatres across the UK. Especially written for young actors, the play can be performed by a cast of seven, with some doubling of roles, or a much larger cast.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2014
Evan Placey
PRONOUN
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Author’s Note
Acknowledgements
Original Production
Characters
Pronoun
About the Author
Copyright and Performing Rights Information
For Danny
Author’s Note
While the play was written for a cast of seven, with the same actors who play the main characters also playing the additional characters, larger casts could certainly have separate actors play these roles (or could increase the number of the Senior Management Team). So the play could have anywhere from seven up to any number of actors. In either case, there should be a heightened awareness with the latter characters that these are young actors playing adults – that this is performance: when they first appear, we watch an actor put on an apron to become Mum, an actor put on a doctor’s coat, etc. But once they’re ‘dressed’, they needn’t worry about playing the gender or age of their character, merely the truth of that moment.
Dean is a transgender male – meaning Dean was born a girl, and is biologically female, but identifies as male, and in transition to becoming male. In the stage directions, Dean is referred to as he as this is the pronoun that Dean, if he were real and not in a play, would go by and identify with. The role should be played by a female actor.
Set – it’s imagined that somewhere on stage (or maybe the whole stage) is a closet/wardrobe/clothing rack… or maybe a dress-up chest. Somewhere from which the actors get items of clothing on stage to become the adult characters.
Also, on stage is a large poster of James Dean from Rebel Without a Cause.
The play takes place from May 2013 to June 2014.
Acknowledgements
Anthony Banks, Rob Watt, Lucy Deere, Paula Hamilton, Tom Lyons, and all the staff at the National Theatre. James Grieve and Michael Fentiman.
Tanya Tillett at the Knight Hall Agency.
The staff and young people at Gendered Intelligence. Also the brilliant resources on their website, particularly ‘A Guide for Parents and Family Members of Trans People Living in the UK’ and ‘A Guide for Young Trans People in the UK’.
Jamie, for the insight, openness and anecdotes.
Rebel Without a Cause by Steward Stern, Irving Shulman and Nicholas Ray, from whom I have quoted lines. And the screenplay for Breakfast at Tiffany’s by George Axelrod, based on the book by Truman Capote, for the same reason.
The many young people who took part in the premiere productions of this play. You give me hope for the future.
E.P.
Pronoun was commissioned as part of the 2014 National Theatre Connections Festival and premiered by youth theatres across the UK, including a performance at the National Theatre in July 2014.
Each year the National Theatre asks ten writers to create new plays to be performed by young theatre companies all over the country. From Scotland to Cornwall and Northern Ireland to Norfolk, Connections celebrates great new writing for the stage – and the energy, commitment and talent of young theatremakers.
www.nationaltheatre.org.uk/connections
Characters
THE TEENS
DEAN, transgender male (female-to-male); played by a female actor
JOSH, male
KYLE, male
AMY, female
LAURA, female
DANI, female
JAMES DEAN, male. As in the movie star… circa 1955, Rebel Without a Cause teenager look: blue jeans, white T-shirt, red jacket. Speaks with an American accent.
ADDITIONAL CHARACTERS (THE ‘ADULTS’)
MUM, forties, played by a young male
DAD, forties, played by a young female
SMT (Senior Management Team), played by two to four actors
DOCTORS (MONROE, BOGART, BRANDO), played by three actors
PRIVATE DOCTOR
A Note on Punctuation
A forward slash (/) denotes a line that is interrupted, and the point of interruption.
