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'What happened then, some would say, was almost magic.' Disregarded and disobedient, ten-year-old Mary Lennox is sent from India to Yorkshire, and put into the care of an uncle she has never met. At Misselthwaite Manor, a brokenhearted house full of secrets and strange noises, Mary discovers a garden as lost and neglected as she is. If she can learn to make friends with robins, grumpy gardeners and a boy who speaks to animals, Mary might be able to bring more than just the garden back to life… The Secret Garden, Frances Hodgson Burnett's tale about the magic of nature and the nature of magic, has been a beloved and quietly radical classic of children's literature since its publication in 1911. Holly Robinson and Anna Himali Howard's thrillingly adventurous adaptation was first performed at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre, London, in 2024.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2024
Frances Hodgson Burnett
THE SECRET GARDEN
in a new version by
Holly Robinson & Anna Himali Howard
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
Thanks
Original Production Details
Characters
Notes
The Secret Garden
About the Authors
Copyright and Performing Rights Information
For Dante John Howard
Thanks
We would both like to thank: Drew McOnie, James Pidgeon, Lauren King, mezze eade and the whole Regent’s Park team; Tim Sheader; Nic Wass; Polly Jerrold and Howard; Nick Hern Books, especially Maddie Hindes; the many actors who joined us for readings and workshops and shared their time, thoughts and talents with us; Elly Roberts; Katherine Pollock and maatin; our wonderful agents Kirsten Foster and Imogen Sarre. And finally, our incredible creative team and our brilliant cast who came together to grow this garden with extraordinary care.
Holly would like to thank
The Robinsons for the moors.
The Mitchells for sharing their Welsh Garden when it was most needed.
Gillian Greer for being there through the hardest spring.
The Robinsaagis (small and tall) for my belonging.
Anna Himali Howard for being magic and care incarnate.
And Adam Brace who taught me to grasp the nettle.
Anna would like to thank
Ethan and Clem, for this new world.
Mum and Janak, Helen and Richard, for an abundance of love.
Everyone who held me up during these seasons of growth, death and (re)birth.
The many new aunts, uncles, godmothers, grandparents and villagers who have taken their place in our lives.
Holly Robinson, for keeping imagination alive.
Gangan and Ba, who made sense of me.
And Dad, for ordinary magic.
The Secret Garden was first performed at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, London, on 15 June 2024, with the following cast:
COLIN
Theo Angel
BEN WEATHERSTAFF
Richard Clews
DR CRAVEN
George Fletcher
MRS MEDLOCK
Amanda Hadingue
MARTHA
Molly Hewitt-Richards
ARCHIBALD CRAVEN
Jack Humphrey
CHAMPA
Avita Jay
MARY LENNOX
Hannah Khalique-Brown
CAPTAIN LENNOX
Patrick Osborne
LATA/THE ROBIN
Sharan Phull
PADMA
Archana Ramaswamy
DICKON
Brydie Service
Consultant Historian and Translator
Dr Priyanka Basu
Puppetry Consultant
Laura Cubitt
Movement Director
Will Dickie
Sound Designer
Tingying Dong
Voice Coach
Kate Godfrey
Dramaturg
Gillian Greer
Season Associate Sound Designer
James Hassett
Director
Anna Himali Howard
Casting Director
Polly Jerrold
Dialect Coach
Gurkiran Kaur
Composers
Ford Collier and Kate Griffin (Mishra Music)
Lighting Designer
Jai Morjaria
Accent Coach
Elspeth Morrison
Intimacy Director
Ita O’Brien
Associate Director
Hana Pascal Keegan
Costume Designer
Khadija Raza
Writer
Holly Robinson
Assistant Intimacy Director
Rose Ryan
Set Designer
‘Magic is the bringing about of unbelievable things through an obstinate faith that nothing is too good to be true.’
Frances Hodgson Burnett
‘…and of course, the English are famous throughout the entire civilised world for their hatred of children.’
Auberon Waugh
‘With all of our crazy, adaptive-deviced, loving kinship and commitment to each other, we will leave no one behind as we roll, limp, stim, sign, and move in a million ways towards cocreating the decolonial living future. I am dreaming like my life depends on it. Because it does.’
Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice
‘Make the ordinary come alive for them. The extraordinary will take care of itself.’
William Martin, excerpt from The Parent’s Tao Te Ching
‘Give [children] the fields and the woods and the possibility of the world salvaged from profit. Stand them in the stream, head them upstream, rejoice as they learn to love this space they live in, its sticks and lakes and then the silent, beautiful blossoms.’
Mary Oliver, Upstream
‘Go under the ivy…’
Kate Bush
Characters
MARY LENNOX, ten, British-Indian
COLIN CRAVEN, ten, British-Indian. This role should be played by a wheelchair user
DICKON SOWERBY, twelve. This role should be played by an actor with a mobility disability
MARTHA SOWERBY, thirteen, Dickon’s sister
ARCHIBALD CRAVEN thirties, white. This role should be played by an actor with a disability
HAROLD CRAVEN thirties, white. Archibald’s brother. This role should be played by an actor with a stammer
MRS MEDLOCK, fifties
BEN WEATHERSTAFF, sixties
LATA CRAVEN / THE ROBIN, late twenties, Indian. Archibald’s late wife and Colin’s mother
PADMA MUKHERJEE, thirties, Indian. Lata and Champa’s sister
CHAMPA LENNOX, thirties, Indian. Padma and Lata’s sister. Mary’s mother.
CAPTAIN LENNOX, thirties, white. Mary’s father
Every character is also part of the chorus. Some also play Dickon’s animals.
For BSL interpreted performances
COOK. The cook should be treated as part of the chorus
Notes
A forward-slash ( / ) indicates that the next line is an interruption.
Square brackets [ ] indicate an unspoken word or thought.
When characters exit a scene, they do not necessarily exit the stage.
The disability-specific language in the text can be changed to reflect the disabilities of the actors playing the roles.
We begin in winter and end in summer – this change hums through everything.
This ebook was created before the end of rehearsals and so may differ slightly from the play as performed.
One: The Beginning/The End
The play begins almost how it ends; with a group of people (ARCHIBALD, MRS MEDLOCK, DOCTOR CRAVEN, BEN, MARTHA, DICKON, PADMA, LATA and CHAMPA) gathered. They are not yet in the Garden – and not yet complete with MARY, COLIN and the Magic. A community finding its way to itself.
LATA. It began.
PADMA. It begins.
CHAMPA. In a garden.
LATA. The garden.
PADMA. In an English garden
LATA. at the hour where everything stills itself.
CHAMPA. Soft gold stillness
PADMA. slanting through and under branches.
LATA. The sun readying itself –
CHAMPA/LATA/PADMA. Not quite yet
LATA. to set.
CHAMPA/LATA/PADMA. And a father
LATA. Asking –
ARCHIBALD. How did this happen?
How did this begin?
Overlapping –
MEDLOCK. It begins with the girl –
DOCTOR. It begins with the boy –
MARTHA. It begins with three sisters –
DICKON. It begins with two brothers –
CAPTAIN. It begins with sickness –
BEN. It begins in Yorkshire –
PADMA. Not yet –
ARCHIBALD. It begins…
LATA. In India.
Two: British India
A British bungalow in Kolkata. 1903. Colonial luxury. A party fills the stage: dancing, wine, ‘sophistication’, the suffocating propriety of the English Raj. Everyone playing GUESTS or SERVANTS. CHAMPA, a glamourous Indian socialite, and her husband, CAPTAIN LENNOX, a British officer.
CHAMPA. It begins at a party –
CHORUS. At a party in India!
CAPTAIN. An India ruled by an English king.
DICKON. And in that India –
MEDLOCK. in 1903.
ARCHIBALD. A girl.
Hidden away from the party is MARY, being waited on by her ayah (played by PADMA). The ayah is unwell, shivering and sick, but trying to hide it.
MARY puts her arms in the air to be dressed.
Nothing happens.
MARY. Ayah, where is my dress?!
PADMA. Shall I tell a story? The one with the spoilt boy and the magic sea?
MARY. But what about the party?
PADMA. You know you’re not invited, Missie Sahib.
MARY. Go, go and ask her why.
PADMA. Missie, please. You’re never invited.
MARY. I command you to ask her!
PADMA. I am not well enough to / argue with you.
MARY. I don’t care. I don’t care about you. Or her. And I don’t care about their awful party. I don’t care about anything.
MARY storms off.
LATA. A girl named Mary Lennox.
MEDLOCK. And Mrs Lennox, how old is your darling girl now?
DICKON. Mary Lennox was never seen.
MARTHA. Mary Lennox was kept out of sight.
DOCTOR. Mary Lennox was ignored.
CHAMPA. Oh, um, seven years old.
MARTHA. Mary was ten.
DOCTOR. And where is she tonight?
CHAMPA. With her ayah. Her, uh, nanny. She was screeching all afternoon – gave me quite the headache.
CAPTAIN. Champa, I’ve just the thing for headaches.
He hands her a drink and begins to dance with her.
BEN. Mary Lennox’s mother only cared about parties.
MEDLOCK. And being the wife of a British officer.
DOCTOR. Mary Lennox’s father only cared about sending telegrams to England.
BEN. Receiving telegrams from England.
PADMA. And ruling India for England.
CAPTAIN (toasting). To England!
CHORUS. To England!
They all drink.
DOCTOR. I hear Curzon plans to slice Bengal down the middle.
CAPTAIN. Partition would certainly quieten all this nationalistic chatter. We fully support it, don’t we, Champa?
CHAMPA. Of course, darling.
DOCTOR. Hear, hear.
As they toast and cheer, a terrible cry is hard from off. The LENNOXES assume this is MARY.
CHAMPA (toasting). To the Viceroy!
CHORUS (toasting). To the Viceroy!
CAPTAIN (hearing the cry, to a SERVANT). Will someone quiet that insufferable child?
MARY appears – this is mortifying to the Lennoxes.
MARY. Where has my ayah gone?
CHAMPA. She’s supposed to be sleeping!
MARY. Why is no one looking after me?
CAPTAIN. For goodness’ sake!
