Jeremy Richards ([info]jeremyrichards) wrote,
@ 2003-02-25 15:21:00
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The Happy Existentialist
(Dark stage. On the back wall, a projected quote: "I have never felt a day of despair in my life"--Jean-Paul Sartre. The quote fades as lights come up on Jean-Paul Sartre in a Paris cafe. He sits, smoking a cigarette. Staring out blankly, suddenly he giggles, but stops himself as Simone de Beauvoir and Albert Camus enter.)

Simone: Jean Paul, we were waiting for you outside the theater. Where were you?

Sartre: I'm sorry, I couldn't bear to see it.

Camus: Your own play? This was the premier, and you missed it!

Sartre: I know. I'll see it later. I just wasn't in the mood.

Camus: Which mood?

Sartre: Does it matter?

(Pause; they each take drags from their cigarettes and stare off blankly.)

Simone: There was something I've been meaning to say to you. To both of you.

Sartre: What's that?

Simone: I don't think that love is any more potent than death, and love is never so certain as death. But still, the woman in society poses as a promise to life, to bring life, as if it were an obligation, with or without love. So this is what we have, here to embrace or give up altogether. (Pause) I'm thinking of taking dance lessons.

Camus and Sartre (together, mumbling, nodding) Yes, hmm, sounds good.

Camus: That reminds me of something.

Sartre: What's that?

Camus: Suffering.

(Camus and Simone laugh dryly.)

Simone: Jean Paul, what's wrong? You're not yourself.

Sartre: Nothing.

Camus: Ah, you mean Nothingness?

Sartre: No, just nothing.

Simone: You mean the absence of Being?

Sartre: No, just nothing. Nothing. Little "n," no ness. (giggles)

(Simone and Camus gasp)

Simone: What was that?

Sartre: Just a hiccup. (giggles)

Camus: That was no hiccup, that was mirth! You're giggling!

Sartre: Am not! (giggles)

Simone: How could you? Look out the window, Jean Paul: The sun hides like a coward, the river flows indifferent, and the children, the children have all boarded themselves up to sulk and whittle away their youth. There is no room for joy, here. How could you be so irreverent?

Sartre (about to burst, then laughs): OK, I admit it! I like . . . things! I like noodles and puppies and little fat babies! Oh, life is delightful, isn't it?

Camus: But what about your writings? Were you being inauthentic when you said that "Man is condemned to be free"?

Sartre: I said that? Well that's rather silly, isn't it? Freedom is wonderful! I am free to skip and run and, oh, watch this (Sartre tap dances and ends in a flourish) Tada!

(Camus takes a swig on absinthe and hold his head.)

Simone (weeping): I can't believe the man I love is so lost in delusion.

(Sartre takes Simone, grabs her hand and whips her around, pulls her close and starts to ballroom dance.)

Sartre: Come, Simone. I will dance you out of despair.

Simone: Never!

Camus: This is an outrage!

Sartre: Knock knock.

Simone: Stop it.

Sartre: Knock knock.

Simone: I'm not playing this game.

Sartre: Hello? Ah, hello? Knock knock!

Camus (beyond drunk): Someone answer that damn door!

Simone (weeping): Who's there?

Sartre: God.

Simone: God who?

Sartre: You, babe. I god you.

Simone (giggling through her tears in spite of herself): Stupid . . . (giggling more, hitting him softly) Stupid joke.

(Sartre dips her, kisses her deeply)

Simone (smiling): You bastard.

Camus: Ha! I get it! The solidarity of collective consciousness is a dance! Ha! (laughs, slaps his knee) Nothing, no ness! Ha!

(The lights become warmer, music rises from the next room. Simone and Jean-Paul continue to dance in wild circles as Camus does the hambone and swigs merrily, all dancing and humming in tune with a divinity they feel but don't recognize, embracing this moment, forgetting the past, unaware of the future, where post-structuralism's severe shadow will cast back over their graves through the works of Julia Kristeva and Hélène Cixous, who will dismiss existentialism as not only passé, but dead. They dance on, knowing none of this, only now.)

Simone (laughing): You magnificent bastard.

(Fade out)



© copyright 2003 Jeremy Richards



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indeed
[info]anymelanie
2003-02-25 03:33 pm UTC (link)
gotta love any work that ends with "magnificent bastard."

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[info]lordrexfear
2003-02-25 04:59 pm UTC (link)
THIS is the shit that is making me dipping into my depleted funds to come see you when you hit URBANA. Yup, yup.

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Re:
[info]jeremyrichards
2003-02-25 05:03 pm UTC (link)
Thanks. Only wish I could perform something like this at the Bowery club. Maybe I can get Shappy as Sartre, Taylor to play Camus, and Cristin as Simone?

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[info]lordrexfear
2003-02-25 05:37 pm UTC (link)
What? Only Taylor or Shappy could handle it? I could do it... I'm good enough. You think just because I don't win SLAMS that I'm not loved and super talented? Huh? I've been in Chekov! I've been in Shakespeare... Hell... I've done Sartre!

Okay, ignore me... I'm actually not offended.

My issue would probably be is that you only get I think 20-30 minutes and this would easily swallow about 6-7 of those minutes if not more.

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[info]joethelionn
2003-02-25 05:55 pm UTC (link)
I love anything that references the "hambone".

This reminds me of my favorite Samuel Beckett anecdote:

One bright summer day Beckett and several colleagues had made their way to a Parisian park. It was an exceptionally lovely day; birds chirping , children at play, etc. All the common prerequisites of a lovely day at the park were more than admirably present. At some point Beckett commented upon the pleasantness of it all to which one of his colleagues replied, "Yes, it's the type of day that makes one feel grateful to be alive".

"Oh", said Beckett, "I wouldn't go that far...".

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Re:
[info]jeremyrichards
2003-02-25 06:45 pm UTC (link)
That's a great story.

Occasionally, we do Beckett style in improv; the audience tends to be baffled.

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wonderful
(Anonymous)
2003-02-25 11:58 pm UTC (link)
Oh this is perfectly glorious!
Someone just told me that they were feeling unhappy and bitter, and that they didn't understand why since they had never been depressed before in their life.
And I wondered how anyone could be so simple.
Beause too often it seems that the natural state of anyone with the intelligence above a duck (ducks are alloted a special squawking contentment) is unhappiness. or at least a tendency towards unhappiness.
But I'm the one who's made that judgement, it's not a natural law.
Plus I always enjoy making sport at the culture of depression.
You're fucking brilliant, Jeremy. You definitley have the most fun livejournal I've ever seen.
-Lauren Hudgins

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[info]zoomardav
2003-02-26 09:19 am UTC (link)
This is funny. It reminds me of some of the stuff that Steve Allen used to do on his show.

Don Knotts would have been a kick ass Camus.

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Ah, happiness
(Anonymous)
2003-03-01 07:05 pm UTC (link)

And to think that Camus wrote a novel called The Happy Death.


I'm teaching Sartre starting right after Spring Break over here in the Spoke, and it's quite a reprieve to see him poked in the eye with a sharp wit.


Bon

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Re: Ah, happiness
[info]jeremyrichards
2003-03-02 01:20 am UTC (link)
Thanks, Bon.

Good to hear you're teaching and such. At Gonzaga, then?

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[info]hypocriteshrink
2007-07-25 09:49 am UTC (link)
You so should've been in London for Being and Time: The Musical, the recent production at Regent's College SPC.

Or maybe not. This far exceeds anything that was in that.

But all proceeds did go to charity.

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[info]jeremyrichards
2007-07-25 05:04 pm UTC (link)
Well, it certainly sounds high concept, or high pre-concept, as it were.

Did they rhyme hermeneutic with German glue tic? That's the only couplet I can imagine.

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