About this ebook
"Boy in Hoodie" is the story of the "Dead Cat Kid," as he’s known by his classmates. He's fascinated by death—curious about it in a philosophical sense—but he's not morbid, and he didn't kill a cat. But which is more important, the truth or perception?
"Woman in Prada" centres on an attractive, middle-aged woman who enjoys the finer things in life. And now that she's no longer a suburban housewife, she's finally free to explore her own desires. But what if they are leading her to be with a much younger man? Can she choose to put social optics to the side and do what makes her happy for once?
Daniel MacIvor
Born in Sydney, Cape Breton in 1962, Daniel MacIvor studied theatre at Dalhousie University in Halifax and George Brown College in Toronto. A prolific playwright, dynamic performer, producer, and artistic director, MacIvor has been creating original Canadian theatre since 1986 when he founded the highly acclaimed theatre company da da kamera, which has won a Chalmers Award for Innovation in Theatre (1998). MacIvor is also a successful filmmaker. His projects include the award winning short film The Fairy Who Didn’t Want to Be a Fairy Anymore. His first feature film, Past Perfect (produced by Camelia Frieberg), premiered at the 2002 Toronto International Film Festival and was released in theatres across Canada in March and April of 2003. He also adapted his Governor General’s Award-nominated stage play, Marion Bridge, for the screen (directed by Wiebke von Carolsfeld), for which he won the Best Screenplay Award at the 2002 Atlantic Film Festival. Talonbooks published his play Cul-de-sac in 2005.
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I, Animal - Daniel MacIvor
I, Animal
Daniel MacIvor
Playwrights Canada Press
Toronto
For Kat
Contents
Introduction
Production History
Man In Scrubs
Boy In Hoodie
Woman In Prada
About the Author
Also By Daniel MacIvor
Copyright
Introduction
In kabuki theatre there is a gesture called looking at the moon,
and there is a story where an actor—let’s call him the first actor—would perform this gesture in a way that made the audience sit up and take notice every time. What beauty in his movements, what feeling, what a masterful actor. And though audiences loved the first actor, the company’s teacher was never impressed and felt him not nearly as good as a younger actor in the company—let’s call him the second actor—the second actor whom the audience hardly ever noticed. But being a good and gentle man the teacher kept this feeling mostly to himself, realizing it an opinion, not a fact. If the audience was happy, who was the teacher to interfere? One day, a patron of the theatre was singing the praises of the first actor to the teacher, and the teacher gently mentioned his opinion that the second actor was to his eyes superior. The patron was shocked, Who? I don’t even know this actor’s name!
The patron went on about the first actor’s beautiful hands, the arc of his arm, how his eyes would well with feeling—how could the teacher not offer the first actor the deepest of respect over this invisible second actor? And the teacher said, When the first actor looks at the moon I see the actor see the moon, when the second actor looks at the moon I see the moon.
I, Animal was written as a Fringe play—first produced by Kazan Co-op at the SuperNova Theatre Festival and then later at SummerWorks in Toronto. I wrote it because I wanted to make something that was first and foremost producible. I’ve always been a big supporter of the Fringe ideology as a system for cultural entrepreneurs—it seems to be a way for theatre artists to make work and a living at the same time. The idea behind I, Animal is that it can be presented as one, two or three monologues and in whatever order one might find efficient or pleasing. Perhaps one actor would play all the parts. I suppose if one wanted to, one might take it apart and use pieces of all three monologues to make an entirely new monologue—something experimental. I’m good with all of that. The premise is simple—its setting is night, outside, under a full moon, and its themes are the things that make us human—or make us question our humanity. Simple. Also, no big design. No fancy soundscape or score. Maybe some pre-show music or songs between monologues—songs you like or songs you think the characters like. Maybe an airplane landing or taking off. A siren. A dog barking. Things you might hear at night outside. Simple. No big lighting set-up. One light or two lights and some fill. (Or do it outside under a street light or in a parking lot on a full moon.) No props are required other than a leash, a suitcase, a phone and a flashlight. Simple simple simple. It’s not about the design. Actually it’s not even really about the text. It’s all about the performances. These are not director’s pieces. There’s no big