Thursday, January 2, 2020

All in the Timing A Collection of One-Act Plays by David Ives

All in the Timing is a collection of one-act plays written by David Ives. They were created and conceived throughout the late 1980s into the early 1990s, and although each short play stands on its own, they are often performed together. Here is a summary of the best plays from the collection. Sure Thing Sure Thing, a 10-minute comedy by Ives, was created in 1988. About five years later, the movie Groundhog Day  starring Bill Murray  was released. Its unknown if one inspired the other, but we do know that both storylines feature an incredible phenomenon. In both stories, events recur over and over again until the characters can finally get things not just right but perfect. The concept of Sure Thing feels similar to an improvisation activity known in some circles as New Answer or Ding-Dong. During this improv activity, a scene unfolds and any time the moderator decides that a new reply is warranted, a bell or buzzer sounds off, and the actors back up the scene just a bit and invent a brand new response. Sure Thing takes place at a cafe table. A woman is reading a William Faulkner novel when she is approached by a man who hopes to sit next to her and get better acquainted. Whenever he says the wrong thing, whether he hails from the wrong college or admits to being a mamas boy, a bell rings, and the characters start anew. As the scene continues, we discover that the bell ringing isnt just responding to the male characters mistakes. The female character also states things which are not conducive to a meet cute encounter. When asked if she is waiting for someone, she at first replies, My husband. The bell rings. Her next answer reveals that she plans to meet her boyfriend to break up with him. The third response is that she is meeting her lesbian lover. Finally, after the fourth bell ring, she says that she is not waiting for anyone, and the conversation progresses from there. Ives comedy reveals how difficult it is to meet someone new, pique his/her interest, and say all the right things so that the first encounter is the beginning of a long, romantic happily ever after. Even with the magic of the time-warping bell, romantic start-ups are complicated, fragile creatures. By the time we get to the end of the play, the bell ringing has forged a model love at first sight — it just takes a long time to get there. Words, Words, Words In this one act play, David Ives toys with the Infinite Monkey Theorem, the notion that if a room full of typewriters and chimpanzees (or any kind of primate for that matter) could eventually produce the complete text of Hamlet, if given an infinite amount of time. Words, Words, Words features three affable chimp characters that are able to coherently talk to each other, much the same way bored office co-workers may socialize. However, they have no idea why a human scientist has forced them to stay in a room, typing for 10 hours a day until they recreate Shakespeares most beloved drama. In fact, they have no idea what Hamlet is. Still, as they speculate on the futility of their career, they do manage to spout a few famous Hamlet quotes without ever realizing their progress. Variations on the Death of Trotsky This bizarre yet humorous one-act possesses a similar structure to that of Sure Thing. The sound of the bell signals that the characters will start the scene all over again, offering a different comical interpretation of Leon Trotskys final moments. According to expert Jennifer Rosenberg, Leon Trotsky was a Communist theorist, prolific writer, and leader in the 1917 Russian Revolution, the peoples commissar for foreign affairs under Lenin (1917-1918), and then head of the Red Army as the peoples commissar of army and navy affairs (1918-1924). Exiled from the Soviet Union after losing a power struggle with Stalin over who was to become Lenins successor, Trotsky was brutally assassinated in 1940. Ives play begins with the reading of a similarly informative entry from an encyclopedia. Then  we meet Trotsky, sitting at his writing desk with a mountain climbing ax smashed into his head. He does not even know that he has been mortally wounded. Instead, he chats with his wife and suddenly falls over dead. The bell rings and Trotsky comes back to life, listening each time to details from the encyclopedia, and trying to make sense of his last moments before dying yet again†¦ and again†¦ and again.

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