Kristen Kosmas – Part 4

 

from A CERTAIN QUANTITY OF ACCURATE DESCRIPTIONS

plays for the mental theater
 

Editor’s Note: This is the fourth part in a weekly series of texts from a new work by Kristen Kosmas. Check back on Wednesday, Aug 28, for the fifth and final part.
 
Read Part 1 here
Read Part 2 here
Read Part 3 here
Read Part 5 here

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#5. DESCRIPTION OF SOMETHING I’D REALLY RATHER NOT NAME.

 

As far as I know
there is a long table made of wood.
At one end, a man with a giant head, bald,
is looking this way and that.
(He is maybe a little paranoid.)
He is eating an endless
chicken thigh with the skin still on it.
He chews and talks.
He talks but he doesn’t say any thing.
He chews and murmurs.
Grumbles.
He is thinking about his money.

He tosses the chicken thigh bone over to the right.
It lands with a dull thud on the stage floor.
He gestures his hands around wildly in the air at about shoulder level.
His face is all—
Maybe he is praying for God to protect his money
while he finishes chewing his over-large mouthful of chicken.

He takes another thigh from the silver platter.

Someone’s hands are upstage left, framed very small in a little window. (Maybe part of a torso also shows, but mostly it is the hands.) The hands are wringing a white handkerchief around and around. The handkerchief is scented lavender. The lavender smell and the chicken smell mix to make a nausea. The person whose hands these are is whispering. She is whispering to herself in quick syllables. What is she saying? I don’t know. I can’t hear her. She is in some sort of conflict. She is having a moral dilemma. She has red hair.

All of the electricity in the city goes out at this point and there is a kind of mild panic. It is possible that in some people the mild panic grows ever greater. It is a feeling of the walls being pressed in upon, some cosmic pressure asserting itself on the space from the outside.

Yes. I fainted at a party recently.

Someone comes in holding an emergency candle and makes a gesture like this—. He begins speaking about puppets. This is to calm the audience down, he’s trying to calm the audience down. But it isn’t working. Some people are– Some people freak out. Puppets really freak some people out. Panic mounts to terror. The bald man at the table starts pounding his fists. He is saying: I Want My Money! Give Me My Money! Over and over again. He is saying it in an imitation of loud-speaking, but in fact, he is not saying it that loud.

The red-haired woman has expired. Later, people will say: It’s for the best. She really was suffering.

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Click here to read Part 1.
Click here to read Part 2.
Click here to read Part 3.
Click here to read Part 5.

Click here to read an interview with Kristen Kosmas in B O D Y.
 

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KRISTEN KOSMAS is an American playwright and performer. She has had new works commissioned by The Chocolate Factory (NYC), Performance Space 122 (NYC), The Theatre of a Two-Headed Calf (NYC), Seattle University’s SITE Specific, Dixon Place (NYC), and the New City Theater in Seattle. Her plays (see links below) and solo performances have been presented in Boston, Seattle, Chicago, Austin, and many downtown venues in New York City. She is the writer/performer of four critically acclaimed solo shows: Blah Blah Fuckin Blah, Again, Slip, and The Scandal! As an actor, she has appeared in many notable new plays including Potatoes of August by Sibyl Kempson, Mark Smith by Kate Ryan, ASTRS and Some Things Cease To Be While Others Still Are by Karinne Keithley, The Internationalist by Anne Washburn, Producers of Fiction by Jim Strahs, The Florida Project by Tory Vazquez, and Hurricane by Erin Cressida Wilson. Ms. Kosmas is a founding member of the OBIE Award winning performance series Little Theater; the Brooklyn-based experimental writer’s collective The Ladies’ Auxiliary Playwriting Team/Machiqq; and The Twenty-Five Cent Opera of San Francisco, a monthly event for the enactment of texts and theatricals. She holds a BFA in Playwriting from Brooklyn College. She is an Assistant Professor of Theatre at Whitman College and a member of New Dramatists in NYC.

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Read more work by Kristen Kosmas:

 
Buy Hello Failure from Ugly Duckling Presse.
Buy This From Cloudland from PLAY A Journal of Plays
Buy Anthem and The Mayor of Baltimore from 53rd State Press.
A rave review of There There in The New York Times