Fire in the Bones. By Thomas F. Rogers. Performance Rights

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Transcription:

By Thomas F. Rogers Performance Rights It is an infringement of the federal copyright law to copy or reproduce this script in any manner or to perform this play without royalty payment. All rights are controlled by Eldridge Publishing Co., Inc. Contact the publisher for additional scripts and further licensing information. The author s name must appear on all programs and advertising with the notice: Produced by special arrangement with Eldridge Publishing Company. ELDRIDGE PUBLISHING COMPANY 95church.com Thomas F. Rogers Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing http://www.95church.com/playdetails.asp?pid=2045

- 2 - STORY OF THE PLAY A powerful drama, this play brings to light the tragic and complex circumstances which underlie the catastrophe that some 120 years ago cast a shadow on the Mormon Church: the Mountain Meadows Massacre. Even today many members fear to know the particulars. In this play Brigham Young is completely exonerated as the instigator of the massacre, which is as it should have been. At the same time the play suggests the tragic dilemma into which well-meaning persons like John D. Lee are sometimes thrust and the sacrifices that a community, right or wrong, may require of them. The characters resemble the zealots of every society and age. Such people make tragedy as timely as ever. Space setting with props.

- 3 - CHARACTERS (In order of appearance.) 14 m, 5 w, 14 extras (doubling recommended) LIEUTENANT FIVE SOLDIERS MILES PACE, a friend of John D. s. EMMA LEE, John D. s seventeenth wife, in her early twenties. RACHEL LEE, John D. s sixth wife, in her early thirties. ALMA LEE, John D. s and Agatha s son, in his mid-teens. SECRETARY JOHN D. LEE, a pioneer settler in his mid-forties. JACOB HAMBLIN, a pioneer settler and Indian envoy, middle aged. GEORGE ALBERT SMITH, a Mormon Apostle, middle aged. LEWIS, a soldier. HAIGHT, an officer. DAME, an officer. LOTT, a soldier. MORRILL, a soldier. HIGBEE, a soldier. KLINGENSMITH, a soldier. KNIGHT, a soldier. AGATHA LEE, John D. s first wife, in her mid-forties. MARY ANN LEE, John D. s sixteenth wife, later Alma s wife, in her early teens. PRISCILLA HAMBLIN, Jacob s wife. SAMMY LEE, son of John D. and Agatha, in his early twenties. SHERIFF STOKES MARSHALL BECKER 1ST AND 2ND GUARDS PROSECUTOR JUDGE BOREMAN COUNSELOR MCMURDY

- 4 - PROLOGUE (AT RISE: March 23, 1877. Mountain Meadows, Utah. Just after sunrise. Near a downstage wing, two men and two cloaked women stand with backs to the audience, focusing on an object at the rear of the opposite wing. At their feet are blankets, towels, and a basin of water. Upstage center are five armed U.S. Soldiers and a Lieutenant. The Soldiers stand in a row. In his hand the Lieutenant holds a civilian hat. A coat and muffler are draped over his arm.) LIEUTENANT: Man your arms! (The Soldiers lower their guns to a firing position, each aimed at the same point of focus offstage. The women and younger man watch unflinchingly.) Ready! Aim! DEEP MALE VOICE: (From offstage in the direction they are aiming.) Aim for my heart, boys! LIEUTENANT: Fire! (The Soldiers fire. The older male spectator recoils. The guns report is immediately followed by a muted thud as of a body dropping into a box. The Soldiers slowly lower their arms and resume the position of attention. No one moves.) LIEUTENANT: At ease! (He walks offstage in the direction of the target, then returns.) Dismissed! (The Soldiers move offstage in a direction opposite that of their target. The Lieutenant then walks to the four spectators, salutes and addresses the younger of the two men, who is about thirty.) LIEUTENANT: (Cont d.) You may tend to the body. (Taking the towels and basin, but leaving the blankets, the younger man gestures for the others to stay behind, then goes offstage in the direction they have been facing and in which the Soldiers had fired. As they speak, the others turn and face one another.)

- 5 - MILES: I ll be leaving you now, Rachel...Emma. So you can be by yourselves. EMMA: (In a Cockney accent.) Thank you, Miles. MILES: Taint likely we ll see each other again very soon, I reckon. EMMA: No, I don t suppose. MILES: Heard you might be heading south, Emma into Arizona. EMMA: That s right. MILES: How about you, Rachel? Will you stay in Panguitch? EMMA: Miles, for heaven s sake! MILES: I m sorry. RACHEL: It s all right, Emma. Miles means well. He s just trying to distract us, aren t you, Miles? MILES: No. Not exactly. Forgive me, but before I leave you I need to know...did he really kill those two women back then, here in the Meadows, like Jacob said he did at the trial? Because if he really did EMMA: Then he d cease to be your idol. MILES: Rachel, you were with him all those months at the penitentiary. Did he ever tell you he had or hadn t killed those two women? RACHEL: No. MILES: No? And you, Emma how about you, all the time you and he were there together on the Colorado at Lonely Dell? Did he ever tell you? EMMA: No. MILES: No? But wouldn t he of told you if you d of asked him? EMMA: Of course. MILES: And, knowing that, didn t you feel compelled to ask him? Either of you? RACHEL: We felt compelled to do just one thing, Miles to be his wives and, as such, to give him the benefit no one else would. Not even you, it seems. MILES: But didn t Agatha ever tell you not even once before she died? (They do not answer him. Under his breath.) A damn shame one of you didn t find out!

- 6 - EMMA: Miles! Just be grateful you were ill the day they called him to the Meadows. MILES: Doc Fisher he insisted I stay in bed, or I d have gone. EMMA: Be grateful. Or you might have had as much to pay as much or more and not been willing. MILES: I ve thought of that. Today again. EMMA: I guess you will just have to keep him as your idol and always revere him, Miles like the rest of us. MILES: I guess I will. EMMA: We want certainty so badly, don t we, Miles? (He nods. The young man returns from the wings.) EMMA: Can we view him, Alma? ALMA: Not quite. First I need the blankets. EMMA: (Handing them to him.) Here. MILES: You re sure I can t help you, Alma? (Shaking his head, Alma returns to the wings.) RACHEL: The eldest son has certain privileges. John D. specially requested that Alma wash and dress him. MILES: I understand, and I ll leave you now. RACHEL: Thank you, Miles. (Miles tips his hat and leaves. Embracing Emma.) Emma, Emma, how did it all begin? With those Missourians, I suppose those Fanchers. RACHEL: Things might have been different if Jacob Hamblin had been there to powwow with those blood-thirsty Indians. If Jacob hadn t stayed away so long honeymooning another bride. I ve often wondered, Emma, if he didn t just smell trouble and marry her when he did, so they would have to call on someone else to handle those rampaging Lamanites. Handling Lamanites was Jacob s special gift. Maybe because, Lord forgive me, he was deep down so very sly. EMMA: (As if speaking to someone directly in front of her.) Jacob how you ve disappointed some of us. I remember the first time I saw you. You were as winning and handsome

- 7 - EMMA: (Cont d.) as everyone said. But I only had eyes then and ever after I m proud to say for John D. It was in Salt Lake at the Church offices the day of our marriage. I d just met Brother Brigham for the first time. He d interviewed us and given us his blessing. We were just going out the door, and there you were, waiting your turn. Before we got away I d also made the acquaintance of Apostle Smith. (The lights dim.) Scene 1 (AT RISE: January, 1858. Salt Lake City. The lights rise on an office waiting room. A male secretary sits at a desk to one side of an imposing interior door. A wooden bench faces him at the other end of the room. A handsome man still in his thirties sits on the bench, then rises as John D., in his mid-forties, emerges from the inner door, all smiles. Emma removes her bonnet and shawl and, now wearing more youthful apparel, joins John D. at the door as he ends his first speech.) JOHN D.: (Turning and facing back through the same door.) Thank you, Brother Brigham. I ll care for her as well as I have all the others. EMMA: (Chucking John D. on the chin.) And I ll tend him better than the others, Brother Brigham. You ll see. SECRETARY: You re next, Brother Hamblin. (The man at the bench rises and waits for John D. and Emma to pass him.) JOHN D.: If it isn t the Indian missionary himself. JACOB: Well, John D. Don t tell me the Lord has blessed you with yet another wife? JOHN D.: Emma Jacob Hamblin. Jacob Emma. She ll be mine after lunch, soon as we re back from the endowment house.

End of Freeview Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing http://www.95church.com/playdetails.asp?pid=2045 Eldridge Publishing, a leading drama play publisher since 1906, offers more than a thousand full-length plays, one-act plays, melodramas, holiday plays, religious plays, children's theatre plays and musicals of all kinds. For more than a hundred years, our family-owned business has had the privilege of publishing some of the finest playwrights, allowing their work to come alive on stages worldwide. We look forward to being a part of your next theatrical production. Eldridge Publishing... for the start of your theatre experience!