0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes) 560 views64 pagesWorking Script
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content,
claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
LIBRETTO VOCAL BOOK
From the book by Studs Terkel
Adapted by Stephen Schwartz and Nina Faso
With additional contributions by Gordon Greenberg
Songs by
Craig Carnelia
Micki Grant
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Mary Rodgers and Susan Birkenhead
Stephen Schwartz
James Taylor
NOTICE: DO NOT DEFACE!
Should you find it necessary to mark eves or cuts, use a soft black lead pencil only.
NOT FOR SALE
This book is rented for the period specified in your contract. It remains the property of
IN ALL MATERIALS Ti
MTI MUSIC LIBRARY
31A INDUSTRIAL PARK ROAD
(Mvere Tenaras bereananonas NEW HARTFORD, CT 06057
421 West S4th Steet
New York, NY 10019
(212) 541.4684
Copyright ©MUSICAL NUMBERS
All The Livelong Day
Ja. Livelong Day Playoff
Rex’s Costume Change.
Delivery...
Nobody Tells Me How,
Brother Trucker.
Just A Housewife
. Roberta’s Costume Change -.
Millwork...
If I Could’ve Been...
8. The Mason...
Delores Transition.
It’s An Art
. Joe’s Costume Change
Joe...
A Very Good Day
Cleanin’ Women...
. Fathers and Sons..
Something To Point To
. Bows / Exit MusicMAN
1
2
4,
6
7.
8
8
All The Livelong Day
Delivery
Brother Trucker
Millwork
If Could’ve Been
‘The Mason
It’s An Art
13. Fathers and Sons
14, Something To Point To
WOMAN 1
7
9
All The Livelong Day
Delivery
Brother Trucker
Just A Housewife .
Millwork
If 1 Could’ve Been
It’s An Art
11. A Very Good Day
12, Cleanin’ Women
14, Something To Point To
MAN 2
1
2
4.
6
9
. All The Livelong Day
Delivery
Brother Trucker
Millwork
If I Could’ve Been
It’s An Art
11. A Very Good Day
13, Fathers and Sons
14. Something To Point To
16
29
31
37
39
53
56
16
29
31
39
47
53
SONGS BY CHARACTER
WOMAN 2
6
7,
9.
All The Livelong Day
Delivery
Brother Trucker
Just A Housewife ..
Millwork
If 1 Could’ve Been
It’s An Art
12, Cleanin’ Women
14, Something To Point To
MAN 3
All The Livelong Day
Delivery
Brother Trucker
Millwork
If I Could’ve Been
9.1t's An Art
10. Joe
13. Fathers and Sons
14, Something To Point To
WOMAN 3.
1. All The Livelong Day
2.
9.
Delivery
Nobody Tells Me How
Brother Trucker
Just A Housewife
. Millwork
If | Could’ve Been
W's An Art
12. Cleanin’ Women
14, Something To Point To
16
2
29
31
39
49
56
16
29
31
39
42
33
56
14
16
2
29
37
39
49Day
nt To
31
“WORKING” SONG CREDITS
“All the Livelong Day”
‘Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz (with acknowledgments to Walt Whitman)
“Delivery”
Music and Lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda
“Nobody Tells Me How”
Lyrics by Susan Birkenhead
Music by Mary Rodgers
“Brother Trucker”
‘Music and Lyrics by James Taylor
“Just a Housewife”
‘Music and Lyrics by Craig Camelia
“Millwork”
‘Music and Lyrics by James Taylor
“If | Could’ve Been”
‘Music and Lyrics by Micki Grant
“The Mason”
‘Music and Lyrics by Craig Carnelia
“It’s An Art”
‘Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz
“oe”
Music and Lyrics by Craig Carnelia
“A Very Good Day”
‘Music and Lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda
“Cleanin’ Women”
Music and Lyrics by Micki Grant
“Fathers and Sons”
‘Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz.
“Something to Point To”
Music and Lyrics by Craig Carnelia010
nberg.
Workine
(As the audience enters, they see actors preparing, stage crew setting up the stage, and
the stage manager doing pre-show check. On stage, we see 5 desks with large 1970's
style reel to reel tape players
As house lights go to half, we hear the sounds of the stage manager and crew's
ClearCom conversation. They are finishing a conversation as the stage manager calls.
‘Lights 1 Go.’ Once house lights go to “Half”, we hear the stage manager clearly... )
STAGE MANAGER
Standby Lights 2 - 6, Video 1 & 2, Border in and Sound 10.
(unheard operators reply in the affirmative)
House Out, Lights 2 and Border in—go.
(lights change and border flies in)
Lights 3 and Video 1—go.
(as he or she says GO, a projection hits the border. It says: In 1974, Chicago radio
broadcaster Studs Terkel published a best selling compilation of interviews
‘with a cross section of Americans talking about their jobs.)
Lights 4 and Video 2~go.
(the next image appears. It says: In 2007—2008 additional interviews were
conducted. Terkel described it as ‘the extraordinary dreams of ordinary people.’
The final image appears. It says: These are their words.)
Lights 5, Sound 10, Border out—GO.
(as he or she says GO, a reel to reel audio machine on stage starts to spin, and we hear
the actual recording of Studs speaking with one of his subjects. Another starts to spin
and we hear an overlapping interview. And another. And another. And another.
Until it builds to a cacophony.)
(Lights change sharply as the band breaks out into the rocking opening vamp, border
‘flies out, revealing actors...)
WOMAN 1
I HEAR
AMERICA SINGING
MAN 1 & WOMAN 2
MAN 3 & WOMAN 1
HEARWorKING
MAN 1 & WOMAN 2
MAN 2 & WOMAN 3
THE VARIED CAROLS HEAR
MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 1 & 2
AMERICA SINGING
MAN 2 & WOMAN 3
AMERICA,
MAN 2, WOMAN 1 & 3
SINGING ..
MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 1& 2
SINGING
MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 1, 2 & 3
SINGING
MAN 2
‘THE MASON SINGING
WOMAN 3
‘THE WAITRESS SINGING
WOMAN 1
‘THE MILL WORKER SINGING
WOMAN 2
THE MANAGER SINGING
MAN 1
‘THE FIREMAN SINGING
ALL
EACH ONE SINGING
WOMAN 3
‘THE TEACHER
MAN 1
‘THE TRUCKER
WOMAN 1 & 2, MAN2
‘THE HOOKERWorkine -3-
WOMAN 1 & 2, MAN 1 & 2
‘THE HOUSEWIFE
ALL
IHEAR
MAN1&3
WOMAN 1
THEAR
‘AMERICA SINGING
‘AMERICA SINGING
(The reel to reel players are still spinning - and we now hear them again. This time,
though, the actors speak along with the original interviewees, holding the book
WORKING or the script.)
MAN 1*
Every load isa challenge, and when you finally /offload it you get a feeling of
completing a job, which I don't think you get in a production line situation,
WOMAN 3
| fee! like Carmen in a way, like a gypsy / holding out a tambourine, ya know, and
they throw their coins.
MAN 3
Pick it up, put it down, pick it up, put it down. /
WOMAN 2
It sounds terrible, just a housewife, its true, / what is a housewife?
MAN 2
‘Any man who works with his hands I think takes pride/ in his work.
WOMAN 1
like flying and I like people, I really do, with all the great benefits, lying around
the world, meeting all these great people.
(MIKE DILLARD, IRONWORKER, breaks through the crowd.)
MIKE (MAN 3)
HEY SOMEBODY, DON’CHA WANNA HEAR
THE STORY OF MY LIFE?
ONE OF THEM MOVIE COMPANIES
T.V. DOCUMENTARIES
"The sashes (“/") in the dialogue are mean! to indicate the point at which,
the next actor begins speaking overlapping the rst ofthe previa lineWON’CHA COME AND ASK ME PLEASE
‘TO TELL YOU WHAT I DO AT THE STORE
(As if counti
MEN WOMEN
STUCK AGAIN
WITH YOU KNOW WHO —
ME AND MY OLD PAL
WorKING
(MIKE)
AND PAY ME A MILLION DOLLARS
‘CAUSE IF YOU PAY ME A MILLION DOLLARS
I WOULDN'T HAVE TO GO AND DO IT NO MORE
ALL
ing off)
ONE.
Two.
THREE ...
FOUR
JUST LIKE THE SONG SAY
ALL THE LIVELONG DAY
EVERYBODY DONE KNOW THAT SONG
WORKING FOR A LIVING THE WHOLE DAY LONG
ALL THE LIVELONG DAY
HEY SOMEBODY, WON’CHA TURN YOUR HEAD
TAKE A LOOK MY WAY
WOMEN
YM GETTIN’ OLD AND I TELL YOU
MEN
GETTIN’ OLD AIN'T NOTHIN’ NEW
STUCK AGAIN
WITH You KNOW WHO-
MONDAY MONDAY
1 Y'KNOW RAIN OR SHINE
HE'LL BE SHOWIN’ RAIN OR SHINE
ME AND MY OLD PAL
MONDAY MONDAYWorKING -5-
ALL
AND ANOTHER CUP OF COFFEE, GET THE JUICES FLOWIN’
ANOTHER CUP OF COFFEE, GET THE JUICES FLOWIN
ANOTHER CUP OF COFFEE, GET THE JUICES FLOWIN’
AND IT’S ONE ... TWO ... THREE ... GET GOIN’!
JUST LIKE THE SONG SAY
ALL THE LIVELONG DAY
EV'RYBODY DONE KNOW THAT SONG
WORKING FOR A LIVING THE WHOLE DAY LONG.
ALL THE LIVELONG
MAN 1 & WOMAN 3 MAN 2 & WOMAN 2
JUST LIKE JUST LIKE
THE SONG ‘THE SONG
SAY JUST LIKE SAY
THE SONG
SAY NOW
ALL THE ALL
LIVELONG. ALL THE
Day LIVELONG.
DAY ‘THE LIVELONG
JUST LIKE DAY
THE SONG.
SAY JUST LIKE
THE SONG
SAY NOW
ALL THE ALL
LIVELONG ALL THE
DAY LIVELONG
DAY THE LIVELONG
JUST LIKE JUST LIKE
THE SONG THE SONG
SAY JUST LIKE SAY
THE SONG
SAY NOW
ALL THE ALL
LIVELONG ALL THE
DAY LIVELONG.
DAY
MAN 3 & WOMAN 1WoRKING
(MAN 1 & WOMAN 3) (MAN 3 & WOMAN 1) (MAN 2 & WOMAN:
‘THE LIVELONG
yusT LIKE DAY
THE SONG JUST LIKE
SAY ‘THE SONG
SAY NOW
ALL THE ALL THE ALL
LIVELONG LIVELONG
DAY DAY ‘THE LIVELONG
ALL
VERYBODY DONE KNOW THAT SONG
WORKING AT LIVING THE WHOLE DAY LONG
ALL
THE
LIVE-
LONG
DAY!
MIKE DILLARD, IRONWORKER (MAN 3)
Ya dying breed. A laborer. Strictly muscle work. Pick it up, put it down. Pick it
up, put it down. Pick it up, putit down. Typically, in the morning, you wait at the
shanty until seven o'clock. You go in at seven, and you start walking your way uP
the ladder, climbing up the steel. Every two floors you plank it off. Then you
disconnect the bottom of the mast and you tie it to the boom on top of the choking,
cable, Then you do the same thing and pick up the other side.
I started working structural steel when I was eighteen years old. I've worked on
towers probably 1,000 feet high. Most people are afraid of heights like that, so
automatically every ironworker has an ego. You're doing something somebody else
can’t do, And you get to wear a tool belt: When you're a kid eighteen years old, and
you have the wrenches in like a holster, you're like a cowboy.
an ironworker. My older brothers were
But I always knew I was going to be
onworker, so it was a natural course of events.
ironworkers and my father was an ir
My father... my father was very disappointed I didn’t go to college.
(To get off this “personal” topic)
We had a college boy at work this summer. One time he saw a book in my back
pocket and he was amazed. He says to me: “You read?” That's what can get t0
you—the non-recognition by other people. To say a man is just a laborer, a woman is
just a waitress; It bothers you sometimes.WorKine -7-
(MIKE)
Some mornings, | look across the skyline for a building I worked on, say that office
building over there. See that building? I helped build it, And I know some guy is
sitting in his corner office behind his five thousand dollar desk, and he’s never
gonna think about me. But yeah, I think about him sometimes
LL
(ln the Chicago production: dressers transformed MIKE in front of our eyes into REX
WINSHIP, a hedge fund manager. As the music SNAPS to a close, he BUZZES his
assistant, tearing through his office...)
iE LIVELONG
REX (MAN 3)
‘Amanda! Where is that P & L report?
(We hear him on her speaker phone, sitting on her desk om the stage deck as the
computer sounds of instant messages and an office are heard as the stage fills with
images of cubicles and the lights shift to...)
AMANDA MCKENNY, PROJECT MANAGER (WOMAN 2)
It’s on your desk.
REX
Why is it not in my hand?!
m. Pick it AMANDA
wait at the
payor (She looks to audience. Her boss is nota pleasant man to work for.)
you ma project manager. I'm here at work at 7:30 AM, [leave at 8 PM. In between my
e choking ‘meetings, l answer messages and email—and try to avoid my boss. You always have
a boss, Sometimes you have an OK boss, and sometimes you have a Satan boss. He's
not behind me is he? I wish these walls were like — a litle higher. I've been in a lot
ked on of different cubicles. I've been in the high-wall cubes, I've been in the half-height
80 cubes. Listen ~ the way things are these days, I'm glad to be in any cubicle at all
ebody else have friends who would kill for this job, for any job.
stent) ANOTHER WOMAN IN CUBICLE (WOMAN 3)
I paper the walls of my cubicle with posters. I bring in fresh flowers, brought in my
favorite ceramic lamp. This little collection of things on top of my computer ~ I call
them “computer gods.” I guess | have more decorations than I thought. But you
of event
events, know, ina cubicle, things like glow-in-the-dark skeletons go a long way.
MAN IN CUBICLE (MAN 1)
o Sharing a cubicle is srt of like sharing a bathroom stall. It doesn’t matter how tall
re the sides are or how big it is, you're sill in there with someone else — in a not sexy
way.
woman isWorxinc
MAN WEARING HEADPHONES IN CUBICLE (MAN 2)
I can see the programmer in the cubicle next to me through the reflection in the
window. Sometimes, I can see her reflection and see what she’s doing. Quite often,
she's Emailing jokes to her sister. | also acquired a webcam. | set it up so it points
behind me and I have a little window on my computer which is the webcam picture,
and if somebody walks behind me, I can see them.
WOMAN IN CUBICLE (WOMAN 1)
| grew up expecting I would get out of college and make a million dollars. I grew up
expecting that somebody was just gonna deliver a Mercedes to my front door. It's
been quite a rude awakening, This is the first time in four generations that I have it
‘worse than my parents.
AMANDA
Jobs are not big enough for people. When you ask most people who they are, they
define themselves by their jobs: “I'm a doctor.” “I'm a carpenter.” “I'm a
sportscaster.” If someone asks me, I say, "I'm Amanda McKenny. At certain points
in time, I do things for a living, ”
(The cast transitions the set to a fast food restaurant while she continues to speak)
My mentality is totally different than the people who are twenty years older, the
“fers.” Ihave no real sense of loyalty, because I know they have a business to run
and they'll lay me off if it’s prudent. | accept that. I don't perceive that anyone my
age thinks: I've got a job for life. What they feel is: Allright, I'm going to get as
much as | can from this company, then I'm going to move and get more money. This
is the first job of many.
(MAN 2 is joined by A DRESSER, who helps him transform into FREDDY
RODRIGUEZ, a fast food worker.)
FREDDY (MAN 2)
THIS IS MY FIRST JOB
ISMELL LIKE A BURGER,
THE REGISTER IS EASY.
HEY, YOU WANNA BURGER?
UHIT THE PICTURE OF THE BURGER,
EV'RY DAY, THE SAME OLD THING
HELLO, CHICKEN NUGGET, QUARTER POUNDER.
AND I WAIT FOR THAT PHONE TO RING, THAT PHONE TO RING
‘THE PHONE AT THE END OF THE COUNTERLAN 2)
(FREDDY)
mn in the WHEN 1 SEE THE MANAGER
Quite often, WRITING DOWN AN ORDER
on deel, WHEN I SEE THE MANAGER
* MAKING CHANGE
WHEN SEE THE MANAGER
WRITING AN ADDRESS,
mI grew up TWHISPER, YES!
| soon ts ' GIMME SOME CHANGE
AND SEND ME ON MY WAY,
okay.
are, they I'M OFF ON A DELIVERY!
. AND I'M FINALLY ON MY OWN: Dean ta ele)
ain points OFF ON A DELIVERY!
DELIVERY! PEACE!
speak)
AND I'M HEADED TO PARTS UNKNOWN!
OFF ON A DELIVERY, DELIVERY
FRESH AIR AND EXERCISE
AND SOMETIMES I'LL THROW IN
Serna SOME EXTRA FRIES
‘one my FOR CALLING IT IN TODAY,
etas MY WORLD IS GREY
oney. This UNTIL THEY SEND ME AWAY ON A. UNTIL THEY SEND ME AWAY ON A
DELIVERY! DELIVERY!
AND THE WIND IS IN MY HAIR!
OFF ON A DELIVERY
NO ONE'S WATCHING ME,
1 CAN WANDER ANYWHERE
BUT THE FOOD IS GETTING COLD,
AND S01 DO AST AM TOLD
RESPONSIBILITY
1 HAVE RESPONSIBILITIES.-10~ WorKING
(FREDDY)
SEE MY FATHER SITS AT HOME
HE DOESN'T WORK ANY MORE
WHILE MY MOTHER WORKS A DOUBLE SHIFT
AT THE DEPARTMENT STORE
AND IT'S NICE
NOT HAVING TO ASK FOR MONEY
AND IT’S NICE
NOT HAVING TO ASK FOR DINNER
IT'S NICE, ON NIGHTS,
WHEN YOU HAVE TO GET AWAY ..
MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 1, 2 & 3]
1 — NEED DELIVERY!
1.GO TO WORK EVERY DAY
YM PUTTING MONEY AWAY,
HEY, YOU KNOW WHAT THEY SAY,
SLOW AND STEADY
I’M MAKING MINIMUM WAGE, AH
‘THAT'S PRETTY GOOD FOR MY AGE AH
IF CAN MANAGE TO SAVE, AH
T'LLBE READY TOGO Y'LL BE READY TOGO
WHEREVER I GOTTA GO,
AH, AH!
WHEREVER DES
INY LEADS ME
AH, AH!
FOR NOW THE RESTAURANT FEEDS ME AH, AH!
AND MY FAMILY NEEDS ME {
DELIVERY!
YES!
‘THE CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS RIGHT.
WHERE'S MY DELIVERY,
MY DELIVERY?
THANKS FOR GETTING ME OUT
OF THE HOUSE TONIGHT!
WHERE'S MY DELIVERY?WorkING -11-
WOMAN 1,2 & 3
VERY!
oGo
IVERY,
IVERY?
(FREDDY) (MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 1, 2 & 3)
1 KEEP THE ORDERS STRAIGHT
AND I SAY “SORRY” IF 'M LATE
YOU'RE LATE!
SOME EXTRA NAPKINS FOR YOUR PLATE,
FOR MAKING YOU WAIT,
THAT'LL BE $12.98 $1298
FOR YOUR DELIVERY! DELIVERY
1CAN WANDER OUT OF RANGE!
HERE'S MY DELIVERY,
MY DELIVERY!
‘TOWARDS A FUTURE NEW AND STRANGE!
HERE'S MY DELIVERY,
DELIVERY!
THIS JOB IS JUST A START
BUT WAIT,
1 HAVEN'T TOLD YOU MY FAVORITE PART
IT'S WHEN THEY PAY.
AND THEN THEY SAY
SAY.
SAY, HEY!
REX
(has only a big bill — hesitates, then hands it to FREDDY)
Fuck it. Keep the change.
FREDDY
KEEP THE CHAN
MAN1&3
KEEP THE CHANGE
KEEP THE CHANGE
KEEP THE CHANGE
KEEP THE CHANGE
KEEP THE CHANGE
HEY, KID, KEEP THE CHANGE!12 - WoRKING
(FREDDY) (MAN 1 & 3) (WOMEN)
AND BIT BY BIT I KEEP THE CHANGE
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
HEY!
IF SAVE A LITTLE EVERYDAY,
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
HEY!
THIS JOB’S GONNA DELIVER ME
FAR AWAY DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
HEY!
VLL LOOK BACK ON THIS
AND SAY
SAY. SAY. (HAY! SAY. SAY. (HAY!
‘THANK GOD FOR
DELIVERY! DELIVERY! DELIVERY!
REX
T'ma guy who likes to work. Some people enjoy tennis, I enjoy work. I enjoy being a
leader. I enjoy being the guy everybody looks to. I like the responsibility of having a
team of people working for me.
In our world of money, money-management is still the sexiest job there is. Ask any
girl at the East Bank Club. Money is hot. True story — they did a study that found
that just looking at a Maserati made girls produce twice as many hormones as
normal. Oh yeah. If someone wants to call me a shallow douchebag, a corporate tool,
a freakin’ ‘robber baron’ — I take it as a compliment. Abso-fuckin-lutely
‘That's what this country is about — the free market. It's not perfect, but if they
‘would leave it alone, it would sure as hell correct itself better than any regulator can.
Yeah — Some companies will go away. Some people will lose jobs. And some people
will lose money. But that's just basic capitalism.WorKine - 13 -
(WOMEN)
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
DELIVERY
SAY. SAY. (HAY!
DELIVERY!
joy being a
f having a
Ask any
at found
6 as
orate tool,
they
ulator can,
me people
(REX)
Who developed America? The regulators? The SEC? Or was it the Mellons, the
Rockefellers? I mean, tell me what they did bad? Rockefeller exploited some workers
in the copper fields, maybe he shot some of them. Fine. Not perfect. But who
benefited? There's still Standard Oil, isn’t there? Mellon's bank is still around. Listen,
how many charities were started by these people? How many museums, theatres,
national parks—are here for us to enjoy thanks to the “robber barons"? These were
the giants who built the cities, who built our country. Unless you have losers, you
cannot have winners,
(His phone vibrates)
Hold on a second. I got to take this.
(into phone)
‘Yeah. OK. Give me 5 minutes. Yeah. OK.
(to us)
Look, I'm going to have to cut this short. I need to get back on the phone before the
markets close overseas
Everybody works long hours these days. Kid wants to make it, he's gotta be willing
to work long hours. And he's gotta know how to outsmart the regulators to make a
profit. It's easy. Christ, if you can’t outsmart one little government staff, you
shouldn’t come to work in the morning.
(aughs)
I should be their teacher. You know, I always wanted to teach. That's what I'd like to
do when I get tired of all this— get involved with young people. Pass along my
knowledge... my experience... my values.
(The lights have come up on a TEACHER, an older white female, at an old school
blackboard.)
ROSE HOFFMAN, TEACHER (WOMAN 3)
(Greeting “children” as they enter)
Good morning, Hernando, how are you? Good morning, Selena, I missed you.
(To us)
In your heart, you may have a dislike for a certain child, but you force yourself to
say:
(Sweetly, to another “child”)
Good morning, Manuel, how you doing?
(To us)
‘Someone forgot to take his Ritalin this morning,Te WorkiNG
(ROSE)
My name is Rose Hoffman. I teach third grade.
(beat)
‘At9:15, we start with arithmetic. Ihave “tables fun” on the board — multiplication.
You don’t say “tables”, you say “tables-fun.” Everything has to be fun, fun, fun.
I tell my kids:
(Claps hands)
Mrs. Hoffman’s here, everybody works! Working is a blessing. In the old days, I had
eighteen to twenty children who stayed in my class from the beginning bell to the
very end. Today, I have thirty-seven in my class. The children come in, play with
their cellphones, and leave... for computer lab, art therapy.
Oh, yes, Ihave seen great changes since I began teaching in 1967.
(music under)
January 6, 1967... My students back then were Polish primarily. I loved the Polish
people. They worked hard.
MY CLASSROOM WAS ALWAYS A SHOWCASE,
IN THOSE DAYS WE DID IT OURSELVES
WITH COLORFUL PICTURES AND CHARTS ON THE WALL
A SNOWMAN IN WINTER, A PUMPKIN IN FALL
AND ALL MY SUPPLIES WERE IN NEAT LITTLE PILES
ON THE SHELVES
MY CHILDREN WERE ALWAYS RESPECTFUL
WHEN THE PRINCIPAL CAME, THEY WOULD RISE
IF [HAD TO LEAVE FOR A MINUTE OR TWO
‘THEY ALWAYS FOUND SOMETHING CONSTRUCTIVE TO DO
AND EVERYONE SAT IN THEIR PLACES ACCORDING TO SIZE
BUT KIDS DON'T KNOW HOW TO BEHAVE ANYMORE!
ASK THEM TO RISE AND THEY ASK YOU: “WHAT FOR?”
WE CONFISCATE WEAPONS AND DRUGS AT THE DOOR
NO SPITBALLS AND COMIC BOOKS NOW
THEY WANT ME TO TEACH IN A CLASSROOM LIKE THAT
BUT NOBODY TELLS ME HOW
Back
shock
didn
prob
OhyWorkine is =
~ multiplication,
fun, fun, fun,
ne old days, I had
ting bell to the
in, play with
sd the Polish
ALL
> DO
) SIZE
(ROSE)
Back then we actually taught English, not English as a Second Language. I'm
shocked that English is the second language. When my parents came over, they
didn't learn Jewish as a first language at the taxpayers’ expense. We didn’t have
problems with focus, with discipline. Of course, in those days we had the paddle.
Oh yes, I'm a big believer in corporal punishment. It builds respect ... and trust.
I MADE A BIG THING ABOUT SPELLING
BUT THEY LEARNED BY THE TIME I GOT THROUGH
‘THEY COPIED THE WORDS TILL THEY KNEW THEM BY HEART
TEN TIMES FOR THE DUMB ONES, AND TWICE FOR THE SMART
AND GOLD STARS WERE GIVEN
‘TO THOSE WHO MADE SENTENCES TOO
BUT WHY BOTHER TEACHING THEM SPELLING TODAY?
NOBODY KNOWS HOW TO READ, ANYWAY
HOW CAN YOU SPELL WHAT YOU CAN'T EVEN SAY?
IT'S “SE HABLA ESPANOL” NOW
‘THE WAY I'VE BEEN TEACHING FOR FORTY -SOME YEARS
IS NO LONGER “EFFECTIVE” OR SO IT APPEARS
WELL, DAMMIT, IT WORKED FOR ME THEN
SO WHAT'S WRONG WITH IT NOW?
‘THEY SAY I'M SUPPOSED TO “KEEP UP WITH THE TIMES”
BUT NOBODY EVER TELLS ME
How.
(Her mood softens as she speaks again. During the following, lights come up on
TERRY MASON)
There is one girl who stands out in my mind in all my years of teaching ... my
favorite ... she wasn’t very bright, but she was never any trouble. I see her every
once in a while. She gives no trouble today either. She has the same smile for
everyone,
TERRY MASON, FLIGHT ATTENDANT (WOMAN 1)
‘The first two months I started flying I had already been to New York, London and
Paris. Which is pretty huge when you're from Kankakee, Illinois. But after you start
working for the airlines, i's actually not as glamorous as you thought it was going to
be.
Sometimes, people just get nasty. I mean, they're harassed by security and then they
‘get delivered to us. And your shining personality only goes so far. We get scaredWoRKING
(TERRY)
sometimes too. I've never yet been so scared that I didn't want to 6 °0 the plane,
sat there’ve been times at take-offs when there's been something funny.
and we had a load full of passengers and the
ke an emergency landing in Chicago
the nose gear is gonna
(One time I was working first class,
captain tells me we're going to have to mal
tesause we lost a pin out of the nose gear. When we land,
collapse, So, he wants me to prepare the whole cabin for this landing, but not for
oeber two hours, And not to tell the other flight attendants, Because they're new
and would get all excited.
So [had to keep this in me... for two hours... and I'm wondering, J gonna die
today? And I'm serving drinks and food. And this guy Bet mad at me because his
‘omelette’s too cold. I was gonna say,
(big stewardess smile)
i “You just wait buddy. You're not gonna have to worry about that fucking omelette.”
When I told my parents I was going into the airlines, they B0t 59 excited. My mother
especially thought it would be great that I could have the ambition, the nerve to 8°
to the city on my own and try to accomplish something, Really, I just wanted to get
‘out of Kankakee.
(Sound of whistle... becomes the sound of a truck's horn (Our focus shifts to FRANK
DECKER, an interstate trucker. Music vamp starts)
FRANK (MAN 1)
tf you want to have a tril, there's no comparison, not eve to a jet plane, to
| arreping on steel truck and going out there onthe Dan Ryan Express)
‘ninute you climb into that truck, you forget about the wife and kids you just kissed
goodbye and the adrenaline starts pumping
BREAKER NUMBER NINE, BIG BUDDY
i PUT YOUR EARS ON FOR ME NOW
i BIG TRUCKER GOT TO HAVE A BIG LIE
SO COME ON, BROTHER TRUCKER
YA GOT TO COME BACK, MOTHER...
KEEP SEIN’ DOUBLE ‘LESS 1 CLOSE ONE EYEWorkine So
(FRANK)
1GOT TO ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER
SURE ‘NUFF ASHAMED ‘BOUT THE SHAPE I'M IN
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER
on the plane,
ny
pee YM BACK ON MY WHEELS AGAIN
» Chicago
ar is gonna MEN
but not for ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER
they're new
FRANK
OUTWARD BOUND FROM SOUTH BEND
nI gonna die
MEN
e because his ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER
FRANK
oo I'M BACK ON MY WHEELS AGAIN
YM RUNNIN’ OUTTA WHITES
GOD DAMN DIM THOSE HEADLIGHTS
ed. My mother
e nerve to go
wanted to get FOUR HOURS SLEEP IN THE LAST TWO NIGHTS
BUT I'M GONNA BE ALRIGHT,
1GoT TO
ts to FRANK or
MEN MAN 2
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER
ISAY WHERE, AND YOU SAY WHEN.
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER ...
ne, to
way, The FRANK
Du just kissed YM BACK ON MY WHEELS AGAIN.
MAN 2&3
1GOT TO,
MEN
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER
FRANK
BACK IT ON UP
AND DO IT AGAIN
MAN 2 &3
BACK IT ON UP!
MEN
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, BROTHER TRUCKER= 18 WoRKING
FRANK
YM BACK ON MY WHEELS AGAIN
ROL
FRANK WOMEN BRO
You're gone for a week, two weeks, picking up a
a load at one port, delivering it to another. ant
! You sit in that truck, your only companionship .
is your own thoughts. And you don’t want to xe
ee ee ‘
home. So you turn up your radio, if you can iw
play it loud enough to hear over the engine
Yeah, we truckers fantasize something ‘AH, AH, AK. x
tremendous. You think about the gitl behind AH, AH, AH. -
that voice, and you build something up in AH, AH, AH. 4
your mind until you begin to believe it ®
MOON OVER NEW JERSEY
YM IN A HURRY
00H,
WON'T YOU LET ME GO IN PEACE?
I AH,
I’M INDEPENDENT AH,
1 AIN'T GOT NO TEAMSTER DOUGH
| FRANK WOMEN MEN (EXCEPT FRANK
CAUSE THE A-F OF -L ROLL,
AND THE C-O ROLL,
THEY STILL DON'T ROLL, ROLL,
OWN THE ROAD ROLL, ROLL,
AND THE ONLY MAN AND THE ONLY MAN AND THE ONLY MAN
‘TELLIN’ ME WHERE ‘TELLIN’ ME WHERE ‘TELLIN’ ME WHER
TOGO TOGO ToGo
18 THE MAN WHO 18 THE MAN WHO 18 THE MAN WHO
OWNS THE LOAD (OWNS THE LOAD OWNS THE LOAD
HE SAYS
AND HE SAYSWOMEN
| (EXCEPT FRANK]
OLL,
DLL,
SLL,
ND THE ONLY MAN
LLIN’ ME WHERE
GO
THE MAN WHO.
VNS THE LOAD
WorKING - 19 -
FRANK WOMEN MEN (EXCEPT FRANK)
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL
BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER
ISAY WHERE
[AND YOU SAY WHEN
Icor To
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL
BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER
I'M BACK ON MY 00H, OOH,
WHEELS AGAIN
ISAY IsAy
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL. ROLL, ROLL, ROLL
BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER
BACK IT ON UP BACK ITON UP,
AND DO IT AGAIN ISAY
oon,
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL ROLL, ROLL, ROLL,
BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER
I'M BACK ON MY BACK ON MY BACK ON MY
MY WHEELS AGAIN MY WHEELS AGAIN MY WHEELS AGAIN
BROTHER, BROTHER,
I'M BACK ON MY I'M BACK ON MY BACK ON MY
WHEELS AGAIN! WHEELS AGAIN! WHEELS AGAIN!
1GOT TO. 1GOT TO. 1GOT TO
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL,
BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER
BACK IT ON UP BACK IT ON UP BACK IT ON UP
AND DO IT AGAIN AND DO IT AGAIN AND DOIT AGAIN
ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL, ROLL,
BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER BROTHER TRUCKER
YM BACK ON MY WHEELS.
BACK ON MY WHEELS: BACK ON MY WHEELS
AGAIN AGAIN AGAIN
BROTHER TRUCKER! BROTHER TRUCKER!
FRANK
BACK ON MY WHEELS AGAIN20 - Workine
(FRAN!
Coming home to your wife can be a sorta let down. She has to raise the kids, she has
to fight off the bill collectors. She can’t even count on her husband to be at a
graduation or a communion. When you do get home, you're so tired you'd rather be
sleeping than getting ready to go out on a Saturday night. I make two round trips to
Evansville and pass within four blocks of my house and never go home. Easier to
just keep on going. So you call your wife and tell her you won't be back...
(Talking into phone)
Hey honey, ... Hello?
(gets cut off)
Effing phone company.
OPERATOR'S VOICE, RAJ (MAN 2)
Verizon tech support, this is Johnnie—how may I help you?
FRANK
Yeah, this number isn’t working and I have like five bars.
OPERATOR'S VOICE
I'm sorry you're having trouble sir. May I have the number you were calling?
FRANK
s
t
s
'
Yeah, 219-765-5910.
OPERATOR'S VOICE
Ym sorry, sir, all circuits in your area are busy ..
FRANK
What? Jesus, I can’t understand anything you're saying. What's wrong with you
guys?
OPERATOR'S VOICE
Y'm sorry, sir. Why don’t you wait five minutes, then place your call
(FRANK slams receiver down, and as he does, lights go out on him and come up on
RAJ CHADHA, an operator.)
RAJ (MAN 2)
(Finishing his sentence after FRANK has hung up)
again.
You'd think they'd be grateful to get alive person instead of a computer. Sometimes you
really want to talk to them, if they sound upset. For me it’s a temptation to say, “Gee,
what's the matter?” But you can’t say more than “I'm sorry you're having trouble.”WorkING 21
he kids, she has
‘be at a
you'd rather be
0 round trips to
ne, Easier to
ck.
alling?
with you
ome up on
r. Sometimes you
to say, “Gee,
ng trouble,’
(RAJ)
If you get caught talking to a customer, that’s one mark against you. Three marks
and you're... One woman said to me, “Operator, I'm lonesome. Will you talk to me?”
Isaid, “Gee, I'm sorry, Ijust can’t.” But you cant.
(Laughs)
I'ma communications person, and I can’t communicate.
SHARON ATKINS, RECEPTIONIST (WOMAN 1)
So, | always thought of a receptionist as the loser at the front desk taking phone
messages. Now I'm one. So of course I had to change my opinion. She had to be
special, right? Because I'm so special. I was fine until we had this office party. I'd be
having a fairly intelligent conversation with someone when they'd ask me what I
did, When I'd say, ” I'm a receptionist,” they’d make an excuse and walk away. So,
now I make up other names for what I do — “communications control,” “entry
management”.
(RAJ swivels back so now both HE and SHARON are facing us. NOTE: The following
contrapuntal speeches should be rehearsed so certain key words or phrases which are the
same in both speeches occur at the same time.)
RAJ SHARON
It’s strange, but you get tired of talking I'm tired at the end of the day, tired of
My mouth gets tired cause you talk talking. There isn’t a ten-minute break
constantly for six hours straight without a in the day that’s quiet. You can’t think
ten-minute break. You can’t think about it. ‘What I do all day is say what I have to
Everyone is in a hurry to talk to somebody say as quickly as possible and switch
else, but not to talk to you. You're ina room —_the call to whoever it’s going to I notice
the size of a gymnasium surrounded by people have asked me to slow down
people talking to people thousands of miles when I'm talking,
away.
SHARON
I never listen in on a phone conversation.
RAJ
Do I listen in on conversations?
SHARON
But let me tell you ..
BOTH
Some people really do
RAJ
SHARON
Especially if you're working late at night. Tonce worked for AT & T and all the girls
Sometimes people on the line are so used to listen in on phone conversations
absurd, you'll sit there and laugh until I don’t care who you are, if you work
there's tears rolling down your face nights and it's real quiet, you're going to
listen in on phone conversationsWoRKING
RAJ
It makes the night go faster
SHARON
Sometimes, to make the day go faster, do drawings, Mondrian sort of things
never people I pretend I'm alone and things are quiet. cal tthe Land ‘of No Phone.
RAJ & SHARON
I never answer the phone at home.
(Sound ofa phone ringing .. a woman picks up . lights come up on KATE. ‘SHE looks
out at us, a litle flustered ..)
KATE RUSHTON, HOUSEWIFE (WOMAN 2)
Hello? Oh, Ym sorry, no thank you. My husband gets the paper atthe office and I
read it on line. No, I don’t have an office ~ I don't work. I work, | work, of course
work .. it's just... I don’t have a job. Anyway, thanks for the offer.
(hangs up)
ma stay at home mom. I guess in my mother’s day they would have called me
a housewife. That's funny. It’s not lke I sit around watching soap operas all day-
Thave a lot of work to do.
(music under)
You just want something more exiting to talk about at dinner party, you know
You know, something that matters. What I do only matters to three people
ALL AMIS JUST A HOUSEWIFE
NOTHING SPECIAL, NOTHING GREAT
WHAT I DOIS KINDA BORING
1f YOU'D RATHER, IT CAN WAIT
ALL AM IS SOMEONE'S MOTHER
ALL AM IS SOMEONE'S WIFE
ALL OF WHICH SEEMS UNIMPORTANT
ALLITISIS
JUST MY LIFE.
DO THE LAUNDRY, WASH THE DISHES
‘TAKE THE DOG OUT, CLEAN THE HOUSE
‘SHOP FOR GROCERIES, LOOK FOR SPECIALS
GOD, IT SOUNDS $O MICKEY MOUSEWorKING ie
of things —
\d of No Phone.
\TE. SHE looks
2)
office and I
rk, of course
called me
as all day,
you know,
ple.
(KATE)
DROP THE KIDS OFF, PICK THE SHIRTS UP
‘TRY TO LOSE WEIGHT, TRY AGAIN
KEEP THE TROOPS FED, PICK THEIR THINGS UP
LOSE YOUR PATIENCE COUNT TO TEN.
(Lights come up on OTHER HOUSEWIVES upstage at various tasks ~ ironing,
sewing, etc.)
KATE & OTHER HOUSEWIFE (WOMAN 3)
Den Br 6 Te Bo 9 ne 10
HOUSEWIVES (WOMAN 1 & 3)
BiB Bn Pin Bind
KATE
ALLL AMIS JUST A HOUSEWIFE
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
JUST A HOUSEWIFE,
KATE
NOTHING GREAT
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
WHAT1DOIS
KATE
‘OUT OF FASHION!”
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
WHAT I FEEL IS
KATE
“OUT OF DATE”
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
ALL 1 AM IS SOMEONE'S MOTHER
KATE
RIGHT AWAY I'M NOT TOO BRIGHT
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
WHAT1DOIS
KATE
UNFULFILLINGWorKING
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
SO THE T.V. TALK-SHOWS TELL ME EVERY NIGHT
KATE
I DON’T MEAN TO COMPLAIN AND ALL
BUT THEY MAKE YOU FEEL LIKE YOU'RE TWO FEET TALL
WHEN YOU'RE JUST A WIFE
HOUSEWIVES
JUST A HOUSEWIFE
KATE
ALL THEY SEE ARE THE POTS AND PANS
AND THE PEPSI CANS OF A PERSON'S LIFE
HOUSEWIVES
wv ure
KATE
YOU'RE A "WHIZ" IF YOU GO TO WORK
BUT YOU'RE [UST A JERK IF YOU SAY YOU WON'T
HOUSEWIVES
| JUST A HOUSEWIFE
KATE
PEOPLE SAY THAT THEY THINK IT’S FINE
| IF THE CHOICE IS MINE
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
BUT YOU KNOW THEY DON'T.
WHAT I DO, WHAT I CHOOSE TO DO
MAY BE DUMB TO YOU
BUT IT’S NOT TO ME
IS IT DUMB THAT THEY NEED ME THERE?
IS IT DUMB TO CARE?
KATE
CAUSE 1 DO, YA SEE
KATE & HOUSEWIVES
AND I MEAN, DID YOU EVER THINK,
REALLY STOP AND THINK,
WHAT A JOB IT WAS—Worxine - 25 -
TALL,
(KATE & HOUSEWIVES)
DOING ALL THE THINGS
THAT A HOUSEWIFE DOES?
(Lights begin to slowly fade on other housewives.)
KATE
I'M AFRAID IT’S UNIMPRESSIVE,
HOUSEWIVES
ALL I AM IS SOMEONE'S MOTHER
KATE
NOTHING SPECIAL,
KATE & WOMAN 1
WHAT I DOIS WHAT1DOIS
UNEXCITING KINDA DULL
KATE
‘TAKE THE KIDS HERE,
TAKE THE KIDS THERE
WOMAN 3
WOMANI
MOMMY:
I DON'T MEAN TO COMPLAIN WOMAN3
ATALL. ALLIAMIS
WOMAN 1
MY LIFE
WOMAN 3
ALLT AMIS
KATE
BUSY BUSY
WOMAN 1
EV'RYDAY
WOMAN 3
ALLT AMIS
KATE
LIKE MY MOTHER...
HOUSEWIVES
ALL AMIS= 26 - WoRKING
KATE
JUST A HOUSEWIFE.
(CONRAD SWIBEL, UPS man in uniform, enters quietly behind her.)
CONRAD (MAN 1)
(Shouting suddenly)
UPS!
(KATE, startled, screams and drops basket.)
KATE
(Annoyed, picking things up)
You don't just jump up behind someone and scream.
CONRAD
Sorry.
KATE
Its all right. Thank you
CONRAD
(Politely to KATE as she goes inside)
‘Thank you, ma’am. Sorry, ma‘am.
(To us)
You have to make excitement for yourself, you know?
(We hear a dog bark as he approaches another house. CONRAD backs away.)
Where is he? Where is he?
(To us)
I've been bit once already. By a Doberman. That's the biggest part of a dog's day,
when the U.PS. man‘comes. So when nobody's looking, you kick him down the
street. Even if he just follows you, you try to get him for the one you missed a couple
of houses back,
Yeah, that’s the big subject of conversation with us: dogs. And women. If you have a
nice-lookin’ babe, that kinda brightens your day. We have a code we put in the
system, We put a “Q". That stands for “cutie.” If you see a nice little honey laying
‘out there in her backyard in a two-piece bathing suit, she'll be laying there on her
stomach with her top strap undone ~ if you go there and you scare her good
enough, she'll jump up! It gives you something to do. It adds excitement to the day.
(Sneaks up behind “house”, then yells loudly)
UPsiWorKING - 27 -
may.)
dog's day,
own the
issed a couple
If you have a
itin the
ney laying,
ere on her
(We hear a woman scream behind the house. CONRAD shoots us a smile and exits.
In the Chicago production: dressers transformed KATE into ROBERTA VICTOR,
prostitute.)
ROBERTA (WOMAN 2)
didn’t want to become a housewife like my mother and sisters. Somehow I knew
wanted ... “more” out of life. 1 was fifteen, I was sitting in this coffee shop when a
friend came by and said: "Yo, hurry up — I got a cab waiting, you can make five
hundred dollars in twenty minutes.” We went up to this penthouse. The guy up
there was quite... well-known. He wanted to watch two women do it, and then he
wanted to have sex with me, It was barely sex. He was almost finished by the time
wwe started. It was a tremendous kick. I mean, there I was, doing nothing, feeling
nothing, and in twenty minutes I was gonna walk out of there with five hundred i
dollars in my pocket. Just out of curiosity, how many people you know make five
hundred dollars for twenty minutes work? And I was still in high school.
CANDY COTTINGHAM. FUNDRAISER (WOMAN 3)
I think of myself as an upper-class working girl. The press calls me a “socialite”,
which is just another name for a well-dressed fund raiser. To me, fundraising is like
candy. You get to talk with fascinating people and promote causes you love. What
could be more delicious than that? 1 began in the eighties, I gave a party in
Washington, D. C. for Nicaraguan refugee children —it wasn’t for the Contras,
although I'm sure that would have been fun too. But fundraising is work. It’s hard to
separate people from their money. There is finesse to approaching a potential donor.
Inever bring up money when I first meet someone. It's not like it's a secret. I mean,
they know why I'm there. But sometimes | like to see how long I can go before I ask
for a gift. Call me a tease.
ROBERTA
It’s a marketplace transaction. Somehow I managed to absorb that when I was quite
young. I was a precocious child. Actually, I was sort of lonely. I didn’t experience
‘myself as being attractive. I mean, I didn't look like a Calvin Klein ad. But, I was
bright, and I didn't play by “The Rules.” Guys were mostly scared of me. They
didn’t want to get involved emotionally, but they did want to fuck. For a while, I
was willing to accept that. It was feeling intimacy, feeling warm ... feeling.
CANDY
The other day, I was riding around New York in a limousine during a hotel strike,
and there was nowhere to go, and I thought; “Now I know what it feels like to be a
bag lady.” You can’t just go around, pick up every homeless person you see and
bring them home with you. But if you can help by saying something entertaining,
you bring a light into their eyes. Maybe that’s what the word “social-lite” means.- 28 ~ WorKING
ROBERTA
You become your job. I've become a hustler. Even when I'm not hustling, I'm a
hustler. What you do is what you are. I don’t think it’s so terribly different from
somebody who works on an assembly line forty hours a week and comes home cut-
off, numb... People aren’ built to switch on and off like water faucets.
(The scene shifts to a luggage factory, where we focus on GRACE CLEMENTS,
MILLWORKER. Beside GRACE, other women and a man are working on the line. As
GRACE describes her job, she and the other MILLWORKERS mime their tasks in
unison, all movements as identical and precise as blue-collar Rockettes. Their faces are
totally blank, like automatons. The movements are constantly, endlessly repeated.)
GRACE (WOMAN 1)
I work in a luggage factory. We make suitcases. The tank I work at is six foot deep,
‘eight foot square. In forty seconds:
You have to take the wet felt out of the felter;
put the blanket on to draw out the excess moisture;
wait two, three seconds;
take the blanket off;
pick the wet felt up and balance it on your shoulder;
reach over, get the hose;
I spray the inside of this copper screen;
tum around; walk to the hot dry die behind you;
take the hot piece off and set it on the floor;
put the wet piece on the dry die;
push this button;
(sound of steam)
inspect the piece we just took off;
stack it;
count it,
Forty seconds.
(snaps her fingers)
(The OTHER MILLWORKERS repeat the above litany softly as GRACE continues.)
OTHERS
You have to take the wet felt out of the felter...(ete.)
GRACE
In the summertime, the temperature at our work station ranges anywhere from 100
to 150 degrees. I've taken thermometers and checked it out. I have arthritis in the
joints of my fingers, naturally in my shoulder balancing this wet piece. The hose will
' sometimes leak and spray back on you. The hydraulic presses leak, so you're
slipping on oil. You have the possibility of being burnt every time the hot die hitsg'ma
ent from
es home cut-
ENTS,
1 the line, As
‘tasks in
wir faces are
speed.)
«foot deep,
continues.)
e from 100
is in the
he hose will
t die hits
WoRKING ees)
(GRACE)
that wet felt. You're just engulfed in a cloud of steam
(steam)
every forty seconds.
(Music under)
four hours a day. I work eight straight hours with two ten-
minute breaks and one twenty-minute break for lunch, I find it difficult to eat my
lunch in that length of time. Forty seconds.
(enap)
(AS GRACE and MILLWORKERS continue motions)
GRANDAD WAS A SAILOR
AND HE BLEW IN OFF THE WATER
MY FATHER WAS A FARMER
AND I HIS ONLY DAUGHTER
1 TOOK UP WITH A NO-GOOD
MILLWORKING MAN FROM MASSACHUSETTS.
WHO DIED FROM TOO MUCH WHISKEY
AND LEAVES ME THESE THREE FACES TO FEED
MILL WORK AIN'T EASY
MILLWORK AIN'T HARD
MILL WORK MOST OFTEN IS
AGODDAMN AWFUL BORING JOB
AND I'M WAITING FOR A DAYDREAM
TO TAKE ME THROUGH THE MORNING
AND PUT ME IN MY COFFEE BREAK
SO I CAN HAVE MY SANDWICH AND REMEMBER
T'S ME AND MY MACHINE
FOR THE REST OF THE MORNING
FOR THE REST OF THE AFTERNOON
AND THE REST OF MY LIFE
(As the MILLWORKERS continue to work, Man 2 has stopped in disgust. He switches
off his machine and exits, leaving his place in the line empty.)
‘They can't keep men on the tanks. They say it’s too monotonous. | think women
adjust to monotony better than men do, because their minds are used to doing twoWorkING
(GRACE)
things at once, where a man can only think of one thing at a time. A woman can
listen to a child while she’s doing something else. It’s the same way on the tanks.
You get to be automatic in what you're doing and your mind is doing something
else..
(GRACE and the women continue to work.)
1GET TO RIDE
AND
MY MIND BEGINS TO WANDER
‘TO MY DAYS BACK ON THE FARM
ANDI CAN SEE MY FATHER SMILING AT ME
SWINGING ON HIS ARM
AND I CAN HEAR MY GRANDAD'S STORIES
(OF THE STORMS OUT ON LAKE ERIE
VESSELS AND CARGOES
FORTUNES AND SAILORS’ LIVES WERE LOST
GRACE & MAN 2
IT'S MY LIFE HAS BEEN WASTED
AND HAVE BEEN A FOOL,
‘TO LET THIS MANUFACTURE’
USE MY BODY FOR A TOOL,
GRACE MAN 2
I RIDE
GRACE & MAN 2
HOME IN THE EVENINGS
STARING AT MY HANDS
SWEARING BY MY SORROW
GRACE
‘THAT A YOUNG GIRL OUGHT TO STAND A BETTER CHANCE
GRACE MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 2 & 3
IT'S ME AND MY
GRACE & MAN 2 MACHINE
MAY I WORK THIS MILL.
JUST AS LONG AST AM ABLE
LONG ASI AM ABLE
AND NEVER MEET THE MAN
WHOSE NAME IS ON THE LABEL.
17'S ME AND MY
MACHINEWorKine -31-
(GRACE & MAN 2) (MAN 1 & 3, WOMAN 2 & 3)
vomnan can
n the tanks.
; something
y's ME AND MY MACHINE MACHINE
FOR THE REST OF THE MORNING
FOR THE REST OF THE MORNING
FOR THE REST OF THE AFTERNOON AFTERNOON
GRACE
GONE
AND THE REST OF MY LIFE
(As music gets softer)
‘You wish you didn’t have to work in a factory. But when it’s all you know how to
do, that’s what you do
(GRACE remains in place.)
ALLEN EPSTEIN, COMMUNITY ORGANIZER (MAN 2)
‘An organizer is someone who brings in new members. You try to build an
“organization that will give people the power to make the changes. | put together a
fairly solid organization of rural people in Pike County to stop Bethlehem Steel from
strip mining,
Thad to tell people again and again that they had the stuff to do the job, that it's
possible to win. You see, most people in their guts don’t really believe it. Nobody
believed we could stop Bethlehem Steel. But see, all that the people in Pike County
really wanted was a park, just a place for their kids. And Bethlehem Bethlehem
said, “Go to hell We're not gonna give you a damn thing,”
So I got twenty, thirty people together I saw as leaders and I said, “Let's get that
park.” They said, “We can’t.” I said, “Yes, we can.” So we got enough people
together —we wrote letters, we protested, until we finally got on TV. And
Bethlehem caved. Couple months later, four thousand people from Pike County
a drove up to watch bulldozers grading down the land to make that park
VOMA,
Nice You see, people become convinced there’s not a damn thing they can do. I think we
have it inside us to change things.
T mean, all human recorded history is about what, five thousand years old? How
‘many people in that time have made an overwhelming difference? Twenty? Thirty?
You see the problem with history is that it’s written by college professors about great
‘men. But that’s not what history is. History’s a hell of a lot of little people, men and
women, just like you and me, getting together and deciding they want a better life.- 32 - Workine
WOMAN 2
(Sings a capella)
IF 1 COULD'VE BEEN
WHAT I COULD'VE BEEN
I COULD'VE BEEN SOMETHING
WOMAN 3
I wanted to be a writer...
MAN 1
a major-league baseball player ...
MAN 3
own a little farm
WOMAN 1
IF WHAT I COULD BE
HAD BEEN LEFT TO ME
1 WOULD'VE BEEN SOMETHING ...
WOMAN 3
but then I got married ..
MAN 2
«then the kids came along ...
MAN1
but then my dad took sick ...
WOMAN 3
‘A TOWER OF STRENGTH
‘A CENTER OF POWER
ATTEN BUCKS AN HOUR
(Music becomes more rhythmic)
MAN 3 (MIKE DILLARD)
‘There's always a stumbling block. I was gonna work for a few years, buy me a car,
head West. Well, | met the wife, that kinda changed my plans. You never know what
you woulda did
WOMAN 2
IF I COULD'VE DONE
WHAT I COULD'VE DONE
I COULD'VE DONE BIG THINGSWorkine - 38 -
me acar,
know what
WOMAN 3
WITH SOME LUCK TO DO
WHAT I WANTED TO
1 WOULD'VE DONE BIG THINGS
MAN 2
SWAM A FEW RIVERS
WOMAN 1
CLIMBED A FEW HILLS
MAN 3
PAID ALL MY BILLS
WOMAN 1
f NOW IT'S JUST DREAMS
THAT STUCK WITH
AND HELL,
THAT AIN'T A LOT TO MAN 2 & 3
sHOW on,
MAN 1 MAN 2 & 3, WOMEN 1 & 2
THAVEN’T GONE FAR on,
FROM THE STARTING LINE
BUT DEEP DOWN INSIDE
WHERE IT COUNTS, I KNOW .
MAN 2 &3
MAN 2 & 3, WOMAN 1&3
ALL
I KNOW THAT IFT
WOMAN 2
COULD'VE GONE
WOMAN 1 & 3, MAN 1,2 & 3
IF | COULD'VE GONE
WHERE I COULD'VE GONE
WHERE I COULD’VE GONE
ICOULD’VE GONE PLACES:
1 WOULD'VE GONE FAR AWAY
WITH LEEWAY TO GO(WOMAN 2)
FAR ASI COULD GO
| WOULD'VE GONE PLACES.
TO THE FRONT OF THE LINE
‘THE TOP OF THE TIER
A LONG WAY FROM HERE
WOMAN 3
WAY BACK THEN
1 HAD AMBITION
A LOT OF STAMINA
AND GUTS
I NEVER TOOK “NO”
FOR AN ANSWER
IT WAS TOUGHER TO FIGHT
| ALL THOSE IF'S, AND'S, OR
BUTS
ALL
THOSE IF’S, AND’S, OR
WOMAN 1, 2 & 3, MAN 3
BUT'S
BUT
IE
MAN 3 & WOMAN 1 & 2
1 COULD’VE BEEN
WHAT I COULD'VE BEEN
1 COULD'VE BEEN SOMETHIN’
IF MY DESTINY
(WOMAN 1 & 3, MAN 1,2&
1 COULD'VE GONE FAR AWAY
WOMAN 1 & 2, MAN 1, 2 &3
1. COULD'VE
BEEN
WAY BACK
THEN
OH, WAYBACK
WHEN
MAN 1 & 2
ALL
WOMAN 1 & 2, MAN 3
ALL
MAN 1&2
BUTIFI
BUTIFI
MAN 1 & 2 WOMAN 3
I
IF 1 COULD HAVE BEEN
WHAT I COULD HAVE BEEN COULD HAVE
BEEN
SOMETHING SPECIAL, IF SOMETHING
SPECIAL
1
HAD
re
FT
wH
we
BA\
cWorkING - 35 -
3, MAN 1, 2 & 3} (MAN 3 & WOMAN 1 & 2) (MAN 1 & 2) (WOMAN 3)
~ 1F My DESTINY
HAD BEEN LEFT TO ME HAD BEEN LEFT TO ME
1 WOULD VE BEEN SOMETHIN’ COULD HAVE
BEEN
NE FAR AWAY
I COULD’VE BEEN SOMETHING
WOMAN 1 ALL EXCEPT WOMAN 1
2,MAN 1,2 &3 IF THEY HAD JUST LET ME GO IF THEY HAD JUST LET ME GO
WHERE I WAS RARIN’ TOGO
WHEN I WAS RARIN’ TOGO WHEN I WAS RARIN’ TOGO
BACK THEN
IF THEY HAD JUST LET ME
WOMAN 2 ALL EXCEPT WOMAN 1 & 2
GOD ONLY KNOWS, co
MAN 1&2
GOD ONLY KNows,
MAN 3 & WOMAN 3
Jee GOD ONLY KNOWS
WOMAN 1 & 2
ee GOD ONLY
ALL
KNOWS
ee WOMAN 2
WHAT I COULD VE BEEN
(ooices, in counterpoint, fade out...)
MAN1
1COULD’VE BEEN WOMAN 2 & MAN 2
‘SOMETHING WHAT I COULD'VE
WOMAN 3 MAN 3
u 1 COULD/VE BEEN BEEN
WOMAN 3
SOMEONE ‘THE TOP OF THE
GN SPECIAL WOMAN 1
SoMErNING WOMAN 2 & MAN 2 I. COULD’VE GONE TIER
WHAT I COULD'VE MAN1
SPECIAL
BEEN ‘SOMEWHERE 1 COULD'VE BEEN
1
SPECIAL SOMETHING= oe WorKinc
WOMAN 3 MAN3
1 COULD'VE BEEN
ALONG WAY SOMEONE
FROM HERE
MAN1
1 COULD’VE BEEN SOMEONE
MAN 3
WHAT I COULD'VE WOMAN 2 & y,
BEEN WHAT 1 COULD
WOMAN 3 BEEN
‘THE TOP OF THE THH
MAN1
WOMAN 2 & MAN 2 1 COULD'VE BEEN
WHAT I COULD'VE ee
BEEN MAN3
1 COULD'VE BEEN
WOMAN 3 MAN 1
THE TOP OF THE SOMEONE, ICOULD'VE BE]
SPECIAL Ea
TIER MAN 2 & WOMAN 1
MAN 1 WHAT I COULD'VE Seen)
I.COULD'VE BEEN BEEN 1 COULD'VE GON}
SOMETHING WOMAN 3 SOMEWHERE
ALONG WAY FROM ee
HERE
WOMAN 1
‘The last hour is the hardest. You sit there with half a mind and one eye on the clock.
MAN1
All I'm thinking about now is gettin’ home, takin’ off my uniform.
WOMAN 2
A.cold can of beer
WOMAN 3
Puttin’ my feet up in front of the idiot box ...
MAN 3 (MIKE DILLARD)
‘When that whistle blows, you geta lot of guys wanna sit around and talk. [just
wanna get out of here.Workine
37 -
(ANTHONY COELHO, white, 60's, stone mason, squints up atthe setting sun)
ANTHONY (MAN 2)
Ita pretty good day layin’ stone. You get interested in what you're doin’ and you
usually fight the clock the other way. You're not lookin’ for quittin, you're
wondering you haven't got enough done and it's almost quittin’ time.
(A SINGER enters with a guitar and starts to pick softly)
OMAN 2 & M,
WHATI COULD)
BEEN
There's not a house in this country I haven't built that I don’t look at every time I go
by, and if there's one stone crooked, I still notice it. The people what lives there
might not notice it, but I notice it, Stone’s my business. Stone’s my life.
SINGER (MAN 1)
(As ANTHONY continues working)
HE BUILDS A HOUSE
WITH HIS HANDS
THIRTY YEARS GO BY
ITSTANDS:
IT STANDS WHERE NOTHING STOOD
‘A HOUSE OF STONE
‘THE MASON SLEEPS REAL GOOD
I COULD ’VE BEEN
SOMEONE
SOMEWHERE
PECIAL,
HE DOES HIS WORK
HIS WORK DAY FLIES
(QUITTIN’ TIME’S A BIG SURPRISE
AND THEN IT'S ONE MORE STONE
TO GET JUST RIGHT
IT’S ALWAYS ONE MORE STONE
BEFORE THE NIGHT
he clock,
EVERY HOUSE HE BUILDS
EVERY STONE HE LAYS
11'S NOT JUST MAKIN’ MONEY
AND COUNTIN’ OFF THE DAYS,
ANTHONY
I daydream all the time about stone. Someday I'm gonna build me a stone cabin
down on the Green River. I'm gonna build stone cabinets in the kitchen. Everything
stone. A stone front door... that’s going to be very heavy. All my dreams, seems like
they got to have a piece of rock mixed up in ‘em,
ustSINGER
HE BUILDS A HOUSE
WITH HIS HANDS
A HUNDRED YEARS GO BY
IT STANDS
IT TELLS YOU WHO HE WAS
A LIFE GOES FAST
BUT THE WORK A MASON DOES
IT'S MADE TO LAST
‘THE WORK A MASON DOES
ANTHONY
‘There's nothin’ on this earth gonna last forever. But with stone, you're gettin’ pretty close
SINGER
IT'S MADE TO LAST.
EDDIE JAFFE, PUBLICIST (MAN 3)
I can’t relax. ‘Cause when you ask a guy who's fifty-eight years old, “What does a press
agent do?” you force me to look back and see what a fecacta life I've had. My hopes, my
aspirations —what I did with them. What being a press agent does to you. What have |
wound up with? Rooms full of clippings and a case of colitis
But what I think has been my main problem - the inability to say ‘no.’ The
insistence on being part of everything. The fear you're going to miss something.
‘One psychiatrist said to me, ‘A guy with one ass can’t ride two horses.”
Being a publicity man is a confession of weakness. It’s for people who don’t have
the guts to get attention for themselves. You spend your whole life telling the world
how great somebody else is,
In this work, you don’t build anything. If I had a little mom and pop candy store
and I built it up into a bigger store, I might have sold it for a million dollars. Who
do I sell my clippings to?
(Eddie sits down at a table in a restaurant. The focus shifts to a waitress at the
restaurant: DELORES DANTE, as she picks up her tray and begins to wait on him and
the other CUSTOMERS.)WorKING - 39 -
DELORES (WOMAN 3)
(Pouring water for customers)
Good evening, m'Lords. What's exciting at the bar that I can offer?
(tous)
It would be very boring if I had to say, “Would you like a cocktail?” over and over. So I
come out different for my own enjoyment. I say, “what's exciting at the bar that I can
offer, m’Lord?”... or something. Maybe with cocktails, I give them a little philosophy.
‘They have coffee, I give ‘em political science. I have an opinion on every single subject
there is. My bosses don’t like it, so I have to speak “sotto voce.” But if get heated, 1
don’t give a damn. I speak like an Italian speaks. I have to be a waitress. How else does
the world come to me? Everyone wants to eat, everyone has hunger. And I serve them.
I give service. I can't be servile, There is a difference.
gettin’ pretty close
(Music under)
1 get intoxicated with giving service. It becomes theatrical and I feel like ... Mata
hat does a press Hari, and it intoxicates me. I'm on stage.
J. My hopes, my
u. What have I THERE'S SOME AS DON'T CARE
WHEN THEY PUT DOWN THE PLATE, THERE'S A SOUND
the NOT WITH ME
mething. WHEN THEY MOVE A CHAIR
IT WILL SCRAPE WITH A GRATE ON THE GROUND
NOT WITH ME
on't have I WILL HAVE MY HAND RIGHT WHEN I PLACE A GLASS
ag the world NOTICE HOW I STAND RIGHT AS CUSTOMERS PASS.
SERVE A DEMI-TASSE WITH A GESTURE SO GENTLE,
ndy store OR DOIT AGAIN TILL
ars. Who IT'S NEAR ORIENTAL
(SHE hums a snatch of “Un Bel Di” from “Madame Butterfly” )
the IT'S AN ART, IT'S AN ART
t om him and ‘TO BE A FINE WAITRESS
‘TO SEE THAT YOU PLEASURE EACH GUEST
‘THERE'S A TWIST TO MY WRIST
WHEN I BRING YOUR STEAK IN
AND WATCH HOW I TAKE IN
YOUR LIVER AND BACON
IT ALL NEEDS BE STYLISH AND SMART
‘THAT'S WHAT MAKES IT AN ARTWorkine
(DELORES)
1 REMEMBER ONE DAY
AS 1DO NOW AND THEN, I HAD SHAKES
DOWN I WENT
‘THERE WITH MY TRAY
FULL OF COFFEES AND CORDIALS AND CAKES
DOWN I WENT
BUT I KEPT MY POISE — NOT ONE GUEST HEARD ME FALL,
NEVER MADE A NOISE, NOT ONE NOISE, FOOD AND ALL
IF YOU HAVE TO CRAWL, YOU GIVE ‘EM WHAT THEY LIKE
YOU CARRY YOUR TRAY LIKE
IT’S ALMOST BALLET-LIKE
(SHE hums a snatch of “Swan Lake” )
IS AN ART, IT'S AN ART
TO BE A FINE WAITRESS
EACH EVENING I TREASURE THE TEST
LIKE TONIGHT WAS A FIGHT
“CAUSE THEY HIRED THIS BUSBOY
‘THIS CLOTHES-ALL-A-MUSS-BOY
AND GUESTS HEARD HIM CUSS — BOY,
DID WE HAVE A QUICK “HEART-TO-HEART"!
EVEN THAT IS AN ART
TIPS! HA!
TIPS ARE IMPORTANT TO PEOPLE LIKE CAPTAINS AND BARMEN
FOR THEM, IT’S A TIP, SEE?
FOR ME, I'M A GYPSY
JUST TOSS ME A COIN AND I SUDDENLY FEEL LIKE I'M CARMEN!
SO ON THROUGH THE ULCER
‘THE BACKACHE, THE HOT SWEATY FEET
ON You Go
‘THROUGH “IS YOUR KNIFE DULL SIR?”
AND "MADAM WANTS WHAT WITH HER MEAT?”
ON YOU GO
TWO A.M. APPROACHES, THE CURTAINS DESCEND
‘THERE AMONG THE ROACHES, MY ACT'S AT AN ENDWorKING er
LL
KE
ARMEN
ARMEN!
(DELORES)
EVERY NIGHT I TEND TO FIND MYSELF CRYING
THERE'S NO WORK SO TRYING
OR SO SATISFYING
I tell everyone I’m a waitress and I'm proud. When somebody says to me, “Hey,
you're terrific! How come you're just a waitress?,” you know what I say to them?
Isay, "Why? Don’t you think you deserve to be served by me?”
DELORES
CUSTOMERS
Miss!
IT'S AN ART
IT'S AN ART MISS!
TO BE A GREAT WAITRESS PLEASE TAKE CARE OF THIS
TO DO WITHOUT LEISURE OR REST COULD WE HAVE A CHECK, PLEASE?
80 1Z00M MISS
THROUGH THE ROOM PLEASE
WITH A FLAIR NO ONE ELSE HAS BRING SOME MORE OF THESE
AN AIR NO ONE ELSE HAS
ISWEAR NO ONE ELSE HAS
MY LILT Iss
WHEN I SAY MISS
“ALA CARTE.” AND ANOTHER ORDER TO GO
YOU CAN SEE IT GIVES ME A GLOW MY PLATE, MISS
MY CUP, MISS
EVERY TIME I PROVE I'M A PRO I'M LATE, MISS.
HURRY UP, MISS
MAYBE I'M NOT QUITE MISS!
MICHELANGELO, AND A BAG FOR MY DOG.
BUT I'M NOT JUST A WAITRESS YOU WERE GREAT
I'MA ONE- BUT I'M LATE
WOMAN
SHOW
MY CHECK, PLEASE
MY CHANGE, PLEASE
COME ON, PLEASE, LADY
LET'S GO!
DELORES
After sixteen years here, | went on a trip to Hawaii for two weeks. Went with my
lover. My eldest daughter said, “Act your age.” I said, “Honey, if | were acting my
age, I wouldn't be walking,” Not after sixteen years on this jobMAN1
I worked for them 16 years, and overnight they let half of us go. It's now known as
Black Thursday. They told us to clear out, leave. That's all. No goodbyes. One guy
broke down and cried right there. ‘What did 1 do wrong? I've done a great job.
Please don’t do this to me. My daughter's getting married next month. How am I
going to face people? All of a sudden, nobody calls. You go out and start visiting
friends, but they're all busy with their own work. They don't have time for you.
This is a psychological...
(halts. A long pause.)
I don’t want to get into it,
WOMAN 2
It was a year ago November and I’m still looking. But, you just have to fight your
‘own way — which I've done my whole life.
EDDIE (MAN 3)
Don’t get me wrong, in this economy, I'm lucky to have any work at all. But after so
many years, I wish — I just wish I knew how it felt not to have to go to work.
(In the Chicago production, A DRESSER helped EDDIE to transform into
JOE ZUTTY, retired)
JOE (MAN 3)
When I retired, the first two years I was downhearted. I had no place to go, nothin’
to do. Then I gave myself a good goin’ over. Joe, I said, you can't sit at home like
that and waste your time. You got to get out, do things. Well, the day goes pretty
fast for me now. I don’t daydream at all. Ijust think of something, and I forget it.
‘That daydreaming, it don’t do you no good. Keep busy, keep movin’, that's the
trick.
YOU WAKE ATTEN
FOLD UP THE BED
You don’t wanna leave your couch open all day, you know? It's depressing.
YOU COOK AN EGG
YOU TOAST SOME BREAD
You cook for yourself, you save a bundle. If you don't keep track o' your money,
who will?Workine = 43 -
(JOE)
w known as YOU THINK ABOUT
yes. One guy THE DAY AHEAD
great job
"How am I You don’t go feelin’ sorry for yourself —
tart visiting 11'S LIKE1SAID,
e for you.
‘You can sit home and be mad at the world, or you can get out and do things /
YOU TAKE A WALK
YOU MEET A CHUM
This one guy lives down by National Biscuit — Boy, you should see the nice aroma
fight your
YOU SHOOT THE BULL
YOU ARGUE SOME
But after so ‘And maybe he calls up a coupla other fellas to come over, play some poker.
ae YOU LOSE AT GIN
UNTIL THEY COME
0
This guy remembers what cards you picked up!
‘THE DIRTY BUM ...
beat at gin beats doin’ nothin’
But even gett
YOU TAKE A BUS
YOU TAKE A TRAIN
) go, nothin’
jome like
es pretty ‘You go visit your wife’ s grave. On the way you read the Reader's Digest.
forget it.
asthe 1 DOES YoU GooD
TO USE YOUR BRAIN
cor maybe you go out and see your cousin. You bring a six-pack along
YOU'S TAKE A STROLL
DOWN MEMORY LANE!
when we were young we was always together —
ng .. AND RAISIN’ CAIN
We go back a long ways, him and me. Oh, the times we had
1 REMEMBER ONCE
‘money, BACK IN ‘62ae WorKING
(JOE)
WE WERE AT THIS FAIR Like
WITH THESE GIRLS WE KNEW
ON THIS CRAZY RIDE
WHERE YOU SCREAMED OR YOU PRAYED ie
‘The “Big Dipper,” they called it.
WE COULD HARDLY WALK
AS WE LEFT THE CAR
‘SO WE STAGGERED DOWN:
FOR A CANDY BAR
‘THEN WE SAT AND LAUGHED
IN THE PENNY ARCADE
i
ATSIX O'CLOCK
YOU WATCH THE NEWS
‘Them politicians get you so mad you throw your slippers at the set
YOU COOK SOME FRANKS
NO BIG TO-DO'S
it Most nights you lay around, you straighten up, maybe you call your daughter.
YOU WATCH A GAME
YOU TAKE A SNOOZE
But then there’s Sunday, Sunday's different —
YOU CHANGE YOUR SHIRT
AND SHINE YOUR SHOES
“Cause you're goin’ around the block to the tavern ..
YOU DRINK SOME BEER
| tt YOU SHOOT SOME FOOL
You don’t have to drink a lot to have a good time, maybe three, four in an evening
YOU FIND A PAL,
YOU BEND HIS EAR
| ‘You meet a lot o’ your old crowd there Sundays. Sometimes a bunch o' you, you
sing— i
‘THE KINDA SONG 1
YOU NEVER HEARWorkinc - 45 -
Jaughter.
n an evening
Y you, you
(JOE)
Like “Stardust” or “In the Mood”
AND THEN YOU CHEER
Last Sunday night we sang “Till We Meet Again.” Believe it or not, | once did a
waltz to that tune. Honest to God
ITWAS AT A DANCE
1 WAS SEVENTEEN
AND THE GIRL WAS LIKE
FROM A MAGAZINE
AND THE LIGHTS WERE LOW
AND I REALLY MEAN LOW
Ithink a coupla my friends had somethin’ to do with that ...
AND I KISSED HER CHEEK
AS WE WALTZED AWAY
REMEMBER THAT
LIKE IT’S YESTERDAY
BOY, WAS SHE SURPRISED
I CAN HEAR HER SAY:
(pleased and embarrassed)
“JOE!”
THEY DRIVE YOU HOME
FROM ROUND THE BLOCK
YOU TAKE YOUR CASH
OUT OF YOUR SOCK
YOU FIX THE BED.
YOU CHECK THE LOCK
YOU WIND THE CLOCK
When I retired, a lot o' people told me, “Joe, you got your health, you shouldna done
it” But it was too late. I don’t know why I retired. It’s just a habit, I guess. But I got
no regrets. I keep busy, keep travelin’. I go to fires every once in a while. That fire
we had on Milwaukee Avenue about three months ago, I was there. I was surprised
that the smoke was comin’ out there heavy as hell, but you don’t see no flames, you
know? Boy ... That was some fire.
(We hear the sound of a fire siren.
TOM PATRICK, fireman, comes running out of a burning building, choking for air.
JOE remains seated in his chair.)= 46 - WorKING
TOM (MAN 1)
You go in there and it’s dark. Smoke's pourin’ outta the goddamn building, 1 all
happens really fast. I feel this tremendous heat to my left.I turn around and the
whole fuckin’ room is orange, yellow. You can just see orange and feel the heat. The
Lieutenant and the other fireman got the ladder up and saved two people. But
downstairs there was a guy tryin’ to get out the door. They had bolts on the door.
He was burnt dead. Know what the lead man s:
LEAD MAN (MAN 2)
(from offstage)
We lost a guy. Shit! We lost a guy.
TOM
‘You saved two people. How would you know a guy's sleepin’ on the poo! table?
LEAD MAN
‘Yeah, but we lost a guy
(By now the fire has cleared behind TOM.)
TOM
[always wanted to be a fireman. A lot of guys want to be firemen. It's like kids.
Everybody's stil a kid. Guys forty years old stil fel like kids inside except they're
| | starting to lose their hair and don’t screw so much, I used to be a cop. Know why I
itched to fireman? 1 liked people. And sometimes, when I was a cop, I would feet
the hate coming into me.
remember one time, ] went to the roof of this project, and there's this big black guy
about six-seven at the top of the stairs. He had his back to me. I said, “Hey, fella,
turn around.” He said, “Yeah, wait a minute.” His elbows were movin’ around his
belt. said, “Turn around a minute.” It dawned on me that he had a gun caught in
his belt and he was trying to get it out. I said, “Hioly shit.” So I took out my gun and
said, “You fucker! I'm gonna shoot!” He threw his hands up against the wall
I He had his dick out and he was tryin’ to zip up his fly, and there was a git! standin’
in the corner, which I couldn't see. So here was this guy gettin’ a hand job and
maybe a lotta guys would've killed him. I said, “Holy shit, 1 coulda killed you.” He
started shakin’ and the gun in my hand was shakin’ like a bastard, and I said ..
I said, “Just get the hell outta here ..”
| So I took the fire department test in ‘98 and got called in ‘99. You know, the fuckin’
‘world’s so fucked up, the country’s fucked up. But the firemen, you actually see
them produce. You see them put out a fire. You see them come out with babies in
their hands. You see them give mouth-to-mouth when a guy's dying, You can't get
around that shit, That's real. | worked in a bank once— you know, it's just paper,WorKING -47-
ing, Itall
and the
he heat. The
le. But
the door.
ol table?
ke kids.
ept they're
now why I
would feel
g black guy
ey, fella,
round his
caught in
ny gun and
wall
irl standin’
band
i you.” He
said
he fuckin’
lly see
babies in
1can’t get
t paper,
(TOM)
you're lookin’ at numbers. It's not real. But I can look back and say, “I helped put
out a fire. ! helped save somebody.” Someone could be born, someone could grow
old because of me. It shows something I did on this earth.
(UTKARSH TRUJILLO enters as a caregiver, leads JOE to his ‘room’, and turns to the
audience)
UTKARSH (MAN 2)
HE HAD A VERY GOOD DAY TODAY
WE WENT DOWN TO THE SENIOR CENTER
JUST A MILE AWAY
SOME DAYS HE ONLY WANTS‘TO STAY AT HOME
BUT ON TUESDAYS THEY PLAY MUSIC AND THEY DANCE
‘YOU SHOULD HAVE SEEN HIM DANCE
THEY WERE PLAYING SPANISH MUSIC
HE'S A HAM; HE LIKES TO MAKE THE NURSES SMILE
SOME DAYS HE CAN'T REMEMBER WHO I AM
BUT TODAY, HE WAS LUCID FOR A LITTLE WHILE
AND THROUGH IT ALL I TAKE HIS PULSE
1 CHANGE HIS CLOTHES
WHERE ARE HIS CHILDREN?
HEAVEN KNOWS
IT DOESN'T PAY MUCH, BUT I GET THROUGH
BECAUSE I DO THE WORK THAT NO ONE ELSE WILL DO.
THERESA LIU, NANNY (WOMAN 1)
SHE HAD A VERY GOOD DAY TODAY
WE WENT TO A NEARBY PARK
WHERE SHE LIKES TO PLAY
SHE'S ONLY FIVE, BUT SHE CAN DO IT ALL
AND TODAY WE TOOK HER SCOOTER FOR A RIDE
‘YOU SHOULD HAVE SEEN HER GLIDE
AND I WAS TERRIFIED
1 SPENT THE AFTERNOON, JUST RUNNING BY HER SIDE
THE SUN CAME DOWN, AND THEN I BROUGHT HER HOME
HER PARENTS WORK LATE, TUCK HER IN EACH NIGHT.
AND I SING:WoRKING
(THERESA)
You
real
sou
Ige
Ma
MAHAL KITA
MINAMAHAL KITA
MAHAL NA MAHAL KITA,
TIL SHE'S ASLEEP
SHE SAYS, “I LOVE YOU,” AND I LOVE HER TOO
WHILE 1 DO ALL THE WORK HER MOTHER DOESN'T DO
UTKARSH
I HAVE A FAMILY OF MY OWN
THERESA
1 HAVE A DAUGHTER BACK AT HOME
UTKARSH
1 SEND WHATEVER I CAN SPARE
THERESA
WITH NO ONE SINGING HER TO SLEEP
UTKARSH & THERESA
AND SOMETIMES I CLOSE MY EYES, AND IMAGINE I AM THERE
| | UTKARSH THERESA
DUERMETE MAHAL KITA
DUERMETE MINAMAHAL KITA
HASTA LA MADRUGADA
DUERMETE,
HE HAD A VERY GOOD DA Y TODAY MAHAL KITA
WE WENT DOWN TO THE SENIOR CENTER MINAMAHAL KITA
JUST A MILE AWAY MAHAL NA MAHAL KITA,
MAHALKITA,
UTKARSH & THERESA
ONE DAY MY DREAMS ARE GONNA ALL COME TRUE
FOR NOW I DO WHAT NO ONE WANTS TO DO
i t FOR NOW I DO WHAT NO ONE WANTS TO DO
li | (Lights fade on them as MAGGIE HOLMES comes on. SHE is a cleaning woman,
African American, older)WORKING - 49 -
MAGGIE (WOMAN 2)
‘You know what I always wanted to do? I wanted to play the piano. That's what I
really wanted. And I'd write songs and things, about my life growin’ up in the
south, and my mama and grandmama ... Now I got my own, beautiful daughter, and
Igot plans for her. So, [leave my house every morning and go scrub rooms up at the
Marriott. And at night I come here to this office an’ it’s scrubbin’ again.
(Music under)
For generations, that’s all we done — scrubbin’, My grandma, my mama and me.
But my daughter, she ain’t gonna do no domestic work. | aim to be the end o' that
particular line.
MAMA WORKED JUST LIKE HER MAMA BEFORE HER
DOMESTIC WORKIN’ WAS THEIR TRADE
THEY WAS LAUNDRESS, COOK AND LIVE-IN HELP
a THURSDAY GIRL, BABY SITTER, AND HOTEL MAID
= ‘THEY WORKED SIX DAYS A WEEK ALL DAY LONG
AND NEVER COULD GET OUTTA DEBT
- ‘THOSE WERE THE DAYS WHEN THE MINIMUM WAGE
WAS ANYTHING YOU COULD GET.
‘THERE...
ESA
2 THEY WAS
MAGGIE & WOMEN (WOMAN 1 & 3)
% CLEANIN’ WOMEN
WITHOUT FACES
WOMEN
KITA ‘THEY WAS
MAGGIE & WOMEN
COMIN’ AND GOIN’
ON A FIRST NAME BASIS
MAGGIE
YOU'RE TALKIN’ TO SOMEBODY WHO KNOWS
WOMEN
SOMEBODY WHO KNOWS
MAGGIE
AND AFTER TOO MANY YEARS,
woman,= 50 - WorkiNc
MAGGIE & WOMEN
LORD.
MAGGIE
1 DON’T WANNA BE IN ONE MORE LAUNDRY ROOM
WOMEN
OH, No!
MAGGIE
I DON’T WANNA PICK UP NARY ‘NOTHER BROOM.
‘ONE OF THESE DAYS
WOMEN
ONE OF THESE DAYS
MAGGIE
JUST WANNA SLEEP TILL NOON
ALL DAY LONG I’M THINKIN’
MY KIDS IS IN THE STREET SOMEWHERE
BUT THE FOLKS UP IN THEIR ROOMS
DON’T THINK YOU'RE THINKIN’ HALF THE TIME
] | [ALWAYS TALKIN’ ROUND YOU ALL
LIKE YOU AIN'T EVEN THERE DAY LONG
IT GETTIN’ $0 IT DO SOMETHIN’ TO MY MIND. ALLDAY LONG
SOMETHIN’ TO MY MIND
TOMY MIND,
O11, LORD!
GOT A DAUGHTER WITH A HEAD ON HER SHOULDERS
AND PRETTY AS A PICTURE TOO
xo,
SHE AIN'TCONNA HIDE THAT PRETTY FACE SITE AIN'T GONNA HIDE
| rms cxosep voor, OH, NO,
‘SCRUBBIN’ FLOORS LIKE HER MAMA DO
IF MY LEGS DON’T GIVE OUT, AND MY BACK HOLD UP
IM GONNA MAKE HER A BETTER DAY
(OH, ONE OF THESE DAYS.
YOU'LL NEVER SEE HER GET DOWN ON HER KNEES
(OH, LORD!
UNLESS SHE'S DOWN THERE TO PRAYWorkiNG Soi
MAGGIE & WOMEN
NO MORE CLEANIN’ WOMEN
WOMEN
CLEANIN'
MAGGIE & WOMEN
WITHOUT FACES
WOMEN
NO, No!
MAGGIE & WOMEN
‘SHE'S GONNA WALK IN ON A “MISS LAST NAME” BASIS
MAGGIE
WOMEN
SHE'LL BE THE FIRST IN THIS FAMILY
WOMEN
SHE'LL BE THE FIRST IN THIS FAMILY
MAGGIE WOMEN
TO HAVE A FACE YOU CAN SEE YOU CAN SEE
: LORD, SHE AIN'T GON’ BE LORD
¥ LONG STUCK INSIDE NO LAUNDRY ROOM OH NO!
. DAY LONG AND WHEN SHE SWEEPIN’,
AETHIN’ TO MY MIN SHE'LL BE PUSHIN’ HER OWN BROOM
MY MIND, ‘THE DAY MAY NEVER COME ‘SOMEDAY
LORD! WHEN SHE CAN SLEEP TILL NOON BUT
MAGGIE & WOMEN
LONG AS SHE CAN GET UP SINGIN’ HER OWN TUNE,
AIN'T GONNA HIDE MAGGIE
No,
FOR ME THAT DAY,
MAGGIE & WOMEN
ONE OF THESE DAYS MAGGIE
FOR ME THAT DAY
LORD!
WOMEN
FOR ME THAT DAY- 52 - WORKING
MAGGIE
CAN'T COME TOO SOON.
WOMEN
CAN'T COME TO SOON.
LORD,
TOO SOON,
THAT DAY
THAT DAY
CAN’ COME, CAN'T COME CAN'T COME, CAN'T COME
TOO SOON
CAN'T COME
NO, NO, TOO SOON
NO
NO TOO SOON
THAT DAY
THAT DAY
CAN'T COME CAN'T COME
CAN'T COME TOO SOON! CAN'T COME TOO SOON!
MAGGIE
come from four generations o’ cleanin’ women. But my daughter, she’s a whole
new generation. That’s what we got comin’ up today — a whole new generation ...
(Lights up on RALPH WERNER, salesman, 19.)
RALPH (MAN 1)
My name is Ralph Werner. I'm nineteen years old. I ran this mutual fund for the
students in my school. My father runs his own investment firm, I guess that’s where
learned. He runs a hedge fund—you know —those are the guys who are always
getting caught defrauding their investors. We studied Ethics at school, so I'm sure I
won't have any problem. I'll be going to business school. Kellogg, naturally. What
Td really like to be is a professional golfer. But realistically, I'll probably be an
| | entrepreneur. And then I'l start a family, of course. My quote dream girl unquote
i has long brunette hair, doesn’t have to wear a lot of make-up, because she’s going to
| be naturally pretty. I want her to have a lot of personality, because when I'm thirty
i and we're moving up the ladder, there's going to have to be a lot more than looks.
At first she'll probably be working, but after our first child she'll stay home. And
she'll be a good mother. I hope to have three children two boys and a girl. I would
like a Colonial house, possibly one that leans toward a Mediterranean style. Maybe it
| could even be backing right on a golf course, so my wife and I can play golf
whenever we want.
(His brow furrows with a new thought)
Thope my wife can play golf.
“
tereWorkinc 7
MEN
DON.
T COME
OON!
a whole
eration ...
for the
at's where
always
I'm sure |
ly. What
ean
unquote
going to
‘m thirty
in Looks.
e. And
1.1 would
e. Maybe it
if
(Lights up on Charlie Blossom, age 19, a big mischievous smile on his face.)
CHARLIE BLOSSOM (MAN 2)
My name is Charlie, I'l be twenty in three weeks. So I got recommended for this job
ina news room on a Chicago paper. I went down to the paper and talked to the
editor, told him how much I wanted to be a journalist. He liked me~T had a tie on.
Coming to work for me was a kind of missionary kind of thing. I was bringing.
organic walnuts and organic raisins and just giving them away to everybody. See, at
this stage of the game I was in a very spiritualistic mood. I was enjoying my job,
because I was answering phones most of the time. People would call up and
complain or have a problem, and I'd say: “This is a capitalist newspaper. And as
ong as it's a capitalist newspaper, it's not gonna serve you, because its purpose is to
make money for its owner.” And I'd tell them to call up the editor, or come down
and take over the paper. A lot of people responded really well to these suggestions.
But the editor calls me into his office, and he’s like, “Blah blah blah blah blah ...”
I wanted to take a baseball bat and smash his head in. I mean, he’s a really nice
person, I like him a lot. I don’t know if I would get any pleasure from shooting him
up with a fifty-caliber machine gun and seeing his body splatter to pieces. But my
fantasy all spring at the paper was getting a gun and shooting them.
(beat)
Or getting a gun, walking into the editor's office and saying, “Okay, how do you
face your death?”
Thad been thinking for months, what will I do when I get fired? I had to do
something to show them, “Hey, I'm better than you mother-fuckers, I'm getting fired
because I'm different.” I had to think fast, so I looked at the editor, and I said, “I
hope you can live with the conditions you're creating!” And then I just turned and
walked out and started to cry. And the editor, he hurries after me and said, “Wait a
minute. I'm not creating these conditions, you are.” I said,
(shouting)
“No, no, I’m not the one who has the power, you're the one who has the power!”
(Pause)
Now I've got myself on unemployment. They were nice to me the first few times.
Then this woman told me to “get a number.” I wanted to tell her, “Fuck you, I can
wait outside your apartment and knock you over the head and steal your money.”
But that’s bitterness. I don't like being bitter. I'm a pacifist.
(A light comes up on MIKE, looking at them and thinking about his oun son.)Worxinc
MIKE (MAN 3)
1 HEARD A LOTTA SONGS SAY “WHERE YOU GOIN’ MY SON?”
NOW I KNOW THEY'RE TRUE
BOY, YOU NEVER STOP TO THINK HOW FAST THE YEARS RUN
NOW THEY'RE TAKING YOU.
1 REMEMBER YOU WAS THREE ‘N’ A HALF
YOUR MA AND ME, WE'D SIT THERE AFTER THINGS GOT QUIETED
WE'D LAUGH AT SOME NEW WORD YOU SAID
HOW TOUGH YOU WERE TO GET TO BED
AND WE'D PLAN THE NIGHT AWAY
PLANNING FOR OUR KID
1 WAS YOUR HERO THEN
1 COULDN'T DO NO WRONG, AS FAR AS YOU WERE CONCERNED
YOU THOUGHT I WAS THE BEST OF MEN
THE TABLES HADN'T TURNED
YOU HADN'T LEARNED.
HOW LITTLE TIME IT TAKES
AND DADDIES MAKE MISTAKES
SEEMS TO ME THAT LATELY I BEEN THINKIN’ A LOT
I THINK ABOUT MY DAD
LOTS OF FUNNY THINGS COME BACK I THOUGHT I'D FORGOT
NOW THEY MAKE ME SAD
HIGH SCHOOL AND IT USED TO BE
I DIDN'T WANT HIM TOUCHIN’ ME, AND I SHUDDERED IF HE DID
FURTHER BACK TO SUMMER NIGHTS
BASEBALL GAMES BENEATH THE LIGHTS
AND SLEEPIN’ IN THE CAR
MY DADDY AND HIS KID
HE WAS MY HERO THEN
HE COULDN'T DO NO WRONG, AS FAR AS I WAS CONCERNED,
I THOUGHT HE WAS THE WISEST AND THE STRONGEST
AND THE BEST OF MEN
‘THE TABLES HADN'T TURNED.
IHADN'T LEARNED
HOW LITTLE TIME IT TAKES
AND EVERYBODY BREAKS
AND DADDIES MAKE MISTAKESWorKING 58
(Music under)
oi (MIKE)
for ‘This may sound square, but my kid is my imprint, you know what I mean? This is
why I work. Every time I see a smart young guy walkin’ by dressed real sharp, I'm
lookin’ at my kid. You know what I want? J want my kid to tell me that he’s not
gonna be like me. I want him to look at me and say, “Dad, you're a nice guy, but
QUIETED you're a fuckin’ dummy.” Hell, yes. If you can’t improve yourself, you improve your
posterity. Otherwise, life isn’t worth nothin’. You might as well go back to the cave
and stay there. I'm sure the first cave man who went over the hill to see what was on
the other side—I don’t think he went there wholly out of curiosity. He went there
because he wanted to get his son out of the cave ..
MIKE MAN 1&2
SRNED 1 HEARD A LOTTA SONGS SAY:
“WHERE YOU GOIN’, MY SON?"
WHERE YOU GOIN’?
NOW I KNOW THEY'RE FOR REAL
GOIN’
BOY, YOU NEVER STOP TO THINK
HOW FAST THE YEARS RUN
HOW FAST THE YEARS RUN
OR THE THINGS THEY STEAL
; NOW IT SEEMS I ALWAYS KNEW
‘OF WHY 1 DO THE THINGS I DO
AND THE THINGS I NEVER DID 1DO THE THINGS DO
WHY I WORK MY WHOLE DAMN LIFE OOH...
ee S0'S I COULD GIVE A BETTER LIFE
THAN THE ONE MY DAD COULD GIVE ME
IGIVE IT
TO MY KID
(On applause, WORKERS slowly start to come on, one by one.)
a MIKE
You think about a piece of work. Even, let's say, Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel. This
beautiful work of art. But what if he had to create the Sistine Chapel a thousand
times a year? Don’t you think that would dull even Michelangelo's mind?
WOMAN 3
See, it’s not just the work. Somebody built the Pyramids.
MAN 2
‘The Pyramids, the Sears Tower, these things don’t just happen.= 56 - WorkING
MAN1
| don’t care how little you did, you drive down a road and you say, “I worked on
this road.”
WOMAN 2
If there’ s a bridge, you say, “I worked on this bridge.”
WOMAN 1
I think that if a carpenter builds a cabin for poets, then the poets owe the carpenter a
little plaque — just three or four lines on the wall:
MAN 2
“Though we labor with our minds, this place we can relax in was built by someone
who can work with his hands
WOMAN 2
Picasso can point to a painting,
WOMAN 1
A writer can point to a book.
MAN1
What can I point to?
| WOMAN 3
(Music under)
You know what I'd like — I would like to see a building, say the Sears Tower, |
would like to see on one side of it a foot-wide strip from top to bottom with the
names of every person who's ever worked in or on that building — all the names.
| So when a guy walked by, he could take his son and say
MAN 1
SEE THAT BUILDING.»
WOMAN 1
| WAS THE ONE WHO DID THE DESIGN
| WOMAN 3
1 WAS THE ONE WHO DRAFTED THE PLANS
WOMAN 1 & 3, MAN1
EVRY DETAIL AND EVRY LINEorked on
carpenter a
‘someone
wer, I
th the
names,
WorKING - 57 -
MAN 2 & 3, WOMEN
SEE THAT BUILDING
MAN 1
IRAN THE CRANE THAT LIFTED THE BEAMS
MAN 2 |
|
|
{
1 WAS THE GUY WHO WORKED UP ABOVE,
WOMAN 2
LOOK AT THOSE BRICKS, THOSE BRICKS ARE MINE
MAN 1 & 2, WOMAN 1
EV'RY DETAIL AND EV'RY LINE,
ALL
SEE THAT BUILDING
WOMAN 1
LOOK HOW MY DOOR HANGS IN THE FRAME,
ALL
SEE THAT BUILDING
MIKE
FORTY FLIGHTS UP, SCRATCHED MY NAME.
ALL
SEE THAT BUILDING
MAN1
I'M ON THE STAFF—I WORK AS A GUARD
WOMAN 2
1 CLEAN THE FLOORS AND I CLEAN ’EM GOOD |
WOMAN 3 t
PEOPLE DON’T KNOW MY JOB 1S HARD
ALL
SEE THAT BUILDING
WOMAN 1
FIVE DAYS A WEEK I WORK AT A DESK
MAN 2
1 DO THE BOOKS,
WOMAN 1
1 HANDLE THE MAILWorKING
WOMAN 2
NINE ON THE DOT 1 PUNCH MY CARD
ALL
SEE THAT WINDOW
MAN 3
UP BY THE LEDGE
MAN 1
‘TEN FROM THE TOP
SEE THAT WINDOW
MAN 2
COUNT FROM THE LEFT
MAN 2 & WOMAN 2
ONE,
MAN 3 & WOMAN 1
Two,
MAN 1 & WOMAN 3
THREE
ALL
WOMAN1
THAT'S WHERE I WORK!
ALL
EVERYONE SHOULD HAVE SOMETHING TO POINT TO
SOMETHING TO BE PROUD OF
MAN 2
LOOK WHAT I DID,
MAN 1
SEE WHAT I'VE DONE
WOMEN
1 DID THE JOB
MIKE
1 WAS THE ONEWorKING
ALL
EVERYONE SHOULD HAVE SOMETHING TO POINT TO
SOME WAY TO BE TALL IN THE CROWD
PROUD
SEE THAT BUILDING
DAY AFTER DAY AFTER DAY AFTER DAY
‘THAT'S WHERE I PUT MYSELF ON THE LINE
THAT'S WHERE I SWEAT TO EARN MY PAY
SEE THAT BUILDING
MAN 3
‘THAT'S WHERE [ PUT THE FOOD ON OUR PLATES
WOMAN 3
‘THAT'S WHERE I'VE LIVED A PIECE OF MY LIFE
ALL
WHERE I CAN BRING MY KIDS AND SAY:
SEE THAT BUILDING
MAN 2 & 3, WOMAN 1 & 3 MAN 1
‘THE LUMBER WAS CUT 1
DECISIONS WERE MADE WAS THE
SEE THAT BUILDING ONE
‘THE WINDOWS ARE WASHED
THE SITE WAS SURVEYED
‘THE MEMOS ARE TYPED 1
‘THE CONCRETE WAS LAID WAS THE
‘THE RECORDS ARE KEPT RECORDS ARE KEPT
ALL
‘THE OFFICE 15 RUN
‘THE COFFEE IS SOLD
THE DIGGING WAS DONE
‘THE BUILDING WAS BUILT
FOR ALL EYES TO SEE
BY
ME!
ME!
WOMAN 2
1
WAS THE
ONE
WAS THE
RECORDS ARE KEPT