About this ebook
The first collection of plays by Merlin Goldman. It includes Killing Rainbows (Alma Tavern Theatre, Bordeaux Quay and the White Bear Pub, 2016-17), Our Kid (2016), Tick-Tock and TANK (Alma Tavern Theatre, 2017), A Game of Two Halves (Theatre Royal Bath, 2019), Hit Points (2019), Chainsaw (The King's Arms Theatre, 2020) and Loud Mouth (2016-20).
Merlin Goldman writes about duality, disability, and injustice. He has written plays, poems, novels, and films. This is his first collection of plays. His first play, Firewall, was performed at the Montreal Fringe Festival. Killing Rainbows was performed twice in Bristol, and Tick-Tock and Tank ran for a week. He was long listed for Pint-sized (Our Kid) and the Old Vic 12 (Loud Mouth) and shortlisted in 2019 by Bristol Old Vic for Hit Points. A short play, A Game of Two Halves, had the headline slot of an evening of shorts at Theatre Royal Bath in 2019 and Chainsaw was performed in Salford in 2020.
Merlin Goldman
Merlin Goldman began as a playwright, with work performed at the Montreal Fringe Festival, The Alma Theatre and Theatre Royal Bath. He was short-listed in the Bristol Old Vic Open Call. He's made over a dozen films as a writer, crew, director, or producer and is a graduate of Talent Campus 5, a screenwriter's training scheme. He's been shortlisted for the Pears Film Fund (twice). He's also illustrated several of his own books.
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Pieces - Merlin Goldman
A CHRONOLOGY
2016–17 Killing Rainbows was first performed in 2016 in the Alma Tavern Theatre, directed by Daniel Smith. Its next performance was above Bordeaux Quay restaurant, directed by June Trask. It’s third in 2017 was above the White Bear pub in Cotham and directed by Kris Hallett. All performances were in Bristol, UK.
2016 Our Kid was longlisted for the Pint-sized Plays competition.
2017 Tick-Tock and TANK were directed by Daniel Smith and performed as part of an evening of plays (Pantomime Shorts) at the Alma Tavern Theatre.
2019 A Game of Two Halves was written during a playwriting course run by Matt Grinter at Theatre Royal Bath. This culminated with all the pieces being performed for one night in the main auditorium. It was directed by Chloe Masterton.
2019 Hit Points was shortlisted in Bristol Old Vic’s Open Session.
2020 Chainsaw was directed by Michelle Parker and shown at The King’s Arms Theatre in Salford, UK.
2016–20 The premise of Loud Mouth was longlisted for The Old Vic 12 in 2016 and completed in 2020.
INTRODUCTION
The first play I wrote was called Firewall and was performed in 2007 at Club Lambi for two nights as part of the Indyish Assembly 2.0 International Collaborative Art Relay at the Montreal Fringe Festival. Writers around the world created scripts based on a never-before-seen T J Dawe piece. Scripts were passed in a relay with close to 100 illustrators, animators, actors and musicians. Artists changed the pieces as much as they wanted while working under a time limit. Unfortunately, the original and final script were both lost.
Killing Rainbows was inspired by a conversation I had with Chris Chalkey as part of a creative workshop held in his building in Stokes Croft. He told us how he’d taken pride in the area, sweeping the pavement outside. He began painting anti-consumerist slogans on billboards and walls, which led him into conflict with Bristol City Council. They would send staff to cover the artwork with grey squares. His life story inspired the play. To have the play performed three times allowed me to tweak it each time, strengthening the story engine as I learnt more about storytelling.
Our Kid was written in response to the killing of journalists by jihadi terrorists. I was never brave enough to watch the videos, but the horror of the events sickened me enough to channel it into a play. Several of the most notorious kidnappers were British and it struck me as perverse that there might be two British men, locked together in a room on foreign shores, with their lives at stake. And what if they found out that they were from the same town and had the same interests? ‘What if?’ The spark that starts a writer’s creative journey.
TANK and Tick-Tock were written for a self-produced night of shorts. Dreamt up over a pizza with Euphoria Kew, we decided to put on our work. We’d had a taste of how ‘easy’ it was with our Trial & Error show, which had included Killing Rainbows. By this point, I was reading more playbooks than single plays. TANK is clearly influenced by Pinter with its vibe of two men in a room almost talking about nothing. The threat for them is the outcome of their latest audition. Tick-Tock bears much credit to Sir Terence Rattigan with its class sensibilities and the outrage over a pregnancy out of wedlock.
During all this time, I was devouring books on writing and attending workshops. I signed up to the intermediate playwriting course at Theatre Royal Bath. This was run by Matt Grinter, who went on to win the Olwen Wymark award for his delivery of it. The final outcome of the course was to have ten minutes of our work, a short play or an excerpt of a longer piece, performed at The Egg. I chose to write a new short piece, A Game of Two Halves. It was in part inspired by George Turvey, who suggested that using an event provided a good setting or conclusion to a story. I was pretty familiar with football – a match is often said to be a simile of a play: two halves with an interval – so I used that as the basis for the story but spread it out over a whole season.
The characters of Froggie and Bee both came to life about the same time and to an extent represent human versions of their animal namesakes. The play was cut down to fit the time limit and Chloe Masterton, the director, added the character of a referee to help with both scene changes and the key moment when Froggie is ejected. There is a plan to expand it to full length. On the night, the play was bumped to the end and gathered quite a few laughs. It’s much like TANK in that it uses the benefit of opposites to examine a theme. In the case of A Game of Two Halves, the theme is change. Froggie resists the changes being brought about by the new owners, whereas Bee embraces them.
Chainsaw was written for a good friend, Scott Davenport. He’d been my mentor during the London Screenwriters’ Festival’s Talent Campus scheme. An advocate for mental health, he put on a night of shorts to raise money and I offered to write a play for it. The play was based on an article I read about the use of AI to scan social media posts to detect people at risk of suicide. One often hears about the more negative aspects of social media and this positive application intrigued me. That didn’t stop me putting in the unfortunate ending, but even that is more down to human error than the limitations of the system envisaged.
If short plays are sprints, then full-length plays are marathons. I have something approaching a full-length play, Midnight Sunrise, but more work is required to complete it. Hit Points came about from the premise of how we treat people with illnesses which are neither visible nor easy to prove clinically. I remember the early scepticism of chronic fatigue syndrome in the eighties and nineties. It was often dismissed as ‘yuppie flu’. The phenomenon of benefit cheats also percolated through my mind during its writing. What if someone said they were ill but either couldn’t prove it or worse, chose to pretend they were ill in the first place? Why would they do this, and could they be found out? Hit Points tries to address these themes.
The final play in this collection is Loud Mouth. This play began as an idea several years ago and was inspired somewhat by the film The Machinist. I wanted to explore how buried guilt could affect someone. Mashed together with themes of fascism and ageism, the play begins after a world-changing event that has disabled the main character, David. Responsible for a hit-and-run, he appears to be visited by the ghost of the girl he killed. This haunting drives him further and further into a rage against her age group, who he sees as having benefited from the event. The latest edits were focused on making sure that the apparition could equally be ‘real’ (in the sense of being physically in the room and a manifestation of Jenny) or a figment of his imagination.
I hope you enjoy reading this collection of plays.
––––––––
MERLIN GOLDMAN
KILLING RAINBOWS
Killing Rainbows, a Trial & Error production, first presented at the Alma Tavern Theatre from 2–4 June 2016. It was later performed for one night on 24th October at Bordeaux Quay, with Duncan Bonner in the role of Chris Topley and directed by June Trask as part of a Green Light night. It was then performed at The Room Above in the White Bear on 25th May 2017, directed by Kris Hallett with Tim Whitten in the role.
CAST ///
CHRIS TOPLEY: CHRIS HARRISON
DIRECTED BY ///
DANIEL SMITH
CHARACTERS ///
CHRIS TOPLEY: 52 YEARS OLD
SETTING ///
BRISTOL
SCENE 1
A man enters in paint-splattered overalls, sweeping the floor.
Chris I love the smell of Stokes Croft in the morning. It smells like victory. I came here in the 1980s, to work as a teacher. I’d been an engineer at the Rover plant in Birmingham. I’d studied engineering here, my birthplace, it was meant to be a career for life. It was honest work, creating an object, working in teams. But the cars were bland and lacked the soul of those that built them. Their organs were ugly, twists