Title Card/ slide used in the second performance at Artspace in 1993 |
poster for The Nancy Ward: Joe Lewis in residence Jul2 2 -August 30 1990 |
If you want to perform this monologue yourself here are the stage directions. notes on set costume props and images for slides. since it begins with you sauntering in to the spotlight carrying a Aida or shopping bag and singing the 1953 song "Young At Heart" a ballad with music by Johnny Richards and lyrics by Carolyn Leigh. that Frank Sinatra had a mega hit with, you need to learn it
now that the song is in your head we'll proceed.
Production needs:
sketch for a set idea 1990 |
Set:an ironing board. and a chair in front of a slide screen (projections are optional but the projected text is integral to the meaning of the performance but not the story)
costume:pants, a baggy T shirt tucked into pants, a watch with alarm vintage Adidas Bag or large shoulder bag or plastic shopping bag
props: large bag with bottle of water and plastic cups and 20 to 30 pill bottles ( please note performance may be done wet or dry)
sound track: (optional) radio playing low and an alarm clock being set off by stage manager at regular intervals of three minutes
screen shot from documentation of first performance at Artspace, August 29, 1990 |
procedure with stage manager and alarm clock:
When the alarm is sounded the story teller must stop and preform the following tasks. open the bottle of water and pour an inch of it into the glass, set both down, then reach into the bag and bring out a pill bottle, stand up, pull open the front of the underskirt and drop the pill bottle into the shirt and pour the water out of cup onto a closed mouth ,wipe the mouth sit down and continue with the story. this action must be repeated every time the alarm is heard.
procedure without stage manager and alarm clock:
The performer will stop the story at several intervals look at their watch announce a progression of times from seven thirty five AM onward until eight thirty am and upon announcing a time, perform the task with the pill bottles as described above.
When the story is finished being told (cue line Woody Wood Pecker is over now)_(the alarm should be left to ring while) the performer pulls up the front of the underskirt and wipes their face and neck while the pill bottles fall with a crash to the floor. end of action freeze to the beat of 10. Then lift a cupped hand to the ear a speak last two lines in a slight whisper (alarm off radio up )
second slide |
Be aware that text as written here is only the basic story, the story changes and expands with improvisation as it is preformed
THE STORY OF A FRIED EGG
This is the story of a fried egg and a story about all the independence that came to the seven year old who learned to create such an object. Imagine, not that you have to.
Imagine its Sunday morning 7:00 am, Imagine that your parents are still in bed, asleep and that you are hungry,
Cereal is easy but cereal is boring, and besides that its Sunday morning.
Slide 3 |
So, being the brave little soul that you are you look into the cupboard under the kitchen sink and find the tiniest, teeniest little frying pan that there is and, it weighs a ton, you pull it out, BANG, dam oops hope Mom and dad didn't hear that.
Slide 4 |
slide 5
Now what makes more noise pushing or pulling, both but you have come this far your not going to let that stop you it doesn't matter.
So now the chair is in front of the stove you climb up on it and there.
OH you forgot the eggs and the frying pan, get down.
slide 6
Now consider what's worse the noise the chair will make as you drag it over here or the mess dropping all the eggs on the floor would make.
Climb. Open the door as far as it will go, stand on your tippy toes and oh.
There's a box of eggs on the bottom shelf well that was easier than you thought.
You smile to yourself.
slide 7
Now butter you've seen Mom do this a million times butter is easy, now what.
Slide 8
slide 9
FINE, O.K. turn the knob, poof fire good, now turn it down real small, now the butter, plop you dropped it on the floor, scrape it up that's right now pick the cat hairs out of it and back up on the chair and there,
oh look its bubbling,
now the egg,
well you can pick the shells out later.
slide 10
Now you've seen mom flip a million things a million times, now all you have to do is flip one thing. here's the flipper, you start to get down, wait the fire you better turn that off, now where is the flipper, oh yeah a plate back to the dinning room, oh yeah toast, that's easy, you do that all the time, push it down,
now you sit on the chair and think about mom and this egg frying business its hard and she does more then just fry eggs, you sit there looking at the knees of your p.j.s, they're really dirty,
This house is a real dump, i like it, but your a real little sissy neat thing you even make your bed on Saturday and now your learning to cook.
slide 11
The toast is up, the eggs are cooked and you didn't even need to flip them and look mom and dad aren't even out of bed yet and look at Scampy with his nose sticking out the hole in the screen and ignoring you.
All is safe on the western front, you sit down and enjoy the first breakfast that you ever cooked for yourself.
Enjoy. but remember, if you don't hurry up and clean up and put everything away its 8:30 now woody wood pecker is over and.
The Story of a Fried Egg had a second performance at Artspace in 1993 as part of an evening of performance works by Meita Winkler and myself. Both performances were documented on video neither is spectacular.
Slide12
Enjoy. but remember, if you don't hurry up and clean up and put everything away its 8:30 now woody wood pecker is over and.
---------------------------------The End-----------------------------------
THE STORY OF A FRIED EGG
by Joe Lewis ©
1990
This is the story of a fried egg and a
story about all the
independence that came to the seven
year old who learned to
create such an object. Imagine, not
that you have to. imagine its
Sunday morning 7:00 am, Imagine that
your parents are still in
bed, asleep and that you are hungry,
cereal is easy but cereal is
boring, and besides that its Sunday
morning.
So, being the brave little soul that
you are you look into the
cupboard under the kitchen sink and
find the tiniest, teeniest
little frying pan that there is and, it
weighs a ton, you pull it
out, BANG, dam oops hope mom and dad
didn't hear that.
That's step one, now step two, go into
the dining room and look
for an empty chair that's laundry,
that's coats, that ones
Leah's, better not touch that or
she'll have a fit, that one, no
not that one this one this is the
chair.
Now what makes more noise pushing or
pulling, both but you have
come this far your not going to let
that stop you it doesn't
matter. So now the chair is in front of
the stove you climb up on
it and there. OH you forgot the eggs
and the frying pan, get down.
Now for the fridge, its easily open,
but then what the eggs are
at the top of the door, you could just
reach up there, but you
might drop them. Now consider what's
worse the noise the chair
will make as you drag it over here or
the mess dropping all the
eggs on the floor would make. Climb.
Open the door as far as it
will go, stand on your tiptoes and oh.
There's a box of eggs
on the bottom shelf well that was
easier than you thought. You
smile to yourself.
Now what, you've got eggs, frying pan,
the chair makes you high
enough so you can see into the frying
pan when your kneeling
down, you don't want to fall of the
chair. Now butter you've seen
mom do this a million times butter is
easy, now what.
Nothing you've got every thing now you
just have to do it, yeah
do it that's it, OK. turn the stove on,
wait, what if there's no
fire and you gas the hole family and go
to jail, or maybe you
might start a fire. Its almost eight,
on Sunday mom doesn't get
up until after woody woodpecker and
your really really hungry and
besides mom never gassed the family or
started a fire, but she's
big, well so are you, didn't she say
that the first day she made
you go to that stupid school full of
those stupid nuns, she said
" your a big boy now act like one"
FINE, O.K. turn the knob, poof fire
good, now turn it down real
small, now the butter, plop you dropped
it on the floor, scrape
it up that's right now pick the cat
hairs out of it and back up
on the chair and there, oh look its
bubbling, now the egg, well
you can pick the shells out later.
Now you've seen mom flip a million
things a million times, now
all you have to do is flip one thing.
here's the flipper, you
start to get down, wait the fire you
better turn that off, now
where is the flipper,oh yeah a plate
back to the dinning room, oh
yeah toast, that's easy, you do that
all the time, push it down,
now you sit on the chair and think
about mom and this egg frying
business its hard and she does more
then just fry eggs, you sit
there looking at the knees of your
p.j.s, they're really dirty,
this house is a real dump, i like it,
but your a real little
sissy neat thing you even make your bed
on Saturday and now your
learning to cook.
The toast is up, the eggs are cooked
and you didn't even need to
flip them and look mom and dad aren't
even out of bed yet and
look at Scampy (the basset hound)with
his nose sticking out the hole in the screen
and ignoring you. All is safe on the
western front, you sit down
and enjoy the first breakfast that you
ever cooked for yourself.
Enjoy. but remember, if you don't hurry
up and clean up and put
everything away its 8:30 now woody wood
pecker is over and.
Did you hear that.
The telephone didn't just ring did it?