Nocturne: A Play

Nocturne: A Play

by Adam Rapp
Nocturne: A Play

Nocturne: A Play

by Adam Rapp

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Overview

A devastating, elegant, and gripping dissection of the American dream, Adam Rapp's Nocturne signals a brave new voice in American theater.

"Fifteen years ago I killed my sister."


So begins Adam Rapp's highly acclaimed play Nocturne, in which a 32-year-old former piano prodigy recounts the tragic events that tore his family apart.

With a keen eye for human relationships and a deft ear for language, Rapp explores the aftershock of this unimaginable event. The father is so incapable of forgiveness he puts a gun in his son's mouth; the mother so shattered, she deserts the family and eventually takes leave of her sanity altogether; the son--only 17 years old at the time--sets out for New York City. There, he seeks an uneasy refuge in books and reinvents himself as a writer. Across the decade and a half that follows he tries to cope with the ramifications of his own anguish and estrangement while making a desperate search for redemption.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781429998253
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication date: 02/10/2002
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 96
Sales rank: 793,338
File size: 190 KB

About the Author

Adam Rapp is an OBIE Award-winning playwright and director, as well as a novelist, filmmaker, actor, and musician. His play The Purple Lights of Joppa Illinois had its world première last month at South Coast Repertory. His other plays include Red Light Winter (Citation from the American Theatre Critics Association, a Lucille Lortel Nomination for Best New Play, two OBIE Awards, and was named a finalist for the 2006 Pulitzer Prize), Blackbird, The Metal Children, Finer Noble Gases, Through The Yellow Hour, The Hallway Trilogy, Nocturne, Ghosts in the Cottonwoods, Animals and Plants, Stone Cold Dead Serious, Faster, Gompers, Essential Self-Defense, American Slingo, and Kindness. For film, he wrote the screenplay for Winter Passing; and recently directed Loitering with Intent. Rapp has been the recipient of the 1999 Princess Grace Award for Playwriting, a 2000 Roger L. Stevens Award from the Kennedy Center Fund for New American Plays, the 2001 Helen Merrill Award for Emerging Playwrights, and Boston’s Elliot Norton Award; and was short-listed for the 2003 William Saroyan International Prize for Writing, received the 2006 Princess Grace Statue, a 2007 Lucille Lortel Playwriting Fellowship, and the Benjamin H. Danks Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Read an Excerpt

Nocturne

A Play


By Adam Rapp

Faber and Faber, Inc.

Copyright © 2001 Adam Rapp
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4299-9825-3


CHAPTER 1

Fifteen years ago I killed my sister.

There.

I said it.

I can change the order of the words. My sister I killed fifteen years ago. I, fifteen years ago, killed my sister. Sister my killed I years ago fifteen.

I can cite various definitions. To deprive of life: The farmer killed the rabid dog. To put an end to: The umpire killed the tennis match. To mark for omission: He killed the paragraph. To destroy the vital essential quality of: The dentist killed the nerve with Novocain. To cause to stop: The bus driver killed the engine. To cause extreme pain to: His monologue killed the audience.

To slay. To murder. To assassinate. To dispatch. To execute.

You can play with tenses. Will kill. Did kill. Have killed. Will have killed. Would like to have killed.

You can turn it into a gerund. Killing.

There's a kind of progress with a gerund.

If you conjugate in the past tense, it's all the same. I killed. You killed. He, she, it killed. They killed. You all killed. We killed. There's no way around it.

Fifteen years ago I killed my sister.

It's dumb-sounding, the way most facts are. Like a former President or the names of bones.

Grover Cleveland.

Fibula. Tibia. Femur.

There's a finality in a fact. Something medical almost. A fact is crafted. Vaguely industrial. It has permanence. It's a stain or a smudge. A botch or a spot or a blemish. A fact is a flaw It's made of wood and left to fossilize; to gather minerals and geologically imprint itself on the side of a mountain.

You can look at the back of your hand and know exactly how the bones move.

(The sound of a distant piano.)

The piano doesn't sing. It sobs. It aches without release. Like a word that can't wrench itself from the throat. Like an alkaline trapped in the liver. Even one note. A C-sharp. The death of small bird. An F. A stranded car's horn bleating for help on the highway. The piano has permanence. A factual permanence. You walk into a room and there it is, in all its stoic grandeur. It has omnipotence. It waits for you without pursuit. The hulking, coffinlike stillness. The way it comes to know your touch. Like a lover's private indulgence. A kind of glacial intimacy. A cold, sexless knowing.

Grieg. Chopin. Tchaikovsky.

There's a kind of death with the piano. The final note falling. Perhaps it's the inevitable, ensuing silence. The deafening return to stillness. The instrument itself is a homicide waiting to happen. Its physical weight. Its gravity, which slows you. The seeming need it has to render you inert. To turn you into its motionless companion. As though it doesn't want to be played. As though its potential — the crushing unheard music — as though this absence alone is some kind of motion deterrent.

The final movement of a sonata. An almosthuman tragedy. Slow, brutal heart failure. Coronary thrombosis.

The weaving voices interloping a fugue. A political death. A kind of vocal assassination.

Fifteen years ago I killed my sister.

I was seventeen, she was nine. A fact. Now I'm thirty-two. She would be twenty-four. Fact. The hipbone's connected to the leg bone.

The '69 Buick Electra 225 is a very lengthy car. There's something almost illegal about the expanse of its back end. From grille to taillight it's sixteen feet, nine inches long. It has a 440 engine, and when you accelerate you can feel the horsepower buzzing in your ribcage. It's like a car out of a comic book.


At my father's insistence, I buy the Electra from Bob Ranzini — our family's insurance broker — for two hundred and fifty bucks. Mr. Ranzini pats me on the back. He brags of its classic American pedigree. He speaks of its great sluicing hum and his yearly drive down to Jupiter, Florida, and all the old two-lane highways in the South.

Sitting in the Electra is like lounging. There's this sense that platters of food will be served. The seats buzz back. The windows buzz down. This infinite buzzing. Like the invisible drone of bees at work. Locusts in the fruit trees. A car humming with electricity.

The accident happens like this:

Joliet, Illinois. I'm coming home from Sub-Diggity — my summer sandwich-making job. I'm seventeen. I'm just off work. My clothes smell like roast beef and mayonnaise. My fingers are stained with mustard. Steely Dan's "Hey Nineteen" is playing on the AM.

(Singing)

Way back when
In sixty-seven
I was the dandy
Of Gamma Chi


I'm traveling west on Black Road. There is no wind. The air is so hot it folds in through the window like an invisible quilt. It slouches into the passenger seat. After being on my feet for eight hours I'm not exactly in my body. I'm somewhere else; somewhere near the music. Under the words. The bass line's all liquid velvet. It's a cool creamy liquor, this bass line.

It's the second week in July. It's roughly 95 degrees. Mosquitoes are plotting their midsummer feast. Moths are hovering under the gas station sign in a great epileptic nimbus. There's an endless feeling of Little League being played. Nocturnally and with infinite concessions. Slurpies and caramel corn. Blue snow cones staining the chins of toddlers. Hot dogs that are so good they can feed entire families. An ocean of Little League diamonds.

An aluminum bat hitting a ball is one of the greatest notes of July. A D, I think. A split-second song. A little chink of hope.

I turn north onto Gael Drive.

(Singing)

Sweet things from Boston
So young and willing
Moved down to Scarsdale
Where the hell am I?


I'm going 45 in a 30. At least that's where the speedometer freezes after the collision. I like to call it a collision, because decapitation sounds somehow capital. Corporeal.

We've lived on Gael Drive for most of my life. My mother, Jan; my father, Earl; and my little sister and I. It's a threebedroom ranch house with blond brick. We have a garage and a sprinkler system. We have a birdhouse. We have dragonflies that hover and dart like miniature helicopters. We have bees. We have a small bearded gnome that looks as if he's suffering from some sort of gastrointestinal disorder. In the front yard there's a sycamore tree that bleeds. At night its shadow hangs on my bedroom window like an enormous man trembling.

Inside the house we have infinite Formica. Bookshelves and cupboards and countertops. Tables and sideboards.

Desks and dressers and headboards all around. A credenza. There's so much Formica it's as if it was archaeologically excavated and the house was built around it in honor of its laminated magnificence.

I sometimes think that the color of my skin is not white but Formica.

In the living room we have a 1942 Steinway piano. There is not a scratch on it. It's my father's prize possession. It was his father's — Grandpa Earl — and it was handed down with the understanding that it would be played only if the hands that traveled its ivory cusps were worthy of its glory. My father would spend hundreds of dollars having it tuned every spring.

In our blond house the Steinway is so black it sometimes has an air of war. As though it can be mounted and fired up and driven right through the Sheetrock. My mother places doilies on its hood and family pictures on the doilies. My dad holding a rather bored-looking bass. My sister in a pair of roller skates that make her prepubescent legs look long and coltish. My parents clutching each other at the altar, looking as if they're about to walk into a meat locker. An 8-by-10 seventh-grade photo of me.

Snaggletoothed. My hair trying to levitate in one very large and rollicking cowlick.

I would play that Steinway from the ages of ten to seventeen. I would practice for three hours a day and I would play until my hands would grow long and slender like a woman's. I would eventually start walking around hunched and knotted like some kind of Transylvanian harpsichordist. My parents would enter me into local competitions, where mothers and fathers execute a cold, Machiavellian reticence. Sitting together not as husbands and wives but as co-conspirators. Not as lovers but as collaborators in the industry of manufacturing perfection. Hands poised on knees. Backs arched. Necks stiff with righteous perpendicularity. Some stand incredibly still, as though their severity will somehow conjure the perfect note. Some kneel in a strange, sustained genuflection. Some position themselves in the aisles, arms akimbo. A posture of gentle warfare.

These parents are agents and coaches and tutors and mentors and managers all rolled into one. They are priest and jailer. Savior and executioner. Investor. They lock you in practice rooms and surreptitiously record your third crack at Grieg. They keep time with a pencil better than your teacher. They drill you and hug you and make you manicure your nails to the point of cuticle supremacy. It is uncompromising, willful training.

Over time a horse owner rears his prize colt from foal to derby winner with the subtle sustained use of his riding crop.

I would win some of the small competitions. I would lose all of the big ones.

So, it's seven-thirty and the sun is a flaming orb on the horizon. There are colors in the sky. Reds. Pinks. Burnt oranges. Clouds like frayed gauze. Their underbellies golden somehow


Steely Dan is well into its chorus.

(Singing)

The Cuervo gold
The fine Colombian
Make tonight a wonderful thing
Say it again ...


I turn north onto Gael Drive and I decide to not go home. There's a place where I sometimes go and think. It's an enormous platoon of power lines that buzz with a kind of indifferent somnolence. The Radio Trees. Some people go to bars. Others go to the quarry. Some go to a restaurant on the East Side where women in cheap lingerie will dance on your table. I go to the Radio Trees. I want to take my shoes off and feel the buzz in my feet.

I accelerate. Something small runs out into the road. I brake. Nothing happens. It's a dog. A garbage can. A plastic bag that's stolen a bit of breeze. I pump the brake pedal. I might as well be pumping a bologna sandwich. I swerve. There's a thud. A hollow, almost wooden thud. Small as an egg. I continue pumping the brakes. Nothing happens. Steely Dan turns into the Alan Parsons Project. I am the eye in the sky. I pump the brakes and the Electra just keeps going, as though by its own volition. I swerve. I counterswerve. I crash into a large oak tree at the end of the street. The front end of the Electra accordions to the windshield. Birds are everywhere. A schizophrenic cloud of crows.

I crack three ribs and break my nose. I can taste the metal in my blood. Like warm pewter. The speedometer sticks at 45 miles per hour.

In that strange, post-crash ethereal silence I get out of the car and walk the hundred yards or so back to where I heard the thud. The crows have formed a kind of wavering anvil and are flying south toward the sound of the highway. It feels as if the steering wheel has been inserted into my rib cage. My legs take me. The hipbone is connected to the leg bone.

My sister's body lies in the street. It looks like a doll's body. Legs. Feet. Yellow socks perfectly folded. Bits of lace turned down — my mother's touch. Shoes so small it's as if they were born out of a children's fable. Hands. Arms. Neck. A small white dress with blue flowers. Anemones. Buttercups.

Her head is across the street. It has rolled into the Petersens' driveway. I walk over and pick it up. Simply. Perfunctorily. Only a feeling of great clarity and absence. Like a sudden gust of lake wind. As if it's a ball or some kind of fugitive picnic toy. Its weight seems tremendous. I will reattach it to the neck and she will rise off the pavement and go back into the house and wash up for supper.

As I'm reattaching, my mother can be seen framed in the living-room window, her hand pressed against the glass, her head slightly tilted, as though she is peering out over a strange body of water; as though she is watching something hellish emerging from the fog.


The sound of sirens. Shrieking sirens from all directions. The shrieking turns into a kind of weeping. Sirens weeping in an octave only known to whales and dolphins.

CHAPTER 2

I can't remember my sister's face.

Other parts of her are as definite as forks and knives.

Her little blond knees. Legs so slender you wonder how they could support the weight of even the smallest torso. Her wrists as thin as Popsicle sticks. Her boyish arms. Mosquito-bitten. Stained with iodine and calamine lotion. Her tiny hands. Her fingers as light and delicate as bird bones. The moons in her nails. Their infinitesimal hemispheres. Some setting into the beds of her cuticles. Others rising as though coaxed by some kind of centrifugal song.

I can sometimes see the ears. Unusually large ears for a small girl. Lobes like dangling tears of putty. The ears of a barber or a train conductor. An odd, manly wisdom in those ears.

I try to reconstruct the images. In that strange, filmic method of the memory I use still frames. I break it down into celluloid. But before the storyboard there's the mood. The intangibles. The acceleration of the Electra. A kind of vague feeling of satisfaction wending through my intestines. The Radio Trees calling me. The steering wheel smelling of cold cuts. Steely Dan. The feeling of levitation, as though the tires are only on the road because of the constraints of physics. The heat curdling in the front seat. Radiating from the vinyl dash like a boiled medicine shirt that is drawn to the skin.

And then that flash and all those kaleidoscopic possibilities.

Frame I: A dog; King — the Petersens' German shepherd.

Frame 2: A bird; a spooked swallow swooping down from some unknown eaves; nosediving into the grille at the threat of rain.

Frame 3: A small garbage can: green somehow, for recycling, and plastic, because there's no music in the thud.

Frame 4: A miskicked football hurtling end over end from the Doughertys' back yard.


And then Frame 5:

My sister in her dress; so clean it's as if she's been bathed in preparation for her portrait to be painted; her knees; the slightly ducklike pronation of her feet; ducklinglike, I should say; her saddle shoes; the yellow socks with lace; her white dress with the little flowers; the quality of white Roman somehow; the flowers so blue it's as if they are singing; her hand rising up theatrically.

Stop.

Please stop.

Not now.

Not like this.

I'm too small for this to happen.

Sure, I play with the drama. I tweak it. I raise and lower the hand. Palm out. Index finger extended toward the windshield accusatorially. I add and remove inflection. I see it as text and I italicize. I bold. I underscore to drive it home. I fold in shrieks and bogeyman screams and tears. Yes, tears. As if she even had time to well up.

I've plummeted to the depths of comedy. She'll wink at me. She'll have a handlebar mustache. She'll be holding a deck of cards, peel off the joker, frame it with her hand, and then fling it toward the windshield with ironic, magicianlike skill. She'll snicker and sneer. She'll pull out a small saddle horn and honk with great velocity. She'll chortle. She'll flimflam and rabble-rouse. She'll lift her dress and reveal a very loud set of rainbow suspenders.

The fact is that no matter how I reconstruct the instant of impact, the only thing that endures is an overwhelming blankness. A blip of nothing. Zero. A goose egg. As though the sound — that hollow thud — was a product of some kind of neighborhood ventriloquism. As if the asphalt itself was in vaudevillian cahoots with the Hardens or the Petersens.

She swam. She rode her bike. While I practiced for a conservatory audition, she sat under the piano bench and crayoned pictures of clowns with balloons in their cheeks.

She liked boys' clothes. She'd steal my boxer shorts and wear them to swimming practice. Once, at dinner, she ambitiously announced her plan of owning a tuxedo. She intended to wear it to her fourth-grade graduation.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Nocturne by Adam Rapp. Copyright © 2001 Adam Rapp. Excerpted by permission of Faber and Faber, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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