The document is a one act play about a group of elderly war widows who meet in a church basement. They are visited by a Lieutenant Colonel who tries to get their endorsement for a political statement. However, their discussion is repeatedly interrupted by Miss Lee, an elderly widow with dementia, who believes her son is coming to visit and becomes confused. The other widows try to care for Miss Lee but struggle to keep the meeting on track.
The document is a one act play about a group of elderly war widows who meet in a church basement. They are visited by a Lieutenant Colonel who tries to get their endorsement for a political statement. However, their discussion is repeatedly interrupted by Miss Lee, an elderly widow with dementia, who believes her son is coming to visit and becomes confused. The other widows try to care for Miss Lee but struggle to keep the meeting on track.
The document is a one act play about a group of elderly war widows who meet in a church basement. They are visited by a Lieutenant Colonel who tries to get their endorsement for a political statement. However, their discussion is repeatedly interrupted by Miss Lee, an elderly widow with dementia, who believes her son is coming to visit and becomes confused. The other widows try to care for Miss Lee but struggle to keep the meeting on track.
The document is a one act play about a group of elderly war widows who meet in a church basement. They are visited by a Lieutenant Colonel who tries to get their endorsement for a political statement. However, their discussion is repeatedly interrupted by Miss Lee, an elderly widow with dementia, who believes her son is coming to visit and becomes confused. The other widows try to care for Miss Lee but struggle to keep the meeting on track.
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For contact information,
please return to the Peace of Mind information page (click on your browsers Back button, or visit http://www.singlelane.com/proplay/peace.html)
Peace of Mind A one act play By David Lohrey
CAST OF CHARACTERS
LIEUTENANT COLONEL JAMES BRADLEY: A well-preserved middle-aged guy whos been around. In full- uniform, or a coat and tie.
MRS. CHARLOTTE JEAN WILSON: Elderly, statuesque woman in her late sixties, who is only sure things will go right when she is in charge.
MRS. MARGARET (MAGGIE) DUNNING: the type of woman who does not scare easily; elderly, but well put together.
MONIQUE CHAMBERS: Late thirties; has lived alone for too long and it shows.
MISS LEE: An old, frail woman in her eighties.
SCENE: Takes place in a sparsely furnished hall located in the basement of a Methodist Church in the suburbs of a small Southern city. It is autumn, not too long ago.
TIME: It is the present.
At Rise: Speaker stand at podium, as ladies sit on folding chairs. A table to the side is set with refreshments.
BRADLEY Well, then, ladies, if there are no more questions.... Yes, Maam? The lady on the far right. May I have your name, please?
MRS. WILSON You sure may. Charlotte Wilson. Mrs. Chester S., General.
BRADLEY Colonel, maam. Lieutenant Colonel. But thanks for the promotion.
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2
MRS. WILSON You deserve one, Colonel, for all the work youre doing. You really do.
BRADLEY I appreciate that, maam.
MRS. WILSON What I wanted to ask...Oh, Im sure itll seem like a stupid question.
BRADLEY The only stupid question is the one not asked. You go right ahead. Shoot.
MRS. WILSON You know how theyre always talking about...well, Ill give you a for instance: just last week, I reckon its been...well, anyway, they had a panel of top scientists on, and they were talking about the increased chance of nuclear war. Did you see that, Colonel?
BRADLEY There have been so many, uh....
MRS. WILSON Well, they had a couple of experts on there, and they all swore up and down that this new missile defense system could trigger a third world war on account of the treaties we signed with the Russian. So, I was just wondering....
BRADLEY Maam....
MRS. WILSON ...They were so...
BRADLEY ...If youll just let me...
MRS. WILSON ...confident and all.
BRADLEY You are absolutely right. I know just the types you mean. They are all over the place, you know, in Washington. Ill let you in on a little secret, though, ladies. Within ten years, through the efforts of President Reagan, the United States will have a defensive shield to protect us from a surprise missile attack. In the meantime and thats why Im here today, ladies we must not allow the peaceniks and communist sympathizers succeed in driving our nuclear forces out
Peace of Mind
3 of Europe. These so-called experts.... Sure, theyll tell you theyve got it all figured out, but where are they going to be when the Soviet army...?
(Loud noise off; the door swings open. MISS LEE enters, wearing her nightgown, house slippers, and a fine hat.)
MISS LEE Steven? I say, Steven, are you here?
MRS. WILSON Oh, my goodness. Verna, honey! For heavens sakes, what in the world are you doing out...here?
MISS LEE Im looking for that son of mine.
MARGARET Goodness gracious.
MRS. WILSON Maggie.
MISS LEE Been expecting him now...
MRS. WILSON ...Hadnt you better...
MISS LEE ...He called and said hed be in today, so I went on down to the station. Ive been waiting there all morning. You know how fond he is of your cookies, Charlotte Jean, so I thought he might have stopped in here for a spell.
MRS. WILSON Uh, ladies? Wont one of you get a chair for Miss Lee?
MARGARET For crying out loud. Wont somebody please just take her home.
MISS LEE I told him to come directly to the station and wait for me at the old carriage stop.
MARGARET I never heard such nonsense.
Peace of Mind
4 MRS. WILSON (To MONIQUE:) Would you mind, honey? Would you be kind enough, dear, to call over to the Lee place?
MONIQUE Yes, of course.
MRS. WILSON Now dont alarm Estelle. Just tell her how...
MARGARET I expect Estellell know what to do, Charlotte. (MONIQUE exits)
MISS LEE He would have sent word if his train had been delayed. I just know he would.
BRADLEY Anything I can do, uh, ladies? Id be more than happy....
MRS. WILSON I clear forgot all about you, Colonel. I am so sorry. Colonel Bradley, this is Miss Verna Mable Lee. Verna, honey, Id like you to meet Mister...I mean, Colonel....
BRADLEY Bradley, maam. Lieutenant Colonel James Bradley. (Taking MISS LEE by the arm. To MISS LEE:) You dont look too steady there.
MISS LEE (Wrenching free) I would be if youd turn me loose.
BRADLEY (To MRS. WILSON:) Is the little lady all right?
MRS. WILSON Just fine, thank you, Colonel. Miss Lee was the first widow of World War II to come out of Wyatt County. Her husband was lost fighting over in France. My husband was killed in Korea, serving with General MacArthur against the Chinese Communists. Now, Moniques husband... (MONIQUE reenters; WILSON looks to her for an answer.)
Peace of Mind
5 MONIQUE (Talking as she walks into the room) I let that phone ring at least twenty times....
MRS. WILSON Honey, you dont mind now, do you? We were just saying how we lost our husbands, and I was about to say that your Robert -
MONIQUE Yes?
MRS. WILSON Robert was killed outside Saigon, isnt that right, dear. In a helicopter crash?
BRADLEY Im very sorry to hear that, maam, I truly am.
MONIQUE Well, it wasnt your fault.
MRS. WILSON Miss Lee is the founding member and past president of the Wyatt County War Widows League, a direct descendent of the original War Widows League, which next to the Daughters of the American Revolution, is the oldest organization of its kind in the entire United States, bar none. And, well, we are just real proud of Miss Lee. Perhaps, Verna, youd like to say a few...
MISS LEE You sure can talk, Charlotte Jean.
BRADLEY Oh, now I thought that was real interesting.
MISS LEE Who the devil is he?
MRS. WILSON The Colonels come to ask our endorsement, Verna. All the way from Washington to ask our permission to use the War Widows League on a petition to the President of the United States. Can you imagine that?
MISS LEE The president of what?
MRS. WILSON America, honey. The President of America.
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6
MISS LEE I thought he was dead.
MRS. WILSON The new one, dear. The new President.
MISS LEE Never heard of him. My husband used to say, When they come to you, they want; when you go to them, you want.
BRADLEY Your husband was a wise man, maam, because I do want something...
MISS LEE ...I knew it.
BRADLEY ...something, ladies, only I am not selling....
MISS LEE ...Well, Mr. President of the United States, youve caught me on a fine day. My boy is coming home. So you go right ahead and pitch the ball.
BRADLEY Its a public statement, maam. Nothing official. Im here strictly in a civilian capacity. Our supporters are solely interested in keeping the American public informed of the facts pertaining to the recent summit between our President and the Secretary General of the Soviet Union. Your political influence is vital to stopping the whole surrender of American nuclear forces to Communist
MISS LEE ...fiddlesticks.
BRADLEY ...aggression. Hows that, maam?
MISS LEE Good heavens. You sound just like Paul McCartney.
BRADLEY I dont believe I follow you there, maam.
MISS LEE McCartney, McCartney. That perspiring so-and-so on the television.
Peace of Mind
7 BRADLEY I believe youve lost me there, maam.
MARGARET Thats McCarthy, Verna. Youre thinking of Joe McCarthy.
MISS LEE Theres been no President named Joe. No, not Joe.
MARGARET Joseph, dear. Joseph McCarthy. And he wasnt the President.
MISS LEE Well, I didnt vote for him.
MARGARET Nobody did, silly. He wasnt running. He was holding hearings...
BRADLEY ...Ladies, if youd just bear with me for a mo...
MRS. WILSON ...Attention, ladies. Lets give the Colonel our undivided attention.
BRADLEY I appreciate that, thank you. Before I get down to reading the Declaration itself, uh, I think it only right to apprise you of the, uh, really impressive list of distinguished individuals and groups, organizations like your own, from around the world, which have chosen to join us. Now, these, ladies, Ive specifically chosen, because theres been a lot of talk about the folks in Europe not supporting our policies.
(MISS LEE gets up, begins to search the room)
MARGARET (Gesturing and pointing) ...Charlotte. CHARLOTTE.
MRS. WILSON Verna! Verna Lee, honey, where in the dickens...?
MISS LEE ...I feel a draft.
Peace of Mind
8 MONIQUE (Offering her sweater) Here, please, take it. I always feel a bit on the warm-side anyway.
MARGARET Id swear Im losing my mind. Didnt I hear you say you called down to Miss Lees house?
MONIQUE Yes, thats what I said, but I couldnt get an answer.
MARGARET I came down here to listen to the Colonel. Now shes just plain wasting our time.
MRS. WILSON Stop making such a fuss, Maggie.
MARGARET Thats easy enough for you to say. Shes not your...
MRS. WILSON Just hush. That has nothing to do with it.
MARGARET I wont. Making fools of us all. Why wont you admit it?
MRS. WILSON Colonel, then, wont you continue?
BRADLEY As I was saying...uh.... Ladies? Why dont I just go straight ahead and read the published declaration as it appeared last Wednesday in the New York Times. And I quote:
We, the signators, direct an urgent call to the Governments and parliaments of all NATO countries to prevent the realization of the Nuclear Weapons Anti-Proliferation Treaty. What is at stake is nothing less than the political freedom of western civilization as a whole. We see the acute danger, that the ability of the West to defend itself is being irreversibly negotiated away for the sake of short-term political expediencies.
MISS LEE I cant hear a word youre saying, Steve. If you are to have the slightest chance in the state competition, you are going to have to speak up.
Peace of Mind
9 MONIQUE Oh my!
MARGARET Monique, exactly who did you talk to when you called over...?
MONIQUE Not a blessed soul. And I let it ring over thirty times.
MRS. WILSON Yes, well, I expect Estellell be along directly.
MARGARET If all he wants is our endorsement, I say, lets give it to the poor man. Better than making him start all over again.
BRADLEY Maybe I ought to comeback some other time.
MRS. WILSON Well have none of that, Colonel. Youve come all this way. Isnt that right, girls?
MONIQUE I think it just right and proper for us to listen to everything the Colonels got to say.
BRADLEY The removal of the tactical striking force would eliminate -
MISS LEE (Out of her seat; Coaching) Eye contact, son. And dont eat your words.
(BRADLEY doesnt know what to do)
MISS LEE(contd) Go on now. Pick it up.
BRADLEY would eliminate the capability of NATO to strike deep into enemy territory, and thus remove a powerful deterrent to Soviet aggression. The military effect of this, combined with the removal of the cruise missiles from Western Europe would be disastrous. Territorial aggression has been the centerpiece of Russian policy since the Tsars. Not only do we risk ultimate defeat in battle, but we endanger the lives
Peace of Mind
10 MISS LEE But also.
BRADLEY Pardon me?
MISS LEE Not only, but also. If Ive said it once, Ive said it a thousand times. Balance. Youve got to have it, or the whole thing wont hang together.
BRADLEY Maam?
MISS LEE (Moving on MRS. WILSON:) Charlotte Jean, this is exactly what I told you would happen when you all decided to stop teaching Latin.
BRADLEY Yes, maam.
MISS LEE (Turns quickly to BRADLEY) And dont be so quick to agree, son. What kind of lawyer are you going to make if youre always agreeing with everything people say?
BRADLEY Yes. Yes, I see. I understand...what you mean. Uh, Im sorry, Mrs. Wilson, but I really dont think theres much point in continuing.
MARGARET Lets just serve the punch and be done with it. I for one have had enough of this.
MONIQUE Theres no call for that kind of talk. We are still in church, even if it is only the basement.
MRS. WILSON Youre nearly finished, arent you, Colonel? I would appreciate it, sir.
BRADLEY If you say so, maam. (HE finds his place) Denuclearization would bring into effect the overwhelming conventional superiority of our adversaries. If advocates of the proposed treaty speak about
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11
BRADLEY a subsequent arms reduction agreement in the conventional area, it must be noted that anything less than a 6-to-1 asymmetric conventional disarmament would bring about the irreversible defenselessness of Western Europe. Russia would quickly reach its long term goal to conquer the rest of Europe without the need to fire a shot.
MISS LEE (To MONIQUE) What did you say your name was honey? I dont believe weve met.
MONIQUE (A loud whisper) Monique. Monique Chambers.
MISS LEE (Inappropriately loud) Thats my son up there. Youd never guess it, though, would you? (Less directly to MONIQUE now) Such a quiet one. Looks so much like his father. Ha! Such a mess. Called him Stinky for years, til the boys in the neighborhood started to tease him. Steven. Now thats a much finer name. Dont you think? A fine name. I can smell that odor even now as Im talking. It used to just fill the house. Its a unique smell, that. I really dont know how he managed it with those little fingers. Thats what was so funny. How he could take those diapers off. But he always did. And just rub that all over. On to his little face, into his hair. Oh, my, into the...He even got it into his eyelashes. His eyelashes. Can you believe it? You know, I think he even put some into his mouth. Ha, ha, ha! He ate it. Isnt that nasty? And I believe I was down...thats right! I was at the kitchen sink. And I smelled something. And I looked and looked... you know... for something on the floor. Im telling you, I had to open the windows. And do you know where that little stinker was? He was all the way upstairs in his play pen. His monkey cage, his father used to call it. And he had his pants off, and his diapers. Just standing there, all by himself, stark naked, and the biggest grin on his face. Oh, he was having a ball.
(Theres a loud knocking at the door)
MARGARET Estelle! Thank God!
MRS. WILSON Well, then. Ladies, shall we...
MISS LEE (Moving toward BRADLEY) Steve.
Peace of Mind
12 MRS. WILSON Miss Lee, honey. Margaret!
MISS LEE (Advancing, with outstretched hands) Dont leave me, Steve.
BRADLEY Maam, hadnt you better go back...
MISS LEE Steven.
MRS. WILSON Come along now, Miss Lee.
MISS LEE Kiss me, Steven.
BRADLEY Im not Steve, lady. My names Jim. Jim Bradley, maam. Now you better...
MISS LEE Dont be like that, son. Your mama loves you.
MARGARET You got no business coming down here. Go home.
MISS LEE Now, Steve. Give your mama some sugar.
MARGARET For Heavens sake, have you no decency?
MONIQUE (Taking MISS LEE by the arm) Miss Lee. Miss Lee, now, Stevens at home. Your sons at home waiting for you. Hes back in his room, honey, waiting for his supper.
MISS LEE (Pulling away. Desperately to BRADLEY:) Please!
BRADLEY (Helpless) LADY.
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13
MONIQUE (Leading MISS LEE out) I saw your Steven just this morning. He must be very excited to be back. Dont you worry yourself now. (MONIQUE and MISS LEE exit)
MARGARET Hallelujah!
MRS. WILSON (Looks to Heaven) Thank You! Thank You! Thank You!
MARGARET I should have known.
BRADLEY Good Lord. She must be out of her mind.
MRS. WILSON Shes a war victim, Colonel Bradley. A widow. I told you, she founded the Wyatt County Chapter of the War Widows League after her husband was killed in the landings...
BRADLEY ...Thats not Steve, is it?
MARGARET My husband, Colonel. Steve was my husband... and her son.
BRADLEY Im sorry.
MRS. WILSON He disappeared...
MARGARET ...Missing in Action.
MRS. WILSON She always believed he would come home some day.
Peace of Mind
14 MARGARET Wed just married. Steven wasnt but seven years old when he lost his father, one of the first officers to land on D-Day. He was determined to join the Army. And he looked magnificent that day.
MRS. WILSON Colonel, I believe weve imposed on you long enough.
MARGARET His mama insisted on accompanying us to the station.
MRS. WILSON May I walk you out, Colonel?
BRADLEY Id like that. Thank you, maam.
(BRADLEY and MRS. WILSON exit. MARGARET remains on stage alone, lost in reverie, as LIGHTS fade.)
END OF PLAY
Performance rights must be secured before production. For contact information, please return to the Peace of Mind information page (click on your browsers Back button, or visit http://www.singlelane.com/proplay/peace.html)