Department of English
Faculty of Arts,
Chulalongkorn University
The Philadelphia
(1992)
David
Ives
(July 11, 1950 – )
Notes
Ives' short play The Philadelphia premiered in 1992 at the New Hope
Performing Arts Festival.
67 Philadelphia
67 Greg Pliska: In another edition of the play, Ives'
dedication to Pliska reads "This play is for Greg Pliska, who knows what a
Philadelphia can be" (72).
Ives wrote the libretto for The Secret Garden, a 1991 opera from
Frances Burnett's children's book commissioned by the Pennsylvania Opera
Theater, that Pliska composed music for.
- "About,"
Greg Pliska (official website)
72 cheese steak:
|
- "What
Is a Cheesesteak?," Visit Philadelphia
A cheesesteak is a long, crusty roll filled with thinly sliced
sautéed ribeye beef and melted cheese. Generally, the cheese
of choice is Cheez Whiz, but American and provolone are also
common choices. The art of cheesesteak preparation lies in the
balance of flavors, textures and what is often referred to as
the “drip” factor. Other toppings may include fried onions,
sautéed mushrooms, ketchup and hot or sweet peppers.
- "The
History of the Philly Cheesesteak," Fox News (2012)
A cheesesteak is made up of thinly sliced, sauteed rib eye
beef and melted cheese on a long, crusty roll. Common toppings
include fried onions, hot or sweet peppers, sauteed mushrooms
and ketchup. A cheesesteak hoagie is a combination of a cold
hoagie (as subs are called in the Philly area), and the
traditional hot cheesesteak. These have lettuce, tomato and
mayonnaise.
|
|
- "How To Order a Philly Cheesesteak (in Philadelphia)," Visit
Philadelphia (2014; 1:26 min.)
|
|
- "Pat's vs. Geno's: Philly Cheesesteak War!," Rhett and Link
(2008; 3:55 min.)
|
73 And frankly, Scarlett, I don't give a shit: allusion to the
famous parting line of Rhett Butler near the end of Gone with the Wind,
the film version rather than the novel, it seems
Gone with the Wind, dir. Victor Fleming, perf. Clark Gable
and Vivien Leigh, MGM, 1939, film |
- Margaret Mitchell, Gone
with the Wind (1936)
Fragments of words came back to her and she quoted
parrot-like: “A glamor to it—a perfection, a symmetry like
Grecian art.”
Rhett said sharply: “Why did you say that? That’s what I
meant.”
“It was something that—that Ashley said once, about the old
days.”
He shrugged and the light went out of his eyes.
“Always Ashley,” he said and was silent for a moment.
“Scarlett, when you are forty-five, perhaps you will know what
I’m talking about and then perhaps you, too, will be tired of
imitation gentry and shoddy manners and cheap emotions. But I
doubt it. I think you’ll always be more attracted by glister
than by gold. Anyway, I can’t wait that long to see. And I
have no desire to wait. It just doesn’t interest me. I’m going
to hunt in old towns and old countries where some of the old
times must still linger. I’m that sentimental. Atlanta’s too
raw for me, too new.”
“Stop,” she said suddenly. She had hardly heard anything he
had said. Certainly her mind had not taken it in. But she knew
she could no longer endure with any fortitude the sound of his
voice when there was no love in it.
He paused and looked at her quizzically.
“Well, you get my meaning, don’t you?” he questioned, rising
to his feet.
She threw out her hands to him, palms up, in the age-old
gesture of appeal and her heart, again, was in her face.
“No,” she cried. “All I know is that you do not love me and
you are going away! Oh, my darling, if you go, what shall I
do?”
For a moment he hesitated as if debating whether a kind lie
were kinder in the long run than the truth. Then he shrugged.
“Scarlett, I was never one to patiently pick up broken
fragments and glue them together and tell myself that the
mended whole was as good as new. What is broken is broken—and
I’d rather remember it as it was at its best than mend it and
see the broken places as long as I lived. Perhaps, if I were
younger—” he sighed. “But I’m too old to believe in such
sentimentalities as clean slates and starting all over. I’m
too old to shoulder the burden of constant lies that go with
living in polite disillusionment. I couldn’t live with you and
lie to you and I certainly couldn’t lie to myself. I can’t
even lie to you now. I wish I could care what you do or where
you go, but I can’t.”
He drew a short breath and said lightly but softly:
“My dear, I don’t give a damn.”
- Medora Perkerson, "Interview
with Margaret Mitchell," WSB radio (1936)
|
Writing
Ives looks for unusual subject matter; he considers it a personal challenge.
And he likes to challenge actors; not because of hostility towards them—just
the opposite. He thinks actors deserve more credit than playwrights. "I can
sit comfortably in the back of the theatre, while they're up there risking
everything." Some actors say they've taken his roles because they thought
his ideas were too crazy to be staged and wanted to see for themselves. "I'm
a trouble-maker," he said. "I like to create problems."
Asked if he's ever thought of writing serious plays, Ives revealed he wrote
a somber piece for Lives of the Saints and dropped it because it
didn't fit with the lighter scenes. "But my comedies all have a serious
side," he said. "Comedy is serious." Ives and director Rando also recalled
that his Ancient History, a one-acter presented three years ago at
Primary Stages, was basically serious.
Why are so many of Ives' plays short?, an audience member wanted to know.
"I'm impatient," Ives said. "When I watch a play I say 'Okay, I get the
point, now end it. I don't want to see any more.' I like things short and to
the point."
—Steve
Cohen, "David
Ives Discusses His Lives in Rare Philadelphia Q&A," Playbill
(1999)
Comprehension Check
- What do Polish duck blood, cream
of kidney, deep-fried gizzards, calves' brains with okra,
and pickled pigs' feet have in common (69)?
- What is the difference between
aspirin and Bufferin, Advil and extra-strength Tylenol (70,
71)?
- Why is it strange that Mark
could buy the Toronto Hairdresser but not the Daily
News in New York (71)?
- What does City of Brotherly Love
refer to (73)?
|
Study Questions
- What is the importance of the
waitress?
|
Review Sheet
Characters
Al, Allen Chase
– "California cool; 20s or 30s" (74);
"Is your name Allen Chase? [...] It is indeed" (73); "The garment
district is your life!" (74)
Mark, Marcus –
"Frazzled; 20s or 30s" (74)
Waitress, Sharon –
"weary; as you will" (74);
"I've been in a Cleveland all week" (79); "I hope you won't reveal
your name. [...] Sharon" (79)
Susie –
Al's wife/girlfriend (73, 79); "You know Susie packed up and left me
[Al] this morning" (73)
Place
bar/restaurant
– "A bar/restaurant. A table, red-checked cloth, two chairs, and a
specials board" (69)
Philadelphia
– "metaphysically you're in a Philadelphia [...] in a
Philadelphia, no matter what you ask for, you can't get it. You ask
for something, they're not gonna have it. You want to do something,
it ain't gonna get done. You want to go somewhere, you can't get
there from here" (72)
Los Angeles
– "I woke up in a Los Angeles. And life is beautiful!"
(73)
Baltimore
– "Maybe I was in a Philadelphia all along and never knew
it! (77) [...] You might've been in a Baltimore. They're
practically the same" (78)
Cleveland
–
"It's like death, without the advantages" (79)
Vocabulary
comedy
one-act
character
characterization
dialogue
conflict
irony
pun
Sample
Student Responses to David Ives' The Philadelphia
Response 1:
Reference
Media
|
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- The Philadelphia, Pulp
Productions (2011)
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- The Philadelphia, Stony Brook
Actor's Conservatory (2012; 9:15 min.)
|
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- "David Ives Interview," Charlie Rose
(1994; 13:13 min.)
|
|
- "Interview with David Ives," Studio
Theatre (2014; 8:06 min.; Ives speaks on honesty in the
theater, on writing comedy, on auditions, etc.)
|
|
- Jim Price, "Crafting Comedy with
David Ives," The Dramatists Guild of America (2011;
48:56 min.)
|
David
Ives
|
- "Ives,
David," Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization
- Interviews
|
Reference
Ives,
David. The Philadelphia. All in the Timing: Fourteen Plays.
New York: Vintage, 1995. 67–79. Print.
Further Reading
Ives, David. All in the Timing: Fourteen Plays. New York: Vintage,
1995. Print.
Ives, David. Time Flies and Other Short Plays. New York: Grove,
2001. Print.
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Last updated February 5, 2017