Act 1, Scene 10 - Composite Scene
The last scene, Scene 9, ends with the vampire brides attacking in a clump at the center of the bottom half of the stage, the men slumped at the top of the stage with Jonathan stood, hypnotized, on the top step. Dracula is off stage.As the vampire brides attack, they begin to circle. Faster and faster they circle until they spin out, spiraling across the stage like a tornado. The whole cast spirals and swirls about the stage as storm sound effects come on over the top. We spiral into our final positions, sat across the stage in 3 lines, joining at the ends to form a triangle, with Renfield making the bottom right point, Lucy, Mina and Florrie making the bottom left point and Jonathan, still in Dracula's castle, making the top corner. We stay, sat in those positions with the storm noises gradually building, throughout most of the scene. We do start to moan, getting louder as the sound effects do, and when Renfield starts to say "Faster, faster, faster, faster, faster, faster, faster..." we stand, and rocking side to side on our feet as if on a boat that we're having trouble staying steady on, we carry on moaning like ghouls. Finally, after the final "Faster", Renfield shrieks "Faster!". At this all the sound cuts out, the whole cast bows to Dracula - who has been slowly walking down the steps throughout the scene - and collapse. Dracula collects Izzy-Lucy. He walks her up the steps, to where I am lying collapsed. The two of us are walked up the steps to the very top of the stage, we sit down side-by-side, the two versions of Lucy in an almost childlike picture, and Dracula wraps his arms around us, obscuring us form the audience's view. Blackout.
Act 1, Scene 11 - Heartwood House
Lucy character is transferred form Izzy to myself
From among the scattered bodies, Florrie stands up
"as if waking up at a party surrounded by mess with no idea where she is" - Andy
As Mina wakes up as well, Florrie talks to her and the Two Lucy's - Izzy and myself - stand up and face each other. The first line spoken by Lucy is said by both of us: "And the air this morning is so sweet you'd think it'd never get dark again." Then Izzy falls to the ground and the character is transferred. I step down to the bottom of the top set of steps and repeat the line, before walking down to meet the two other girls. The entire scene is conducted whilst surround by the bodies and intended to be very naturalistic, cutting a strange contrast between the normal, upbeat drama and the slightly morbid death that surrounds us. Perhaps this is a foreshadowing of what is to come, symbolic of the troubles the characters are just about to face, as Dracula has just entered Whitby.
I realised, whilst reading the scene, that Lucy is on her period.
Florrie: Miss Lucy, you alright? You does look pale.
Lucy: Oh nothing! I've got a visitor. Must have come in the night. ..my friend, my bloody friend
Mina: The curse
Firstly, I find this interesting because it means that Dracula came to Lucy whilst she was on her period. It's both disgusting, morbid and somewhat appropriate. However I think that Liz Lochhead also put it in for another reason, which was to further impress the sexual themes in the play. Both the symbolism of what Dracula is - lust, temptation, sexual desires - and also the impress the metaphor of Dracula's "Bite" for sex. It's very interesting and a lovely detail.
Another thing I noticed which I absolutely love is Lucy's line:
"And no whinging or the gentlemen will never treat us as equals!"
It's just a little detail, but it shows that Lucy is a feminist. Dracula is set in the late 1800's, several decades before suffrage began and almost a century before feminism even properly kicked in. Of course, this play was written by a female writer in the mid 80's, right in the middle of the new wave of female writers and during a period of huge focus on feminism and female equality. As a huge feminist this is just a small detail that I absolutely adore about Lucy, and it's something I want to highlight when I play her.
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