Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (NHB Modern Plays)
By Rona Munro and Mary Shelley
()
About this ebook
A young scientist by the name of Frankenstein breathes life into a gruesome body. Banished into an indifferent world, Frankenstein's creature desperately seeks out his true identity, but the agony of rejection and a broken promise push him into darkness. Dangerous and vengeful, the creature threatens to obliterate Frankenstein and everyone he loves, in a ferocious and bloodthirsty hunt for his maker.
Rona Munro's brilliant adaptation of Mary Shelley's Gothic masterpiece places the writer herself amongst the action as she wrestles with her creation and with the stark realities facing revolutionary young women, then and now.
'An inventive feminist adaptation... an exploration and celebration of female creativity' - The Stage
Rona Munro
Rona Munro is a writer who has written extensively for stage, radio, film and television. Her plays include: Mary (Hampstead Theatre, 2022); James IV: Queen of the Fight (National Theatre of Scotland, 2022); a stage adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (UK tour, 2019); a stage adaptation of Louis de Bernières' novel Captain Corelli's Mandolin (UK tour and West End, 2019); Scuttlers (Royal Exchange, Manchester, 2015); The James Plays trilogy (National Theatre of Scotland, the Edinburgh International Festival and the National Theatre of Great Britain, 2014); Donny's Brain (Hampstead Theatre, 2012); Pandas (Traverse, 2011); Little Eagles (Royal Shakespeare Company, 2011); The Last Witch (Traverse Theatre and Edinburgh International Festival, 2009); Long Time Dead (Paines Plough and Drum Theatre Plymouth, 2006); The Indian Boy (RSC, 2006); Iron (Traverse Theatre, 2002; Royal Court, London, 2003); The Maiden Stone (Hampstead Theatre, 1995); and Bold Girls (7:84 and Hampstead Theatre, 1990). She is the co-founder, with actress Fiona Knowles, of Scotland’s oldest continuously performing, small-scale touring theatre company, The Msfits. Their one-woman shows have toured every year since 1986. Film and television work includes the Ken Loach film Ladybird Ladybird, Aimee and Jaguar and television dramas Rehab (directed by Antonia Bird) and BAFTA-nominated Bumping the Odds for the BBC. She has also written many other single plays for television and contributed to series including Casualty and Dr Who. Most recently, she wrote the screenplay for Oranges and Sunshine, directed by Jim Loach and starring Emily Watson and Hugo Weaving. She has contributed several radio plays to the Stanley Baxter Playhouse series on BBC Radio 4.
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Book preview
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (NHB Modern Plays) - Rona Munro
ACT ONE
A ship, in the Arctic.
The ship is icebound, trapped in the ice and lost in fog. A young explorer, WALTON, is looking over the rail.
The ship’s MASTER comes close beside WALTON, both of them staring out into the fog.
WALTON. This isn’t the Arctic sea I imagined.
MASTER. How did you imagine it?
WALTON. Never-ending sunlight.
MASTER. The sun’s still there, beyond the fog.
WALTON. So our destination is still there too.
MASTER. There’s a thread of warmth in the air. The ice might thaw soon. The ship might yet float free.
WALTON. Good.
MASTER. But, Captain... I don’t think we can continue.
WALTON (angry, weary). No. I know you don’t.
MASTER. To risk the ship, the men’s lives... for what?
WALTON. For knowledge! We’re explorers. We’re mapping the very edge of human knowledge!
MASTER. To understand what?
WALTON. Our goal hasn’t changed.
MASTER (resigned). No.
WALTON. We’ll find the way to the northern top of the world, the land and sea no human creature has ever found.
(As the MASTER doesn’t respond.) No. You don’t see any value in that, do you? I’m alone here. Friendless on a frozen sea.
MASTER. The men have asked me to talk to you...
WALTON (cutting him off). Tell the men we’re going to push ahead.
MASTER. Captain, look out there, nothing’s changed! There’s still nothing ahead of us but sheet ice. Fields of it. The hull hasn’t been tried against ice this thick.
WALTON. I won’t turn back.
(Startled.) Look! There’s something out there... on the ice.
They both stare.
MASTER. What is it?
WALTON. It’s... (Uncertain, frightened.) A man? A running man?
MASTER (horrified). It’s the shape of a man but... What kind of man could run like that? That fast? On a frozen sea?
WALTON (calling). Hullo!
MASTER (shushing him urgently). No! No! Don’t!
WALTON. It didn’t hear me...
MASTER. Did you want to see that creature turn and run at us? Oh God. Is it coming?! What is it?!
Both WALTON and the MASTER freeze with fear...
Then they are actually frozen, stopped in pose, staring out over the ice.
We hear and then see MARY, muttering and breathing with effort. She’s dragging a writing desk out onto the ice. She’s furious and frustrated.
MARY (to herself). What is it? What is it? Do you know, Mary? No. No, you don’t. My brain keeps slipping from one idea to another...
What am I supposed to be thinking about? My nightmare.
She picks up a page she’s written. Reads it.
The horror.
(Still to herself.) You wrote down your nightmare, now build a bridge to it, a bridge of words...
(Worried thought.) Is it frightening enough?
MARY looks at what she’s written again.
I’m frightened. I don’t want to read this. I don’t want to think about it. This nightmare that marched into my dreaming and made itself the monster king of my poor sleepy thoughts.
(Re: the page.) But I’ve made something of that! I’ve caught that dread with ink and industry. Yes, this is frightening. This is good stuff, Mary!
She’s setting up her work, paper, pens.
(Still to herself.) So. I’ve a start but not a beginning, that can’t be the beginning. That’s the heart of the story. The horror.
She looks at WALTON and the MASTER, frozen.
And even this isn’t the beginning. Set this story up, Mary... come on!
(Idea.) A Preface!
She turns a dazzling smile on the audience, talking to them directly now.
Preface!
Take flour and water – dead things, things without life – mix them together. Leave them in a cupboard. What’ll happen? Life, oozing, greedy, clamouring life will grow on that saucer. The stuff of life, the power that makes dead things move, is all around us. You’re breathing in that dark energy with every breath.
So. This is not a horror story. This is