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An excerpt from “THE
CASE OF THE PRINCE FORMERLY KNOWN AS HAMLET” Copyright:
Bruce Kane Productions 2007 "The
Case Of The Prince Formerly Known As Hamlet" A Justin Thyme Mystery
is protected by copyright law and may not be performed or reproduced in
any way without written permission from Bruce Kane Productions. To obtain
permission go to www.kaneprod.com/plays/playscontact.htm and complete
the IMPORTANT
BILLING AND CREDIT REQUIREMENTS: All producers of "The Case
Of The Prince Formerly Known As Hamlet" A Justin Thyme Mystery "
must give credit to Bruce Kane as sole Author of the Play in all programs
distributed in connection with performance of the Play and in all instances
in which the title of the Play appears for any purposes of advertising,
publicizing or otherwise exploiting the Play and/or production thereof,
including posters, souvenir books, flyers, books and playbills. Bruce
Kane must also appear immediately following the title of the Play and
must appear in size of type not less then fifty percent of the size of
type used for the title. The Author’s name must be equal to or larger
than the Director's, but never smaller than that of the Director. The
above billing must appear as follows: "The Case Of The Prince Formerly
Known As Hamlet" A Justin Thyme Mystery by Bruce Kane. “THE
CASE OF THE PRINCE FORMERLY KNOWN AS HAMLET” CHARACTERS: Justin Thyme
– Bogart like, hard boiled detective. Tough, sardonic, world weary. MUSIC: A bluesy saxophone. THYME: It ended like most of my cases …with everybody dead. The king was dead. The queen was dead. The prince was almost dead. MUSIC OUT: MAIN HALL - ELSINORE CASTLE – DENMARK – IN THE 11TH CENTURY HAMLET: O,
I die, good friend. THYME: Unfortunately the rest wasn’t silence. For a guy who was checking out, Prince Hamlet had a lot to say. HAMLET: O
good friend, if thou didst ever hold me in thy heart THYME: It doesn't take much to see that the problems of one Danish prince don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world. But what the heck. Yeah. I’ll tell your story. I owe you that much. MUSIC: BLUESY SAXOPHONE THYME: It all began with a summons from the King of Denmark . He wouldn’t say what the problem was, but he sounded worried… Very worried. So, I brushed up on my eleventh century Danish and headed for Elsinore. Me? I’m Justin Thyme. I work for the F.B.I. The Fictional Bureau of Investigation. That’s right, I’m a fictional detective. MUSIC OUT: ELSINORE CASTLE - GARDEN THYME: When I finally reached the castle, I was told I could find the king resting in the garden. The king was in the garden alright. But he wasn’t resting. KING HAMLET: (in a choking voice) Murder most foul. THYME: Yeah. It usually is. KING HAMLET: In my ear. THYME: He was fading fast. I leaned in closer. (speaks louder and slower) Yeah, it usually is. KING HAMLET: You don’t have to shout. I’m dying, not deaf. THYME: You said in your ear. KING HAMLET: Poison in my ear. THYME: That’d do it. KING HAMLET: My son. THYME: Your son murdered you? KING HAMLET: No. No… My son didn’t murder me. He must avenge me. Help him Thyme… Help Hamlet avenge me. Promise me, Thyme… Promise me. THYME: Yeah… Sure… I’ll get the guy who murdered you. Just one question. KING HAMLET: Yes? THYME: Who murdered you? KING HAMLET: It was… It was… (King Hamlet snorts loudly and dies) THYME: How do you spell that? He didn’t answer me. He was dead and one thing you learn in the detective game is that dead men give lousy answers. MUSIC TRANSITION: THYME: I made a promise and now I was stuck with it. The code of the fictional detective demanded that I help the king’s son avenge his death. So now I had to find out who whacked the old man. That’s the way it works. . First you find the killer, then you avenge. You could do it the other way around but then you’d have to kill everybody. My first step was to find Hamlet. SEXY SAXOPHONE MUSIC: OPHELIA: Well, hello tall, dark and out of place. THYME: She was wearing a diaphanous gown that was dropping more hints than the host of a bad game show. She told me her name was Ophelia. OPHELIA: My name’s Ophelia. THYME: But that her friends called her… Feelya OPHELIA: But my friends call me … Feelya. THYME: She guessed that my name was Thyme. That I was the fictional detective. OPHELIA: You must be Thyme… The fictional detective. THYME: She said she knew from… OPHELIA: Could you please stop doing that. THYME: Sorry, button nose… Force of habit. OPHELIA: My father warned me about men like you. He said you were T… R…O…U…B…L…E. THYME: Looks and brains. Dames like this always spelled trouble. You know Prince Hamlet? OPHELIA: Intimately THYME: Something about the way she said “intimately” led me to believe she knew the Prince… “intimately.” Know where I can find him? OPHELIA: Through that door, down the corridor, past the turret, through the main ballroom, turn right at the armory, left at the keep, right at the chapel, right again at the throne room, down the next corridor and around the second tower. It’ll be the third door on your right. THYME: Thanks, dollface. OPHELIA: Anytime. THYME: I
watched her walk away on legs that started where legs usually start, around
floor level and ended where you don’t expect them to end…
just below her ears. I followed her directions to Prince Hamlet’s
quarters. (The play continues) |
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