In Absentia
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About this ebook
Four seasons after her husband Tom’s disappearance, Colette remains emotionally paralyzed, isolated in a country cottage. She waits in anguish, not knowing whether he is dead or alive, but clinging to hope. A young stranger in a jean jacket waves to her from the frozen lake – a sign? She emerges to give him her husband’s parka – strangely, the boy has a likeness to Tom.
What is the stranger’s connection to her geologist husband, kidnapped more than a year before by leftist guerrillas in Colombia? How does this slyly seductive young stranger happen to show up at her home in rural Ontario, thousands of miles away? He seems to know more about Colette than he should, and as he slowly insinuates himself into her life, Colette’s attentive sister, Evelyn, and her helpful
neighbour Bill become increasingly alarmed.
Part mystery, part moving story of vanished love, In Absentia explores the notion of disappearance, articulated in very personal terms. Through the tough, time-shifting action of the play, Colette reflects on her marriage and past love, offering rich associative memories while also uncovering the hidden and inaccessible – that which is made to disappear from view.
Guilt and grief, infidelity and infertility, loss and longing are the deeper subjects Panych explores here. At the same time, the play examines the desire to make connections in life – thoughts to deeds, intentions to outcomes – in scenes often enlivened by the playwright’s trademark humour.
Cast of 3 men and 2 women.
Morris Panych
Originally from Calgary, Alberta, Morris Panych is arguably Canada’s most celebrated playwright and director. His plays have garnered countless awards, including two Governor General’s Literary Awards for Drama (for The Ends of the Earth and Girl in the Goldfish Bowl), fourteen Jessie Richardson Awards (Vancouver), and five Dora Mavor Moore Awards (Toronto). His plays have been produced in over two dozen languages and across the globe. Mr. Panych has directed over ninety productions across Canada and the US. He was nominated for a Canadian Screen Award in 2021 for his CBC Gem webseries Hey Lady! He has appeared in over fifty theatre productions and in numerous television and film roles. He has directed more than ninety theatre productions and written over a dozen plays that have been translated and produced throughout the world. The 2009 Off-Broadway production of his play Vigil opened to rave reviews. Under the title Auntie & Me, Vigil was also produced in London in 2003–04; and in French at Théâtre La Bruyère in Paris in 2005; and his classic 7 Stories ranks 9th among the ten best selling plays in Canada, outselling the Coles version of Romeo & Juliet. For more information on the work and career of Morris Panych, visit his website.
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In Absentia - Morris Panych
Contents
Production History
Cast
Setting
Production Note
ACT ONE
ACT TWO
About the Playwright
Copyright Information
In Absentia was first produced on January 31, 2012, at Montreal’s Centaur Theatre with the following cast and creative team:
COLETTE: Jillian Fargey
EVELYN: Susan Glover
JASPER: Jade Hassouné
TOM: Paul Hopkins
BILL: Carlo Mestroni
Director : Roy Surette
Set and Costume Design: John C. Dinning
Lighting Design: Luc Prairie
Stage Manager: Melanie St-Jacques
Apprentice Stage Manager: Samantha Hogan
Assistant Director: Cameron Mackenzie
CAST
COLETTE McKENNY, an attractive thirty-eight-year-old woman
JASPER, a young man
TOM McKENNY, Colette’s husband
EVELYN, Colette’s older sister
BILL, forty-something, a neighbour
SETTING
The play takes place in the imagination – Colette’s imagination, which includes memory, dreams, and hallucinations. In reality, the scenes happen in and around an upscale cottage on a lake, but naturalism should be kept to a minimum, as this will upset the dream-like, constantly drifting tone of the piece and take it out of its own milieu, which is the mind.
PRODUCTION NOTE
Characters and scenes will appear and disappear as trains of thought, like drifting snow on a lake; the piece is constantly in motion. Changes of tone or shifts in time or location are variously noted by a typographic ornament, a stage direction, or the arrival or departure of a character. In production this is accomplished largely through lighting changes and stage positions. There is simultaneous action throughout the play. The arrival and departure of characters should surprise us, but at the same time seem perfectly natural, as in a dream.
Tom, it should be noted, is visible only to Colette, and she often addresses him in the midst of dialogue with the other characters. Jasper, Evelyn, and Bill often remain onstage during the Colette and Tom sequences, but do not take part in them; instead, they go about their own business.
snowflakeheader1.jpgACT ONE
Lights up on COLETTE and JASPER. TOM stands at a distance.
TOM: You didn’t come down to the tree today.
COLETTE chooses to ignore him. Instead, she speaks to JASPER, who is trying to warm up his hands.
COLETTE: People love to swim out to that little island in the summer months. There’s a pergola somebody built – I don’t know who – covered over with trumpet vines. Apparently somebody owns the place, but nobody around here seems to know who it is. You can walk out there now on the ice.
JASPER: Not really an island, then.
COLETTE: Not if you can walk to it, no.
Beat.
JASPER: I missed last winter entirely.
COLETTE: Well, I’m jealous.
JASPER: Stayed right out of the hemisphere.
COLETTE: I hate winter, especially this one.
JASPER: Yeah?
COLETTE: It’s hard to believe anything will ever come alive again.
JASPER: Then, suddenly, everything comes back.
COLETTE: Not always.
JASPER: I like the seasons; I missed them when I was away.
COLETTE: How are your fingers now?
JASPER: The blood’s mostly come back.
COLETTE: I have terrible circulation, even in the summer. When I go swimming, the blood goes right out of my fingers. I look like a dead person. Mind you, I’ve never seen a dead person –
JASPER: No?
COLETTE: No. But when I look down at my hands sometimes, coming out of the water, I think, Oh, this is what I’ll look like.
My goodness, I’m talking a lot.
JASPER: Let me see your hands.
He takes her hands and turns them over.
I knew a girl who read palms for a living.
Beat.
COLETTE: Would you like some tea?
JASPER: Oh, I don’t drink tea, Mrs. McKenny. It gives me a weird indigestion. Do you have any blueberry pie at all?
COLETTE: Uh – no.
JASPER: That’s all right, then. When I was travelling, I always had a craving for blueberry pie.
Beat.
It is funny what you miss the most.
COLETTE: It is.
JASPER: Like, you don’t know who you are until you step out of your life for a bit.
COLETTE: How did you know my last name?
Beat.
JASPER: It’s on the mailbox outside?
Beat.
Maybe I shouldn’t have knocked at your door. This is – an imposition.
COLETTE: No, no. I’m glad you did.
JASPER: I’m glad I did, too.
COLETTE: I saw you out on the lake, and I thought, My goodness, that poor young man,
and I went out looking for you. I grabbed the parka and went out, but then I couldn’t see you anywhere. I don’t know what you were thinking, walking around in a jean jacket in this weather –
JASPER: I don’t know what I was thinking. Sometimes you don’t think.
COLETTE: Definitely the wrong hemisphere for that.
JASPER: It’s only March; you forget what it’s like.
COLETTE: How long have you been travelling?
JASPER: A while now. Quite a while now.
COLETTE: And you’re on your way home.
JASPER: Yeah, well, home
is a relative term.
COLETTE: Is it?
JASPER: I don’t think anybody misses me, where I’m from.
COLETTE: They must.
JASPER: Is this your husband’s parka?
COLETTE: Did I say I was married?
JASPER: No.
Beat.
But this is not exactly a woman’s coat.
COLETTE: It’s my