Read The Skin of Our Teeth Online
Authors: Thornton Wilder
Pointing at the storm signal, which has one black disk.
HENRY:
What is it, Papa?
ANTROBUS:
What? Oh, that's the storm signal. One of those black disks means bad weather; two means storm; three means hurricane; and four means the end of the world.
As they watch it a second black disk rolls into place.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Goodness! I'm going this very minute to buy you all some raincoats.
GLADYS:
Putting her cheek against her father's shoulder.
Mama, don't go yet. I like sitting this way. And the ocean coming in and coming in. Papa, don't you like it?
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Well, there's only one thing I lack to make me a perfectly happy woman: I'd like to see a whale.
HENRY:
Mama, we saw two. Right out there. They're delegates to the convention. I'll find you one.
GLADYS:
Papa, ask me something. Ask me a question.
ANTROBUS:
Well . . . how big's the ocean?
GLADYS:
Papa, you're teasing me. It'sâthree-hundred and sixty million square-milesâandâitâcoversâthree-fourthsâofâtheâ earth'sâsurfaceâandâitsâdeepest-placeâisâfiveâandâaâhalfâmilesâdeepâandâitsâaverageâdepthâisâtwelveâthousandâfeet. No, Papa, ask me something hard, real hard.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Rising.
Now I'm going off to buy those raincoats. I think that bad weather's going to get worse and worse. I hope it doesn't come before your broadcast. I should think we have about an hour or so.
HENRY:
I hope it comes and zzzzzz everything before it. I hope itâ
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Henry!âGeorge, I think . . . maybe, it's one of those storms that are just as bad on land as on the sea. When you're just as safe and safer in a good stout boat.
HENRY:
There's a boat out at the end of the pier.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Well, keep your eye on it. George, you shut your eyes and get a good rest before the broadcast.
ANTROBUS:
Thundering Judas, do I have to be told when to open and shut my eyes? Go and buy your raincoats.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Now, children, you have ten minutes to walk around. Ten minutes. And, Henry: control yourself. Gladys, stick by your brother and don't get lost.
They run off.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Will you be all right, George?
CONVEENERS
suddenly stick their heads out of the Bingo Parlor and Salt Water Taffy store, and voices rise from the orchestra pit.
CONVEENERS:
George. Geo-r-r-rge! George! Leave the old hen-coop at home, George. Do-mes-ticated Georgie!
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Shaking her umbrella.
Low common oafs! That's what they are. Guess a man has a right to bring his wife to a convention, if he wants to.
She starts off.
What's the matter with a family, I'd like to know. What else have they got to offer?
Exit.
ANTROBUS
has closed his eyes. The
FORTUNE TELLER
comes out of her shop and goes over to the left proscenium. She leans against it watching
SABINA
quizzically.
FORTUNE TELLER:
Heh! Here she comes!
SABINA:
Loud whisper.
What's he doing?
FORTUNE TELLER:
Oh, he's ready for you. Bite your lips, dear, take a long breath and come on up.
SABINA:
I'm nervous. My whole future depends on this. I'm nervous.
FORTUNE TELLER:
Don't be a fool. What more could you want? He's forty-five. His head's a little dizzy. He's just been elected president. He's never known any other woman than his wife. Whenever he looks at her he realizes that she knows every foolish thing he's ever done.
SABINA:
Still whispering.
I don't know why it is, but every time I start one of these I'm nervous.
The
FORTUNE TELLER
stands in the center of the stage watching the following:
FORTUNE TELLER:
You make me tired.
SABINA:
First tell me my fortune.
The
FORTUNE TELLER
laughs drily and makes the gesture of brushing away a nonsensical question.
SABINA
coughs and says:
Oh, Mr. Antrobus,âdare I speak to you for a moment?
ANTROBUS:
What?âOh, certainly, certainly, Miss Fairweather.
SABINA:
Mr. Antrobus . . . I've been so unhappy. I've wanted . . . I've wanted to make sure that you don't think that I'm the kind of girl who goes out for beauty contests.
FORTUNE TELLER:
That's the way!
ANTROBUS:
Oh, I understand. I understand perfectly.
FORTUNE TELLER:
Give it a little more. Lean on it.
SABINA:
I knew you would. My mother said to me this morning: Lily, she said, that fine Mr. Antrobus gave you the prize because he saw at once that you weren't the kind of girl who'd go in for a thing like that. But, honestly, Mr. Antrobus, in this world, honestly, a good girl doesn't know where to turn.
FORTUNE TELLER:
Now you've gone too far.
ANTROBUS:
My dear Miss Fairweather!
SABINA:
You wouldn't know how hard it is. With that lovely wife and daughter you have. Oh, I think Mrs. Antrobus is the finest woman I ever saw. I wish I were like her.
ANTROBUS:
There, there. There's . . . uh . . . room for all kinds of people in the world, Miss Fairweather.
SABINA:
How wonderful of you to say that. How generous!âMr. Antrobus, have you a moment free? . . . I'm afraid I may be a little conspicuous here . . . could you come down, for just a moment, to my beach cabana . . . ?
ANTROBUS:
Why-uh . . . yes, certainly . . . for a moment . . . just for a moment.
SABINA:
There's a deck chair there. Because: you know you
do
look tired. Just this morning my mother said to me: Lily, she said, I hope Mr. Antrobus is getting a good rest. His fine strong face has deep deep lines in it. Now isn't it true, Mr. Antrobus: you work too hard?
FORTUNE TELLER:
Bingo!
She goes into her shop.
SABINA:
Now you will just stretch out. No, I shan't say a word, not a word. I shall just sit there,âprivileged. That's what I am.
ANTROBUS:
Taking her hand.
Miss Fairweather . . . you'll . . . spoil me.
SABINA:
Just a moment. I have something I wish to say to the audience.âLadies and gentlemen. I'm not going to play this particular scene tonight. It's just a short scene and we're going to skip it. But I'll tell you what takes place and then we can continue the play from there on. Now in this sceneâ
ANTROBUS:
Between his teeth.
But, Miss Somerset!
SABINA:
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. But I have to skip it. In this scene, I talk to Mr. Antrobus, and at the end of it he decides to leave his wife, get a divorce at Reno and marry me. That's all.
ANTROBUS:
Fitz!âFitz!
SABINA:
So that now I've told you we can jump to the end of it,âwhere you say:
Enter in fury
MR. FITZPATRICK
, the stage manager.
MR. FITZPATRICK:
Miss Somerset, we insist on your playing this scene.
SABINA:
I'm sorry, Mr. Fitzpatrick, but I can't and I won't. I've told the audience all they need to know and now we can go on.
Other
ACTORS
begin to appear on the stage, listening.
MR. FITZPATRICK:
And
why
can't you play it?
SABINA:
Because there are some lines in that scene that would hurt some people's feelings and I don't think the theatre is a place where people's feelings ought to be hurt.
MR. FITZPATRICK:
Miss Somerset, you can pack up your things and go home. I shall call the understudy and I shall report you to Equity.
SABINA:
I sent the understudy up to the corner for a cup of coffee and if Equity tries to penalize me I'll drag the case right up to the Supreme Court. Now listen, everybody, there's no need to get excited.
MR. FITZPATRICK AND ANTROBUS:
Why can't you play it . . . what's the matter with the scene?
SABINA:
Well, if you must know, I have a personal guest in the audience tonight. Her life hasn't been exactly a happy one. I wouldn't have my friend hear some of these lines for the whole world. I don't suppose it occurred to the author that some other women might have gone through the experience of losing their husbands like this. Wild horses wouldn't drag from me the details of my friend's life, but . . . well, they'd been married twenty years, and before he got rich, why, she'd done the washing and everything.
MR. FITZPATRICK:
Miss Somerset, your friend will forgive you. We must play this scene.
SABINA:
Nothing, nothing will make me say some of those lines . . . about “a man outgrows a wife every seven years” and . . . and that one about “the Mohammedans being the only people who looked the subject square in the face.” Nothing.
MR. FITZPATRICK:
Miss Somerset! Go to your dressing room. I'll
read
your lines.
SABINA:
Now everybody's nerves are on edge.
MR. ANTROBUS:
Skip the scene.
MR. FITZPATRICK
and the other
ACTORS
go off.
SABINA:
Thank you. I knew you'd understand. We'll do just what I said. So Mr. Antrobus is going to divorce his wife and marry me. Mr. Antrobus, you say: “It won't be easy to lay all this before my wife.”
The
ACTORS
withdraw.
ANTROBUS
walks about, his hand to his forehead muttering:
ANTROBUS:
Wait a minute. I can't get back into it as easily as all that. “My wife is a very obstinate woman.” Hm . . . then you say . . . hm . . . Miss Fairweather, I mean Lily, it won't be easy to lay all this before my wife. It'll hurt her feelings a little.
SABINA:
Listen, George:
other
people haven't got feelings. Not in the same way that we have,âwe who are presidents like you and prize-winners like me. Listen, other people haven't got feelings; they just imagine they have. Within two weeks they go back to playing bridge and going to the movies.
Listen, dear: everybody in the world except a few people like you and me are just people of straw. Most people have no insides at all. Now that you're president you'll see that. Listen, darling, there's a kind of secret society at the top of the world,âlike you and me,âthat know this. The world was made for us. What's life anyway? Except for two things, pleasure and power, what is life? Boredom! Foolishness. You know it is. Except for those two things, life's nau-se-at-ing. So,âcome here!
She moves close. They kiss.
So.
Now when your wife comes, it's really very simple; just tell her.
ANTROBUS:
Lily, Lily: you're a wonderful woman.
SABINA:
Of course I am.
They enter the cabana and it hides them from view. Distant roll of thunder. A third black disk appears on the weather signal. Distant thunder is heard.
MRS. ANTROBUS
appears carrying parcels. She looks about, seats herself on the bench left, and fans herself with her handkerchief. Enter
GLADYS
right, followed by two
CONVEENERS
. She is wearing red stockings.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Gladys!
GLADYS:
Mama, here I am.
MRS. ANTROBUS:
Gladys Antrobus!!! Where did you get those dreadful things?