Two Person Scene - Ten Minute Play
Two Person Scene - Ten Minute Play
Minute Play
"Cinema Limbo" is a ten-minute play (written by Wade Bradford). It is a comic, two person
exchange between two movie theater employees. The piece can be used, free of charge, for
educational purposes and amateur productions.
This short two-person play is also a usual "character building" tool for any actress using the
"Vicky Monologue" for auditions and classroom performances.
Cinema Limbo:
Setting:The box office of the Grand Cinemas. No set is required. Two office chairs (capable
of rolling and spinning) are placed center stage. An attractive young woman who looks both
cynical and whimsical spins in the chair. She is dressed in a rather ugly polyester outfit one
expect to find on a movie theater employee. Her name is Vicky. And she is bored.
(A young man named Joshua enters. Vicky suddenly stops spinning. Her boredom has
suddenly vanished.)
VICKY: That’s what we call the box office. An insider joke between cashiers.
JOSHUA: Oh.
JOSHUA: I guess. Mr. Boston said he wanted you to train me how to work the box office.
VICKY: Then let the training begin. People come up. They say what movie they want. You
press this button. Take their money. Give them their ticket. There, you’re trained.
VICKY: Now sit down and wait. But don’t get anxious. No one’s coming tonight. It’s
Christmas Eve and all our movies suck.
JOSHUA: This beats working at concessions. Thank God I didn’t get stuck with that Bar One
job. That would’ve sucked.
VICKY: Stuart is certainly loving it though. Have you seen that look in his eye when he’s
running Concessions?
JOSHUA: He told me you were dating but that you wanted it kept secret.
JOSHUA: We met in the fifth grade. You know how every class has a kid who gets picked on
throughout the whole year by everybody? That was him. No one liked him.
VICKY: Why?
JOSHUA: Well, it started out just because he was the new kid. His folks just move into town
to set up a new church. They were husband and wife ministers or something. Very, I don’t
know, just kind of friendly and creepy at the same time.
JOSHUA: Anyway, kids in school picked on him because he was new, and a little weird
looking. You can’t tell it as much, but his face was completely covered with freckles. Big
brown freckles… kind of like… um… like someone flicked splotches of paint at him.
JOSHUA: And then no one liked him because every chance he got, he started talking about
Jesus. He did a book report on the entire Bible. In art class, he made a crown of thorns
ashtray. He tried making Noah’s Ark out of clay, but it exploded in the kiln. And then one
day we were supposed to give a speech, an oral report on the country of our choice and he
picked Israel.
VICKY: Really? I had an uncle who got into that. He’d speak in tongues before every
Thanksgiving dinner. But he had one of those robot voices because of his throat cancer, so it
was really low and scary. Like Darth Vader speaking pig latin.
JOSHUA: Stuart wasn’t as entertaining. And to top it off, the kids started hating him more
because he wanted to be the teacher’s pet.
JOSHUA: Same thing we the school teachers. And the lunch lady. And the principal. Most
kids said he was a tattle tale. There was this one bully who hocked a loogie right in his hair,
right in the middle of class.
JOSHUA: But anyway, I felt sorry for Stu. So I let him hang around me at recess once in a
while. He was okay. Sort of clingy. He never wanted to leave my side. I got beat up a couple
of times by Troy, just for sticking up for him.
JOSHUA: I guess. But it isn’t like grade school anymore. We don’t hang out. I was kind of
surprised to see him when I got hired here. He left before we finished junior high. His parents
put him in some private school. So, are the rumors true?
JOSHUA: That you’re not interested in Stuart anymore. That you are, oh what were the
words, that you’re almost done toying with him.
VICKY: Well that makes me sound like a bitch. I kind of like that.
JOSHUA: So?
VICKY: So?
VICKY: Why should I talk about my love life? Or "lust" life? What about you? I bet you've
had a lot of girlfriend. Probably broken a lot of hearts.
JOSHUA: Not really. I've never been in love or anything. Just casual dates and stuff. I mean,
for all intensive purposes I’m pretty much like all the other geeks you’ve been describing.
VICKY: But you wear that letterman’s jacket. You’re kind of a jock. I say that with all due
respect.
VICKY: Well, you have to understand. I’m the kind of girl who takes pity on poor pathetic
geeks who have never kissed a girl. Let’s just say that I like someone who is easily trainable
– someone who will truly appreciate me. It’s sad, I know. But hey, I’ll take an ego boost
wherever I can get it. Unfortunately, these adorably nerdy boyfriends get boring after a while.
I mean, I can only listen to their computer games and mathematic equations for so long. Of
course, Stuart’s different in a lot ways. He’s terrible at math, for one. And he’s pretty clueless
about technology. But he’s a comic book sort of geek. And a hopeless romantic. He’s pre-
occupied with holding my hand. Everywhere we go, he wants to hold hands. Even when
we’re driving. And he’s got this new pastime. He keeps saying “I love you.” It was so sweet
and wonderful the first time he said it. I almost cried, and I’m not the kind of girl who cries
easily. But by the end of the week, he must have said “I love you” about five hundred times.
And then he starts adding pet names. “I love you, honey bunch.” “I love you sweet-heart.” “I
love you my little smoochy-woochy-coochi-koo.” I don’t even know what that last one
means. It’s like he’s speaking in some brand-new, love-infected language. Who would have
thought romance could be so boring?
JOSHUA: Is it boring?
VICKY: You mean you don’t know from first hand experience?
VICKY: Perhaps.
VICKY: (Laughs. Falls off chair.) They let you letter in choir?! Oh, that’s priceless.
VICKY: College I guess. Back to captivity. I’m taking a year off first.
JOSHUA: Hey, me too! I was hoping the Grand Cinemas would improve my social life.
VICKY: (Laughs.) Has it?
VICKY: OH.
VICKY: No. Rico’s cool. I just wouldn’t trust him with much more than a postage stamp.
VICKY: I used to want a social life but I think I’m content here in the box. If you want to see
people, just wait till Friday night, they’ll swarm around you, begging you for tickets. But the
glass on the fishbowl keeps them from violating your space. If you want to talk to someone,
you just pick up the phone, and when you get sick of talking, you can just hang up. You can
read, you can do your homework, or you can veg-out and watch the Grand go by. You can
swipe snacks from concessions and on hot days, we’ve got air conditioning. If you’re bored
you can spin around on this thing.
JOSHUA: Really?
VICKY: Hey, what did you get at the Christmas party gift exchange?
VICKY: I got the worse possible present ever. Listen to this. I’m in this dance group, right.
Ballet. I’ve been doing the Nutcracker for the past two months. I’ve been having nightmares
with the ‘sugar plum fairie suite’ playing in the background. Every mall or department store
has been playing Tchaikovsky. I can’t get away from that God forsaken music! It drives me
nuts. And guess which CD Mrs. Sanchez buys me? The Nutcracker. I hope I pick her name
next year. I had no idea she could be so cruel. That’s why it must be nice to be religious like
Stewy. You can doom people to hell.
JOSHUA: Eternal hell over the Nutcracker? Now that’s a raw deal.
VICKY: Eternal damnation. You’d think after a few thousand years you’d get bored with
never ending torment. Satan would come up to you and say, “Today you’ll be covered with
man-eating ants and pummeled by a giant mountain gorilla.” And you’d just look at him and
YAWN and say, “Again?! How dull. Are you running out of ideas already? Can I make a
request for Bubba the mountain Gorilla, because he and I have a rapport going; we work well
together, I think. (Pausing and completely changing the subject.) Do you think it’s possible to
travel through time?
VICKY: It’s this fishbowl. It really gets to you after a while. So do you? You know, think
they’ll figure out time travel?
JOSHUA: I don’t know. I guess I might travel back and find my great-great-great-great
grandfather. Say hi. What would you do?
VICKY: Well, if I had a time machine, say they invent it when I’m like really old. Like 35 or
something. Then, I’d travel back to right now, and I’d give myself advice.
VIC KY: Who to be friends with. Who to avoid. What choices to make. What guys to like.
JOSHUA: Why do you need a time machine? Just make the right choices now.
VICKY: But how do you know if it’s the right choice? You don’t until after the fact.
JOSHUA: Well, that’s the point. You take a chance and you learn from your mistakes. Or,
you try something and it’s a great experience.
JOSHUA: Then you regret it. I think not knowing what happened next is part of the fun.
VICKY: Really?
JOSHUA: Yeah.
He pauses for a moment. Then, they roll their chairs toward each other. She kisses him. He
kisses back. They pull apart.
JOSHUA: So…
They are both started as they hear the sound of a door opening. They look upstage.
JOSHUA: Oh! Hi. (Suddenly regretful.) How’s it going, Stuart?
VICKY: Hey, Stewy. Joshua and I were just talking about regrets. (Listens.) What do I have
to regret? Oh nothing. (A sly smile on her face.) Nothing at all.
Lights out.