Spotlight on Lee Falk - Other writings - Home at Six
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Country: | USA / English |
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Lee Falk copyrighted the "Home at Six" (In Words of One Syllable or Less) in 1971 [1].
Plot
John, a loving father who methodically returns home nightly at 6 to be greeted by his polite children, loving wife and doting mother, happends to return home this particular day at 4. A terrible mistake!
Instead of the usual greeting, he is confronted by an alian world. His mother is addicted to prescription drugs and unable to recognize him and the housekeeper is a kleptomanieac. His children have problems -the daughter is a budding pyromanic, and his son is drinking a dozen beers each day. His wife confides that John's dear old dad actually was a thief and reveals she having an affair with John's best friend. The house is in total disarray.
Dejected, the father collapses into a chair. Comes 6 o'clock, he is awakened by the family he has always known, all bright and beaming, scrubbed and happy.
Cast
Scene
- The time is now in the front room of John's neat home
Cast
- Grams - John's old gray Mums
- Tim - John's son, age 9
- Marge - John's girl, age 12
- Kit - John's wife
- Maude - The germ of maid
- John - Slim and gray (or fat and gray)
- Bob - John's best friend
Productions
In 1964 Lee Falk told[2] that he recently had written two short plays to be performed in one evening: "Eris" and "Home at Six". And that "Home at Six" was to be put up by ANTA in the fall.
Lee Falk said[1] he directed "Home at Six" with a good professional company in an Equity Workshop in New York and he later saw the play produced at Hofstra University on Long Island.
1971
Sons and daughters of the members of "The Players" flocked to the Club's East Jefferson Ave Playhouse to attend the Chrismas party (on December 11) to see Dickens "Chrismas Carol" and Falk's "Home at Six" [3].
1973
Cabaret Theatre at St John's Church, March 16-17 [4].
1975
Richmond High School's Drama Club at McCuire Hall, May 14-15. Cast: Tim Branson .... [5].
1976
Richard Bland College on March 29 through week of May 3 [6]
1977
Garrison Players at Newport Opera House May 1. One of six competitin plays in the Sixth Annual One Act Drama Festival of the New Hampshire Community Theatre Association [7].
1981
The Chapel Street Players of Newark presented "Home at Six" at the 39th Delaware State Play Festival at University of Delaware. One of six groups which took part in the Community Theater Division of the festival on March 14 at Mitchell Hall in Newark [8].
1983
The Theatre Company of Westfield State College presented "Home at Six" May 3 & 4, directed by Pattie Gillespie.
1987
The Studio Theatre at Western Oregon State College's Rice Auditorium on November 18-21.
Directed by student David Bliss. Cast: Nancy Godfrey, Chris Scott, Denise Case, Patricia Sowby, Gina Boyd, Denise Kujawa and Steven Ronda [9] [10].Directed by Jane Wingard. Cast:
The Barn Theatre at Missouri Southern State College by Studio 87 on May 1 and 2, 1987.
Directed by Linden Taylor. Cast: Trij Brietzke as Grams, Douglas Hill as Tim, Renee Arbogast as Marge, Sarah Sexton as Kit, Melissa Cytron as Maude, Lyndall Burrow as John and Robert Luther as Bob. Staff: Rick Evans (Program cover design), Janet McCormick (costumes), Nanda Vylonis (stage manager), Dawn Ehrenberg (house manager), Todd Webber, Allan McGowne and DuWana Cargile (lighting).
1988
The members of the Fairleigh Dickinson University's Theatre Clubb presented three one act plays on April 20-21 - among the "Home at Six" [11] [12].
1996
Pasadena Theatre Company's production of "Home at Six" was named Best Production at the Maryland Community Theatre Festival in February.
Directed by Jane Wingard. Cast: Ed Kuhl, Heater Tuckfield, Susan Weber ..... The production was to represent Maryland at the regional One Act Festival at Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove first weekend in May. A benefit performance was held at Baldwin Hall in Millersville [13].
2008
2nd Star Productions at Bowie City Hall.
Directed by Jane Wingard. Cast: Charlie Maloney (John), Debe Tighe (Grams), Rosalie Daelemans (Kit), Debbie Krauss (Maud), Zachary Fadler (Tim), Vivian Wingard (Marge) and Wendell Holland (Bob) [14].
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Falk Lee, "Eris and Home at Six", Dramatists Play Service Inc. 1971, p 2 Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "dps71" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ "Caplan Lois, "The Phantom Returns", St. Louis Jewish Light (St. Louis, Missouri), 19 Aug 1964, p 15
- ↑ Wittaker Jeanne, "Tradition Time at Detroit's Historic Players", Detroit Free Press (Detroit, Michigan), 12 Dec 1971, p 53
- ↑ "Weekend/Your Family Calendar - Theatre", Detroit Free Press (Detroit, Michigan), 09 Mar 1973, p 30
- ↑ "Drama Club to Present at McGuire Hall", Palladium-Item (Richmond, Indiana), 09 May 1975, p 14
- ↑ "Home at Six Will Conclude Drama Course", The Progress-Index (Petersburg, Virginia), 22 Mar 1976, p 10
- ↑ Ladd Deborah, "Of Spesial Interest - NTG to Compete at Drama Fest", Nashua Telegraph (Nashua, New Hampshire), 27 Apr 1977, p 38
- ↑ Crosland Philio F, "Kent County guild wins state festival", The News Journal (Wilmington, Delaware), 16 Mar 1981, p 33
- ↑ "Shakespear opens WOSC theater season", Statesman Journal (Salem, Oregon), 04 Oct 1987, p 21
- ↑ "Western offering two plays", Statesman Journal (Salem, Oregon), 18 Nov 1987, p 14
- ↑ "College Events", The Madison Eagle (Madison, New Jersey), 14 Apr 1988, p 13
- ↑ "Stage Door", Daily Record (Morristown, New Jersey), 15 Apr 1988, p 27
- ↑ "Pasadena troupe taking winning play on the road", The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, Maryland), 26 Apr 1996, p 27
- ↑ Johnson Mary, "Production company's trio of one-acts test makeshift quarters at Bowie City Hall", The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, Maryland), 18 Sep 2008, p G4