Prairie Home Companion, A (movie tie-in)

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Prairie Home Companion, A (movie tie-in) Page 8

by Keillor, Garrison


  She can tell you’re lying. A child could tell—

  LEFTY

  But he sang “Amazing Grace.” And it almost

  made you forget what he’d done. Which I

  don’t want to talk about.

  DUSTY

  You’re dumb enough to be twins.

  LEFTY

  I promised him on a Bible that I would never

  tell and I won’t. So let that be the end of it.

  LOLA

  When do you go on?

  DUSTY

  Soon as Fish Face stops talking.

  LOLA

  Thanks for the encouragement.

  CUT TO:

  29 INT. FITZGERALD THEATER—SAME TIME

  GK

  Back with more show right after this word

  about shoes.

  PAT DONOHUE & SHOE BAND (SING)

  Talking shoes, talking Guy’s,

  Any two, any size.

  From your ankle to your toes

  At the bottom of your clothes

  Talking shoes, talking Guy’s.

  GK at the microphone, motioning for DUSTY and LEFTY to come out.

  GK

  Guy’s Shoes, they’re made to last. And ask

  about the Guy’s Cash Shoe, with the hole in

  the sole where you can stash your extra cash

  and keep it safe until you need it. Isn’t that

  right, Lefty?

  LEFTY stands at a microphone to GK’s left. And DUSTY next to him.

  LEFTY

  That’s where I keep mine.

  GK

  Good to have them with us here tonight.

  Please welcome the Old Trailhands

  themselves, the Puccinis of the Prairie, the

  Beethovens of the Bunkhouse—Dusty and

  Lefty!

  APPLAUSE. DUSTY and LEFTY nod and bow, wave.

  LEFTY

  Yes, sir, always good to be on the show,

  because, you know, it’s mighty lonesome out

  there on the prairie. A cowboy gets tired of

  scenery after a while. You get sceneried out

  and you wish you had somebody to talk to.

  (LOOKING AT DUSTY) Somebody smart.

  GK

  You miss people out there?

  DUSTY

  Yessir. Talking to a horse is not the same, and

  my horse is pretty smart. He’s good at math

  and physics and chemistry, but I can’t teach

  him philosophy.

  GK

  You can’t teach him philosophy?

  DUSTY

  Nope. You can’t put Descartes before the

  horse!

  GK

  Very good.

  LEFTY

  Speaking of horses, I want to thank all the

  friends and neighbors who wrote in to say

  how much they enjoyed “Come Ride

  My Pony” that we sang last week. Thanks for all

  your cards and letters. Meant a lot to me.

  CUT TO:

  30 INT. BACKSTAGE—SAME TIME

  STAGE MANAGER

  Somebody bring me a rifle, I’ll kill the both of

  them, the tall one first.

  (ON P.A.)

  Guy Noir to the stage.

  Over his shoulder, the DANGEROUS WOMAN appears. She stands at STAGE MANAGER’s shoulder. He turns and walks past her.

  STAGE MANAGER

  Hey Noir!

  CUT TO:

  31 INT. FITZGERALD WINGS—SAME TIME

  People pass through the shot in the foreground and the DANGEROUS WOMAN looks steadily at the camera as it comes toward her.

  DUSTY (O.C.)

  One, two—you know what to do.

  (SINGS)

  I’m just an old cowboy with twigs in my hair

  I’m two-thirds alligator and three-quarters bear

  And one-half a liar but let it be known

  I never told one lie that was not my own.

  DUSTY & LEFTY (DUET)

  Whoopitiyiyo git along little dogies.

  CUT TO:

  32 INT. FITZGERALD THEATER—SAME TIME

  Onstage, LEFTY looks off at the DANGEROUS WOMAN who is looking at him.

  LEFTY (SINGS)

  I eat when I’m hungry, I drink when I’m dry.

  Don’t boss me or cross me or I’ll spit in your eye.

  I think as I please and I say what I mean,

  And I think all you women are the finest I’ve seen.

  DUSTY & LEFTY (DUET)

  Whoopitiyiyo git along little dogies.

  DUSTY (SINGS)

  I love the prairie, say what you will.

  It’s flat and it’s dusty but I love it still

  It’s empty and lonely and tedious too

  So maybe I’m crazy but what can I do.

  DUSTY & LEFTY (DUET)

  Whoopitiyiyo git along little dogies.

  LEFTY

  Here’s the guitar solo coming up.

  He picks out a short solo turnaround and looks into the wings. The DANGEROUS WOMAN has disappeared.

  LEFTY

  Okay. Real good.

  (HE SINGS)

  I’m sure you can tell by the way we are dressed

  We are two cowboys of the Wild West.

  Cowboys whose shoes have stepped in manure

  Heroes of song and of literature.

  We ride in the snow and we ride in the rain

  Just like Gene Autry, just like John Wayne

  They were better cowboys than us and I mean it

  But we are still living and that is convenient.

  DUSTY & LEFTY (DUET)

  Whoopitiyiyo git along little dogies.

  33 INT. FITZGERALD WINGS—SAME TIME

  LOLA sits on the security desk backstage, and GK sits in the chair. She is holding a guitar and strumming it. Onstage, the show continues, and we can hear the BAND playing.

  LOLA

  My mother said that you got into radio when

  somebody was flying a kite? Somebody

  whose clothes came off?

  GK

  It was a big kite towed behind a boat, and he was on water skis.

  LOLA

  And he fell and he was dragged through the

  water and his red swim trunks came off and

  then the kite lifted him up in the air?

  GK

  A naked man, flying. It was quite a sight.

  LOLA

  Why didn’t he pull up his shorts?

  GK

  He was hanging on to the kite.

  LOLA

  But how did that get you into radio?

  GK

  Well, that was how I met your dad. He was

  flying the kite.

  LOLA

  My dad? He was the naked guy?

  GK

  Naked guy with his shorts around his ankles,

  flying. It seemed like our chance to leave

  town. So we headed for Chicago looking for

  a job and we took turns driving. And he was

  GK (CONT’D)

  asleep in the backseat, when I pulled into a

  truck stop in Oshkosh, Wisconsin—

  LOLA

  He told me about that.

  GK

  Yeah, I got out and went in to pay for the gas

  and then he woke up and decided to go pee,

  and then I came back and got in the car and

  thought he was still asleep back there so I

  pulled out on the highway and went to

  Chicago and left him in Oshkosh. And he

  went in the coffee shop and there was your

  mother.

  LOLA

  So that’s how I came to be born.

  GK

  It led up to it, yes.

  LOLA

  If you had looked in the backseat and seen he wasn’t there, I might not exist.

  GK

  Well, he and I weren’t getting alo
ng all that

  well, so I wasn’t that anxious about him one

  way or the other—

  LOLA

  That is so weird.

  GK

  Not if I look at you, then it’s beautiful.

  LOLA

  Yeah, but to think that if you’d noticed he

  was missing and turned around and gone

  back to Oshkosh, I wouldn’t exist.

  GK

  Makes it even more of a miracle that you do.

  LOLA

  So how’d you get into radio?

  GK

  I was doing a show called the Baked Bean Jamboree—

  LOLA

  With my dad.

  GK

  Right.

  LOLA

  “Happy Baked Beans.”

  GK

  You know it?

  (SINGS WITH LOLA)

  Happy Baked Beans are nutritious

  Made the natural way.

  Give you lots of fiber,

  Try some, you will say:

  They are nature’s fruit, root-i-toot-toot-toot

  Eat baked beans every day.

  LOLA

  But how did you get into radio?

  GK

  Well . . . this was after the pontoon boat that

  capsized on the Mississippi—

  STAGE MANAGER

  You are the worst person to tell a story I’ve ever heard in my life.

  GK

  It just takes time.

  STAGE MANAGER

  Answer the question, would you.

  GK

  I’m getting around to it.

  LOLA

  That’s okay. You can tell me some other time.

  APPLAUSE (O.C.)

  STAGE MANAGER

  You’re on. Go.

  GK jumps up.

  CUT TO:

  34 INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE DRESSING ROOM

  DONNA knocking at the door.

  DONNA

  Chuck? I’m ready for you now. Chuck?

  CUT TO:

  35 INT. DRESSING ROOM—SAME TIME

  DONNA opens the door, freezes, has slow shocked reaction.

  DONNA

  Chuck? Are you decent? Chuck?

  CUT TO:

  36 INT. DRESSING ROOM—SAME TIME

  CHUCK AKERS sits in a chair, head back, mouth open, eyes closed, his guitar in his lap, his arms draped awkwardly over it. He is wearing a shirt, undershorts, and socks, and there are candles burning on the table.

  DONNA

  Chuck?

  She stands over him, studying him. She shakes his shoulder lightly. She touches his face.

  DONNA

  Oh my God.

  She feels for his pulse. She puts her other hand on his chest, looking for a heartbeat.

  DONNA

  Oh Chuck. Why’d you have to go and do that

  now, ya old bugger? This was supposed to be

  your last show. You were supposed to get a

  trophy. . . . Now what am I supposed to do?

  Huh? Just tell me that.

  DONNA pulls a sheet over CHUCK AKERS.

  CUT TO:

  37 HALLWAY OUTSIDE DRESSING ROOM—MOMENTS LATER

  DONNA closes the dressing room door and puts up a sign: Do Not Disturb. She bows her head for a moment, takes a deep breath, then walks away.

  CUT TO:

  38 INT. STAGE DOOR—CONTINUOUS

  The DANGEROUS WOMAN stands at the security desk, wearing her Twins baseball cap and dark glasses. GUY NOIR sits behind the desk, rummaging in the top drawer for a pencil and paper.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  It’s time for me to go.

  GUY NOIR (NOT LOOKING UP)

  Okay.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Look at me.

  GUY NOIR (NOT LOOKING UP)

  What’s going on?

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Look at me.

  He looks up. She leans forward.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Listen very carefully and don’t be afraid. I

  am the angel Asphodel. I come to do my

  work and bring mercy into the world and to

  carry out the Lord’s will and honor His holy

  name. With every breath of my being may I

  proclaim the glory of the Lord.

  The DANGEROUS WOMAN takes off her dark glasses and baseball cap and shakes out her hair.

  GUY NOIR (DAZED)

  If you want to be an angel, sweetheart, hey—

  I’m all for it. You’re angelic enough for me. I

  say, spread your wings and fly.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  This is a revelation—

  GUY NOIR

  Hey, for you and me both! Mind if I ask a

  question?

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  I know your question and the answer is no.

  GUY NOIR

  You’re not, huh?

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  No.

  CUT TO:

  39 INT. DRESSING ROOM—MOMENTS LATER

  In dim light, GK sits in the corner, his jacket off, his feet up on a chair.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN (O.C.)

  I used to listen to your show. Until the night I

  died. My name was Lois Peterson.

  The DANGEROUS WOMAN sits on the dressing table, her legs dangling down.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  I was driving to this cabin up north and you

  were telling a story and I started laughing

  and I lost control of the car and it skidded

  into the ditch and flipped over and, as it did,

  the thought crossed my mind that the story

  wasn’t that funny. And then I was standing

  in this tall grass and looking down at my

  own body. My head at a weird angle. My

  neck broken when the car flipped. I was on

  my way to the cabin to meet my lover Larry.

  We had planned this for two months and

  your story caused me to lose control and I

  died. My head was flopped over like a

  chicken’s. You sort of killed me, in a way.

  Isn’t that interesting?

  GK

  I’m so sorry.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Of course you are. But I don’t miss my life. I

  did for a while but then I got over it. I sort of

  miss licorice. And martinis. All those

  different cheeses they have. I remember these

  soft white cheeses that Larry and I would

  melt and we’d sit out on the porch and dip

  slices of bread in it.

  GK

  Fondue.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  I’ve been trying to think of that word. What

  is it?

  GK

  Fondue.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  It was famous. Is that the word? It was good.

  Tasted good.

  GK

  The melted cheese?

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Yes.

  GK

  Maybe you mean fabulous.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Fabulous. Yes. Fabulous. Fabulous. I like the

  B there. Fabulous. But I’m okay with being an

  angel. No regrets. Not really.

  GK

  You’re really an angel?

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Of course.

  GK

  What do you do? Well, that’s a dumb

  question . . .

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  I comfort people who are desperately sad.

  And I take people up to God. That’s why I

  came. But you know, I always wondered

  about that story and why it was funny.

  GK

  What story was it?

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  It was about penguins.

  GK

  Oh. Right. The two penguins stan
ding on the

  ice floe.

  DANGEROUS WOMAN

  Yes.

  GK

 

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