Валентин Красногоров – THEATER PLAYS (страница 9)
CONSULTANT: That’s fine. Another glass?
DIRECTOR: Sure.
CONSULTANT: Now that we’ve understood each other, it’ll be easier to agree on the rest of it. I’ve noticed that, like many directors, you’re more interested in the form of the performance than in its meaning. You’re fixated on the how, but you’re not interested in the what and the why.
DIRECTOR: “The why” – what does that mean? So long as the show is beautiful and has tons of flair, the rest doesn’t matter. The main thing is the viewership and its reactions. In short, the ratings.
CONSULTANT: Ratings are important to us too – not the ratings for the broadcast, but the rating the client gives us. The success of the spectacle and therefore the size of the fee will be pegged to that indicator. And if the government’s ratings, God forbid, sink after tomorrow’s show....
DIRECTOR: That will bring the fee down too?
CONSULTANT: That will result in no payment at all.
DIRECTOR: I’m starting to regret getting mixed up in this bizarre deal of yours.
CONSULTANT What’s bizarre about it?
DIRECTOR: Not least the fact that I was tasked with preparing a public funeral on a huge scale and at the same time required to keep the preparations secret.
CONSULTANT: We couldn’t tell you everything before, for various reasons. But now it’s crunch time. There are some particulars you should know if you’re going to keep a tight grip on the spectacle.
DIRECTOR: Then tell me why there had to be so much secrecy.
CONSULTANT: We needed to buy time.
DIRECTOR: What for?
CONSULTANT: So that
DIRECTOR: Who are “they”?
CONSULTANT: “They” aren’t us.
DIRECTOR: No kidding. And who’s to stop those “not us” from preparing too?
CONSULTANT: That’s the whole point of the game.
DIRECTOR: I don’t get any of this. Who are we burying anyway?
CONSULTANT: Let’s just say a certain person who put us in an awkward spot.
DIRECTOR:
CONSULTANT:
DIRECTOR: There’s one thing I don’t understand. I know he was always needling you and your colleagues, threatening to leak information… Especially on the prime minister…
CONSULTANT: Him and others. So?
DIRECTOR: Then why have you ordered up this lavish funeral for him? Let his friends bury him.
CONSULTANT: Now they’re criticizing us too. But if we give their hero a grand send-off and praise him to the skies, they’ll have nothing to gripe at us for. That’s why the words have to be delivered at the ceremony exactly as they’re written. Politics is a theater where you mustn’t put a foot wrong. Otherwise, the role won’t be yours much longer.
DIRECTOR: So that’s it…
CONSULTANT: Do you understand now? They loved their leader, but we, it turns out, love him even more. The upshot is that they’ll seem to be in cahoots with us, and there won’t be a thing they can say about it. And if they do arrange their own separate ceremony, everyone’ll be watching your beautiful show, not their pathetic little rally.
DIRECTOR: Gotcha.
CONSULTANT: By the way, we don’t much want too many people we don’t know at the funeral. It could get out of hand. Do you have any advice on how to make it so they won’t pose a threat?
DIRECTOR: Very simple. Announce that due to the huge influx of people, the city center is off-limits for traffic. Put up barriers, post police details, and bring in the special forces. Keep everybody, not just vehicles, away from the funeral venue, unless they have a pass.
CONSULTANT: Not a bad idea.
DIRECTOR: Nothing to it. It’s standard operating procedure for our mass spectacles.
CONSULTANT: But on the other hand, we also need to create the impression that people are flocking there to say farewell, and that they support us.
DIRECTOR: So, then, don’t let anyone in, but there have to be crowds. I get it. This isn’t my first time. I can set that up. Give me a division of soldiers in civilian clothes, and I’ll film them filing past the coffin fourteen times.
CONSULTANT:
DIRECTOR: I thought you’d done that a long time ago.
CONSULTANT: I see your great reputation isn’t just talk.
DIRECTOR: That’s why they pay me the big money.
CONSULTANT: Now there’s a hint I’ve heard before. I’ll say it again: hash out all the details with the prime minister. Anything else is a waste of time. We’ve each of us got a job to do. Let’s do it.
DIRECTOR:
WOMAN: I was told I have to go on with the rehearsal.
DIRECTOR: Not a moment too soon. Where’s the other one?
WOMAN: He’s getting his instructions from her. He’ll be here in a minute.
DIRECTOR: Have you learned the words?
WOMAN: Sort of. Want to hear?
DIRECTOR: In a minute.
WOMAN: You think she’s your assistant?
DIRECTOR: I don’t know. That’s what she said. At least she knows a bit about the theater.
WOMAN: That’s entirely possible. I’m thinking she’s been cast in supporting roles at one time or another. Here, though, she’s a headliner.
DIRECTOR: How do you explain that astronomical ascent? She probably has something special going for her?
WOMAN: Sure. The something special that men value above all else.
DIRECTOR: And which man valued it?
WOMAN: First one, then another… and so on. Higher and higher and higher.
DIRECTOR: In any event, she’s no fool.
WOMAN: That, unfortunately, can’t be taken away from her.
DIRECTOR: And she dresses very elegantly.
WOMAN: And undresses even more elegantly.
DIRECTOR: You’re just jealous of her.
WOMAN: I won’t argue that.
DIRECTOR: What’s her official position, anyway?
WOMAN: Who knows?.. Speechwriter, consultant, staffer, aide, adviser… In other words, someone who’s very close to a very important person. You’re with me, right?