7 Stories

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7 Stories
Written by Morris Panych
CharactersMan, Charlotte, Rodney, Jennifer, Leonard, Marshall, Rachel, Percy, Michael, Joan, Al, Lillian, Nurse Wilson, The Four Window People
Date premiered1989
Place premiered Vancouver
Original languageEnglish
SubjectMan (the main character), contemplates jumping from a 7th story ledge, but the residents of the building keep popping out and interrupting him.
GenreComedy
Setting7th story of an apartment in Vancouver

7 Stories [1] is a play created by Canadian playwright Morris Panych. [2] [3]

Contents

Plot

The protagonist (a well dressed man) is standing on the ledge on the seventh story of a tall building, contemplating leaping to his death. He is interrupted by the colorful residents of the seventh story who are too caught up in their own lives to notice the man or question his being on the ledge of the building. The persons who interact with the man do so by opening or appearing at one or more of seven windows on the seventh storey. For the majority of the play, the people talking with the protagonist have most of the dialogue. The man hasn't much dialogue until near the end, when he explains that his daily routine was thrown off when he woke up and lost track of what day it was.

Production

The play has a set that is quite confined for actors to work with. Actors must try and work with a set in which they must play their parts in a window. The set of 7 stories includes several windows, a ledge, and at least one spotlight. The set gives the notion of an urban environment. Man is stationed on the ledge and the rest of the cast plays their parts through the various windows. One of the windows is set to give the impression of a party, whereas another is dark to represent Leonard’s apartment. After Man’s soliloquy, the set changes to represent the apartment building ledge adjacent to the original setting.

Characters

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References

  1. Panych, Morris (1989). 7 Stories. Vancouver: Talonbooks. pp. 1–93. ISBN   0-88922-281-9.
  2. "Russ Hunt's Reviews". Russell A. Hunt. Archived from the original on 10 April 2010. Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  3. Zilberman, Michal (29 October 2001). "Getting high on Seven Stories". The McGill Tribune. Archived from the original on 31 January 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2010.