Synopsis
Trophies
Published by Dramatists Play Service
3 Male 2 Female
David and his father do not get along, and after a long absence, the family is eager but pensive about his arrival. His kid sister, Laura, spends as much time away from home as possible, risking punishment if she returns past the strict times her father has set
Mrs Stone is determined to keep the peace at all costs and struggles to stay out of the Valium bottle. The younger son, Bobby - the golden boy, star football player and Dad's obvious favorite - was the glue that held the family together until an accident left him mildly brain damaged and the family torn apart
Through scenes in the present and flashbacks to the past, the dynamics of this troubled family become more apparent. Despite agreeing to a truce for the weekend to appease Mrs. Stone, David and his father continue to hammer away at each other, while Mrs Stone fights a losing battle to save the weekend
Laura creates more of her own cocoon, and Bobby memorizes a passage from Hamlet to impress David, which he insists he do, much to the embarrassment of his parents. David desperately wants to prove himself as an actor, attends Carnegie Mellon, and makes clear his feelings about football, refusing to play as a child
The more Mr Stone chides David about his life and choices, the more David undermines his father's authority until after one last blow-out, David and his father finally begin to accept their failure toward one another
"Mr Wooten has attempted nothing less than an All-American family tragedy, a play about ordinary people in ordinary conflict that ends as a poignant lament for the lost familial values we like to think once held our society together" ~ NY Times
" the whole play resembles one of those William Inge-like family dramas [a] remarkably straightforwardfamily drama" ~ NY Post