PATRICK MEYERS   


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Plays by Patrick Meyers

PATRICK MEYERS
Feedlot
1st Produced:
Circle Repertory Compant, New York
1977
Company:
-
1st Published:
Dramatists Play Service, NY,
ISBN
-
To Buy This Play:
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Genre:
-
Play/Drama
Parts:
Male
5
Female
-
Parts Other:
-
Notes:
-
Synopsis:
Set in the operations room of an abattoir - where the feed for the incoming cattle is prepared and distributed. Gene, one of the workers is the butt on jokes and remarks by his fellow workers because he is gay. When most of his co-workers are out of the room Gene locks the door and holds Billy Fred captive at gun point. A first he claims that as a vegetarian he wants to free the cattle - but it soon emerges that Billy Fred had raped Gene's sister and he wants revenge.
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PATRICK MEYERS
K2
1st Produced:
-
-
Company:
-
1st Published:
Dramatists Play Service, NY,
ISBN
-
To Buy This Play:
If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click, otherwise
(below) are AbeBooks for secondhand & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies
Genre:
-
Play/Drama
Parts:
Male
2
Female
-
Parts Other:
-
Notes:
-
Synopsis:
The setting is an icy ledge high up on K2, the world's second highest mountain. Two climbers, Taylor and Harold, are stranded at 27,000 feet, and Harold has suffered a broken leg in their precipitous descent. They have also lost one of their ropes, and the remaining one is neither long or strong enough to serve as a sling to lower Harold to the next ledge. As Taylor climbs back up the mountain in an attempt to recover the other rope the two men keep up a running conversation which begins in a lighthearted vein but gradually shades into an absorbing discussion of the meaning and value of life. Taylor, an arch-conservative, womanizing assistant district attorney, sees personal gratification as the focus of existence, while Harold, a physicist, has found an almost mystic satisfaction in his selfless love for his wife and young son. When Taylor's attempts to rescue the second rope fail, and the desperation of their situation can no longer be denied, it is, finally, the bond between the two men which is put to the test as Harold, in a scene of shattering emotional impact, calmly but firmly orders Taylor to save himselfto salvage the one life which can be saved, and to live on for both of them. (NOTE: While the Broadway production of K2 employed a realistic set, the play can be produced with equal effectiveness using a simplified, abstract setting).
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