Authors: Bob Odenkirk
Finally, you've got to appreciate my extra abs. That's right, I have two abs more than most people. They are in my lower back, and, I'll admit it, they were put there by my Beverly Hills plastic surgeon. I was told that they are the latest thing. God, I hope so. They hurt like hell.
Famous QuotationsâUnabridged
“
There is nothing on this earth more to be prized than true friendship
, but one of those heated bathroom floors? That comes closeâreal close.”
âThomas Aquinas
EXT. PRISON
INT. PRISON MEETING ROOM
In a sad, generic meeting room, five prisoners sit in their faded orange jumpsuits, rough characters all. In this California federal prison, they are mostly Latino. A fellow prisoner strides in with heavy energy and a shredded face. His imposing size adds to a sense of his own gravity. He is Placidio, their Director, and he is the big dog in this packânot to be messed with! They, the prisoners, are in a theater group. What else is there to doâit's prison!
Placidio unnecessarily silences the already silent group.
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Okay, motherfuckers, shut the hell up!
                            Â
(
beat
)
                   Â
Now I want to congratulate you all on
                   Â
an excellent production of
Steamboat
last
                   Â
Friday. The reviews are in: you're the hit
                   Â
of the whole prison, but before you get
                   Â
swell heads, I want to tell you your prize:
                   Â
you have to take on Shakespeare!! The
                   Â
immortal Bard! Every prisoner's challenge:
                   Â
the language, the passions, the intellect!
No reaction from the assembled. They're not sure how to take this. Some smell a challenge. No one high-fives
.
                                 Â
PLACIDIO (CONT'D)
                   Â
Now, before you go high-fiving, because
                   Â
you were all so great in the last production,
                   Â
I'm going to let you pick which play
                   Â
you get to do.
                                 Â
LUIS
                   Â
Uhhh,
any
Shakespeare play?
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Any one at all. The challenge of a
                   Â
lifetimeâ¦you lifers!
                                 Â
LUIS
                   Â
Well, I guess it's hard to choose. There's
                   Â
so manyâ¦
Suddenly, in the back of the room, ROBERT speaks up. Robert is a white-collar criminal, only here due to spillover at the “country club” prison up the road
â¦
                                 Â
ROBERT
                   Â
Placidio has issued us a challenge. I have
                   Â
not been the most vocal of inmates, but if
                   Â
you'll allow me to speak as a used-to-be
                   Â
patron of the arts, I'd say, if I had to vote,
                   Â
I'd vote forâ¦Shakespeare in the Park.
The other prisoners aren't sure about Robert, but we can see his suggestion has an immediate attraction to them
.
                                 Â
RAFALIO
                   Â
Sounds good to me.
                                 Â
RANDALL
                   Â
Yeah, I like that one best.
There is general agreement all around, but before this wildfire can catch wind, Placidio wants to clarify his intent
â¦
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Okay, well, maybe you don't understand
                   Â
the question so good, but
which
of the
                   Â
great Shakespeare's plays would you
                   Â
choose to do?
                                 Â
ROBERT
                   Â
I understood you perfectlyâI am a
                   Â
great aficionado of the Bard, and I would
                   Â
propose we take on
In the Park
. That one.
                   Â
Its full name is
Shakespeare in the Park
.
The other prisoners, who've never given a second look to Robert, are suddenly on his side in a big way. Their energy gathers in a restless mummering, but they silence when Placidio puts up his hand
â
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Wait, motherfuckers, wait! There's no
                   Â
such thing, man. I don't thinkâ¦
                                 Â
ROBERT
                   Â
Uh, indeed there is. I saw it many years
                   Â
ago. More than once. It was great. They
                   Â
performed it outside, just as Shakespeare
                   Â
intended!
Rafalio, no friend of Robert's (he tried to kill Robert onceâ¦a day, for the past four years), is suddenly on his enemy's side
â
                                 Â
RAFALIO
                   Â
Yeah, I've heard of it. The best play ol'
                   Â
Bill Shakespeare ever wrote.
                                 Â
EDDIE
                   Â
I know it, too!
Shakespeare in the Park!
                   Â
They do it every year in my hometown.
                   Â
New York.
Placidio hesitates, he is not on firm footing here
â
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Okay, slow down, lookâ¦you mean, you
                   Â
saw a Shakespeare
play
, like
Othello
, or
                   Â
Richard the Third
, or
Hamlet
â¦IN THE
                   Â
PARK. Right? Yeah?
                                 Â
LUIS
                   Â
I don't know about thatâ¦it was just
                   Â
called
Shakespeare in the Park
when
                   Â
I saw it.
Charlie, thirty-four and obese, with fine features and extensive facial tattoos, completely out of his league, suddenly butts in
â
                                 Â
CHARLIE
                   Â
(
growing more sure of himself as he speaks
)
                   Â
Yeah, me tooâ¦I saw that play, too. Yeah.
                   Â
I loved it. I love Shakespeare, all of him,
                   Â
but this oneâ¦yes, is his best.
                                 Â
LUIS
                   Â
Yeah, man, it had everything.
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Like what, then? What happens in it?
                                 Â
LUIS
                   Â
Well, this kid slept with his mother, the
                   Â
queenâ¦
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
That's
Hamlet
â¦
                                 Â
RAFALIO
                   Â
Oh, yeah, and then this Dad-King killed
                   Â
his sonsâ¦
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Richard the Third
â¦
                                 Â
CHARLIE
                   Â
â¦then at the end, the sprite from the
                   Â
Garden told them all the moral!
                                 Â
PLACIDIO
                   Â
Well, that's
Midsummer Night's Dream
,
                   Â
man! You got it wrongâ
                                 Â
LUIS
                   Â
No, YOU got it wrongâit's