enters.
HELEN : I donât think Iâll ever get tired of this view. Come and have a look. The eighteen-footers have got their spinnakers out.
MIKE : Colin turned down eighty grand today.
HELEN : Colin?
MIKE : Iâve been hearing stories that heâs really down on his luck. Nothingâs been happening for him. I get on the phone to LA and convince them heâs a top writer, which is bloody hard given his current track record. I call him in, offer him the job and he calls me a harlot.
HELEN : Why?
MIKE : Because the storyâs being relocated to Tennessee.
HELEN : A storyâs a story wherever itâs set.
MIKE : Exactly.
HELEN : I can understand why he might be a bitâ¦
MIKE : What?
HELEN : Reluctant to work for you.
MIKE : I canât.
HELEN : Now your roles are reversed. It would be a bit hard.
MIKE : So he throws away eighty grand just to spite me? Itâs insane.
HELEN : Any luck with âLesbian Nunsâ?
MIKE : Got it through last week.
HELEN : You didnât tell me. Did you have to change the script much?
MIKE : A bit. Only one of the nuns is allowed to be lesbian, and itâs got to be a tendency. Not consummated.
HELEN : Mike, thatâs crazy. Isnât the whole point of the story that there are a lot of lesbian nuns and theyâre suffering a hell of a lot of guilt?
MIKE : Honey, you sit at my desk day after day and try and get any film through the American system and youâll realise that what Iâve done is a bloody miracle.
HELEN : Canât they show the truth of anything just for once?
MIKE : Jesus, honey. We get enough truth in our lives. We donât want it up there again on our screens.
HELEN : I know the commercial logic, but occasionally Iâd like to see the truth!
MIKE : The only truth that matters in this situation is that they have the money and if they ask me to change nuns into astronauts and lesbians into doughnuts, I will make them a movie about astronauts eating doughnuts. They ask. I give. Itâs called commerce; itâs grubby, and itâs how I paid for this view. If you donât like it, well go back to Dri-Tot Manor.
HELEN : I just canât believe people wouldnât be interested in a movie about the real situation.
MIKE : They probably would, but the men who have the money donât believe they would. And that, Iâm afraid, is an end to it.
MIKE and HELEN exit. COLIN enters and sits reading. The doorbell rings. COLIN frowns and goes to get it. Itâs KATE with a suitcase. COLIN embraces her with passion.
KATE : Kids in bed?
COLIN : [ nodding ] Even Penny. Sorry you didnât win.
KATE : I knew we wouldnât. Still. [ She shrugs .] That was a warm welcome. Iâm surprised.
COLIN : So am I. I was planning to be cold and distant.
KATE : Bad time while I was gone?
COLIN : Awful. Shopping without lists is a major trauma, and our daughterâs been a monster.
KATE : You said on the phone she had a new boyfriend.
COLIN : Yes.
KATE : He goes to an ordinary high school?
COLIN : Yes.
KATE : That should make you pleased.
COLIN : He was kicked out of his private school for selling dope in the toilets.
KATE : She told you this?
COLIN : No, I listen to the phone calls on the extension. How was the Dorchester?
KATE : Overrated.
COLIN : And the garden gnome?
KATE : [ embarrassed ] Oh, I, er, didnât see much of him. He found himself a native.
COLIN : Black lady?
KATE : English rose. Howâs work?
COLIN : On to the second draft of the screenplay. No money in sight.
KATE : Tell me something cheerful.
COLIN : Iâm very glad to see you home.
KATE : [ to the audience ] And I was very glad to be home. Ian didnât find an English rose. He found me, but what Colin doesnât know wonât hurt him. Iâd been promoted, Iâd been unfaithful, and the marriage was back on an even keel.
COLIN : I did some thinking about the future while you were away. Did
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