Jerusalem (NHB Modern Plays)
4.5/5
()
Rebellion
Theater
Mythology
Conflict
Celebration
Coming of Age
Mentor
Chosen One
Found Family
Quest
Damsel in Distress
Wise Old Man
Dragon
Supernatural Beings
Power of Nature
Nature
Performance
Drugs
Family
Identity
About this ebook
On St George's Day, the morning of the local country fair, Johnny 'Rooster' Byron, local waster and Lord of Misrule, is a wanted man. The council officials want to serve him an eviction notice, his son wants to be taken to the fair, a vengeful father wants to give him a serious kicking, and a motley crew of mates wants his ample supply of drugs and alcohol.
Jerusalem premiered at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in 2009, directed by Ian Rickson and starring Mark Rylance in an astonishing performance as Johnny Byron. It transferred to the West End in 2010.
'Unarguably one of the best dramas of the twenty-first century' Guardian
'Tender, touching, and blessed with both a ribald humour and a haunting sense of the mystery of things... one of the must-see events of the summer' Telegraph
'Jez Butterworth's gorgeous, expansive new play keeps coming at its audience in unpredictable gusts, rolling from comic to furious, from winsome to bawdy' Observer
'Storming... restores one's faith in the power of theatre' Independent
'Show of the year'Time Out
Jez Butterworth
Jez Butterworth is one of the UK's leading playwrights. His plays include: Mojo (Royal Court Theatre, London, 1995; West End, 2013); The Night Heron (Royal Court, 2002); The Winterling (Royal Court, 2006); Parlour Song (Atlantic Theater, New York, 2008; Almeida Theatre, London, 2009); Jerusalem (Royal Court, 2009; West End, 2010; New York, 2011); The River (Royal Court, 2012); The Ferryman (Royal Court and West End, 2017) and The Hills of California (West End, 2024). Mojo won the George Devine Award, the Olivier Award for Best Comedy and the Writers' Guild, Critics' Circle and Evening Standard Awards for Most Promising Playwright. Jerusalem won the Best Play Award at the Critics' Circle, Evening Standard and WhatsOnStage.com Awards, and was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play. The Ferryman won the Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Play, and the Critics' Circle, Olivier and WhatsOnStage Awards for Best New Play, as well as the 2019 Tony Award for Best Play. His screenwriting credits include Fair Game (2010), Get On Up (2014), Edge of Tomorrow (2014), Black Mass (2015), Spectre (2015), Ford v Ferrari (2019), and Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023). For TV, he created and wrote the comedy series Mammals for Amazon Studios, and created the historical fantasy drama Britannia for Sky and Amazon Prime. In 2007, he won the E.M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 2019 he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
Read more from Jez Butterworth
The Ferryman (NHB Modern Plays) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mojo (NHB Modern Plays) Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Winterling (NHB Modern Plays) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jez Butterworth Plays: Two (NHB Modern Plays) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jez Butterworth Plays: One Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Night Heron (NHB Modern Plays) Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Parlour Song (NHB Modern Plays) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Jerusalem (NHB Modern Plays)
30 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Text of this outstanding play, so memorably portrayed by a Mark Rylance-led cast on the West End and Broadway in 2009-11. The writing is extremely witty and sharp, also tersely expressive and dense in meaning, leading to the Shakespearian comparisons several reviewers have identified. This and the brief but meaningful stage directions reward the reading of this playtext. What is still missing here is some analysis, unpicking the various references to Blake's hymn, to St George, to May-day revels, presumably lamenting some kind of lost or threatened vitality in English culture, presumably again embodied in the character of the play's hero, Rooster Byron.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jerusalem is about many things, from the hard partying gang that hangs about Rooster's rickety Airstream trailer, to the sadness of the discrimination against Romanys - Gitanes - Gypsies - of which he turns out to be one. Condemned to making money as a daredevil in his youth and a blood donor in middle age, Rooster is determined to live large - while the local town does its utmost to boot him out. In between, we are treated to the magic of central England, the fairies and giants and mystical beings that inhabit the woods and glens that for centuries have provided our legends. From Robin Hood to hobbits to Shrek, this setting is as fertile as they come, and author Jez Butterworth milks it to its fullest.The first two acts are riotously funny, setting us up for the dismal fall, which is obvious from the beginning - this can't last. And it doesn't. But along the way we are treated to Rooster's intelligence, his understanding of the way things work, and his role in them. It's a remarkable story of coping and survival in a hostile environment, buried in a haze of gin and marijuana, as anybody in his situation might descend to. To that point, Jerusalem is highly believable. This could (and of course has been) going on in real life. Only the wonderfully involved massive and mammoth lies that Rooster spins are obviously made up. He has made himself into one of the great legends of the woods, remaining Rooster while generation after generation of teenagers in search of something more hang out for a while and move on.A delightfully complex story, though readers don't have to get all this from reading it. As a straight story it is highly entertaining. But make no mistake, there is a masterpiece lurking in these pages.
Book preview
Jerusalem (NHB Modern Plays) - Jez Butterworth
Jez Butterworth
JERUSALEM
CONTENTS
Title Page
Dedication
Original Production
Characters
Act One
Act Two
Act Three
About the Author
Copyright and Performing Rights Information
For Gilly
Jerusalem was first performed at the Royal Court Theatre Downstairs, London, on 15 July 2009 (previews from 10 July), with the following cast:
The production transferred to the Apollo Theatre, London, on 10 February 2010 (previews from 28 January), with the same cast and creative team (except the roles of Dawn, which was played by Amy Beth Hayes, and Marky, which was played by Charlie Dunbar-Aldred / Lennie Harvey / Jake Noble).
It was produced by Sonia Friedman Productions, Royal Court Theatre Productions, Old Vic Productions, in association with Lee Menzies.
CHARACTERS
in order of appearance
PHAEDRA
MS FAWCETT
MR PARSONS
JOHNNY ‘ROOSTER’ BYRON
GINGER
PROFESSOR
LEE
DAVEY
PEA
TANYA
WESLEY
DAWN
MARKY
TROY WHITWORTH
PROLOGUE
A curtain with the faded Cross of St George. A proscenium adorned with cherubs and woodland scenes. Dragons. Maidens. Devils. Half-and-half creatures. Across the beam:
– THE ENGLISH STAGE COMPANY –
A drum starts to beat. Accordions strike up. Pipes. The lights come down. A fifteen-year-old girl, PHAEDRA, dressed as a fairy, appears on the apron. She curtsies to the boxes and sings, unaccompanied.
PHAEDRA.
And did those feet in ancient time,
Walk upon England’s mountains green,
And was the holy lamb of God,
On England’s pleasant pastures seen.
She beams, pulls a string and the wings flap.
And did the Countenance Divine,
Shine forth upon those clouded hills,
And was Jerusalem builded here,
Among those dark satanic –
Thumping music. She flees. The curtain rises upon…
ACT ONE
England at midnight. A clearing in a moonlit wood. At the back of the clearing stands an old forty-foot mobile home. The deafening bass pumps from within, and from speakers on the roof. People dancing wildly, with abandon. Through the windows we can glimpse more people dancing. They’re shouting to be heard, but we can’t hear what.
Blackout. Music continues, until…
Birdsong.
Now we can see that the mobile home stands in a fairly permanent state. The old Wessex flag (a golden Wyvern dragon against a red background) flies from one end. An old rusted metal railway sign screwed to the mobile home reads ‘Waterloo’.
A porch stands out front – an old mouldy couch stands on the porch deck. Lots of junk. An old hand-cranked air-raid siren. Stuck to the porch post is an old submarine klaxon. An old record player, with a stand-alone speaker. An old American-style fridge. Stacks of old LPs.
Underneath, a chicken coop. Chopped wood under a lean-to. Rubbish. Empty bottles. A car seat, a swing. An old windchime. A garden table, and four red Coca-Cola plastic chairs. A rusty Swingball set.
In the middle of the copse, the remains of a smashed television.
A man, PARSONS, in a suit with a reflective jacket and case enters the copse. He takes a photograph of the smashed television. Another of the mess on the table. He gingerly picks his way to the front door.
He is followed by a woman, FAWCETT, dressed the same. With a clipboard. She surveys the clearing.
FAWCETT. Time.
PARSONS. Eight fifty-nine and fifty-five. Six. Seven. Nine o’clock.
She nods. He knocks on the door.
Mr Byron? Mr John Byron? Johnny Byron? (Knocks.) John Rooster Byron.
FAWCETT (rebuking). Parsons.
PARSONS (apologetic). Ma’am.
FAWCETT. Stand back.
He does.
Mr Byron? (She knocks.) Mr Byron? Would you care to step outside for a moment? (Pause. Knocks.) Mr Byron? (Pause.) We know you’re in there, Byron. Would you give us a moment of your time? Would you like to step outside and face the music for me?
Silence. A distant church bell rings nine. She touches up her lipstick. PARSONS removes a digital video camera from his bag.
Ready?
PARSONS. Rolling.
FAWCETT. Linda Fawcett, Kennet and Avon Senior Community Liaison Officer. 9 a.m., 23rd April. Serving Notice F-17003 in contravention of the Public Health Act of 1878, and the Pollution Control and Local Government Order 1974.
Loud barking can be heard from inside.
PARSONS. I never knew he had –
FAWCETT. He doesn’t.
PARSONS. But –
FAWCETT. That is not a dog, Parsons.
The barking gets louder. More ferocious.
Very funny, Mr Byron. Extremely amusing.
Louder still. Snarling.
PARSONS. Are you sure?
FAWCETT. Shut up, Parsons.
PARSONS. Rolling –
Plaintive howling throughout. A hatch opens on the top of the mobile home. A head appears, wearing a Second World War helmet and goggles, with loudhailer, like out of the top of a tank. Barking. The camera pans up to it. It disappears sharply.
FAWCETT. Under Section 62 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act, supported by Order 24, the County Court ruling which was heard in Salisbury County Court on 12th March –
The loudhailer appears out of a window at the side of the vehicle to the blind side of the camera and barks over:
– and also employs the use of Order 113 of the Rules of the County Court. With the aforementioned notice, Kennet and Avon include a brochure outlining Unauthorised Encampment Policy, the Strategy and Partnership Section, issue date December 2002, reference 4.06.0001006.
She removes a piece of paper and a staple gun. She goes over to the front door and solemnly staples the page to the door. Four, five times.
(Calling out through the crack in the door.) Goodbye, Mr Byron. And see you tomorrow at 9 a.m. sharp, sir. (She turns.) Parsons.
She leads the way.
PARSONS (to himself). I’ll say this. It’s a lovely spot.
They leave. A man of about fifty, JOHNNY, sticks his head out the top of the trailer. He has the loudhailer.
JOHNNY. Testing. Testing, one two. This is Rooster Byron’s dog, Shep, informing Kennet and Avon Council to go fuck itself. Woof woof!
The hatch shuts. Impossibly fast, the front door opens and the same man appears. Wiry. Weathered; drinker’s mug. Bare chest. Helmet. Goggles. Loudhailer. Despite a slight limp, he moves with the balance of a dancer, or animal.
Hear ye, hear ye. With the power invested in me by Rooster Johnny Byron – who can’t be here on account of the fact he’s in Barbados this week with Kate Moss – I, his faithful hound Shep, hereby instruct Kennet and Avon to tell Bren Glewstone, and Ros Taylor, and her twat son, and all those sorry cunts on the New Estate, Rooster Byron ain’t going nowhere. Happy St George’s Day. Now kiss my beggar arse, you Puritans!
In one practised move he lets off an unexpected airhorn blare into the loudhailer, a long blast. And with that he hangs the loudhailer on a hook (like he does this every day), lifts his goggles, throws the needle on the record player, flicks