Canadian Rajah - Softcover

Carley, Dave

 
9781927922903: Canadian Rajah

Inhaltsangabe

<p><i>Canadian Rajah</i> is the incredible -- and true -- story of Esca Brooke Daykin. He was the first-born son of the legendary "White Rajah of Sarawak" but was exiled from that country (a British colony, now part of Malaysia) to the backwoods of Eastern Ontario. Esca's very existence was erased from his birth country's history books. He waged a lifelong battle to have his true identity and parentage recognized. Esca's life spans continents, races, generations and centuries -- and only now is it being told.</p>

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Dave Carley has been a professional theatre artist for over years, with a primary focus on stage plays. His works have had over 450 productions across Canada and the United States. In addition to Canadian Rajah, they include Midnight Madness, the Governor General's Literary Award finalist Writing with our Feet, Taking Liberties, and The Last Liberal. Dave has also written for radio and television, as well as the print media.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Scene 1

Toronto, 1925. ESCA is in his garden in Lawrence Park. A magnolia tree may be shedding petals, and he sits amid them in wonder. He is neatly dressed; even when gardening he looks dapper. He also holds a drink, and an opened letter.

ESCA: Everything in my garden is from somewhere else. My magnolia tree is a hybrid from China. I purchased it at a nursery in Ottawa because I couldn't find the right variety here in Toronto. Those irises -- I bought the bulbs at a botanical garden in New Jersey. That white pine? Transplanted from my cottage just east of Kingston. (Holds up letter.) And me? According to this, I just stumbled out of the backwoods of Ontario.

(Music effect to take us back slightly in time, and across an ocean.)

Scene 2

London, England, a few months earlier. The interior of the Brooke home, upstairs, in Ranee GHITA's dressing area. GHITA sweeps in and eventually begins shedding her Edwardian-era clothes for her battle dress: a version of a baja kurung, a knee-length blouse worn over a full length dress. Like ESCA's magnolia, it too is a hybrid; one of GHITA's making, and designed for maximum impact.

GHITA: I will give him this: he's punctual.Crawford said he was yanking on the doorbell at the dot of three. But I'm a very un-punctual Ranee. When you hold all the cards, it's more fun to lay them down slowly. I'm going a little native for our little native. (Holds up the baja kurung). A baja kurung. Very Sarawak. Every time I put this on I can hear my mother's warning: "Do think this through, Ghita. Do you really want to live England, go all the way around the world -- to someplace no one has ever heard of -- (Different pronunciations.) Sarawak Sarawak Sarawak -- a place that sounds like a parrot? And live in a jungle with head-hunters? And marry that Charlie Brooke? He's so much older than you. And Charlie's reputation is so -- dubious."

"Dubious reputation." Those words were catnip to this kitty.

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