Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,598,536 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Cold comfort: a futuristic play of cryogenic proportions.


ACT ONE, "DIE ANOTHER DAY"

Overhead lights cast a sterile glow over a conference room dominated by a rectangular, polished wood table. A woman wearing a business suit sits at the head of the table. Three other people slump in chairs. Each wears a white smock that extends to just above bare feet bare feet

symbol of impoverishment. [Folklore: Jobes, 181]

See : Poverty
. Wisps of steam waft from the heads and exposed lower arms of the sprawled forms. Behind each misting body stands a gleaming chrome cylinder.

WOMAN: Wake up. Come on, wake up, sleepyheads. The hunched bodies groan, mumble 1. mumble - Said when the correct response is too complicated to enunciate, or the speaker has not thought it out. Often prefaces a longer answer, or indicates a general reluctance to get into a long discussion. , and begin to move.

WOMAN: Yes, sit up, that's it. Shall we have some wine and cheese? I'll bet I'll Bet was an NBC game show that aired from March 29 1965 to September 24 1965, that was created by Ralph Andrews. The host of this program was Jack Narz. It was a precursor of It's Your Bet, which aired with four different hosts during its four year run: Hal March, Tom  you're hungry. Let's take roll call first and make sure the gang's all here. I'll start with the Splendid Splinter, the greatest hitter in baseball history--Ted Williams. (No response) Step up to the plate, slugger.

TED: Oh my lord, how did I get here? Last I remember, my son told me to drink a special milkshake he'd whipped up for me. I took a swig and then everything went hazy. (Pause) I'm gonna take batting practice on that boy's behind!

WOMAN: Now, now. He was acting in your best interests. Next we have Carl Sagan--astronomer, author, skeptic, and the last known scientist to have appeared on a late-night television talk show without putting both the host and the audience to sleep.

CARL: Why yes, I'm here. Have I made contact with the great cosmic hereafter? You're not ... no, that's impossible. It would be thoroughly ironic, though, given the unwillingness of modern religious systems to conceive of Verb 1. conceive of - form a mental image of something that is not present or that is not the case; "Can you conceive of him as the president?"
envisage, ideate, imagine
 a female God. But, of course, the whole idea is irrational.

WOMAN: Indeed. Now, let's hear from Richard Feynman Noun 1. Richard Feynman - United States physicist who contributed to the theory of the interaction of photons and electrons (1918-1988)
Feynman, Richard Phillips Feynman
, physicist extraordinaire ex·tra·or·di·naire  
adj.
Extraordinary: a jazz singer extraordinaire.



[French, from Old French, from Latin extra
 and all-purpose supersmart individual.

DICK: Hello. I love surprises, and I'm certainly surprised to be here. But don't call me supersmart. Just think of me as a curious dude and a wise guy.

CARL: That's not how your scientific colleagues referred to you, as I recall.

DICK: Oh, they called me much worse names--usually while I was giving lectures. But I was never boring. How many of those stick-in-the-muds still get talked about today? Say, what day is it?

WOMAN: It's the first day of the rest of your lives in the year 2102. You are now wards of the Martha Stewart Living Martha Stewart Living is a magazine and a television show featuring entertaining and home decorating guru Martha Stewart. Both the magazine and the television program focus on the domestic arts.  Foundation.

TED: 21027 That would mean I'm, gee, 183 years old. By God, the Red Sox should have won a World Series by now.

WOMAN: Don't be silly. Something far less preposterous has happened. Our scientists finally figured out how to revive people from cryogenic sleep. None of you actually died. You just took metabolic time-outs while hanging upside-down in chrome cylinders (She points to each of the containers.), your bodies frozen solid in liquid nitrogen Noun 1. liquid nitrogen - nitrogen in a liquid state
atomic number 7, N, nitrogen - a common nonmetallic element that is normally a colorless odorless tasteless inert diatomic gas; constitutes 78 percent of the atmosphere by volume; a constituent of all living
.

CARL: Lucky I wear turtleneck sweaters, even in the summer. At least, I used to wear them. (He looks at his smock with disgust.)

WOMAN: Oh, you're all lucky. First, Martha had the foresight to acquire this company back in 2005. She had made a lot of money improving the quality of people's lives, but her firm hit a rough patch. So, she took her remaining resources and invested them in the business of improving the quantity of people's lives.

CARL: Whoever corners the market on extending human life is going to enter a financial universe of, well, billions and billions of dollars.

WOMAN: I like your style. Of course, money has lost some of its value over the past century. The 7-11 down the block charges $200 for a hot dog and a soda.

DICK; Ouch.

WOMAN: But let's look on the bright side. You're the first group to come out of the deep freeze deep freeze

see freezer.
, and we're all so happy about it here at the MSL See multiple single-level.  Foundation. It means that our scientists have succeeded in regenerating frozen biological cells. It's sort of like jump-starting a dead car battery on a winter morning. I can't reveal the complex details of our discovery. Competition is fierce out there.

DICK: Tell me anyway. I could care less about the blood sport among business types trying to squeeze big bucks out of crying medics.

WOMAN: That's cry-o-gen-ics. (She emphasizes each syllable.)

DICK: (Grinning) Whatever. You don't have to worry about me having a yard sale with your trade secrets. I'm just like every other retired Nobel laureate--I want to devote my spare time to solving the mystery of consciousness and explaining how the brain works.

CARL: You're forgetting the big questions, Dick. What are we doing here, and what do these people plan to do with us? I never put a down payment on a cryogenics cryogenics: see low-temperature physics.
cryogenics

Study and use of low-temperature phenomena. The cryogenic temperature range is from −238°F (−150°C) to absolute zero. At low temperatures, matter has unusual properties.
 capsule, yet here I sit, steam coming out of my armpits.

TED: I didn't know I was cooling my cleats in this cryogenic on-deck circle, either.

WOMAN: None of you did. We recruited you through confidential family and professional contacts. As elite members of the scientific community, you'll serve as cryogenic ambassadors to the world now that regeneration technology is a reality.

TED: You've got to be kidding. Me, a scientist? And I suppose you think Dick here can hit a curve ball and Carl can throw overhand o·ver·hand   also o·ver·hand·ed
adj.
1. Executed with the hand brought forward and down from above the level of the shoulder: an overhand pitch; an overhand stroke.

2.
.

WOMAN: You wrote a book called The Science of Hitting, didn't you? Let's not Let's Not is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It was first published in Boston University Graduate Journal in December 1954. It was written for no payment as a favour to the journal, and later appeared in the collection Buy Jupiter.  overstate the importance of academic degrees. Consider yourself just as much of a scientist as these gentlemen. (Pause) Now, we're waiting for Monroe. He runs the MSL Foundation, and he'll fill you in on what we have in store for you. A waiter enters the room carrying a tray that holds wedges of cheese, a bottle of wine, and three glasses. He puts the tray on the table and hands a card to the woman.

WOMAN: Ah, it's from Monroe. He's ready to see you. But first, eat, drink, and be merry.

TED: Wine, and cheese? Who put this Little League menu together, Bud Selig Allan Huber "Bud" Selig, Jr. (born July 30, 1934 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is the Commissioner of Major League Baseball (MLB). He was previously the team owner and administrator of the Milwaukee Brewers. ? Let's go Let's Go may refer to: Television
  • Let's Go (Philippine TV series), a teen Philippine sitcom on ABS-CBN
  • Let's Go (New Zealand TV series), a New Zealand television music show
  • Let's Go
 fishing and fry us up some real food.

WOMAN: No one goes anywhere until you meet Monroe.

CARL: Martha Stewart <noinclude></noinclude>

Martha Stewart (born Martha Helen Kostyra on August 3, 1941) is an American business magnate, author, editor and homemaking advocate. She is also a former stockbroker and fashion model.
 runs a tight ship. Where's that free-spirited Julia Child Julia Child (August 15, 1912–August 13, 2004) was a famous American cook, author, and television personality who introduced French cuisine and cooking techniques to the American mainstream through her many cookbooks and television programs. , now that we need her?

Lights dim.

ACT TWO, "BODIES POLITIC"

Ted, Carl, and Dick stand in a plush executive suite. A large window looks out on a city skyline. Oak-paneled walls accentuate an array of art deco art deco (ärt dĕkō`; är dākō`, ärt) or art moderne (är môdĕrn`, ärt)  furniture. A beefy beefy, beefyness

1. in dog conformation, used to describe overdevelopment of musculature in the hindquarters.

2. in cattle, used to designate the desirable physical conformation of a beef animal, but an undesirable character in dairy cattle.
 man in a business suit smiles from behind a mahogany desk.

MAN: Hello. Welcome to the future. (He laughs casually.) My name is Monroe. I've taken hold of the reins here at the MSL Foundation, or Martha's place, as we call it. And I believe the company's about to gallop into a position of industry leadership now that our thoroughbreds are showing some life. (He waits for a response and gets none.) Ah, by thoroughbreds I mean all of you.

CARL: We get it, sir. What we'd like to know is why we're on this ride and where it's taking us.

DICK: Yes. This situation has already gotten weirder than quantum physics quantum physics
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The branch of physics that uses quantum theory to describe and predict the properties of a physical system.



quantum physics

See quantum mechanics.
.

MONROE: Please, everyone, call me Monroe. Let's get down to business, shall we? You are our first cryogenic success stories, and success creates responsibilities.

DICK: I know what your game is, Monroe. You put me in the big chill so I could be regenerated as your director of research operations. You sly duck.

MONROE: An intriguing but inaccurate inference. Science has far surpassed anything you could imagine from your 21st century perspective. So has technology. We need all of you to attend a globally broadcast press conference tomorrow where you'll announce that MSL cryogenics extended your lives, it's the real deal. Heck, you didn't feel a thing, did you? It was like taking a long, restful rest·ful  
adj.
1. Affording, marked by, or suggesting rest; tranquil. See Synonyms at comfortable.

2. Being at rest; quiet.



rest
 nap and then, pow! You came, you thawed, you conquered death. Put it in your own words.

TED: Well, spray paint me in pinstripes and call me a Yankee. That's it? Just tell those scribblers and microphone jockeys that we're tickled to have been pickled?

MONROE: Good one. You're a natural. We'd also like you all to serve as MSL Foundation spokespersons on television shows.

CARL: It's not that I'm averse to chatting up the media, mind you. But what a waste! You're putting us out to pasture when we're still in our intellectual prime.

DICK: Not to mention the good deeds that can be accomplished with these ... what should I call them, cold capsules? Think of the many endangered wild animal species that Martha's place can save from extinction.

MONROE: We're saving a wild animal species, all right--politicians. (He leans back in his leather chair.) Remember, you come from a time when there were only a few hundred television channels. Wireless transmission advances since then have spawned 5,000 television channels, and that number is growing as we speak. And do you know what three-quarters of those channels broadcast?

CARL: (With a downcast down·cast  
adj.
1. Directed downward: a downcast glance.

2. Low in spirits; depressed. See Synonyms at depressed.


downcast
Adjective

1.
 look) Infomercials.

TED: Hey, they're not all so bad. I bought one of those singing fish (Zool.) a California toadfish (Porichthys porosissimus), called also midshipman; - so called because it produces a buzzing sound with its air bladder.

See also: Singing
 you hang on the wall. I call him Gil Hodges.

MONROE: No, Carl, not infomercials--news and public affairs shows. Nearly 4,000 channels serve up headline news and commentary all the time, day and night. Those shows are cheap to produce and highly profitable, believe you me. I think we have more people covering news than making news these days. But there aren't enough political analysts and social pundits to go around. That's why we've been cryogenically canning as many politicians as we can. Now, we can regenerate a whole army of talking heads for hire.

CARL: Which politicians are you talking about?

MONROE: Oh, let's see, there's Bill, Hillary, George W., Al, Colin ... you get the picture.

TED: How about Strom Thurmond?

MONROE: No, he's still alive. But we have an impressive stable of ready-for-prime-time pontificators waiting to come in from the cold. And each of you has led the way in making their political comebacks possible.

DICK: So, you used us to get regeneration technology up and running, and now you're going to have us sell freeze-dried blowhards for the boob tube.

MONROE: It's the natural cycle of scientific enterprise. Remember the Human Genome Project? It started out as a great DNA-dissection adventure, stimulated a raft of research into the genetics of disease, and after a few decades, morphed into a bunch of secretive DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 firms that sell medical breakthroughs directly to people who have enough money or insurance.

TED: Whew whew  
interj.
Used to express strong emotion, such as relief or amazement.


whew
interj

an exclamation of relief, surprise, disbelief, or weariness
. I think we all just got knocked on our keisters by a high, hard one under the chin.

CARL: Baseball is truly a metaphor for life, even among formerly frozen folk. I think it's time to dust myself off, crawl back into my cryogenic clubhouse, and ice myself down for another 100 years or so. Maybe then I can be put to better use. Want to join me, fellas?

Dick and Ted nod their heads in approval.

MONROE: If that's what you really want. Personal choice means so much here at Martha's place. As our motto says, it's a good thing.

Lights dim.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Bower, Bruce
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Play
Date:Dec 21, 2002
Words:1841
Previous Article:Getting warped: a new exhibit on Albert Einstein dissects his slippery science.(American Museum of Natural History, New York, New York)
Next Article:New fossil weighs in on primate origins. (Paleontology).(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
In recycling, cold is getting hot. (cryogenic cleaning of plastic waste)
How to develop and maintain an efficient deflashing operation.
Cryogenics remove PVC from PET and HDPE recycle. (polyvinyl chloride; high-density polyethylene) (Technology News)
Fresh data on the cool way to recycle. (cryogenic granulation)
Could cryogenics crystallize as an option for sand reclamation? (foundry sand)(Sand Reclamation)
Course examines cryogenics.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)
Fifty-year War on Terrorism. (Insider Report).(analysis, United States)(Brief Article)
Rubber deflashing. (Brochures).(from RMT)(Brief Article)
MYERS' SCRIPT FOR CHEEKY `AUSTIN' A BIT UNDER-POWERED.(L.A. LIFE)
COOKIES ARE VILLAGE CHRISTIAN'S CONSOLATION PRIZE ONTARIO CHR. 1, VILLAGE CHR. 0.(Sports)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles