Hold Me Closer
Page 1
ALSO BY DAVID LEVITHAN:
Boy Meets Boy
The Realm of Possibility
Are We There Yet?
Marly’s Ghost (illustrated by Brian Selznick)
Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist (with Rachel Cohn)
Wide Awake
Naomi and Ely’s No Kiss List (with Rachel Cohn)
How They Met, and Other Stories
Love Is the Higher Law
Will Grayson, Will Grayson (with John Green)
Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares (with Rachel Cohn)
The Lover’s Dictionary
Every You, Every Me (with photographs by Jonathan Farmer)
Every Day
Invisibility (with Andrea Cremer)
Two Boys Kissing
HOLD ME CLOSER:
The Tiny Cooper Story
A musical in novel form
(Or, A novel in musical form)
by David Levithan
a companion to the novel
Will Grayson, Will Grayson
by John Green and David Levithan
DUTTON BOOKS
An imprint of Penguin Group (USA) LLC
DUTTON BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Group (USA) LLC
375 Hudson Street | New York, New York 10014
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penguin.com | A Penguin Random House Company
Copyright © 2015 by John Green and David Levithan
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Levithan, David.
Hold me closer : the Tiny Cooper story / by David Levithan.
pages cm
Companion book to: Will Grayson, Will Grayson by John Green and David Levithan.
Summary: “Larger-than-life Tiny Cooper finally gets to tell his story, from his fabulous birth and childhood to his quest for true love and his infamous parade of ex-boyfriends, in the form of a musical he wrote”— Provided by publisher.
ISBN 978-0-698-19168-6)
[1. Gays—Fiction. 2. Dating (Social customs)—Fiction. 3. Love—Fiction. 4. Musicals—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.L5798Hm 2015
[Fic]—dc23
2014039368
Edited by JULIE STRAUSS-GABEL
The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
Version_1
Contents
Also by David Levithan
Title page
Copyright
Dedication
An Introductory Note
Characters
Musical Numbers
Settings
ACT I
ACT II
Acknowledgements
For Libba,
who I would have star in every musical
and
For Chris,
who I would like to have sitting beside me whenever I see one
AN INTRODUCTORY NOTE
from Tiny Cooper:
Hold Me Closer is meant to be true. (Except for the part where people keep bursting into song—that’s only true sometimes.) No names have been changed, except if the person got really annoyed or mad that I was writing about him and asked me to change it. That said, certain ex-boyfriends did not get to decide whether or not their names would be used. If they have a problem with that, they should have never dumped me in the first place.
Like myself, this musical is meant to be loud and spectacular, although there are also some quiet moments. People who don’t understand musical theater (i.e., most of my family, and a good portion of the greater Chicago area) tend to think of it as being unrealistic. I disagree. Because what is life if not a series of loud and quiet moments shuffled together with some music thrown in? My point being: Before you put on any production of Hold Me Closer, whether it’s in your high school auditorium or on Broadway, it’s important to realize that the truth is sometimes quiet . . . and other times, it’s loud and spectacular. You don’t always get to choose which form it takes.
But I get ahead of myself. It’s best to think of this as a one-man show that happens to have lots of other people in it. I know it’s not going to be physically possible for me to star in every production—although please ask me first when you start the casting process. The musical has already changed slightly since its first epic production. That’s the thing about life and love—every time you take another look at them, there’s something else that can be revised.
For now, let me just say this: My name is Tiny Cooper, and it’s time to raise the curtain on my bombastic, baffling, and hopefully stupendous story.
CHARACTERS
(in order of appearance)
TINY COOPER, age zero to sixteen
MOM, Tiny’s mother
DAD, Tiny’s father
LYNDA, the cool lesbian babysitter
PHIL WRAYSON, Tiny’s best friend (most of the time)
COACH FRYE, a jerkface
THE GHOST OF OSCAR WILDE, as himself
EX-BOYFRIENDS #1 THROUGH #17, on parade
WILL, EX-BOYFRIEND #18, the most recent and thus most important one
DJANE, Tiny’s friend and the girl Phil Wrayson is in love with (without admitting it)
ENSEMBLE of townspeople, church choir members, baseball teammates, Pride parade participants, and such.
MUSICAL NUMBERS
ACT I
“I Was Born This Way”
Tiny
“OH! What a Big Gay Baby!”
Tiny, Mom, Dad, Ensemble
“Religion”
Tiny, Mom, Dad, Ensemble
“The Ballad of the Lesbian Babysitter”
Lynda, Tiny
“Hey, Whatcha Doing?”
Phil Wrayson, Tiny
“Second Base”
Tiny, Ensemble
“I Know It, But Why Can’t I Say It?”
Tiny, Ensemble
“Stating the Obvious”
Mom
“What Do You Do?”
Dad
“I Know This Can’t Be Easy For You”
Tiny, Dad, Ensemble
“Dude, You Couldn’t Be Gayer”
Phil Wrayson, Tiny
“The Nosetackle (Likes Tight Ends)”
Ensemble
“What Is Missing? (Love Is Missing)”
Tiny, Lynda, The Ghost of Oscar Wilde
ACT II
“Parade of Ex-boyfriends”
Tiny, His 18 Ex-boyfriends
“I Like”
Tiny, Ex-boyfriend #1
“The Size of the Package”
Tiny, Ensemble
“Close to a Kiss”
Anonymous Movie Star
“You’re Wonderful! I Don’t Want to Date You!”
Ex-boyfriend #5
“Summer of Gay”
Tiny and the Camper Chorus
“Don’t Hit Send”
The Ghost of Oscar Wilde
“Saving Myself”
Tiny, Ex-boyfriends, Ensemble
“It Wasn’t You”
Tiny
“Drunk on Love”
Phil Wrayson, Djane
“Something Else”
Tiny
“Finale”
Ensemble
ACT I
In a suburb outside Chicago, starting with Tiny’s birth sixteen years ago.
ACT II
Same suburb, only now Tiny’s dating.
ACT I
ACT I, SCENE 1
It’s a dark stage, and at first all you hear are murmurs, a heartbeat, and heavy breathing. Like, serious Lamaze. Then we see, in the middle of the stage, a large piece of paper showing two bare, spread legs, discreetly covered by a hospital sheet. The heartbeat gets louder. The breathing gets heavier and more frantic, like a dinosaur is sitting on Santa and tickling him at the same time. Finally, as it all crescendos, TINY COOPER comes into the world, crashing through the piece of paper and entering spectacularly onto the stage.
We are not going for realism here. He should not be naked and covered with amniotic fluid. That’s gross. He should not be wearing a diaper. He’s not into that. Instead, the person who emerges should be the large, stylish Tiny Cooper that you will see for the next two acts. To delineate him from Tiny at other ages, you should have him wearing a button that says AGE: 0.
Most babies come into the world crying or gasping or snotting.
Not Tiny Cooper.
He comes into the world singing.
Cue: Opening chords of “I WAS BORN THIS WAY.” This is a big, lively, belty number—because, let’s face it, if Elphaba got to sing “Defying Gravity” at the start of Wicked, she’d be much, much happier throughout the entire show. Tiny has just fallen into the world—some would say he was pushed—and already he has a sense of who he is and what he’s going to do. The music and the production value must reflect that. Sparkles, people. Lots of sparkles. Do not get stingy with the sparkles. The reason drag queens love them so much is that you can get them for cheap.
TINY:
Hello, my name is Tiny Cooper . . . what’s yours? I’ve just been born and, man, it feels good!
Cue music.
[“I WAS BORN THIS WAY”]
TINY:
I was born this way,
big-boned and happily gay.
I was born this way,
right here in the U.S. of A.
It’s pointless for you to try
to pinpoint how I became
so G-A-Y.
From my very first swish inflection,
the rainbow curved in my direction.
I’ve got brown hair,
big hips,
and green, green eyes.
And when I grow up
I’m gonna make out
with guys, guys, guys!
Why try to hide it?
What good would that do?
I was born this way
and if you don’t like it
that says enough about you.
If you find it odd,
take it up with God.
Because who else do you say
could make me shine this way?
All God’s children wear traveling shoes
whether you’ve got flat feet
or twinkle toes.
I’m going to dance right into this life
and keep dancing
as it goes.
I was born this way,
big-boned and happily gay.
I was born this way,
right here in the U.S. of A.
It’s pointless for you to try
to pinpoint how I became
so G-A-Y.
From my very first swish inflection,
the rainbow curved in my direction.
I’ve got genes that fit me well
and a spirit all my own
I was born this way—
The rest is a great unknown!
Really belting now.
I.
was.
born.
this.
way.
And I love.
the way.
I.
was.
born.
The rest
is a great unknown.
But I’m ready,
oh yes, I’m ready
to find my own!
If anyone is going to object to this musical, they will have left the theater at this point. Which is fine. That means for the rest of the time, you’ll have a crowd that really gets it.
Tiny Cooper steps over to the side of the stage, confiding in the audience. The stage clears. The spotlight is on him. (You will need a very big spotlight.)
A note on the spotlight: It should be very clear from the beginning that this is Tiny’s special place. I know plenty of people—like my best friend, Will, and my most recent ex (also named Will; long story)—who want to stay as far away from the spotlight as possible. But there are those of us who draw our power from those electric moments when everyone is watching, everyone is listening, and there is the most perfect silence you can imagine, the entire room waiting to hear whatever you will say next. Especially for those of us who ordinarily feel ignored, a spotlight is a circle of magic, with the strength to draw us from the darkness of our everyday lives.
The thing about a spotlight is that you have to step into it. You have to get onto that stage. I haven’t been ready for a lot of things, but from early on, I was ready for this.
TINY:
I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t gay, although there were definitely times I realized it more than others. And I can’t remember a time I wasn’t huge—which pretty much erased hiding as an option. This was my normal—big and gay. I would have never thought there was anything unusual about it. Except that I didn’t live alone on a dessert island. [Misspelling intentional!] No, there had to be other people around. And the reaction I got from some of them made me self-conscious.
You don’t think babies can hear you. But you’re wrong. They can hear you.
The spotlight returns to the center of the stage. TINY’S MOM is wheeling a rather large, somewhat garish pink baby carriage. TINY’S DAD is walking beside her. The CROWD is made up of neighbors, all of them nosy, many of them judgmental. As they sing “OH! WHAT A BIG GAY BABY!” you should get a sense that they are both intrigued and disturbed by having such a big gay baby in their midst. As for Mom and Dad—they are alright with having a big gay baby, but they’re tired, because having a big gay baby takes a lot of work. Not just because he wants to dance all night and demands milk shakes from his mother pretty much every hour, but because of the endless questions from neighbors and the “guidance” of family members who seem to think Mom and Dad have control over how big or how gay their big gay baby is.
Mom and Dad can no more
make me straight than they can make me short. There’s this thing called biology, and it’s calling the shots. Mom and Dad realize this. Others do not.
The tune here is an old-fashioned town-crowd melody—kind of like how the people from the town in The Music Man might sound if Harold Hill had brought an infant homosexual to town instead of wind instruments.
[“OH! WHAT A BIG GAY BABY!”]
CROWD:
Oh! What a Big Gay Baby!
He must weigh twenty pounds.
Oh! What a Big Gay Baby!
Why is he making those sounds?
TINY
(makes baby disco sounds, sort of like a gay dance club has opened on Sesame Street)
CROWD:
Oh! What a Big Gay Baby!
Feeding him must be such work!
Oh! What a Big Gay Baby!
He only falls asleep to Björk!
MOM AND DAD:
Possibly maybe . . .
Possibly maybe . . .
CROWD:
He prefers hot male nurses
and cries at ugly purses.
Has a booty and knows to shake it.
Has a pacifier and loves to take it.
Oh! What a Big Gay Baby!
Bedazzle the diapers and order them large!
Oh! What a Big Gay Baby!
Pimp his crib the size of a barge!
MOM AND DAD:
Look at this Big Gay Baby of ours—
not something you read about in Dr. Spock.
Look at our Big Gay Baby—
not what we were expecting when we were
expecting.
Hello, dear Big Gay Baby,
you might have to run before you can walk.