Prologue
As the audience enters, an organist takes his place at a huge eccentric organ to the side of the stage and begins to play funeral music. Before a front drop depicting in a honeycombed beehive the class system of mid-19th century England two gravediggers appear, carrying shovels, and begin to dig a grave downstage center. As they dig they disappear six feet into the earth, leaving piles of dirt on the upstage side.
At curtain time a police warden appears, looks at his watch, hurrying them. Two workmen enter. They pull down the drop. The deafeningly shrill sound of a factory whistle. Blackout.
The lights come up to reveal the company. A man steps forward and sings.
MAN:
Attend the tale of Sweeney
Todd.
His skin was pale and his eye was odd.
He shaved the
faces of gentlemen
Who never thereafter were heard of again.
He
trod a path that few have trod,
Did Sweeney Todd,
The Demon
Barber of Fleet Street.
ANOTHER MAN:
He kept a shop in
London town,
Of fancy clients and good renown.
And what if none
of their souls were saved?
They went to their maker impeccably
shaved
By Sweeney,
By Sweeney Todd,
The Demon Barber of
Fleet Street.
(A blinding light cuts down the stage as an upstage iron door opens. Two men enter. They carry a body in a bag, tied at both ends with rope. They are followed by a woman carrying a tin canister marked "Flour." They walk to the edge of the grave and unceremoniously dump the body in it. The woman opens the canister and pours black ashes into the hole. This action covers the next verse of the song)
COMPANY:
Swing your razor wide,
Sweeney!
Hold it to the skies!
Freely flows the blood of
those
Who moralize!
(Various members of the company step forward and sing)
SOLOISTS:
His needs were few, his room
was bare:
A lavabo and a fancy chair,
A mug of suds and a
leather strop,
An apron, a towel, a pail and a mop.
For
neatness he deserves a nod,
Does Sweeney Todd,
COMPANY:
The
Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
WOMEN:
Inconspicuous Sweeney
was,
Quick and quiet and clean 'e was.
Back of his smile, under
his word,
Sweeney heard music that nobody heard.
Sweeney
pondered and Sweeney planned,
Like a perfect machine 'e
planned.
Sweeney was smooth, Sweeney was subtle,
Sweeney would
blink and rats would scuttle.
{The men join in singing, voices overlapping, in a gradual crescendo)
Sweeney was smooth,
Sweeney was subtle,
Sweeney would blink and rats would
scuttle.
Inconspicuous Sweeney was,
Quick and quiet and clean
'e was,
Like a perfect machine 'e was,
Was
Sweeney!
Sweeney!
Sweeney!
Sweeeeeneeeeey!
(TODD rises out of the grave and sings as the company repeats his words)
TODD AND COMPANY:
Attend the tale of Sweeney
TODD.
He served a dark and a vengeful god.
TODD:
What
happened then — well, that's the play,
And he wouldn't want us
to give it away,
Not Sweeney,
TODD AND COMPANY:
Not
Sweeney TODD,
The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. ..
(The scene
blacks out. The bells of a clock tower chine. Early morning light
comes up. ..)
ACT I
A street by the London docks. A small boat appears from the back. In it are sweeney TODD, ANTHONY hope and the pilot. ANTHONY is a cheerful country-bom young ship's first mate with a duffel bag slung over his shoulder. TODD is a heavy-set, saturnine man in his forties who might, say, be a blacksmith or a dockhand. There is about him an air of brooding, slightly nerve-chilling self-absorption.
ANTHONY (Sings):
I
have sailed the world, beheld its wonders
From the Dardanelles
To
the mountains of Peru,
But there's no place like London!
I feel
home again.
I could hear the city bells
Ring whatever I would
do.
No, there's no pl —
TODD (Sings grimly):
No,
there's no place like London.
ANTHONY (Surprised at the interruption): Mr. TODD, sir?
TODD (Sings):
You are
young.
Life has been kind to you.
You will learn
{They step out of the boat, music under)
It is here we go our several ways. Farewell, ANTHONY, I will not soon forget the good ship Bountiful nor the young man who saved nay life.
ANTHONY: There's no cause to thank me for that, sir. It would have been a poor Christian indeed who'd have spotted you pitching and tossing on that raft and not given the alarm.
TODD: There's many a Christian would have done just that and not lost a wink's sleep for it, either.
(A ragged BEGGAR WOMAN suddenly appears)
BEGGAR
WOMAN {Approaching, holding out bowl to ANTHONY, sings):
Alms! . .
. Alms! ...
For a miserable woman
On a miserable chilly morning
. . .
(ANTHONY drops a coin in her bowl)
Thank yer, sir, thank yer.
{Softly, suddenly leering in a mad way)
'Ow
would you like a little squiff, dear,
A little jig jig,
A
little bounce around the bush?
Wouldn't you like to push me
crumpet?
It looks to me, dear,
Like you got plenty there to
push.
{She grabs at him. As ANTHONY starts back in embarrassment, she turns instantly and pathetically to TODD, who tries to keep his back to her)
Alms! ... Alms! .. .
For a
pitiful woman
Wot's got wanderin' wits ...
Hey, don't I know
you, mister?
{She peers intently at him)
TODD: Must you glare at me, woman? Off with you, off, I say!
BEGGAR WOMAN
(Smiling vacantly):
Then 'ow would you like to fish me squiff,
mister?
We'll go jig jig,
A little —
TODD (Making a gesture as if to strike her): Off, I said. To the devil with you!
(She scuttles away, turns to give him a piercing look, then wanders off)
BEGGAR WOMAN (Singing as she goes) •:.
Alms!
. .. Alms! ...
For a desperate woman ...
(Music continues under)
ANTHONY (A little bewildered): Pardon me, sir, but
there's no need to fear the likes of her. She was only a half-crazed
BEGGAR WOMAN. London's full of them.
TODD (Half to himself, half
to ANTHONY): I beg your indulgence, boy. My mind is far from easy,
for in these once-familiar streets I feel the chill of ghostly
shadows everywhere. Forgive me.
ANTHONY: There's nothing to
forgive.
TODD: Farewell, Anthony.
ANTHONY: Mr. TODD, before we
part —
TODD (Suddenly fierce): What is it?
ANTHONY: I have
honored my promise never to question you. Whatever brought you to
that sorry shipwreck is your affair. And yet, during those many weeks
of the voyage home, I have come to think of you as a friend and, if
trouble lies ahead for you in London ... if you need help — or
money ...
TODD (Almost shouting): No!
(ANTHONY starts,
perplexed; TODD makes a placating gesture, sings quietly and
intensely)
There's a hole in the world
Like a great black
pit
And the vermin of the world
Inhabit it
And its morals
aren't worth
What a pig could spit
And it goes by the name of
London.
At the top of the hole
Sit the privileged
few,
Making mock of the vermin
In the lower zoo,
Turning
beauty into filth and greed.
I too
Have sailed the world
and seen its wonders,
For the cruelty of men
Is as wondrous as
Peru,
But there's no place like London!
(Pause, music under, then as if in a trance)
There was a barber and his
wife,
And she was beautiful.
A foolish barber and his wife.
She
was his reason and his life,
And she was beautiful.
And she was
virtuous.
And he was —
(Shrugs)
Naive.
There
was another man who saw
That she was beautiful,
A pious vulture
of the law
Who with a gesture of his claw
Removed the barber
from his plate.
Then there was nothing but to wait
And she
would fall,
So soft,
So young,
So lost,
And oh, so
beautiful!
(Pauses, music under)
ANTHONY. And the lady,
sir — did she — succumb?
TODD:
Oh, that was many years ago
...
I doubt if anyone would know.
{Speaks, music under)
Now, leave me, Anthony, I beg of you. There's somewhere
I must go, something I must find out. Now. And alone.
ANTHONY: But
surely we will meet again before I'm off to Plymouth!
TODD: If you
want, you may well find me. Around Fleet Street, I wouldn't
wonder.
ANTHONY: Well, until then, Mr. TODD.
(ANTHONY
starts off down the street. TODD stands a moment alone in thought,
then starts down the street in the opposite direction)
TODD
(Sings):
There's a hole in the world
Like a great black pit
And
it's filled with people
Who are filled with shit
And the vermin
of the world
Inhabit it...
(As TODD disappears, we see MRS. LOVETT 's pie-shop. Above it is any empty apartment which is reached by an outside staircase. MRS. LOVETT, a vigorous, slatternly woman in her forties, is flicking flies off the trays of pies with a dirty rag as she sings or hums. TODD appears at the end of the street and moves slowly toward the pie-shop, looking around as if remembering. Seeing the pie-shop he pauses a moment at some distance, gazing at it and at MRS. LOVETT, who has now picked up a wicked-looking knife and starts chopping suet. After a beat, TODD moves toward the shop, hesitates and then enters. MRS. LOVETT does not notice him until his shadow passes across her. She looks up, knife in air, and screams, freezing him in his tracks)
MRS. LOVETT: A customer!
(TODD has started out in alarm. MRS. LOVETT sings)
Wait! What's yer rush? What's yer hurry?
(She sticks the knife into the counter)
You gave me such a —
(She wipes her hands on her apron)
Fright. I thought you was a ghost.
Half a
minute, can'tcher?
Sit! Sit ye down!
(Forcing him into a chair)
Sit!
All I meant is that I
Haven't seen a
customer for weeks.
Did you come here for a pie, sir?
(TODD nods. She flicks a bit of dust off a pie with her rag)
Do
forgive me if me head's a little vague —
Ugh!
(She plucks something off a pie, holds it up)
What is that?
But you'd
think we had the plague —
(She drops it on the floor and stamps on it)
From the way that people —
(She flicks something off a pie with her finger)
Keep avoiding —
(Spotting it moving)
No you don't!
(She smacks it with her hand)
Heaven knows I try, sir!
(Lifts her hand, looks at it)
Ick!
(She wipes it on the edge of the counter)
But there's no one comes in even to inhale —
Tsk!
(She blows the last dust off the pie as she brings it to him)
Right you are, sir. Would you like a drop of ale?
(TODD nods)
Mind you, I can't hardly blame them —
(Pouring a tankard of ale)
These are probably the
worst pies in London,
I know why nobody cares to take them —
I
should know,
I make them.
But good? No,
The worst pies in
London —
Even that's polite.
The worst pies in London —
If
you doubt it, take a bite.
(He does)
Is that just
disgusting?
You have to concede it.
It's nothing but crusting
—
Here, drink this, you'll need it —
(She puts the ale in front of him)
The worst pies in London —
(During the following, she slams lumps of dough on the counter and rolls them out, grunting frequently as she goes)
And no wonder with the
price of meat
What it is
(Grunt)
When you get it.
(Grunt)
Never
(Grunt)
Thought I'd
live to see the day men'd think it was a treat
Finding
poor
(Grunt)
Animals
(Grunt)
Wot are
dying in the street.
Mrs. Mooney has a pie shop,
Does a
business, but I notice something weird —
Lately all her
neighbors' cats have disappeared.
(Shrugs)
Have to hand
it to her —
Wot I calls
Enterprise,
Popping pussies into
pies.
Wouldn't do in my shop —
Just the thought of it's
enough to make you sick.
And I'm telling you them pussy cats is
quick.
No denying times is hard, sir —
Even harder than
The
worst pies in London.
Only lard and nothing more —
(As TODD gamely tries another mouthful)
Is that just
revolting?
All greasy and gritty,
It looks like it's
molting,
And tastes like —
Well, pity
A woman alone
With
limited wind
And the worst pies in London!
(Sighs heavily)
Ah sir,
Times is hard. Times is hard.
(She
finishes one of the crusts with a flourish, then notices
TODD
having difficulty with his pie, speaks) Spit it out, dear. Go on. On
the floor. There's worse things than that down there. (As he does)
That's my boy.
TODD: Isn't that a room up there over the shop? If
times are so hard, why don't you rent it out? That should bring in
something.
MRS. LOVETT: Up there? Oh, no one will go near it.
People think it's haunted. You see — years ago, something happened
up there. Something not very nice.
(Sings)
There was a
barber and his wife,
And he was beautiful,
A proper artist with
a knife,
But they transported him for life.
(Sighs)
And he was beautiful...
(Speaks, music continuing under)
Barker,
his name was — Benjamin Barker.
TODD: Transported? What was his
crime?
MRS. LOVETT: Foolishness.
(Sings)
He had this
wife, you see,
Pretty little thing.
Silly little nit
Had her
chance for the moon on a string —
Poor thing. Poor thing.
(As she sings, her narration is acted out. First we see the pretty young wife in the empty upstairs room dancing her household chores. During the following (adJUDGE and his obsequious assistant, the BEADLE, approach the house, gazing up lecherously. The wife remains demure, sewing)
There were these two, you see,
Wanted her like
mad,
One of 'em a JUDGE,
T'other one his BEADLE.
Every day
they'd nudge
And they'd wheedle.
But she wouldn't budge
From
her needle.
Too bad. Pure thing.
(Far upstage, in very dim
light, shapes appear. A swirl of cloth, glints of jewels, the faces
of people masked as animals and demons. During the following lyric,
the wife takes an imaginary baby from an imaginary cot and sits on
the
floor, cradling it in her arms as she sobs)
So they
merely shipped the poor bugger off south, they did,
Leaving her
with nothing but grief and a year-old kid.
Did she use her head
even then? Oh no, God forbid!
Poor fool.
Ah, but there was
worse yet to come —
(Intake of breath)
Poor thing.
(Again the shapes appear, this time a bit more distinctly.
MRS. LOVETT (speaks, musingly)
JOHANNA, that
was the baby's name . . . Pretty little JOHANNA. . .
(Drifts off in reminiscence)
TODD (Tensely): Go on.
MRS. LOVETT
(Eyeing TODD sharply): My, you do like a good story, don't you?
(The BEADLE reappears, gazing up at the wife, miming in a solicitous manner for her to come down. MRS. LOVETT, warming to the tale, sings)
Well, BEADLE calls on her, all polite,
Poor thing,
poor thing.
The JUDGE, he tells her, is all contrite,
He blames
himself for her dreadful plight,
She must come straight to his
house tonight!
Poor thing, poor thing.
(Excited, almost gleeful)
Of course, when she goes there,
Poor thing, poor
thing.
They're havin' this ball all in masks.
(The shapes are now clear. A ball is in progress at the JUDGE'5 house: the company, wearing grotesque masks, is dancing a slow minuet. The BEADLE, leading the wife, appears, moving with her through the dancers. He gives her champagne. She looks dazedly around, terrified)
There's no one she knows there,
Poor dear, poor
thing.
She wanders tormented, and drinks,
Poor thing.
The
JUDGE has repented, she thinks,
Poor thing.
"Oh, where is
JUDGE TURPIN?" she asks.
(During the following, (Ac JUDGE appears, tears off his mask, then his cloak, revealing himself naked. The wife screams as he reaches for her, struggling wildly as the BEADLE hurls her to the floor. He holds her there as the JUDGE mounts her and, the masked dancers pirouette around the ravishment, giggling)
He was there, all right —
Only not so
contrite!
She wasn't no match for such craft, you see,
And
everyone thought it so droll.
They figured she had to be daft, you
see,
So all of 'em stood there and laughed, you see.
Poor
soul!
Poor thing!
TODD (A wild shout): Would no one have mercy
on her?
(The dumb show vanishes. Music stops. TODD and MRS. LOVETT gaze at each other)
MRS. LOVETT (Coolly): So it is you
— Benjamin Barker.
TODD (Frighteningly vehement): Not Barker!
Not Barker! Todd now! Sweeney Todd! Where is she?
MRS. LOVETT: So
changed! Good God, what did they do to you down there in bloody
Australia or wherever?
TODD: Where is my wife? Where's Lucy?
MRS.
LOVETT: She poisoned herself. Arsenic from the apothecary on the
corner. I tried to stop her but she wouldn't listen to me.
TODD:
And my daughter?
MRS. LOVETT: JOHANNA? He's got her.
TODD: He?
JUDGE TURPIN?
MRS. LOVETT: Even he had a conscience tucked away, I
suppose. Adopted her like his own. You could say it was good luck for
her .. . almost.
TODD: Fifteen years sweating in a living hell on
a trumped up charge. Fifteen years dreaming that, perhaps, I might
come home to a loving wife and child.
(Strikes ferociously on the
pie counter with his fists) Let them quake in their boots — JUDGE
TURPIN and the BEADLE — for their hour has come.
MRS. LOVETT
(Awed): You're going to — get 'em? You? A bleeding little nobody of
a runaway convict? Don't make me laugh. You'll never get His 'igh and
Mightiness! Nor the BEADLE neither. Not in a million years.
(No
reaction from TODD)
You got any money?
(Still no
reaction)
Listen to me! You got any money?
TODD: No money.
MRS.
LOVETT: Then how you going to live even?
TODD: I'll live. If I
have to sweat in the sewers or in the plague hospital, I'll live —
and I'll have them.
MRS. LOVETT: Oh, you poor thing! You poor
thing!
(A sudden thought)
Wait!
(She disappears behind a
curtained entrance leading to her parlor. For a beat TODD stands
alone, almost exalted. returns with a razor case. She
holds it out to him)
See! It don't have to be the sewers or the
plague hospital. When they come for the little girl, I hid 'em. I
thought, who knows? Maybe the poor silly blighter'll be back again
someday and need 'em. Cracked in the head, wasn't I? Times as bad as
they are, I could have got five, maybe ten quid for 'em, any day.
See? You can be a barber again. (Music begins. She opens the case for
him to look inside. TODD stands a long moment gazing down at the
case) My, them handles is chased silver, ain't they?
TODD: Silver,
yes.
(Quietly, looking into the box, sings)
These are my
friends.
See how they glisten.
(Picks up a small razor)
See
this one shine,
How he smiles in the light.
My friend, my
faithful friend.
(Holding it to his ear, feeling the edge with his
thumb)
Speak to me, friend.
Whisper, I'll listen.
(Listening)
I
know, I know —
You've been locked out of sight
All these
years —
Like me, my friend.
Well, I've come home
To find
you waiting.
Home,
And we're together,
And we'll do
wonders,
Won't we?
(MRS. LOVETT, who has been looking over
his shoulder,
starts to feel his other ear lightly, absently, in
her own
trance. TODD lays the razor back in the box and picks out
a
larger one. They sing simultaneously)
TODD:
You there,
my friend.
Come, let me hold you.
Now, with a sigh
You grow
warm
In my hand,
My friend,
My clever friend.
{Putting it
back)
Rest now, my friends.
Soon I'll unfold you.
Soon
you'll know splendors
You never have dreamed
All your days,
My
lucky friends.
Till now your shine
Was merely
silver.
Friends
You shall drip rubies,
You'll soon drip
precious
Rubies. ..
MRS. LOVETT:
I'm your friend too,
Mr. TODD.
If you only knew, Mr. TODD —
Ooh, Mr. TODD,
You're
warm
In my hand.
You've come home.
Always had a fondness for
you,
I did.
Never you fear, Mr. TODD,
You can move in
here,
Mr. TODD.
Splendors you never have
dreamed
All your
days
Will be yours.
I'm your friend.
Don't they shine
beautiful?
Silver's good enough for me,
Mr. T.
(TODD
holds up the biggest razor to the light as the music soars sweetly,
then stops. He speaks into the silence)
TODD: My right arm is
complete again!
(Lights dim except for a scalding spot on the
razor as music blares forth from both the organ and the orchestra.
The company, including the JUDGE and the BEADLE, appears and
sings)
COMPANY:
Lift your razor high, Sweeney!
Hear it
singing, "Yes!"
Sink it in the rosy skin
Of
righteousness!
(Variously)
His voice was soft, his manner
mild.
He seldom laughed but he often smiled,
He'd seen how
civilized men behave.
He never forgot and he never forgave,
Not
Sweeney,
Not Sweeney TODD,
The Demon Barber of Fleet
Street...
(They disappear. There is a moment of darkness in which we hear the trilling and twittering of songbirds. Light comes up on the facade of JUDGE TURPIN's mansion. A bird seller enters carrying a bizarre construction of little wicker birdcages tied together. It is in these that the birds are singing. At an upper level of the JUDGE's mansion appears a very young, exquisitely beautiful girl with a long mane of shining blonde hair. This is JOHANNA. For a moment she stands disconsolate, then her eyes fall on the birds)
JOHANNA: And how are they today?
BIRD SELLER:
Hungry as always, Miss JOHANNA.
(He lifts the cages up to
her)
JOHANNA (Sings):
Green finch and linnet bird,
Nightingale,
blackbird,
How is it you sing?
How can you jubilate,
Sitting
in cages,
Never taking wing?
Outside the sky waits,
Beckoning,
beckoning,
Just beyond the bars.
How can you remain,
Staring
at the rain,
Maddened by the stars?
How is it you
sing
Anything?
How is it you sing?
Green finch and linnet
bird,
Nightingale, blackbird,
How is it you sing?
Whence
comes this melody constantly flowing?
Is it rejoicing or merely
halloing?
Are you discussing or fussing
Or simply dreaming?
Are
you crowing?
Are you screaming?
Ringdove and robinet,
Is it
for wages,
Singing to be sold?
Have you decided it's
Safer
in cages,
Singing when you're told?
(ANTHONY enters. Instantly
he sees her and stands transfixed by her beauty)
My cage has many
rooms,
Damask and dark.
Nothing there sings,
Not even my
lark.
Larks never will, you know,
When they're captive.
Teach
me to be more adaptive.
Green finch and linnet bird,
Nightingale,
blackbird,
Teach me how to sing.
If I cannot fly,
Let me
sing.
(She gazes into the middle distance disconsolately)
ANTHONY
(Gazing at her, sings softly):
I have sailed the world,
Beheld
its wonders,
From the pearls of Spain
To the rubies of
Tibet,
But not even in London
Have I seen such a wonder . .
.
(Breathlessly)
Lady look at me look at me miss oh
Look at
me please oh
Favor me favor me with your glance.
Ah, miss,
What
do you what do you see off
There in those trees oh
Won't you
give won't you give me a chance?
Who would sail to Spain
For
all its wonders,
When in Kearney's Lane
Lies the greatest
wonder yet?
Ah, miss,
Look at you look at you pale
and
Ivory-skinned oh
Look at you looking so sad so
queer.
Promise
Not to retreat to the darkness
Back of your
window
Not till you not till you look down here.
Look
at
ANTHONY. JOHANNA:
Me! Green finch and linnet bird,
Look
at Nightingale, blackbird,
Me! Teach me how to sing.
If I
cannot fly,
Look at me .. . Let me sing ...
(As JOHANNA turns back to go inside, their eyes meet and the song dies on their lips. A hushed moment. Then suddenly a clawlike hand darts out from a pile of trash. ANTHONY jumps and looks down to see the BEGGAR WOMAN, who has been sleeping in the garbage under a discarded shawl, thrusting her bowl at him. JOHANNA, frightened, slips back out of sight)
BEGGAR WOMAN (Sings):
Alms! ... Alms! ...
For a
miserable woman ...
(ANTHONY hurriedly digs out a coin and drops
it in her bowl; she peers at him)
Beg your pardon, it's you, sir
...
Thank yer . . . Thank yer kindly . . .
(ANTHONY turns back
to discover JOHANNA. gone and the window shut. The BEGGAR WOMAN
starts off)
ANTHONY: One moment, mother. (She turns) Perhaps you
know whose house this is?
BEGGAR WOMAN: That! That's the great
JUDGE TURPIN's house, that is.
ANTHONY And the young lady who
resides there?
BEGGAR WOMAN: Ah, her! That's JOHANNA, his pretty
little ward. (Slyly confidential) But don't you go trespassing there,
young man. Not if you value your hide. (She nods her head) Tamper
there and it's a good whipping for you — or any other youth with
mischief on his mind.
(Leers at him, sings)
Hey! Hoy! Sailor
boy!
Want it snugly harbored?
Open me gate, but dock it
straight,
I see it lists to starboard.
(She grabs at his crotch
and starts to dance around him grotesquely, lifting her skirts.
ANTHONY is appalled. He pulls coins out of his pocket and tosses them
to her)
ANTHONY Here and here and here. Take it and off with you.
Off.
(The BEGGAR WOMAN, cackling, collects the coins and scampers off. ANTHONY turns back to the house, gazes up at the window. The noise has frightened the birds, who start screeching. ANTHONY becomes aware of them and moves over to the now sleeping bird seller, shakes him awake, and inspects the cages. Music continues under)
Which one sings the sweetest?
BIRD-SELLER: All's the
same, sir. Six pence and cheap at the price.
(ANTHONY selects one,
gives the man a coin, holds up the cage)
ANTHONY: He sings
bravely. (Watches the cage) But why does he batter his wings so
wildly against the bars?
BIRD-SELLER: We blind 'em, sir. That's
what we always does. Blind 'em and, not knowing night from day, they
sing and sing without stopping, pretty creatures. (He gets up,
slinging the cages on his back, and starts off) Have pleasure of the
bird, sir.
{He exits. JOHANNA reappears at the window. ANTHONY holds up the cage, indicating it is a present and she should come down to get it. She hesitates, smiles, nods, disappears from the window. He waits. Shyly, almost furtively, JOHANNA slips out of the door and stands there. He moves toward her, holding out the cage. Slowly her hand goes out toward him. Their fingers touch)
ANTHONY
(Sings softly):
I feel you,
JOHANNA,
I feel you.
I was
half convinced I'd waken,
Satisfied enough to dream you.
Happily
I was mistaken,
JOHANNA!
I'll steal you,
JOHANNA,
I'll
steal you . ..
(They stand so absorbed with each other that they
do not notice the approach of JUDGE TURPIN, followed by the
BEADLE)
JUDGE (Shouting): JOHANNA! JOHANNA!
JOHANNA: Oh
dear!
(Forgetting the bird cage, JOHANNA scurries toward the
house. ANTHONY turns to find the JUDGE glaring at him)
JUDGE: If I
see your face again on this or any other neighbor street, you'll rue
the day you were born. Is that plain enough speaking for
you?
ANTHONY: But, sir, I swear to you there was nothing in my
heart but the most respectful sentiments of—
JUDGE (To BEADLE):
Dispose of him!(He strides toward the house)
JOHANNA: Oh dear! I
knew!
BEADLE (Fondling the truncheon, to ANTHONY): You heard His
Worship.
ANTHONY: But, friend, I have no fight with you.(The
BEADLE takes the cage from him, opens its door, takes out the bird,
wrings its neck and then tosses it away)
BEADLE: Get the gist of
it, friend? Next time it'll be your neck!
(He starts after the
JUDGE and JOHANNA)
JUDGE: JOHANNA, if I were to think you
encouraged that young rogue ...
JOHANNA: Oh father, I hope always
to be obedient to your commands.
JUDGE (Relenting, patting her
cheek): Dear child. (Gazing at her lustfully) How sweet you look in
that light muslin gown.
(She runs into the house, the JUDGE. after
her. The BEADLE follows. ANTHONY is left alone, the empty cage in his
hand)
ANTHONY (Sings):
I'll steal you,
Johanna,
I'll
steal you!
Do they think that walls can hide you?
Even now I'm
at your window.
I am in the dark beside you,
Buried sweetly in
your yellow hair.
I feel you,
Johanna,
And one day
I'll
steal you.
Till I'm with you then,
I'm with you there,
Sweetly
buried in your yellow hair ...
{He smashes the cage, throws it
away and exits as lights fade)
(Lights come up to reveal St. Dunstan's Marketplace. A hand-drawn caravan, painted like a Sicilian donkey cart, stands on the street. On its side is written in ornate script "Signer Adolfo PIRELLI — Haircutter-Barber-Toothpuller to His Royal Majesty the King of Naples," and under this: "Banish Baldness with PIRELLI's Miracle Elixir. " TODD and MRS. LOVETT enter. TODD is carrying his razor case. MRS. LOVETT has a shopping basket)
TODD (Pointing at the caravan): That's him?
Over there?
MRS. LOVETT: Yes, dear. He's always here
Thursdays.
TODD (Reading the sign): Haircutter, barber,
toothpuller to His Royal Majesty the King of Naples.
MRS. LOVETT:
Eyetalian. All the rage, he is.
TODD: Not for long.
MRS.
LOVETT: Oh Mr. T., you really think you can do it?
TODD: By
tomorrow they'll all be flocking after me like sheep to be
shorn.
MRS. LOVETT (Sees BEADLE): Oh no! Look. The beadle —
beadle Bamford.
TODD: So much the better.
MRS. LOVETT: But what
if he recognizes you? Hadn't we better—?
TODD: I will do what I
have set out to do, woman.
MRS. LOVETT: Oops. Sorry, dear, I'm
sure.
(TOBIAS, PIRELLI 's adolescent, simple-minded assistant,
appears through a curtain at the rear of the caravan, beating on a
tin drum. A factory whistle blows and a crowd of people comes running
on, gathering around him)
TOBIAS (Sings):
Ladies and
gentlemen!
May I have your attention, perlease?
Do you wake
every morning in shame and despair
To discover your pillow is
covered with hair
Wot ought not to be there?
Well, ladies and
gentlemen,
From now on you can waken at ease.
You need never
again have a worry or care,
I will show you a miracle marvelous
rare.
Gentlemen, you are about to see something wot rose
from
the dead!
(A woman gasps — he smiles and wiggles his finger
no)
On the top of my head.
Scarcely a month ago, gentlemen,
I
was struck with a 'orrible
Dermatologic disease.
Though the
finest physicians in London were called,
I awakened one morning
amazed and appalled
To discover with dread that my head was as
bald
As a novice's knees.
I was dying of shame
Till a
gentleman came,
An illustrious barber, PIRELLI by name.
He give
me a liquid as precious as gold,
I rubbed it in daily like wot I
was told,
And behold!
(Doffs his cap dramatically, revealing
mountains of hair
which cascade to his shoulders}
Only thirty
days old!
'Twas PIRELLI's
Miracle Elixir,
That's wot did the
trick, sir,
True, sir, true.
Was it quick, sir?
Did it in a
tick, sir,
Just like an elixir
Ought to do!
(To 1ST man)
How
about a bottle, mister?
Only costs a penny, guaranteed.
(Crowd,
overlapping)
1ST MAN:
Penny buys a bottle, I don't know . .
.
2ND MAN:
You don't need —
1ST MAN:
Ah, let's
go!
(Starts to leave)
TOBIAS (To 3RD MAN):
Go ahead and tug,
sir.
3RD MAN:
Penny for a bottle, is it?
TOBIAS:
Go
ahead, sir, harder . ..
TOBIAS (Stopping the 1ST man, who's quite
bald, by pouring a drop on his head):
Does PIRELLI's
Stimulate
the growth, sir?
You can have my oath, sir,
'Tis unique.
(Takes
the man's hand and gently applies it to the wet spot)
Rub a
minute.
Stimulatin', i'n' it?
Soon you'll have to thin it
Once
a week!
Penny buys a bottle, guaranteed!
(Crowd,
overlapping)
1ST MAN (to 2ND MAN):
Penny buys a bottle, might
as well. . .
(Looks hesitantly to 2ND man)
3RD MAN:
Wotcher
think?
2ND WOMAN:
Go ahead and try it, wot the hell.. .
TOBIAS
(To others):
How about a sample? Have you ever smelled a cleaner
smell?
1ST WOMAN ( to 3RD MAN):
Isn't it a crime they let these
urchins clog the pavement?
4THMAN:
Penny buys a bottle, does
it?
TOBIAS ( To 2ND MAN):
That's enough, sir,
ample.
TOBIAS:
Gently dab it.
Gets to be a habit.
Soon
there'll be enough, sir,
Somebody can grab it.
(Points to a man
standing nearby)
See that chap with
Hair like Shelley's?
You
can tell 'e's
Used PIRELLI's!
(Crowd, overlapping)
1ST
MAN:
Let me have a bottle.
2ND MAN:
Make that two.
(1ST
man buys bottles/or both, gets change)
3RD WOMAN:
Come to think
of it, I could get some for Harry . . .
4TH WOMAN:
Nothing
works on Harry, dear. Bye bye.
TOBIAS:
Go ahead and feel,
mum.
Absolutely real, mum . . .
2ND MAN (To 1ST MAN):
How
about a beer?
1ST MAN:
You know a pub?
2ND MAN:
There's
one close by.
1ST WOMAN ( To 2ND WOMAN):
You got all the hair
you need now.
3RD MAN:
That's no lie.
4TH MAN:
Pass it
by.
2ND WOMAN:
I'm just passing by.
TODD (Loudly to MRS.
LOVETT):
Pardon me, ma'am, what's that awful stench?
MRS.
LOVETT:
Are we standing in an open trench?
TODD:
Must be
standing near an open trench!
TOBIAS (Distracting the crowd's
attention):
Buy PIRELLI's Miracle Elixir:
Anything wot's slick,
sir,
Soon sprouts curls.
Try PIRELLI's!
When they see how
thick, sir,
You can have your pick, sir,
Of the girls!
(to
4TH WOMAN)
Want to buy a bottle, missus?
(Crowd,
overlapping)
TODD (Sniffing 1ST man 's bottle):
What is
this?
MRS. LOVETT (Examining 3RD man 's bottle):
What is
this?
1ST MAN:
Propogates the hair, sir.
4TH MAN:
I'll
take one!
TODD (Hands bottle back distastefully):
Smells like
piss.
MRS. LOVETT:
Smells like — phew!
2ND MAN:
He says
it smells like piss.
TODD:
Looks like piss.
MRS.
LOVETT:
Wouldn't touch it if I was you, dear!
2ND MAN (7b 3RD
MAN):
Wotcher think?
TODD (Nods):
This is piss. Piss with
ink.
5TH MAN and WOMEN:
Says it smells like piss or
something.
TOBIAS:
Penny for a bottle ...
Have you ever
smelled a cleaner smell?
How about a sample? . ..
How about a
sample, mister? ...
1ST WOMAN:
Give us back our money!
2ND
WOMAN:
Give us back our money!
1ST WOMAN:
Did you ever —
?
Give us back our money!
3RD WOMAN:
Glad I didn't buy one,
I can tell you!
4TH WOMAN (to TOBIAS):
If you think that piss
can fool a lady, you're mistaken!
MRS. LOVETT:
Give 'em back
their money!
Did you ever — ?
Give 'em back their money!
3RD
WOMAN:
Give 'em back their money, I say!
Give 'em back their
money!
TOBIAS (Trying to calm them, gesturing to TODD) :
Never
mind that madman, mister .. .
Never mind the madman . . .
TODD
and MRS. LOVETT:
Where is this PIRELLI?
crowd:
Where is this
PIRELLI?
(Variously, overlapping)
What about my money,
laddie?
Yes, what about the money?
Hand it back!
We don't
want no piss, boy!
Give it here ...
TOBIAS (Desperately,
beating the drum out of rhythm):
Let PIRELLI's
Activate your
roots, sir —
TODD:
Keep it off your boots, sir —
Eats
right through.
crowd:
Go and get PIRELLI!
TOBIAS:
Yes,
get PIRELLI's!
Use a bottle of it!
Ladies seem to love it
—
MRS. LOVETT:
Flies do, too!
(Crowd laughs
uproariously)
CROWD:
Hand the bloody money over!
Hand the
bloody money over!
TOBIAS (Frenetically fast, looking desperately
toward the curtain):
See PIRELLI's
Miracle Elixir
Grow a
little wick, sir,
Then some fuzz.
The PIRELLI's
Soon'll make
it thick, sir,
Like a good elixir
Always does!
Trust
PIRELLI's!
If your hair is sick, sir,
Fix it in the nick,
sir,
Don't look grim.
Just PIRELLI's
Miracle Elixir,
That'll
do the trick, sir —
1ST MAN:
What about the money?
TOBIAS:
If
you've got a kick, sir —
CROWD (Individuals, building to a
shout):
What about the money?
Where is this PIRELLI?
Go and
get PIRELLI!
What about our money?
TOBIAS:
Tell it to the
mixer
Of the Miracle Elixir —
If you've got a kick, sir —
!
(Desperately yanks the curtain aside, revealing PIRELLI, an
excessively flamboyant Italian with a glittering suit, thick wavy
hair and a daxtling smile — the crowd falls silent, stunned. TOBIAS
collapses, exhausted)
Talk to him!
PIRELLI (Bows and poses
splendidly for a moment, in one hand an ornate razor, in the other a
sinister-looking tooth-extractor, sings):
I am Adolfo PIRELLI,
Da
king of da barbers, da barber of kings,
E buon giorno, good day,
I
blow you a kiss!
(He does)
And I, da so-famous Pirelli,
I
wish-a to know-a
Who has-a da nerve-a to say
My elixir is
piss!
Who says this?
TODD: I do. (He holds up the bottle of
elixir) I am Mr. Sweeney Todd and I have opened a bottle of Pirelli's
Elixir, and I say to you it is nothing but an arrant fraud, concocted
from piss and ink. (MRS. LOVETT takes the bottle from TODD, sniffs
it)
MRS. LOVETT: He's right. Phew! Better to throw your money down
the sewer.
(She tosses the bottle to the ground. The onlookers
"ooh" and "aah" with shocked excitement)
TOBIAS
(Beating agitatedly on the drum, shouting): Ladies and gentlemen, pay
no attention to that madman. Who's to be the first for a magnificent
shave?
TODD (Breaking in): And furthermore . . .(Glaring at
Pirelli) I have serviced no kings, yet I wager that I can shave a
cheek and pull a tooth with ten times more dexterity than any street
mountebank! (He holds up his razor case for the crowd to see) You see
these razors?
MRS. LOVETT: The finest in England.
TODD (To
Pirelli): I lay them against five pounds you are no match for me. You
hear me, sir? Either accept my challenge or reveal yourself as a
sham.
MRS. LOVETT: Bravo, bravo.
(The crowd laughs and cheers,
obviously on TODD 's side. Pirelli, as imposing as ever, holds up a
hand for silence. Slowly he swaggers toward TODD, takes the razor
case, opens it and examines the razors carefully)
PIRELLI (He
speaks with a fairly obvious put-on foreign accent, barely concealing
an Irish underlay): Zees are indeed fine razors. Instruments like
zees once seen cannot be soon forgotten. (Takes out a
tooth-extractor) And a fine extractor, too! You wager zees against
five pounds, sir?
TODD: I do.
PIRELLI (Addressing the crowd):
You hear zis foolish man? Watch and see how he will regret his folly.
Five pounds it is! (Music starts)
TODD (Surveying the crowd):
Friends, neighbors, who's for a free shave?
1ST man (Stepping
forward eagerly): Me, Mr. TODD, sir.
2ND man (Stepping forward
eagerly, too): And me, Mr. TODD, sir.
TODD: Over here. Bring me a
chair.
PIRELLI (To TOBIAS) : Boy, bring ze basins, bring ze
towels!
TOBIAS: Yes, sir ...
PIRELLI: Quick!
(He kicks
TOBIAS. The boy hurries off into the caravan)
TODD: Will beadle
Bamford be the JUDGE?
BEADLE: Glad, as always, to oblige my
friends and neighbors.
(As another man comes on with a wooden
chair and TOBIAS emerges from the caravan with basins, towels, etc.,
the BEADLE instantly takes over. To man, indicating where to set the
chair) Put it there. (1ST man sits on TODD 's chair. The 2ND man is
ensconced on Pirelli's chair. Pirelli shakes out a fancy bib with a
flourish and covers his man. TODD takes a towel and tucks it around
his man's neck) Ready?
PIRELLI: Ready!
TODD: Ready!
BEADLE:
The fastest, smoothest shave is the winner. (He blows his whistle.
The music becomes agitated. The contest begins. Pirelli strops his
razor quickly, TODD in a leisurely manner. Pirelli keeps glancing at
TODD in various paranoid ways throughout, frightened of Todd's
progress. He starts whipping up lather rapidly)
PIRELLI (Sings to
crowd while mixing, furiously):
Now, signorini, signori,
We
mix-a da lather
But first-a you gather
Around, signor-
ini,
signori,
You looking a man
Who have had-a da glory
To
shave-a da Pope!
Mr. Sweeney-so-smart —
(Sarcastic bow to
TODD)
Oh, I beg-a you pardon — '11
Call me a lie, was-a only
a cardinal —
Nope!
It was-a da Pope!
(Looks over shoulder,
sees TODD still stropping slowly, gains confidence, starts to lather
his man's face)
Perhaps, signorini, signori,
You like-a I
tell-a
Da famous-a story
Of Queen Isabella,
Da Queen of-a
Polan'
Whose toot' was-a swollen,
I pull it so nice from her
mout'
That-a though to begin
She's-a screaming-a murder,
She's
later-a swoon-a wid
Bliss an' was heard-a
To shout:
"Pull
all of 'em out!"
(Unexpectedly, TODD still shows no sign of
starting to shave his man. He merely watches Pirelli 's performance.
Pirelli, now feeling that he can take his time, sings lyrically as he
shaves with rhythmic scrapes and elaborate gestures of wiping the
razor)
To shave-a da face,
To pull-a da toot',
Require da
grace
And not-a da brute,
For if-a you slip,
You nick da
skin,
You clip-a da chin,
You rip-a da lip a bit
And dat's-a
da trut'!
(TODD strops his razor slowly and deliberately,
disconcerting Pirelli and drawing the crowd's attention)
To
shave-a da face
Or even a part
Widout it-a smart
Require da
heart.
It take-a da art —
I show you a chart —
(Pulls
down an elaborate chart with many anatomical views of the face and
closeups of follicles, etc.)
I study-a starting in my yout'!
(TODD
starts slowly mixing his lather)
To cut-a da hair,
To trim-a da
beard,
To make-a da bristle
Clean like a whistle,
Dis is
from early infancy
Da talent give to me
By God!
It take-a da
skill,
It take-a da brains,
It take-a da will
To take-a da
pains,
It take-a da pace,
It take-a da grace —
(While
PIRELLI holds this note elaborately, TODD, with a few deft strokes,
quickly lathers his man's face, shaves him and signals the BEADLE to
examine the job)
BEADLE (Blowing whistle):
The winner is
TODD.
MRS. LOVETT (Feeling the customer's cheek): Smooth as a
baby's arse!
(The crowd "oohs " and "ahhs ")
TODD
(Looks around): And now, who's for a tooth pulling — free without
charge!
MAN WITH HEAD TIED UP IN RAG: Me, sir. Me, sir. (He runs
to the chair vacated by the shaved man)
TODD {Looking around): Who
else? (There is silence from the crowd) No one? (Turning to the
BEADLE) Then, sir, since there is no means to test the second skill,
I claim the five pounds!
MRS. LOVETT: To which he is entitled! (To
crowd) Right? (The crowd applauds)
PIRELLI: Wait! One moment.
Wait! {He turns to TOBIAS) You, boy. Get on that chair.
TOBIAS {In
terror): Me, signor? Oh, not a tooth, sir, I beg of you! I ain't got
a twinge — not the tiniest pain. I —
PIRELLI (Giving him a
stinging blow on the cheek): You do now! {Forces him into the chair.
Turning to the crowd) We see who is zee victor now. Zis Mister TODD —
or zee great Pirelli!
BEADLE: Ready?
PIRELLI: Ready!
TODD:
Ready!
(The BEADLE blows his whistle. While TODD, even more
nonchalant than before, merely stands by his patient, Pirelli forces
open the mouth of TOBIAS, brandishing his extractor. He peers in,
selects a tooth, thrusts the extractor into the mouth and starts to
tug while singing with pretended ease. During the song, TOBIAS starts
moaning, then screaming— musically)
PIRELLI {Sings):
To
pull-a da toot'
Widout-a da skill
Can damage da root —
{As
TOBIAS squirms)
Now hold-a da still!
An' if-a you slip
You
grip a bit,
You hit da pit of it
Or chip-a da dp
And have-a
to fill!
To pull-a da toot'
Widout-a da grace,
You leave-a
da space
All over da place.
You try to erase
Widout-a da
trace ...
(Glaring archly at TODD)
Sometimes is da case
You
even-a kill.
(TODD still watches; Pirelli is having trouble,
TOBIAS 's
wails are becoming louder)
To hold-a da
clamp
Widout-a da cramp,
Wid all dat saliva,
It could-a
drive-a
You crazy —!
(To TOBIAS, who is groaning)
Don'
mutter,
Or back-a you go to da gutter —
(To the crowd,
forcing a smile)
My touch is as light as a butter-a
Cup!
I
take-a da pains,
65
I learn-a da art,
I use-a da brains,
I
give-a da heart,
I have-a da grace,
I win-a da race —
!
(While again Pirelli holds the note, TODD stands watching. Then
in one swift move, he tugs the rag off his patient's head, neatly
opens the mouth, looks in, and with a single deft motion of the
extractor, gives a tiny tug and, turning to the crowd, holds up the
extracted tooth. The beadle blows his whistle. The crowd roars its
approval. Pirelli, cut off again in the middle of his high note, sees
that TODD has extracted his customer's tooth, and droops)
I give-a
da up.
MAN (Jumping up from chair): Not a twinge of pain! Not a
twinge!
MRS. LOVETT: The man's a bloody marvel!
BEADLE {Beaming
at TODD) : The two-dme winner — Mr. Sweeney Todd!
(Pirelli
leaves the tooth unpulled in TOBIAS's mouth and, still retaining his
imposing dignity, moves over to TODD)
Pirelli (With profound bow):
Sir, I bow to a skill far defter than my own.
TODD: The five
pounds.
Pirelli (Produces a rather flamboyant purse, and from it
takes five pounds): Here, sir. And may the good Lord smile on you —
(With a sinister smile)
— until we meet again. Come, boy. (Bows
to crowd) Signori! Bellissime signorini! Buon giorno! Buon giorno a
tutti!
(Kicking TOBIAS ahead of him, he returns to the caravan
which TOBIAS, like a horse, pulls off)
MRS. LOVETT (To TODD):
Who'd have thought it, dear! You pulled it off! (The crowd clusters
around TODD)
MAN WITH CAP: Oh, sir, Mr. TODD, sir, do you have an
establishment of your own?
MRS. LOVETT: He certainly does. Sweeney
TODD's Tonsorial Parlor — above my meat pie-shop on Fleet Street.
(The BEADLE strolls somewhat menacingly over to them)
BEADLE: Mr.
TODD . . . Strange, sir, but it seems your face is known to me.
MRS.
LOVETT (Concealing agitation): Him? That's a laugh him being my
uncle's cousin and arrived from Birmingham yesterday.
TODD (Very
smooth): But already, sir, I have heard beadle Bamford spoken of with
great respect.
BEADLE (Whatever dim suspicions he may have had
allayed by the flattery): Well, sir, I try my best for my neighbors.
(to MRS. LOVETT) Fleet Street? Over your pie-shop, ma'am?
MRS.
LOVETT: That's it, sir.
BEADLE: Then, Mr. TODD, you will surely
see me there before the week is out.
TODD (Expressionless): You
will be welcome, beadle Bamford, and I guarantee to give you, without
a penny's charge, the closest shave you will ever know. (MRS. LOVETT
takes TODD 's arm and starts with him off-stage as the scene blacks
out. The factory whistle. In limbo, the BEGGAR WOMAN appears with
other members of the company. They sing)
MEMBERS OF THE
COMPANY:
Sweeney pondered and Sweeney planned.
Like a perfect
machine 'e planned,
Barbing the hook, baiting the trap,
Setting
it out for the BEADLE to snap.
Slyly courted 'im, Sweeney did,
Set
a sort of a scene, 'e did.
Laying the trail, showing the
traces,
Letting it lead to higher places ...
Sweeney.. .
(The
lights shift to a room in JUDGE TURPIN 's house. The JUDGE is in his
judicial clothes, a Bible in his hand. In the adjoining room, JOHANNA
sits sewing)
JUDGE (Sings):
Mea culpa, mea culpa,
Mea maxima
culpa,
Mea maxima maxima culpa!
God deliver me! Release
me!
Forgive me! Restrain me! Pervade me!
(He peers through the
keyhole of the door to JOHANNA' s room)
Johanna, Johanna,
So
suddenly a woman,
The light behind your window —
It
penetrates your gown ...
Johanna, Johanna,
The sun — I see
the sun through your —
(Ashamed, he stops
peering)
No!
God!
Deliver me!
(Sinks to his
knees)
Deliver me!
(Starts tearing off his
robes)
Down!
68
Down.
Down ...
(Now naked to the
waist, he picks up a scourge/row the
table)
Johanna, Johanna,
I
watch you from the shadows.
You sigh before your window
And
gaze upon the town ...
Your lips part, Johanna,
So young and
soft and beautiful —
(Whips himself)
God!
(Again and
again, as he continues)
Deliver me!
Filth
Leave me!
Johanna,
Johanna,
I treasured you in innocence
And loved you like a
daughter.
You mock me, JOHANNA,
You tempt me with your
innocence,
You tempt me with those quivering —
(Whips
himself)
No!
(Again and again)
God!
Deliver me!
It
will-
Stop—
Now! It will —
Stop
—
Right-
Now.
Right-
Now.
Right-
Now ...
(Calm
again, having kneed his way over to the door, he peers through the
keyhole)
Johanna, Johanna,
I cannot keep you longer.
The
world is at your window,
You want to fly away.
You stir me,
Johanna,
So suddenly a woman,
I cannot watch you one more day —
!
(Again whips himself into a frenzy)
God!
Deliver
me!
God!
Deliver me!
God!
Deliver
—
(Climaxes)
God!!
(Panting, he relaxes; when he is in
control again, he starts to dress)
Johanna, Johanna,
I'll keep
you here forever,
I'll wed you on the morrow.
Johanna,
Johanna,
The world will never touch you,
I'll wed you on the
morrow!
As years pass, Johanna,
You'll tend me in my
solitude,
No longer as a daughter,
As a woman.
(He is fully
dressed again)
Johanna, Johanna,
I'll hold you here forever
then,
You'll keep away from windows and
You'll
Deliver
me,
Johanna,
From this
Hot
Red
Devil
With
your
Soft
White
Cool
Virgin
Palms. ..
(Magisterial
again, picking up the Bible, he produces a key and opens the door,
the key forgotten, still in the lock. JOHANNA jumps Up)
JOHANNA:
Father!
JUDGE: JOHANNA, I trust you've not been near the window
again.
JOHANNA (During this speech her eyes fall on the key in the
lock): Hardly, dear father, when it has been shuttered and barred
these last three days.
JUDGE: How right I was to insist on such a
precaution, for once again he has come, that conscienceless young
sailor. Ten times has he been driven from my door and yet.. . (Breaks
off, gazing at her, smitten with lust) How sweet you look in that
light muslin gown.
JOHANNA: 'Tis nothing but an old dress,
father.
JUDGE: But fairer on your young form than wings on an
angel... oh, if I were to think ...
JOHANNA (Demurely, moving to
the door): Think what, dear father?
JUDGE: If I were to think you
encouraged this young rogue ...
JOHANNA (During this speech, she
slips the key from the lock, hides it in her dress): I? A maid
trained from the cradle to find in modesty and obedience the greatest
of all virtues? Dear father, when have you ceased to warn me of
the
wickedness of men?
JUDGE: Venal young men of the street
with only one thought in their heads. But there are men of different
and far higher breed. I have one in mind for you.
JOHANNA: You
have?
JUDGE: A gentle man, who would shield you from all earthly
cares and guide your faltering steps to the sober warmth of womanhood
— a husband — a protector — and yet an ardent lover too. It is
a man who through all the years has surely earned your affection.
(Drops to his knees)
JOHANNA (Staggered): You?!!! (The scene
blacks out)
(Light comes up on MRS. LOVETT 's pie-shop and the
apartment above, which now is sparsely furnished with a wash-stand
and a long wooden chest. At the foot of the outside staircase is a
brand-new barber's pole. Attached to the first banister of the
staircase is an iron bell. TODD is pacing in the apartment above.
MRS. LOVETT comes hurrying out of the shop, carrying a wooden chair.
As she does so, the beggar woman shuffles up to her)
BEGGAR WOMAN
(Sings):
Alms . . . alms . . .
MRS. LOVETT (Imitating her
nastily, sings):
Alms . . . alms . . .
(Music continues)
How
many times have I told you? I'll not have trash from the gutter
hanging around my establishment!
BEGGAR WOMAN: Not just a penny,
dear? Or a pie? One of them pies that give the stomach cramps to half
the neighborhood? (A cackling laugh) Come on, dear. Have a heart,
dear.
MRS. LOVETT: Off. Off with you or you'll get a kick on the
rump that'll make your teeth chatter!
BEGGAR WOMAN: Stuck up
thing! You and your fancy airs! (Shuffling off into the wings,
sings)
Alms ... alms ...
For a desperate woman ...
(Exits.
Music continues. MRS. LOVETT rings the bell to indicate her approach
and starts climbing the stairs. At the sound of the bell, TODD alerts
and snatches up a razor. The music becomes agitated. As MRS. LOVETT
appears, he relaxes somewhat. MRS. LOVETT is now very proprietary
towards him)
MRS. LOVETT: It's not much of a chair, but it'll do
till you get your fancy new one. It was me poor Albert's chair, it
was. Sat in it all day long he did, after his leg give out from the
dropsy. (Surveying the room, music under) Kinda bare, isn't it? I
never did like a bare room. Oh, well, we'll find some nice little
knickknacks.
TODD: Why doesn't the beadle come? "Before the
week is out," that's what he said.
MRS. LOVETT: And who says
the week's out yet? It's only Tuesday. (As TODD paces restlessly,
sings)
Easy now.
Hush, love, hush.
Don't distress
yourself,
What's your rush?
Keep your thoughts
Nice and
lush.
Wait.
(TODD continues to pace)
Hush, love, hush.
Think
it through.
Once it bubbles,
Then what's to do?
Watch it
close.
Let it brew.
Wait.
(Looking round, cheerfully, as tow
grows calmer)
I've been thinking, flowers —
Maybe daisies
—
To brighten up the room.
Don't you think some
flowers,
Pretty daisies,
Might relieve the gloom?
(As TODD
doesn 't respond)
Ah, wait, love, wait.
(Music continues
under)
TODD (Intensely): And the JUDGE? When will I get him?
MRS.
LOVETT: Can't you think of nothing else? Always broodin' away on yer
wrongs what happened heaven knows how many years ago — (TODD turns
away violently with a hiss)
Slow, love, slow.
Time's so
fast.
Now goes quickly —
See, now it's past!
Soon will
come.
Soon will last.
Wait.
(TODD grows calm again)
Don't
you know,
Silly man,
Half the fun is to
Plan the plan?
All
good things come to
Those who can
Wait.
(Looking around the
room again)
Gillyflowers, maybe,
'Stead of daisies . ..
I
don't know, though . . .
What do you think?
TODD (Docilely):
Yes.
MRS. LOVETT (Gently taking the razor from him): Gillyflowers,
I'd say. Nothing like a nice bowl of gillies.
(Music stops.
During the above, we have seen ANTHONY moving down the street. He
sees the sign and stops. He goes to the bell and rings it, then
starts running up the stairs. The effect on TODD is electric. Even
MRS. LOVETT, affected by his tension, alerts. She hastily gives him
back the razor. ANTHONY bursts in enthusiastically)
TODD:
ANTHONY.
ANTHONY. Mr. TODD. I've paced Fleet Street a dozen times
with no success. But now the sign! In business already.
TODD:
Yes.
ANTHONY: I congratulate you. (Turning to MRS. LOVETT)
And...
er...
MRS. LOVETT: Mrs. Lovett, sir.
ANTHONY. A pleasure,
ma'am. Oh, Mr. Todd, I have so much to tell you. I have found the
fairest and most loving maid that any man could dream of! And yet
there are problems. She has a guardian so tyrannical that she is kept
shut up from human eye. But now this morning this key fell from her
shuttered window.
(He holds up JOHANNA 's key) The surest sign
that Johanna loves me and . . .
MRS. LOVETT: Johanna?
ANTHONY:
That's her name, ma'am, and Turpin that of the abominable parent. A
JUDGE, it seems. But, as I said, a monstrous tyrant. Oh Mr. TODD,
once the JUDGE has gone to court, I'll slip into the house and plead
with her to fly with me tonight. Yet when I have her — where can I
bring her till I have hired a coach to speed us home to Plymouth? Oh
Mr. TODD, if I could lodge her here just for an hour or two! (He
gazes at the inscrutable tow)
MRS. LOVETT (After a beat): Bring
her, dear.
ANTHONY. Oh thank you, thank you, ma'am. (To TODD) I
have your consent, Mr. Todd?
TODD (After a pause): The girl may
come.
(ANTHONY grabs his hand and pumps it, then turns to grab
MRS. LOVETT 's)
ANTHONY: I shall be grateful for this to the
grave. Now I must hurry, for surely the JUDGE is off to the Old
Bailey. (Turning at the door) My thanks! A thousand blessings on you
both! (He hurries out and down the stairs)
MRS. LOVETT: Johanna!
Who'd have thought it! It's like Fate, isn't it? You'll have her back
before the day is out.
TODD: For a few hours? Before he carries
her off to the other end of England?
MRS. LOVETT: Oh, that sailor!
Let him bring her here and then, since you're so hot for a little ..
. (Makes a throat-cutting gesture) . . . that's the throat to slit,
dear. Oh Mr. T, we'll make a lovely home for her. You and me. The
poor thing! All those years and not a scrap of motherly affection!
I'll soon change that, I will, for if ever there was a maternal
heart, it's mine. (During this speech Pirelli, accompanied by TOBIAS,
has appeared on the street. They see the sign and start up the stairs
without ringing the bell. Now, as MRS. LOVETT goes to TODD
coquettishly, Pirelli and TOBIAS suddenly appear at the door. TODD
pulls violently away from MRS. LOVETT)
PIRELLI (With Italianate
bow): Good morning, Mr. TODD — and to you, bellissima signorina.
(He kisses MRS. LOVETT 's hand)
MRS. LOVETT: Well, 'ow do you do,
signer, I'm sure.
PIRELLI: A little business with Mr. TODD,
signora. Perhaps if you will give the permission?
MRS. LOVETT: Oh
yes, indeed, I'll just pop on down to my pies. (Surveying TOBIAS) Oh
lawks, look at it now! Don't look like it's had a kind word since
half past never! (Smiling at him) What would you say, son, to a nice
juicy meat pie, eh? Your teeth is strong, I hope?
TOBIAS: Oh yes,
ma'am.
MRS. LOVETT (Taking his hand): Then come with me, love.
(They start down the stairs to the shop)
PIRELLI: Mr. Todd.
TODD:
Signor Pirelli.
PIRELLI (Reverting to Irish): Ow, call me Danny,
Daniel O'Higgins' the name when it's not perfessional. (Looks around
the shop) Not much, but I imagine you'll pretty it up a bit. (Holds
out his hand) I'd like me five quid back, ifn ya don't mind.
TODD:
Why?
(In the shop, MRS. LOVETT pats a stool for TOBIAS to sit down
and hands him a piece of pie. He starts to eat greedily)
MRS.
LOVETT: That's my boy. Tuck in.
PIRELLI: It'll hold me over till
your customers start coming. Then it's half your profits you'll hand
over to me every week on a Friday, share and share alike. All right .
. . Mr. Benjamin Barker?
TODD (Very quiet): Why do you call me
that?
MRS. LOVETT (Stroking TOBIAS 's luxurious locks): At least
you've got a nice full head of hair on you.
TODD: Well, ma'am, to
tell the truth, ma'am — (He reaches up and pulls off the "locks"
which are a wig, revealing his own short-cropped hair) — gets awful
'ot. (He continues to eat the pie. PIRELLI strolls over to the
washstand, picks up the razor, flicks it open)
PIRELLI: You don't
remember me. Why should you? I was just a down and out Irish lad you
hired for a couple of weeks — sweeping up hair and such like —
(Holding up razor) but I remember these — and you. Benjamin Barker,
later transported to Botany Bay for life. So, Mr. TODD — is it a
deal or do I run down the street for me pal beadle Bamford? (For a
long moment TODD stands gazing at him)
PIRELLI (Sings,
nastily):
You t'ink-a you smart,
You foolish-a boy.
Tomorrow
you start
In my-a employ!
You unner-a-stan'?
You like-a my
plan — ?
(Once again he hits his high note, and once again he is
interrupted —TODD knocks the razor out of his hand and starts, in a
protracted struggle, to strangle him) TOBIAS (Downstairs, unaware of
this): Oh gawd, he's got an appointment with his tailor. If he's late
and it's my fault — you don't know him! (He jumps up and starts
out)
MRS. LOVETT: I wouldn't want to, I'm sure, dear. (TODD
violently continues with the strangling)
TOBIAS (Calling on the
stairs): Signer! It's late! The tailor, sir. (Remembering) Oh, me
wig! (Runs back for it. Upstairs, TODD stops dead at the sound of the
voice. He looks around wildly, sees the chest, runs to it, opens the
lid and then drags Pirelli to it and tumbles him in, slamming the lid
shut just as TOBIAS enters. It is at this moment that we realize that
one of PIRELLI 's hands is dangling out of the chest) Signor, I did
like you said. I reminded you . . . the tailor . .. Ow, he ain't
here.
TODD: Signor PIRELLI has been called away.
TOBIAS: Where
did he go?
TODD: He didn't say. You'd better run after
him.
TOBIAS: Oh no, sir. Knowing him, sir, without orders to the
contrary, I'd best wait for him here. (He crosses to the chest and
sits down on it, perilously near PIRELLI 's hand, which he doesn't
notice. TODD at this moment does, however. Suddenly he is all nervous
smiles)
TODD: So MRS. LOVETT gave you a pie, did she, my
lad?
TOBIAS: Oh yes, sir. She's a real kind lady. One whole pie.
(As he speaks, his hand moves very close to PIRELLI 's hand)
TODD
(Moving toward him): A whole pie, eh? That's a treat. And yet, if I
know a growing boy, there's still room for more,eh?
TOBIAS: I'd
say, sir. (Patting his stomach) An aching void.
(Once again his
hand is on the edge of the chest, moving toward PIRELLI 's hand.
Slowly now, we see the fingers of PIRELLI 's hand stirring, feebly
trying to clutch TOBIAS 's hand. When it has almost reached him, TODD
grabs TOBIAS up off the chest)
TODD: Then why don't you run
downstairs and wait for your master there? There'll be another pie in
it for you, I'm sure. (Afterthought) And tell MRS. LOVETT to give you
a nice big tot of gin.
TOBIAS: Oo, sir! Gin, sir! Thanking you,
sir, thanking you kindly. Gin! You're a Christian indeed, sir! (He
runs down the stairs to MRS. LOVETT) Oh, ma'am, the gentleman says to
give me a nice tot of gin, ma'am.
MRS. LOVETT: Gin, dear? Why not?
(Upstairs, with great ferocity, TODD opens the chest, grabs the
screaming PIRELLI by the hair, tugs him up from the chest and slashes
his throat as, downstairs, MRS. LOVETT pours a glass of gin and hands
it to TOBIAS. He takes it. The tableau freezes, then fades)
THREE
TENORS (Enter and sing):
His hands were quick, his fingers
strong.
It stung a little but not for long.
And those who
thought him a simple clod
Were soon reconsidering under the
sod,
Consigned there with a friendly prod
From Sweeney
TODD,
The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
See your razor
gleam, Sweeney,
Feel how well it fits
As it floats across the
throats
Of hypocrites . ..
(The ballad ends on a crashing
chord as the singers black out and light comes up on JUDGE TURPIN in
full panoply of wig, robe, etc. He is about to convict a young
boy)
JUDGE: This is the fourth time, sir, that you have been
brought before this bench. Though it is my earnest wish ever to
temper justice with mercy, your persistent dedication to a life of
crime is such an abomination before God and man that I have no
alternative but to sentence you to hang by the neck until you are
dead. (He produces the black cap and puts it on his head. As he does
so the condemned prisoner is led away) Court adjourned. (During the
following, JUDGE removes cap, wig, and gown. To the BEADLE) It is
perhaps remiss of me to close the court so early, but the stench of
those miserable wretches at the bar was so offensive to my nostrils I
feared my eagerness for fresher air might well impair the soundness
of my judgment. (Light dims on the court and finds the JUDGE. and the
beadle now walking down a street together)
BEADLE: Well, sir, the
adjournment is fortunate for me, sir, for it's today we celebrate my
sweet little Annie's birthday, and to have her daddy back so soon to
hug and kiss her will be her crowning joy on such a happy day.
JUDGE:
It is a happy moment for me, too. Walk home with me for I have news
for you. In order to shield her from the evils of this world, I have
decided to marry Johanna next Monday.
BEADLE: Ah, sir, happy news
indeed.
JUDGE: Strange, when I offered myself to her, she showed a
certain reluctance. But that's natural enough in a young girl. Now
that she has had time for reflection, I'm sure she will greet my
proposal in a more sensible frame of mind.{Light leaves them and
comes up on JOHANNA and ANTHONY in JOHANNA 's room. She is pacing in
agitation and fear)
JOHANNA (Sings):
He means to marry me
Monday,
What shall I do? I'd rather die.
ANTHONY (Sings):
I
have a plan —
JOHANNA:
I'll swallow poison on Sunday,
That's
what I'll do, I'll get some lye.
ANTHONY:
I have a plan
—
JOHANNA (Stops pacing suddenly):
Oh, dear, was that a
noise?
ANTHONY:
A plan—
JOHANNA:
I think I heard a
noise.
ANTHONY;
A plan!
JOHANNA:
It couldn't be,
He's
in court,
He's in court today,
Still that was a noise,
Wasn't
that a noise?
You must have heard that —
ANTHONY:
Kiss
me.
JOHANNA (Shyly):
Oh, sir...
ANTHONY:
Ah, miss
...
JOHANNA:
Oh, sir ...
(She turns away, agitatedly)
If
he should marry me Monday,
What shall I do? I'll die of
grief.
ANTHONY:
We fly tonight —
JOHANNA:
'Tis Friday,
virtually Sunday,
What can we do with time so brief?
ANTHONY:
We
fly tonight —
JOHANNA:
Behind the curtain —
quick!
ANTHONY:
Tonight —
JOHANNA:
I think I heard a
click!
ANTHONY:
Tonight!
JOHANNA:
It was agate!
It's
the gate!
We don't have a gate.
Still there was a —
Wait!
There's another click!
You must have heard that
—
ANTHONY:
It's not a gate.
There's no gate,
You don't
have a gate.
If you'd only listen, miss, and
ANTHONY;
Kiss
me!
JOHANNA:
Tonight?
ANTHONY:
Kiss me.
JOHANNA:
You
mean tonight?
ANTHONY:
The plan is made.
JOHANNA:
Oh,
sir!
ANTHONY;
So kiss me.
JOHANNA:
I feel a
fright.
ANTHONY:
Be not afraid.
JOHANNA:
Sir, I did
Love
you even as I
Saw you, even as it
Did not matter that I
Did
not know your name.
ANTHONY:
Tonight
I'll
Steal
You,
JOHANNA,
I'll steal you ...
ANTHONY:
It's
me you'll marry on Monday,
That's what you'll do!
JOHANNA:
And
gladly, sir.
ANTHONY:
St. Dunstan's, noon.
JOHANNA:
I
knew I'd be with you one day,
Even not knowing who you were.
I
feared you'd never come,
That you'd been called away,
That
you'd been killed,
Had the plague,
Were in debtor's
jail,
Trampled by a horse,
Gone to sea again,
Arrested by
the —
JOHANNA:
Kiss me!
ANTHONY:
Of
course.
JOHANNA:
Quickly!
ANTHONY:
Ah, miss,
Marry me,
marry me, miss,
Oh, marry me Monday!
Favor me, favor me
With
your hand.
Promise,
Marry me, marry me, please,
Oh, marry me
Monday —
ANTHONY:
You're sure?
JOHANNA:
Kiss
me!
ANTHONY (Taking her in his arms):
I shall!
JOHANNA:
Kiss
me!
Oh, sir ...
(Lights dim on them but remain; light rises on
the JUDGE and the BEADLE, still walking together. Music continues
under)
JUDGE (Strolling with BEADLE): Yes, yes, but surely the
respect that she owes me as her guardian should be sufficient to
kindle a more tender emotion.
BEADLE (Sings):
Excuse me, my
lord.
May I request, my lord,
Permission, my lord, to
speak?
Forgive me if I suggest, my lord,
You're looking less
than your best, my lord,
There's powder upon your vest, my
lord,
And stubble upon your cheek.
And ladies, my lord, are
weak.
(Music continues)
JUDGE: Perhaps if she greets me
cordially upon my return, I should give her a small gift. ..
BEADLE
(Winces delicately):
Ladies in their sensitivities, my lord,
Have
a fragile sensibility.
When a girl's emergent,
Probably it's
urgent
You defer to her gent-
ility, my lord.
Personal
disorder cannot be ignored,
Given their genteel
proclivities.
Meaning no offense, it
Happens they resents
it,
Ladies in their sensit-
ivities, my lord.
JUDGE (Feeling
his chin): Stubble, you say? Perhaps at times I am a little overhasty
with my morning ablutions .. .
BEADLE:
Fret not though, my
lord,
I know a place, my lord,
A barber, my lord, of
skill.
Thus armed with a shaven face, my lord,
Some eau de
cologne to grace my lord
And musk to enhance the chase, my
lord,
You'll dazzle the girl until
She bows to your every
will.
JUDGE: That may well be so.
(They have reached the JUDGE
's house)
BEADLE: Well, here we are, sir. I bid you good
day.
JUDGE: Good day.
(He muses, turns)
And where is this
miraculous barber?
BEADLE: In Fleet Street, sir.
JUDGE: Perhaps
you may be right. Take me to him.
(They start off. Light up on
JOHANNA 's room. JOHANNA and ANTHONY get up from a couch)
BEADLE
(Sings):
The name is TODD ...
JUDGE:
Todd,eh?
ANTHONY:
We'd
best not wait until Monday
JOHANNA:
Sir, I concur,
And
fully, too.
BEADLE:
Sweeney TODD.
ANTHONY:
It isn't
right.
We'd best be married on Sunday.
JOHANNA:
Saturday,
sir,
Would also do.
ANTHONY:
Or else tonight.
(The JUDGE
and the BEADLE move past the house)
JOHANNA:
I think I heard a
noise.
ANTHONY:
Fear not.
JOHANNA
I
mean another noise!
ANTHONY:
Like what?
JOHANNA:
Oh,
never mind,
Just a noise
Just another noise,
Something in
the street,
I'm a silly little
Ninnynoddle —
ANTHONY:
You
mustn't mind,
It's a noise,
Just another noise,
Something in
the street,
You silly —
BOTH (Falling into each other's
arms):
Kiss me!
JOHANNA:
Oh, sir...
ANTHONY:
We'll go
to Paris on Monday.
JOHANNA:
What shall I wear?
I daren't
pack!
ANTHONY:
We'll ride a train ...
JOHANNA:
With you
beside me on Sunday,
What will I care
What things I
lack?
ANTHONY:
Then sail to Spain ...
JOHANNA:
I'll take
my reticule.
I need my reticule.
You mustn't think
Me a
fool
But my reticule
Never leaves my side,
It's the only
thing
My mother gave me —
Kiss me!
Kiss me!
We'll go
there,
Kiss me!
We have a place where we can
ANTHONY:
Why
take your reticule?
We'll buy a reticule.
I'd never think
You
a fool,
But a reticule —
Leave it all aside
And begin
again and
Kiss me!
I know a place where we can go
Tonight.
Kiss
me!
We have a place where we can
Go...Go tonight.
BEADLE
{Simultaneously with the above):
The name is
Todd.
JUDGE:
Todd?
BEADLE:
Todd. Sweeney
Todd.
JUDGE:
Todd ...
BEADLE:
Todd.
ANTHONY:
I
loved you
Even as I saw you,
Even as it did not
Matter that
I did
Not know your name
Johanna,
Johanna,
Johanna…
JOHANNA:
I
loved you
Even as I saw you,
Even as it does not
Matter that
I still
Don't know your name, sir,
Even as I saw you,
Even
as it does not
Matter that I still
Don't know your name .
..
BEADLE (Simultaneously with above):
Todd . . . Sweeney
Todd.
JUDGE and BEADLE:
Sweeney Todd.
ANTHONY: Anthony . .
.
JUDGE: Todd . . .
BEADLE: TODD.
JOHANNA: ANTHONY . .
.
JUDGE: TODD, eh?
JOHANNA: ANTHONY:
I'll marry ANTHONY
Sunday, You marry ANTHONY Sunday,
That's what I'll do. That's what
you'll do,
No matter what! No matter what!
I knew you'd come
for me I knew I'd come for you
one day, one day
Only afraid
that you'd forgot. Only afraid that you'd forgot.
BEADLE
(Simultaneously with above):
Ladies in their sensitivities, my
lord ...
JUDGE:
Pray lead the way.
BEADLE:
Have a fragile
sensibility ...
JUDGE:
Just as you say.
JOHANNA:
I feared
you'd never come,
That you'd been called away,
That you'd been
killed,
Had the plague,
Were in debtor's jail,
Trampled by a
horse,
Gone to sea again,
Arrested by the ...
ANTHONY:
Marry
me, marry me, miss,
You'll marry me Sunday.
Favor me, favor
me
With your hand.
Promise,
Marry me, marry me,
That
you'll marry me —
Enough of all this ...
(He crushes her to
him; they kiss)
BEADLE (Simultaneously with above):
When a
girl's emergent,
Probably it's urgent. ..
Ladies in their
sensitivities .. .
JUDGE:
Todd ...
JOHANNA (As she sinks to
the floor with ANTHONY) :
Oh, sir ...
ANTHONY:
Ah, miss . .
.
JOHANNA:
Oh, sir...
Oh, sir ...
Oh, sir ...
Oh, sir
...
Oh, sir ...
Oh, sir ...
ANTHONY:
Ah, miss ...
Ah,
miss . . .
Ah, miss ...
Ah, miss ...
Ah, miss . . .
(Light
leaves them, comes up on the pie-shop-tonsorial parlor. Upstairs,
TODD is silently cleaning his razor. In the shop, MRS. LOVETT and
TOBIAS unfreeze from the position in which they were last seen)
MRS.
LOVETT: Maybe you should run along, dear.
TOBIAS: Oh no, ma'am, I
daren't budge till he calls for me.
MRS. LOVETT: I'll pop up and
see what Mr. TODD says. (Humming, MRS. LOVETT starts climbing the
stairs. As she enters the parlor) Ah me, my poor knees is not what
they was, dear. (She sits down on the chest) How long before the
Eyetalian gets back?
TODD (Still impassively cleaning the razor):
He won't be back.
MRS. LOVETT (Instantly suspicious): Now, Mr. T.,
you didn't! (TODD nods toward the chest. Realizing, MRS. LOVETT jumps
up. For a moment she stands looking at the chest, then, gingerly, she
lifts the lid. She gazes down, then spins to Todd) You're crazy mad!
Killing a man wot done you no harm? And the boy downstairs?
TODD:
He recognized me from the old days. He tried to blackmail me, half my
earnings forever.
MRS. LOVETT: Oh well, that's a different matter!
What a relief, dear! For a moment I thought you'd lost your marbles.
(Turns to peer down again into the chest) Ooh! All that blood! Enough
to make you come all over gooseflesh, ain't it. Poor bugger. Oh,
well! (She starts to close the lid, sees something, bends to pick it
up. It is Pirelli 's purse. She looks in it) Three quid! Well, waste
not, want not, as I always say. (She takes out the money and puts it
down her bosom. She is about to throw the purse away when something
about it attracts her. She slips it too down her dress. She shuts the
chest lid and, quite composed again, sits down on it) Now, dear, we
got to use the old noggin. (As she sits deep in thought, we see the
JUDGE and BEADLE coming up the street)
BEADLE (Pointing): There
you are, sir. Above the pie-shop, sir.
JUDGE: I see. You may leave
me now.
BEADLE: Thank you, sir. Thank you. (He starts off as
(adJUDGE approaches the parlor)
MRS. LOVETT (Coming out of her
pondering): Well, first there's the lad.
TODD: Send him up
here.
MRS. LOVETT: Him, too! Now surely one's enough for today,
dear. Shouldn't indulge yourself, you know. Now let me see, he's half
seas over already with the gin . . (As she speaks, downstairs the
JUDGE clangs the bell. TODD runs to the landing and peers down the
stairs. The BEADLE is still visible, exiting)
TODD: Providence is
kind!
MRS. LOVETT: Who is it?
TODD: Judge Turpin.
MRS.
LOVETT {Flustered): Him, him? The Judge? It can't be! It—
TODD:
Quick, leave me!
MRS. LOVETT: What are you going to do?
TODD
(Roaring): Leave me, I said!
MRS. LOVETT: Don't worry, dear. I'm —
out! (She scuttles out of the tonsorial parlor and starts down the
stairs as the JUDGE ascends. They meet halfway. She gives him a deep
curtsy) Excuse me, your Lordship. (She hurries back to TOBIAS in the
shop)
JUDGE: Mr. TODD?
TODD: At your service, sir. An honor to
receive your patronage, sir.
MRS. LOVETT (To TOBIAS) : Now, dear,
seems like your guvnor has gone and left you high and dry. But don't
worry. Your Aunt Nellie will think of what to do with you. (Picks up
the bottle of gin and pours some more into his glass. Still holding
the bottle, she leads him toward the curtains) Come on into my lovely
back parlor. (They disappear through the curtain)
JUDGE (Looking
around): These premises are hardly prepossessing and yet the BEADLE
tells me you are the most accomplished of all the barbers in the
city.
TODD: That is gracious of him, sir. And you must please
excuse the modesty of my establishment. It's only a few days ago that
I set up quarters here and some necessaries are yet to come.
(Indicating chair)Sit, sir, if you please, sir. Sit. (The JUDGE
settles into the chair; music under as Mrs. Lovett, still holding the
gin bottle, enters her back parlor with TOBIAS)
MRS. LOVETT: See
how nice and cozy it is? Sit down, dear, sit. (She starts to pour him
more gin) Oh, it's empty. Now you just sit there, dear, like a good
quiet boy while I get a new bottle from the larder. (She leaves him
alone)
TODD: And what may I do for you, sir? A stylish trimming of
the hair? A soothing skin massage?
JUDGE (Sings):
You see, sir,
a man infatuate with love,
Her ardent and eager slave.
So fetch
the pomade and pumice stone
And lend me a more seductive tone,
A
sprinkling perhaps of French cologne,
But first, sir, I think —
a shave.
TODD: The closest I ever gave.
(He whips the sheet
over the JUDGE, then tucks the bib in. The JUDGE hums, flicking
imaginary dust off the sheet; TODD whistles gaily)
JUDGE: You are
in a merry mood today, Mr. TODD.
TODD (Sings, mixing lather):
'Tis
your delight, sir, catching fire
From one man to the
next.
JUDGE:
'Tis true, sir, love can still inspire
The
blood to pound, the heart leap higher.
BOTH:
What more, what
more can man require —
JUDGE:
Than love, sir?
TODD:
More
than love, sir.
JUDGE:
What, sir?
TODD:
Women.
JUDGE:
Ah
yes, women.
TODD:
Pretty women.
(The JUDGE hums jauntily;
TODD whistles and starts stropping his razor rhythmically. He then
lathers the JUDGE's face. Still whistling, he stands back to survey
the JUDGE, who is now totally relaxed, eyes closed. He picks up the
razor and sings to it)
Now then, my friend.
Now to your
purpose.
Patience, enjoy it.
Revenge can't be taken in
haste.
JUDGE (Opens his eyes):
Make haste, and if we
wed,
You'll be commended, sir.
TODD (bows):
My lord . .
.
(Goes to him)
And who, may it be said,
Is your intended,
sir?
JUDGE:
My ward.
(TODD freezes; the JUDGE closes his
eyes, settles comfortably, speaks)
And pretty as a rosebud.
TODD
{Music rising): As pretty as her mother?
JUDGE (Mildly puzzled):
What? What was that?
(As the music reaches a shrill crescendo,
TODD is slowly bringing the razor toward the JUDGE 's throat when
suddenly the JUDGE opens his eyes and starts to twist around in
curiosity)
TODD (Musingly, lightly): Oh, nothing, sir. Nothing.
May we proceed? (Starts to shave the JUDGE, sings)
Pretty women .
. .
Fascinating. ..
Sipping coffee,
Dancing.. .
Pretty
women
Are a wonder.
Pretty women.
Sitting in the window
or
Standing on the stair,
Something in them
Cheers the
air.
Pretty women . . .
JUDGE:
Silhouetted...
TODD:
Stay
within you .. .
JUDGE:
Glancing...
TODD:
Stay forever ..
.
JUDGE:
Breathing lightly . . .
TODD:
Pretty women
...
both:
Pretty women!
Blowing out their candles or
Combing
out their hair ...
JUDGE:
Then they leave ...
Even when they
leave you
And vanish, they somehow
Can still remain
There
with you,
There with you.
BOTH:
Ah,
Pretty women
...
TODD:
At their mirrors . ..
JUDGE:
In their gardens .
. .
TODD:
Letter-writing . . .
JUDGE:
Flower-picking . .
.
TODD:
Weather-watching. . .
BOTH:
How they make a man
sing!
TODD:
Even when they leave,
They
still
Are
There.
They're there.
Proof of heaven
As
you're living —
Pretty women, sir!
JUDGE:
TODD:
Pretty
women, here's to
Pretty women, all the
Pretty women ...
Pretty
women, yes!
Pretty women, sir!
Pretty women!
Pretty women,
sir!
(TODD raises his arm in a huge arc and is about to slice the
razor across (adJUDGE 's throat when ANTHONY bursts in)
ANTHONY
(Singing):
She says she'll marry me Sunday,
Everything's set,
we leave tonight — !
JUDGE (Jumping up, spilling the basin and
knocking the razor from TODD's hand): You!
ANTHONY: Judge
Turpin!
JUDGE: There is indeed a Higher Power to warn me thus in
time. (As ANTHONY retreats, he jumps on him and grabs him by the arm)
Johanna elope with you? Deceiving slut — I'll lock her up in some
obscure retreat where neither you nor any other vile, corrupting
youth shall ever lay eyes on her again.
ANTHONY (Shaking himself
free): But, sir, I beg of you —
JUDGE (To TODD) : And as for
you, barber, it is all too clear what company you keep. Service them
well and hold their custom — for you'll have none of mine. (He
strides out and down the stairs)
ANTHONY: Mr. TODD!
TODD
(Shouting): Out! Out, I say! (Bewildered, ANTHONY leaves. Music
begins under, very agitated. TODD stands motionless, in shock. As the
JUDGE hurries off down the street, MRS. LOVETT, with a new bottle of
gin in her hand, sees him. She glances after him, then goes into the
back parlor where TOBIAS is now asleep. She looks at him, puts down
the bottle and hurries out and up the stairs to TODD)
MRS. LOVETT:
All this running and shouting. What is it now, dear?
TODD: I had
him — and then ...
MRS. LOVETT: The sailor busted in. I saw them
both running down the street and I said to myself: "The fat's in
the fire, for sure!"
TODD (Interrupting, sings):
I had
him!
His throat was bare
Beneath my hand — !
MRS. LOVETT
(Alarmed, pacifying): There, there, dear. Don't fret.
TODD:
No,
I had him!
His throat was there,
And he'll never come
again!
MRS. LOVETT:
Easy now.
Hush, love, hush.
I keep
telling you —
TODD (Violently):
When?
MRS. LOVETT:
What's
your rush?
TODD:
Why did I wait?
You told me to wait!
Now
he'll never come again!
(Music becomes ferocious. TODD's insanity,
always close to the surface, explodes finally)
There's a hole in
the world
Like a great black pit
And it's filled with
people
Who are filled with shit
And the vermin of the
world
Inhabit it —
But not for long!
They all deserve to
die!
Tell you why, Mrs. Lovett,
Tell you why:
Because in all
of the whole human race, Mrs. Lovett,
There are two kinds of men
and only two.
There's the one staying put
In his proper
place
And the one with his foot
In the other one's face —
Look
at me, Mrs. Lovett,
Look at you!
No, we all deserve to
die!
Tell you why, Mrs. Lovett,
Tell you why:
Because the
lives of the wicked should be —
(Slashes at the air)
Made
brief.
For the rest of us, death
Will be a relief—
We all
deserve to die!
(Keening)
And I'll never see Johanna,
No,
I'll never hug my girl to me —
Finished!
(Turns on the
audience)
All right! You, sir,
How about a shave?
(Slashes
twice)
Come and visit
Your good friend Sweeney — !
You,
sir, too, sir —
Welcome to the grave!
I will have
vengeance,
I will have salvation!
Who, sir? You, sir?
No
one's in the chair —
Come on, come on,
Sweeney's waiting!
I
want you bleeders!
You, sir — anybody!
Gentlemen, now don't
be shy!
Not one man, no,
Nor ten men,
Nor a hundred
Can
assuage me —
I will have you!
( To MRS. LOVETT)
And I will
get him back
Even as he gloats.
In the meantime I'll
practice
On less honorable throats.
(Keening again)
And my
Lucy lies in ashes
And I'll never see my girl again,
But the
work waits,
I'm alive at last
(Exalted)
And I'm full of
joy!
(He drops down into the barber's chair in a sweat, panting)
MRS. LOVETT (Who has been watching him intently): That's all very
well, but all that matters now is him! (She points to the chest. TODD
still sits motionless. She goes to him, peers at him) Listen! Do you
hear me? Can you hear me? Get control of yourself. (She slaps his
cheek. After a long pause, TODD, still in a
half-dream, gets to
his feet) What are we going to do about him? And there's the lad
downstairs. We'd better go and have a look and be sure he's still
there. When I left him he was sound asleep in the parlor. (She starts
downstairs)
Come on! (TODD follows. She disappears into the back
parlor and re-emerges) No problem there. He's still sleeping. He's
simple as a baby lamb. Later I can fob him off with some story easy.
But him! (Indicating the tonsorial parlor above)
What are we going
to do with him?
TODD (Disinterestedly): Later on, when it's dark,
we'll take him to some secret place and bury him.
MRS. LOVETT:
Well, of course, we could do that. I don't suppose there's any
relatives going to come poking around looking for him. But.. .
(Pause. Chord)
You know me. Sometimes ideas just pop into me head
and I keep thinking . ..
(Sings)
Seems a downright shame . .
.
TODD: Shame?
MRS. LOVETT:
Seems an awful waste .. .
Such
a nice plump frame
Wot's-his-name
Has...
Had . ..
Has...
Nor
it can't be traced.
Business needs a lift —
Debts to be
erased —
Think of it as thrift,
As a gift...
If you get my
drift.. .
(TODD stares into space)
No?
(She sighs)
Seems
an awful waste.
I mean,
With the price of meat what it is,
When
you get it,
If you get it—
TODD (Becoming aware, chuckling):
Ah!
MRS. LOVETT:
Good, you got it.
(Warming to it)
Take,
for instance,
Mrs. Mooney and her pie shop.
Business never
better, using only
Pussycats and toast.
And a pussy's good for
maybe six or
Seven at the most.
And I'm sure they can't
compare
As far as taste —
TODD:
MRS. LOVETT,
What a
charming notion,
Eminently practical and yet
Appropriate, as
always.
Mrs. Lovett
How I've lived without you
All these
years I'll never know!
How delectable!
Also undetectable.
How
choice!
How rare!
MRS. LOVETT:
Well, it does seem a
Waste
...
It's an idea ...
Think about it...
Lots of other
gentlemen'll
Soon be coming for a shave
Won't they?
Think
of
All them
Pies!
TODD:
For what's the sound of the world
out there?
MRS. LOVETT:
What, Mr. Todd,
What, Mr. Todd,
What
is that sound?
TODD:
Those crunching noises pervading the
air?
MRS. LOVETT:
Yes, Mr. Todd,
Yes, Mr. Todd,
Yes, all
around —
TODD:
It's man devouring man, my dear,
And who
are we
To deny it in here?
MRS. LOVETT:
Then who are we
To
deny it in here?
TODD: These are desperate times, Mrs. Lovett, and
desperate measures are called for.
(She goes to the counter and
comes back with an imaginary pie)
MRS. LOVETT: Here we are, hot
from the oven.(She holds it out to him)
TODD:
What is
that?
MRS. LOVETT:
It's priest.
Have a little
priest.
TODD:
Is it really good?
MRS. LOVETT:
Sir, it's
too good,
At least.
Then again, they don't commit sins of the
flesh,
So it's pretty fresh.
TODD (Looking at it):
Awful lot
of fat.
MRS. LOVETT:
Only where it sat.
TODD:
Haven't you
got poet
Or something like that?
MRS. LOVETT:
No, you see
the trouble with poet
Is, how do you know it's
Deceased?
Try
the priest.
TODD (Tasting it): Heavenly.
(MRS. LOVETT
giggles)
Not as hearty as bishop, perhaps, but not as bland as
curate, either.
MRS. LOVETT: And good for business — always
leaves you wanting more. Trouble is, we only get it in Sundays . . .
(TODD chuckles. MRS. LOVETT presents another imaginary pie)
Lawyer's
rather nice.
TODD:
If it's for a price.
MRS. LOVETT:
Order
something else, though, to follow,
Since no one should swallow
It
twice.
TODD:
Anything that's lean.
MRS. LOVETT:
Well,
then, if you're British and loyal,
You might enjoy
Royal
Marine.
(TODD makes a face)
Anyway, it's
clean.
Though, of course, it tastes of wherever it's been.
TODD
(Looking past her at an imaginary oven):
Is that squire
On the
fire?
MRS. LOVETT:
Mercy no, sir,
Look closer,
You'll
notice it's grocer.
TODD:
Looks thicker.
More like
vicar.
MRS. LOVETT:
No, it has to be grocer — it's
green.
TODD:
The history of the world, my love —
MRS.
LOVETT:
Save a lot of graves,
Do a lot of relatives favors
...
TODD:
— is those below serving those up above.
MRS.
LOVETT:
Everybody shaves,
So there should be plenty of flavors
...
TODD:
How gratifying for once to know —
BOTH:
—
that those above will serve those down below!
MRS. LOVETT: Now,
let's see ... (Surveying an imaginary tray of pies on the counter)
We've got tinker ...
TODD (Looking at it): Something pinker.
MRS.
LOVETT: Tailor?
tow (Shaking his head): Paler.
MRS. LOVETT:
Butler?
TODD: Subtler.
MRS. LOVETT: Potter?
TODD (Feeling
it): Hotter.
MRS. LOVETT: Locksmith?
(TODD shrugs, defeated.
MRS. LOVETT offers another imaginary pie)
Lovely bit of
clerk.
TODD:
Maybe for a lark ...
MRS. LOVETT:
Then
again, there's sweep
If you want it cheap
And you like it
dark.
(Another)
Try the financier.
Peak of his
career.
TODD:
That looks pretty rank.
MRS. LOVETT:
Well,
he drank.
It's a bank
Cashier.
Last one really sold.
(Feels
it)
Wasn't quite so old.
TODD:
Have you any BEADLE?
MRS.
LOVETT:
Next week, so I'm told.
BEADLE isn't bad till you smell
it
And notice how well it's
Been greased.
Stick to
priest.
(Offers another pie)
Now this may be a bit stringy, but
then, of course, it's fiddle player.
TODD: This isn't Fiddle
player. It's piccolo player.
MRS. LOVETT: How can you tell?
TODD:
It's piping hot.
(Giggles)
MRS. LOVETT (Snorts with glee): Then
blow on it first. (TODD guffaws)
TODD:
The history of the
world, my sweet —
MRS. LOVETT:
Oh, Mr. Todd,
Ooh, Mr.
Todd,
What does it tell?
TODD:
— is who gets eaten and who
gets to eat.
MRS. LOVETT:
And, Mr. Todd,
Too, Mr. Todd,
Who
gets to sell.
TODD:
But fortunately, it's also clear —
TODD:
MRS. LOVETT:
That everybody But everybody
Goes down well with
beer. Goes down well with beer.
MRS. LOVETT: Since marine doesn't
appeal to you, how about rear admiral?
TODD: Too salty. I prefer
general.
MRS. LOVETT: With or without his privates? "With"
is extra. (TODD chortles)
TODD (As MRS. LOVETT offers another
pie):
What is that?
MRS. LOVETT:
It's fop.
Finest in the
shop.
Or we have some shepherd's pie peppered
With actual
shepherd
On top.
And I've just begun.
Here's the politician
— so oily
It's served with a doily —
(TODD makes a
face)
Have one.
TODD:
Put it on a bun.
(As she looks at
him quizzically)
Well, you never know if it's going to run.
MRS.
LOVETT:
Try the friar.
Fried, it's drier.
TODD:
No, the
clergy is really
Too coarse and too mealy.
MRS. LOVETT:
Then
actor —
That's compacter.
TODD:
Yes, and always arrives
overdone.
I'll come again when you
Have JUDGE on the menu . .
.
MRS. LOVETT: Wait! True, we don't have JUDGE — yet — but
would you settle for the next best thing?
TODD: What's that?
MRS.
LOVETT (Handing him a butcher's cleaver): Executioner. (TODD roars,
and then, picking up her wooden rolling pin, hands it to
her)
TODD:
Have charity toward the world, my pet.
MRS.
LOVETT:
Yes, yes, I know, my love —
TODD:
We'll take the
customers what we can get
MRS. LOVETT:
High-born and low, my
love
TODD:
We'll not discriminate great from small
No, we'll
serve anyone —
Meaning anyone —
BOTH:
And to anyone
At
all!
(Music continues as the two of them brandish their "weapons."
The scene blacks out).
ACT II
Thanks to her
increasing prosperity, MRS. LOVETT has created a modest outdoor
eating garden outside the pie-shop, consisting of a large wooden
table with two benches, a few bushes in pots, birds in cages. At
rise, contented customers, one of whom is drunk, are filling the
garden, devouring their pies, and drinking ale while TOBIAS, in a
waiter's apron, drums up trade along the sidewalk. Inside the
pie-shop, MRS. LOVETT, in a "fancy" gown, a sign of her
upward mobility, doles out pies from the counter and collects a few
on a tray to bring into the garden subsequently. TODD is pacing
restlessly in the tonsorial parlor. The beggar woman hangs around
throughout, hungry and ominous.
TOBIAS:
Ladies and
gentlemen,
May I have your attention, perlease?
Are your
nostrils aquiver and tingling as well
At that delicate, luscious
ambrosial smell?
Yes they are, I can tell.
Well, ladies and
gentlemen,
That aroma enriching the breeze
Is like nothing
compared to its succulent source,
As the gourmets among you will
tell you, of course.
Ladies and gentlemen,
You can't imagine
the rapture in store —
(Indicating the shop)
Just inside of
this door!
(Beating his usual drum)
There you'll sample
Mrs.
Lovett's meat pies,
Savory and sweet pies,
As you'll see.
You
who eat pies,
Mrs. Lovett's meat pies
Conjure up the treat
pies
Used to be!
(TOBIAS and customers sing, overlapping)
1ST
MAN:
Over here, boy, how about some ale?
2ND MAN:
Let me
have another, laddie!
1ST WOMAN:
Tell me, are they
flavorsome?
2ND WOMAN:
They are.
3RD WOMAN:
Isn't this
delicious?
TOBIAS ( To 2ND MAN):
Right away.
4THMAN:
Could
we have some service over here, boy?
4TH WOMAN:
Could we have
some service, waiter?
3RD MAN:
Could we have some service?
2ND
and 3RD WOMAN:
Yes, they are.
1ST MAN:
God, that's good!
2ND
MAN:
What about that pie, boy?
1ST WOMAN:
Tell me, are they
spicy?
2ND WOMAN:
God, that's good!
5TH WOMAN:
How much
are you charging?
TOBIAS:
Thruppence.
3RD WOMAN:
Yes,
what about the pie, boy?
4TH WOMAN:
I never tasted anything so
...
1ST and 5TH woman:
Thruppence?
5TH MAN:
Thruppence
for a meat pie?
1ST and 2ND man:
Where's the ale I asked you
for, boy?
TOBIAS:
|_ Ladies and gentlemen — !
MRS. LOVETT
(Ringing a bell to attract TOBIAS 's attention)
Toby!
(She
starts into the garden with a tray of pies)(To a
customer)
TOBIAS:
Coming!
'Scuse me . . .
MRS. LOVETT
(Indicating a beckoning customer):
Ale there!
TOBIAS:
Right,
mum!
(He runs inside, picks up a jug of ale, whisks back out into
the garden and starts filling tankards)
MRS. LOVETT:
Quick,
now!
CUSTOMER (Licking their fingers):
God, that's good!
MRS.
LOVETT (A bundle of activity, serving pies, collecting money, giving
orders, addressing each of the patrons individually and with equal
insincerity):
Nice to see you, dearie . ..
How have you been
keeping? ...
Cor, me bones is weary!
Toby—!
(Indicating a
customer)
One for the gentleman . . .
Hear the birdies cheeping
—
Helps to keep it cheery . . .
(Spying the BEGGAR
WOMAN)
Toby!
Throw the old woman out!
customers:
God,
that's good!
(TOBIAS shoos the BEGGAR WOMAN away, but she
soon
comes back, sniffing)
MRS. LOVETT (To other customers,
without breaking rhythm):
What's your pleasure, dearie? ...
No,
we don't cut slices .. .
Cor, me eyes is bleary! . . .
(As
TOBIAS is about to pour for a plastered customer)
Toby!
None
for the gentleman! . . .
I could up me prices —
I'm a little
leery ...
Business
Couldn't be better, though —
CUSTOMER:
God,
that's good!
MRS. LOVETT:
Knock on wood.
(She does)
TODD
(Leaning out of window):
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT (To a
customer):
Excuse me ...
TODD:
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT ( To
TOBIAS):
Dear, see to the customers.
TODD:
Psst!
MRS.
LOVETT (Moving toward him):
Yes, what, love?
Quick, though, the
trade is brisk.
TODD:
But it's six o'clock!
MRS. LOVETT:
So
it's six o'clock.
TODD:
It was due to arrive
At a quarter to
five —
MRS. LOVETT:
TODD:
And it's six o'clock!
I've
been waiting all day!
But it should have been here
By now!
And
it's probably already
Down the block!
It'll be here, it'll be
here!
Have a beaker of beer
And stop worrying, dear.
Now,
now . . .
CUSTOMERS:
More hot pies!
MRS. LOVETT (Looking
back, agitated at being pulled in two directions): Gawd.
(To TODD,
moving back to the garden)
Will you wait there, TODD:
Coolly,
You'll come back
'Cos my customers truly When it comes?
Are
getting unruly.
(Circulating again in the garden)
And what's
your pleasure, dearie?
(Spilling ale)
Oops! I beg your
pardon!
Just me hands is smeary —
(Spotting a would-be
freeloader)
Toby!
Run for the gentleman!
(TOBIAS catches
him, collects the money; MRS. LOVETT
turns to another
customer)
Don't you love a garden?
Always makes me teary .
..
(Looking back at the freeloader)
Must be one of them
foreigners —
customers:
God, that's good that is
delicious!
(During the following a huge crate appears high on a
crane and moves slowly downstage to the tonsorial parlor. TODD sees
it)
MRS. LOVETT:
What's my secret?
(To a woman)
Frankly,
dear — forgive my candor —
Family secret,
All to do with
herbs.
Things like being
Careful with your coriander,
That's
what makes the gravy grander — !
CUSTOMER:
More hot
pies!
(MRS. LOVETT hastens into the shop and loads the tray
again)
More hot!
More pies!
TODD (Out the
window):
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT (To a customer in the shop):
Excuse
me ...
TODD:
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT ( To TOBIAS):
Dear, see to
the customers.
TODD:
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT:
Yes, what,
love?
Quick, though, the trade is brisk.
TODD:
But it's
here!
MRS. LOVETT:
It's where?
TODD:
Coming up the
stair!
MRS. LOVETT:
(Holding up the tray)
I'll get rid of
this lot
As they're still pretty hot
And then I'll be
there!
TODD:
It's about to be opened
Or don't you care?
No,
I'll be there!
I will be there!
But they'll never be sold
If
I let 'em get cold —
But we have to prepare!
(During
the/allowing, the crate is lowered to the tonsorial parlor)
MRS.
LOVETT (Without pausing for breath, smiling to a customer):
Oh,
and
Incidentally, dearie,
You know Mrs. Mooney.
Sales've
been so dreary —
(Spots the BEGGAR WOMAN again)
Toby—!
(To
the same customer)
Poor thing is penniless.
(Indicating BEGGAR
WOMAN, to TOBIAS)
What about that loony?
(To the same customer,
as TOBIAS shoos the BEGGAR WOMAN away again)
Lookin' sort of
beery—
Oh well, got her comeuppance —
(Hawklike, to a
rising customer)
And that'll be thruppence —
and
CUSTOMERS:
(Singing with mouths/till)
MRS. LOVETT:
So
she should.
God, that's good that is de have you
Licious ever
tasted smell such
Oh my God what more that's pies good!
(MRS.
LOVETT goes up to the tonsorial parlor, entering as TODD opens the
crate, revealing an elaborate barber chair)
TODD and MRS. LOVETT
(Swooning with admiration):
Oooohhhh! Oooohhhh!
(The empty
crate swings away on the crane)
TODD:
Is that a chair fit for a
king,
A wondrous neat
And most particular chair?
You tell me
where
Is there a seat
Can half compare
With this particular
thing!
I have a few
Minor adjustments
To make —
They'll
take
A moment.
I'll call you . ..
MRS. LOVETT:
It's
gorgeous!
It's gorgeous!
It's perfect!
It's gorgeous!
You
make your few
Minor adjustments.
You take your time,
I'll go
see to the customers.
TODD (Looking at the chair, as MRS. LOVETT
goes back to the garden):
I have another friend . ..
TOBIAS:
(To
the customers)
Is that a pie fit for a king,
A wondrous
sweet
And most delectable thing?
You see, ma'am, why
There
is no meat
MRS. LOVETT:
It's gorgeous!
It's gorgeous!
Pie
can compete It's perfect!
With this delectable It's
gorgeous!
Pie.
customers {Simultaneously with
above):
Yum!
Yum!
Yum!
TOBIAS and MRS. LOVETT:
The
crust all velvety and wavy,
That glaze, those crimps . . .
And
then, the thick, succulent gravy.. .
One whiff, one glimpse . .
.
customers {Simultaneously with above):
Yum! Yum!
Yum!
Yum!
Yum! Yum!
Yum! Yum!
TODD:
And now to test
This
best of barber chairs .. .
MRS. LOVETT:
So rich,
So thick
It
makes you sick . . .
TOBIAS:
So tender
That you surrender ..
.
customers {Simultaneously with above):
Yum!
Yum!
Yum!
Yum!
TODD:
It's rime . ..
It's rime . ..
Psst!
MRS.
LOVETT (To the customers):
Excuse me . ..
TODD {From
above):
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT ( to TOBIAS):
Dear, see to the
customers.
TODD:
Psst!
MRS. LOVETT {Moving toward him):
Yes,
what, love?
TODD:
Quick, now!
MRS. LOVETT:
Me heart's
aflutter — !
TODD:
When I pound the floor,
It's a signal
to show
That I'm ready to go,
When I pound the floor!
I just
want to be sure.
When I'm certain that you're
In place —
MRS.
LOVETT:
When you pound the floor,
Yes, you told me, I
know,
You'll be ready to go
When you pound the floor •
Will
you trust me?
Will you trust me?
I'll be waiting below
For
the whistle to blow . ..
TODD:
I'll pound three rimes.
(He
demonstrates on the frame of the window)
Three rimes.
(He does
it again; she nods impatiently)
And then you —
(She knocks at
the air two times)
Three rimes —
(She knocks heavily and
wearily on the wall)
If you —
(She knocks again, rolling her
eyes skyward)
Exactly.
customers:
More hot pies!
MRS.
LOVETT:
Gawd!
CUSTOMERS:
More hot!
MRS. LOVETT (Over her
shoulder to them):
Right!
CUSTOMERS:
More pies!
TODD
(Seeing her attention waver):
Psst!
CUSTOMERS:
More!
MRS.
LOVETT:
Wait!
(She runs into the bakehouse, which we see for
the first time. Upstage are the large baking ovens. Downstage is a
butcher's-block table, on which stands a bizarre meat-grinding
machine. In the wall is the mouth of a chute leading down from the
tonsorial parlor. Upstage is a trap door leading down to an invisible
cellar. While music continues under, TODD takes a stack of books tied
together, puts it in the chair, then pounds three times on the floor.
MRS. LOVETT responds by knocking three times on the mouth of the
chute. TODD pulls a lever in the arm of the chair. The chair becomes
a slide and the books disappear through a trap. Music. The books
reappear from the hole in the bakehouse wall and plop on the floor.
The chair resumes its normal position. MRS. LOVETT knocks three times
excitedly on the chute; TODD responds by pounding on the floor three
times)
CUSTOMER:
More hot pies!
(MRS. LOVETT hurries out of
the bakehouse)
More hot! More pies!
(TODD resumes tinkering
happily with the chair)
More! Hot! Pies!
MRS. LOVETT and TOBIAS
(To the customers):
Eat them slow and
Feel the crust, how thin
I (she) rolled it!
Eat them slow, 'cos
Every one's a prize!
Eat
them slow, 'cos
That's the lot and now we've sold it!
(She
hangs up a "Sold Out" sign)
Come again tomorrow —
!
MRS. LOVETT (Spotting something along the street):
Hold it
—
CUSTOMERS:
More hot pies!
MRS. LOVETT:
Bless my eyes
— !
(For she sees the man with cap, from Act I, approaching the
barber sign. He looks up and rings TODD 's bell — three
times)
Fresh supplies!
(TODD leans out, sees the man, beckons
him up; the man starts up the steps. TODD holds his razor. They both
freeze. MRS. LOVETT takes down the "Sold Out" sign and
turns back to the customers)
MRS. LOVETT:
How about it,
dearie?
Be here in a twinkling!
Just confirms my theory
—
Toby—!
God watches over us.
Didn't have an inkling . .
.
Positively eerie . . .
TOBIAS:
Is that a pie
Fit for a
king,
A wondrous sweet
And most delectable
Thing?
You
see, ma'am, why
There is no meat pie
CUSTOMER (Simultaneously
with above):
Yum!
Yum!
Yum!
Yum! Yum!
Yum!
Yum!
MRS.
LOVETT (Spotting the BEGGAR WOMAN again):
Toby!
Throw the old
woman out!
(As TOBIAS leads the BEGGAR WOMAN off again, Mrs.
Lovett runs back to the pie-shop)
CUSTOMERS (Starting with their
mouths full, gradually swallowing and singing clearly):
God,
that's good that is de have you
Licious ever tasted smell such
Oh
my God what perfect more that's
Pies such flavor
(MRS. LOVETT
relaxes in thepie-shop with a mug of ale)
God, that's good!!!
(The
scene blacks out. The chimes of St. Dunstan's sound softly. It is
dawn. ANTHONY is searching the streets of London for-JOHANNA)
ANTHONY
(Sings):
I feel you, Johanna,
I feel you.
Do they think that
walls can hide you?
Even now I'm at your window.
I am in the
dark beside you,
Buried sweetly in your yellow
hair,
JOHANNA...
(As he continues the search, the light comes
up on the tonsorial parlor. TODD is seated on the outside stairs,
smoking and enjoying the morning. During the following passage, a
customer arrives. TODD ushers him into the office and into the chair,
preparing him for a shave. Throughout the song, TODD remains benign,
wistful, dream-like. What he sings is totally detached from the
action, as is he. He sings to the air)
TODD:
And are you
beautiful and pale,
With yellow hair, like her?
I'd want you
beautiful and pale,
The way I've dreamed you
were,
Johanna...
ANTHONY:
Johanna...
TODD:
And if
you're beautiful, what then,
With yellow hair, like wheat?
I
think we shall not meet again —
(He slashes the customer's
throat)
My little dove, my sweet
Johanna. ..
ANTHONY:
I'll
steal you,
Johanna. ..
TODD:
Goodbye, Johanna.
You're
gone, and yet you're mine.
I'm fine, Johanna,
I'm fine!
{He
pulls the lever and the customer disappears down the
chute)
ANTHONY:
JOHANNA...
(Nightfalls. We see a wisp of
smoke rise from the bakehouse chimney, a small trail gradually
bellowing out into a great, noxious plume of black. As it thickens,
we become aware of MRS. LOVETT, in a white nightdress, inside the
bakehouse. The oven doors are open and cast a hot light. She is
tossing "objects" into the oven. As the music continues
under, a figure stumbles into view from the alleyway beside the
chimney. It is the BEGGAR WOMAN, coughing and spitting and carrying a
meager straw pallet, her bed)
BEGGAR WOMAN (In a rage, loudly,
sings):
Smoke! Smoke!
Sign of the devil! Sign of the
devil!
City on fire!
(She tries to interest passers-by but,
clearly revolted by her, they move away)
Witch! Witch!
(Spits
at the bakehouse)
Smell it, sir! An evil smell!
Every night at
the vespers bell —
Smoke that comes from the mouth of hell
—
City on fire!
(The smoke trails away as dawn comes up)
City
on fire ...
Mischief! Mischief!
Mischief...
(She shuffles
off. It is now the next day. ANTHONY is searching through another
part of London. TODD is upstairs and looking pleasantly down at the
street. A second customer arrives and is shown into the shop and
prepared, as before)
TODD:
And if I never hear your voice,
My
turtledove, my dear,
I still have reason to rejoice:
The way
ahead is clear,
Johanna...
JOHANNA's voice (Heard only by
ANTHONY, she becomes visible behind bars in a section of the
madhouse, Fogg's Asylum, in which she is incarcerated):
I'll marry
ANTHONY Sunday . . .
ANTHONY Sunday ...
ANTHONY:
I feel you
...
TODD:
And in that darkness when I'm blind
With what I
can't forget —
ANTHONY:
Johanna...
TODD:
It's always
morning in my mind,
My little lamb, my pet,
JOHANNA...
JOHANNA'S
VOICE:
I knew you'd come for me one day . . .
Come for me ...
one day ...
TODD: ANTHONY:
You stay, Johanna — Johanna
...
(As they both sing the second syllable of the name, TODD
slashes the second customer's throat so that his mouth opens
simultaneously with theirs)
TODD:
The way I've dreamed you
are.
(Dusk gather's; TODD looks up)
Oh look, Johanna —
(He
pulls the lever and the customer disappears)
A
star!
ANTHONY:
Buried sweetly in your yellow hair . . .
TODD
(Tossing the customer's hat down the chute):
A shooting
star!
(Night falls again. Smoke rises. MRS. LOVETT is again in the
bakehouse. The BEGGAR WOMAN reappears, coughing fit to kill)
BEGGAR
WOMAN (Pointing):
There! There!
Somebody, somebody look up
there!
(Passers-by continue to ignore her)
Didn't I tell you?
Smell that air!
City on fire!
Quick, sir! Run and tell!
Warn
'em all of the witch's spell!
There it is, there it is, the unholy
smell!
Tell it to the BEADLE and the police as well!
Tell 'em!
Tell 'em!
Help!!! Fiend!!!
City on fire!!!
(The smoke thins;
dawn rises)
City on fire . . .
Mischief. .. Mischief.. .
Mischief...
(She makes a feeble curse with her fingers at the
bakehouse)
Fiend . . .
(Shrugs, turns pathetically to a
passer-by)
Alms .. . alms ...
(She shuffles off again. During
the last section of the song which follows, TODD welcomes a third
customer. He does not kill this one because a wife and child are
waiting out- side — the child has entered the room and sits on the
chest watching TODD. By the end of the song TODD is again looking
softly up at the sky)
TODD (Shaving the customer):
And though
I'll think of you, I guess,
Until the day I die,
I think I miss
you less and less
As every day goes
by,
Johanna...
ANTHONY:
Johanna...
JOHANNA'S VOICE:
With
you beside me on Sunday,
Married on Sunday .. .
TODD
(Sadly):
And you'd be beautiful and pale,
And look too much
like her.
If only angels could prevail,
We'd be the way we
were,
Johanna...
ANTHONY:
I feel you . .
.
Johanna...
JOHANNA'S VOICE:
Married on Sunday . .
.
Married on Sunday ...
TODD (Cheerfully, looking up at the
sky):
Wake up, Johanna!
Another bright red day!
(Wistful
smile)
We learn, Johanna,
To say
Goodbye..
(Having
completed the shave, TODD accepts money from
the customer, who
leaves with his family)
ANTHONY (Disappearing into the distance):
I'll steal you, Johanna!
(The scene fades and we see the
barrel door to Fogg's Asylum. From inside we hear a weird and
frightening sound, the cries and gibbering of the i imates. After a
moment, rising above the bizarre cacophony, we hear JOHANNA's voice
from inside a window, singing a snatch of "Green Finch and
Linnet Bird." A few moments later, she breaks of f singing and
the inmates quieten too as ANTHONY, dejected, enters. As he starts
across the stage, once again we hear JOHANNA 's voice,
singing)
ANTHONY (Incredulous, overjoyed, stops in his tracks):
Johanna! (Calling excitedly up at a window) Johanna! Johanna!
(A
male passer-by enters)
Oh sir, please tell me. What house is
this?
PASSER-BY: That? That's Mr. Fogg's Private Asylum for the
Mentally Deranged.
ANTHONY: A madhouse!
PASSER-BY: I'd keep
away from there if I were you.
(He exits. Once again we hear
JOHANNA 's voice)
ANTHONY: Johanna! Johanna!
(He starts beating
wildly on the door)
Open! Open the door !
(The BEADLE, falsely
amiable as ever, swaggers on, recognizes him)
BEADLE: Now, now,
friend, what's all this hollering and shouting?
ANTHONY: Oh, sir,
there has been a monstrous perversion of justice. A young woman, as
sane as you or I, has been incarcerated there.
BEADLE: Is that a
fact? Now what is this young person's name?
ANTHONY:
Johanna.
BEADLE: Johanna. That wouldn't by any chance be judge
Turpin's ward?
ANTHONY: He's the one. He's the devil incarnate who
has done this to her.
BEADLE: You watch your tongue. That girl's
as mad as the seven seas. I brought her here myself. So — hop
it.
ANTHONY: You have no right to order me about.
BEADLE: No
right, eh? You just hop it or I'm booking you for disturbing of the
peace, assailing an officer —
ANTHONY: Is there no justice in
this city? Are the officers of the law as vicious and corrupted as
their masters?
Johanna! Johanna!
(With a little
what-can-you-do? shrug, the BEADLE blows a whistle. Two policemen
hurry on. The BEADLE nods to ANTHONY. The policemen jump on him but
just before they subdue him, he breaks loose and runs away. The
policemen start after him)
BEADLE (Calling after them): After him!
Get him! Bash him on the head if need be! That's the sort of scalawag
that gets this neighborhood into disrepute. (As the scene dims we
hear first, in the darkness, the shrieks and moans of the asylum
inmates. Then loud and raucous, banishing them, we hear the sound of
Mrs. Lovett singing, as lights come up on her back parlor)
MRS.
LOVETT (Sitting at the harmonium):
I am a lass who alas loves a
lad
Who alas has a lass
In Canterbury.
"Tis a row dow
diddle dow day,
Tis a row dow diddle dow dee .. .
(The parlor
has been prettied up with new wallpaper and a second-hand harmonium.
TODD is sitting on the love seat, cleaning his pipe. MRS. LOVETT is
using the harmonium as a desk. She has a little cash book and is
counting out shillings and pennies in piles) Nothing like a nice sit
down, is there, dear, after a hard
day's work? (Piling up coins)
Four and thruppence .. . four and eleven pence . .. (Makes a note in
the book and does some adding) That makes seven pounds nine shillings
and four pence for this week. Not bad — and that don't include wot
I had to pay out for my nice cheery wallpaper or the harmonium ...
(Patting it approvingly) And a real bargain it was, dear, it being
only partly singed when the chapel burnt down. (Glancing at the
unresponsive TODD) Mr. T., are you listening to me?
TODD: Of
course.
MRS. LOVETT: Then what did I say, eh?
TODD (Back in his
reflections): There must be a way to the judge.
MRS. LOVETT
(Cross): The bloody old judge! Always harping on the bloody old
judge! (She massages his neck) We got a nice respectable business
now, money coming in regular and — since we're careful to pick and
choose — only strangers and such like wot won't be missed — who's
going to catch on? (No response; she leans across and pecks him on
the lips; sings)
Ooh, Mr. TODD —
(Kisses him again)
I'm so
happy —
(Again)
I could —
(Again)
Eat you up, I
really could!
You know what I'd like to
Do, Mr. TODD?
(Kisses
him)
What I dream —
(Again)
If the business stays as
good,
Where I'd really like to go —
(No response)
In a
year or so ...
(No response)
Don't you want to know?
TODD
(Dully): Of course.
MRS. LOVETT:
Do you really want to
know?
TODD (Feigned enthusiasm): Yes, yes, I do, I do.
(Music
continues under)
MRS. LOVETT (Settling back, after a pause): I've
always had a dream — ever since I was a skinny little slip of a
thing and my rich Aunt Nettie used to take me to the seaside August
Bank Holiday . . . the pier . . . making little castles in the sand.
I can still feel me toes wiggling around in the briny. (She sings)
By
the sea, Mr. TODD,
That's the life I covet;
By the sea, Mr.
TODD,
Ooh, I know you'd love it!
You and me, Mr. T,
We could
be alone
In a house wot we'd almost own
Down by the sea
...
TODD:
Anything you say . . .
MRS. LOVETT:
Wouldn't
that be smashing?
(TODD gives her a pained smile)
With the sea
at our gate,
We'll have kippered herring
Wot have swum to us
straight
From the Straits of Bering.
Every night in the
kip
When we're through our kippers,
I'll be there slippin' off
your slippers
By the sea .. .
With the fishies splashing,
By
the sea . ..
Wouldn't that be smashing?
Down by the sea
—
TODD:
Anything you say,
Anything you say.
MRS.
LOVETT:
I can see us waking,
The breakers breaking,
The
seagulls squawking:
Hoo! Hoo!
(She thinks she's being charming;
TODD looks at her in terror)
I do me baking,
(Waves)
Then I
go walking
With you-hoo . . .
You-hoo . . .
I'll warm me
bones
On the esplanade,
Have tea and scones
With me gay
young blade,
Then I'll knit a sweater
While you write a
letter,
(Coyly)
Unless we got better
To do-hoo . . .
TODD:
Anything you say . ..
MRS. LOVETT:
Think how snug it'll
be
Underneath our flannel
When it's just you and me
And the
English Channel.
In our cozy retreat,
Kept all neat and
tidy,
We'll have chums over every Friday
By the sea . .
.
TODD:
Anything you say . . .
MRS. LOVETT:
Don't you
love the weather
By the sea?
We'll grow old together
By the
seaside,
Hoo! Hoo!
By the beautiful sea!
(She speaks, music
under)
Oh, I can see us now — in our bathing dresses — you in
a nice rich navy — and me, stripes perhaps.
(Sings)
It'll be
so quiet
That who'll come by it
Except a seagull?
Hoo!
Hoo!
We shouldn't try it,
Though, till it's legal
For
two-hoo!
But a seaside wedding
Could be devised,
Me rumpled
bedding
Legitimized.
Me eyelids'll flutter,
I'll turn into
butter,
The moment I mutter
"Ido-hoo!"
(TODD gives
her a rather appalled glance)
By the sea, in our nest,
We could
share our kippers
With the odd paying guest
From the weekend
trippers,
Have a nice sunny suite
For the guest to rest in
—
Now and then, you could do the guest in —
By the
sea.
Married nice and proper,
By the sea —
Bring along
your chopper
To the seaside,
(Two slashes)
Hoo! Hoo!
By
the beautiful sea!
(Just before the end of the song, she plays a
measure of "Here Comes the Bride" on the harmonium. After
the song, she nuzzles up to TODD on the love seat)
Come on, dear.
Give us a kiss. (Kisses him) Ooh, that was lovely. Now, Mr. T., you
do love me just a little bit, don't you?
TODD: Of course.
MRS.
LOVETT: Then how about it? Of course, there'd have to be a little
visit to St. Swithin's to legalize things. But that wouldn't be too
painful, would it?
TODD (Back with his obsession): I'll make them
pay for what they did to Lucy.
MRS. LOVETT (Almost scolding): Now,
dear, you listen to me. It's high time you forgot all them morbid
fancies. Your Lucy's gone, poor thing. It's your Nellie now. Here.
(She takes a bon-bon from her purse) Have a nice bon-bon. (She kisses
him over the bon-bon, has a thought) You know, it's seventeen years
this Whitsun since my poor Albert passed on. I don't see why I
shouldn't be married in white, do you? (From the pie-shop, upstage,
we hear ANTHONY calling)
ANTHONY (Off): Mr. TODD! Mr. TODD!
(He
comes running in)
I've found her!
TODD (Jumping up): You have
found Johanna?
ANTHONY: That monster of a judge has had her locked
away in a madhouse!
TODD: Where? Where?
ANTHONY: Where no one
can reach her, at Mr. Fogg's Asylum. Oh, Mr. TODD, she's in there
with those screeching, gibbering maniacs —
TODD: A madhouse! A
madhouse! (Swinging around, feverishly excited, buzzing music under)
Johanna is as good as rescued.
MRS. LOVETT (Bewildered): She
is?
TODD: Where do you suppose all the wigmakers of London go to
obtain their human hair?
MRS. LOVETT: Who knows, dear? The morgue,
wouldn't be surprised.
TODD: Bedlam. They get their hair from the
lunatics at Bedlam.
ANTHONY: Then you think — ?
TODD: Fogg's
Asylum? Why not? For the right amount, they will sell you the hair
off any madman's head —
MRS. LOVETT: And the scalp to go with it
too, if requested. Excuse me, gentlemen, I'm out! (Exits)
TODD
(Excitedly, to ANTHONY) : We will write a letter to this Mr. Fogg
offering the highest price for hair the exact shade of Johanna's —
which I trust you know?
ANTHONY: Yellow.
TODD: Not exact
enough. I must make you a credible wigmaker — and
quickly.
(Sings)
There's tawny and there's golden
saffron,
There's flaxen and there's blonde .. .
(Speaks)
Repeat
that. Repeat that!
ANTHONY: Yes, Mr. TODD.
TODD:
Well?
ANTHONY:
There's tawny and there's golden
saffron,
There's flaxen and there's blonde ...
TODD:
Good.
(Sings)
There's coarse and fine,
There's straight and
curly, ANTHONY:
There's gray, there's white. There's coarse and
fine,
There's ash, there's pearly. There's straight and
curly,
There's corn-yellow There's gray, there's white,
Buff
and ochre and There's ash, there's pearly,
Straw and apricot. ..
There's corn-yellow ...
(They exit. As the lights dim, a quintet
from the company appears and sings)
quintet (Variously):
Sweeney'd
waited too long before —
"Ah, but never again," he
swore.
Fortune arrived. "Sweeney!" it sang.
Sweeney
was ready, and Sweeney sprang.
Sweeney's problems went up in
smoke,
All resolved with a single stroke.
Sweeney was sharp,
Sweeney was burning,
Sweeney began the engines turning.
Sweeney's
problems went up in smoke,
All resolved and completely solved
With
a single stroke
By Sweeney!
Sweeney
Didn't wait,
Not
Sweeney!
Set the bait,
Did Sweeney! Sweeney! Sweeney!
(During
this, TODD appears on the staircase, accompanied by a strange figure;
they enter the tonsorial parlor. We soon realize the figure is
ANTHONY, disguised as a wigmaker)
ANTHONY:
(Finishing his
catechism)
With finer textures,
Ash looks fairer, TODD:
Which
makes it rare. Good.
But flaxen's rarer —
No!No!
Yes, yes,
I know — The flaxen's cheaper . ..
Cheaper, not rarer ...
(Music
continues under)
TODD: Here's money.
(Hands him purse)
And
here's the pistol.
(Hands him a gun)
For kill if you must.
Kill.
ANTHONY: I'll kill a dozen jailers if need be to set her
free.
TODD: Then off with you, off. But, ANTHONY, listen to me
once again. When you have rescued her, bring her back here. I shall
guard her while you hire the chaise to Plymouth.
ANTHONY: We'll be
with you before the evening's out, (Clasping both TODD 's hands) Mr.
TODD. Oh, thank you — friend. (He hurries off. TODD goes to a
little writing table, picks up a quill pen and starts to write. The
quintet sings what he writes)
QUINTET (Variously, as TODD
writes):
Most Honorable Judge Turpin —
(TODD pauses
reflectively)
Most Honorable —
(TODD snorts derisively)
I
venture thus to write you this —
(He resumes writing)
I
venture thus to write you this —
(Thinks, choosing the
word)
Urgent note to warn you that the hot-blooded
—
(Thinks)
Young —
(Grunts with satisfaction)
Sailor
has abducted your ward Johanna —
(Stares off sadly)
Johanna
—Johanna —
(Resumes writing)
From the institution where you
—
(Thinks)
So wisely confined her but,
Hoping to earn your
favor,
I have persuaded the boy to lodge her here tonight
At my
tonsorial parlor —
(Dips the pen)
In Fleet Street.
If you
want her again in your arms,
Hurry
After the night falls.
(He
starts to sign, then adds another phrase with a smile)
She will be
waiting.
(Reads it over)
Waiting ...
(Dips pen again,
writing carefully)
Your obedient humble servant,
Sweeney
(A
flourish of the pen)
Todd.
(Music continues under as TODD
hurries across the stage to JUDGE TURPIN 's house, knocks on the
door, which opens, and hands in the letter)
TODD: Give this to
JUDGE TURPIN. It's urgent.
(As he disappears, lights come up on
the eating garden. It is early evening. The garden is deserted. MRS.
LOVETT is sitting on the steps knitting a half-finished muffler. The
bells of St. Dunstan's sound. After a beat, TOBIAS emerges from the
shop with a "Sold Out" sign, puts it on the shop door, and
goes to MRS. LOVETT)
TOBIAS: I put the sold-out sign up,
ma'am.
MRS. LOVETT: That's my boy.
(Holding up the
knitting)
Look, dear! A lovely muffler and guess who it's
for.
TOBIAS: Coo, ma'am. For me?
MRS. LOVETT: Wouldn't you like
to know!
TOBIAS: Oh, you're so good to me, ma'am. Sometimes,
when
I think what it was like with Signer PIRELLI — it
seems like the
Good Lord sent you for me.
MRS. LOVETT: It's just my warm heart,
dear. Room enough
there for all God's creatures.
TOBIAS (Coming
closer, hwenng, very earnest): You know, ma'am, — there's nothing I
wouldn't do for you. ,If there was a monster or an ogre or anything
bad like that wot was after you, I'd rip it apart with my bare fists,
I would.
MRS. LOVETT: What a sweet child it is.
TOBIAS: Or even
if it was just a man
MRS. LOVETT (Somewhat uneasy) A man,
dear?
TOBIAS (Exaggeratedly conspiratorial): A man wot was bad and
wot might be luring you all unbeknownst into his evil deeds,
like.
MRS. LOVETT (Even more wary): What is this? What are you
talking about?
TOBIAS (Sings):
Nothing's gonna harm you,
Not
while I'm around.
MRS. LOVETT: Of course not, dear, and why should
it?
TOBIAS:
Nothing's gonna harm you,
No, sir,
Not while
I'm around.
MRS. LOVETT: What do you mean, "a
man"?
TOBIAS:
Demons are
prowling
Everywhere
Nowadays.
MRS. LOVETT (Somewhat
relieved, patting his head): And so they are, dear.
TOBIAS:
I'll
send 'em howling,
I don't care —
I got ways.
MRS. LOVETT:
Of course you do ... What a sweet, affectionate child it
is.
TOBIAS:
No one's gonna hurt you,
No one's gonna
dare.
MRS. LOVETT: I know what Toby deserves ...
TOBIAS:
Others
can desert you —
Not to worry —
Whistle, I'll be
there.
MRS. LOVETT: Here, have a nice bon-bon. (Starts to reach
for her purse, but TOBIAS stays her hand in
adoration)
TOBIAS:
Demons'll charm you
With a smile
For a
while,
But in dme
Nothing can harm you,
Not while I'm
around.
(Music continues)
MRS. LOVETT: What is this
foolishness? What're you talking about?
TOBIAS: Little things wot
I've been thinking and wondering about . . . It's him, you see —
Mr. TODD. Oh, I know you fancy him, but men ain't like women, they
ain't wot you can .trust, as I've lived and learned. (She looks at
him uneasily)
Not to worry, not to worry,
I may not be smart
but I ain't dumb.
I can do it,
Put me to it,
Show me
something I can overcome.
Not to worry, mum.
Being close and
being clever
Ain't like being true.
I don't need to, I won't
never
Hide a thing from you,
Like some.
(Music continues
under)
MRS. LOVETT: Now Toby dear, haven't we had enough foolish
chatter? Let's just sit nice and quiet for a bit. Here. (She pulls
out the chatelaine purse, which is now immediately recognizable to
the audience as PIRELLI's money purse, and starts to fumble in it for
a bon-bon)
TOBIAS (Suddenly exited, pointing): That! That's Signor
PIRELLI's purse! (MRS. LOVETT, realizing her slip, quickly hides
it)
MRS. LOVETT (Stalling for time): What's that? What was that,
dear?
TOBIAS: That proves it! What I've been thinking. That's his
purse.
MRS. LOVETT (Concealing what is now almost panic): Silly
boy! It's just a silly little something Mr. T. gave me for my
birthday.
TOBIAS: Mr. TODD gave it to you! And how did he get it?
How did he get it?
MRS. LOVETT: Bought it, dear. In the pawnshop,
dear. (To distract him, she lifts the unfinished muffler on its
needles) Come on now.
(Sings)
Nothing's gonna harm you,
Not
while I'm around!
Nothing's gonna harm you, Toby,
Not while I'm
around.
TOBIAS: You don't understand.
(Sings)
Two quid was
in it,
Two or three —
(Speaks, music continuing)
The
guvnor giving up his purse — with two quid?
(Sings)
Not for a
minute!
Don't you see?
(Speaks, music under)
It was in Mr.
TODD's parlor that the guvnor disappeared. MRS. LOVETT (With a weak
laugh): Boys and their fancies! What will we think of next! Here,
dear. Sit here by your Aunt Nellie like a good boy and look at your
lovely muffler. How warm it's going to keep you when the days draw
in. And it's so becoming on you.
TOBIAS (Sings):
Demons'11
charm you
With a smile
For a while,
But in time
Nothing's
gonna harm you,
Not while I'm around!
MRS. LOVETT: You know,
dear, it's the strangest thing you coming to chat with me right now
of all moments because as I was sitting here with my needles, I was
thinking: "What a good boy Toby is! So hard working, so
obedient." And I thought. . . know how you've always fancied
coming into the bakehouse with me to help bake the pies?
TOBIAS
(For the first time distracted): Oh yes, ma'am. Indeed, ma'am.
Yes.
MRS. LOVETT: Well, how about it?
TOBIAS: You mean it? I
can help make 'em and bake 'cm? (MRS. LOVETT kisses him again and,
rising, starts drawing him back toward the pie-shop)
MRS. LOVETT:
No time like the present, is there? (She leads him through
thepie-shop into the bakehouse)
TOBIAS (Looking around): Coo,
quite a stink, ain't there?
MRS. LOVETT (Indicating the trap
door): Them steps go down to the old cellars and the whiffs come up,
love. God knows what's down there — so moldy and dark. And there's
always a couple of rats gone home to Jesus. (She leads him across to
the ovens) Now the bake ovens is here. (She opens the oven doors. A
red glow illuminates the stage)
TOBIAS: They're big enough, ain't
they?
MRS. LOVETT: Hardly big enough to bake all the pies we sell.
Ten dozen at a time. Always be sure to close the doors properly, like
this. {Closes doors. Draws him to the butcher's-block table) Now
here's the grinder. (She turns its handle, indicating how it
operates) You see, you pop meat in and you grind it and it comes out
here. (Indicates the mouth of the grinder) And you know the secret
that makes the pies so sweet and tender? Three times. You must put
the meat through the grinder three times.
TOBIAS: Three times,
eh?
MRS. LOVETT: That's my boy. Smoothly, smoothly. And as soon as
a new batch of meat comes in, we'll put you to work. (She starts/or
the door back into the pie-shop)
TOBIAS (Blissful): Me making pies
all on me own! Coo!
(Noticing her leaving)
Where are you going,
ma'am?
MRS. LOVETT: Back in a moment, dear.
(At the door she
turns, blows him a kiss and then goes into the pie-shop, slamming the
door behind her and locking it, putting the key in her pocket.
TOBIAS, too fascinated to realize he has been locked in, starts
happily turning the handle of the grinder)
TOBIAS: Smoothly does
it, smoothly, smoothly...
(As he grinds and MRS. LOVETT appears at
the foot of the stairs to the tonsorial parlor, unseen by her the
BEADLE enters the back parlor)
BEADLE: Mrs. Lovett! Mrs.
Lovett!
MRS. LOVETT (Climbing the stairs, looking for TODD): Mr.
Todd! Mr. Todd!
BEADLE (Notices the harmonium, sits down, and
sings from a song book, accompanying himself):
Sweet Polly
Plunkett lay in the grass,
Turned her eyes heavenward, sighing,
"I
am a lass who alas loves a lad
Who alas has a lass in
Canterbury.
'Tis a row dow diddle dow day,
'Tis a row dow
diddle dow dee ..."
MRS. LOVETT (Enters, clapping): Oh,
beadle Bamford, I didn't know you were a music lover, too.
BEADLE
(Not rising): Good afternoon, Mrs. Lovett. Fine instrument you've
acquired.
MRS. LOVETT: Oh yes, it's my pride and joy.
BEADLE
(Sings, as she watches him uneasily):
Sweet Polly Plunkett saw her
life pass,
Flew down the city road, crying,
"I am a lass
who alas loves a lad
Who alas has a lass loves another lad
Who
once I had
In Canterbury.
'Tis a row dow diddle dow day,
'Tis
a row dow diddle dow dee ..."
(He speaks, leafing through the
pages)
Well, ma'am, I hope you have a few moments, for I'm here
today on official business.
MRS. LOVETT: Official?
BEADLE:
That's it, ma'am. You see, there's been complaints —
MRS.
LOVETT: Complaints?
BEADLE: About the stink from your chimney.
They say at night it's something foul. Health regulations being my
duty, I'm afraid I'll have to ask you to let me take a look.
MRS.
LOVETT (Hiding extreme anxiety): At the bakehouse?
BEADLE: That's
right, ma'am.
MRS. LOVETT (Improvising wildly): But, it's locked
and . . . and I don't have the key. It's Mr. TODD upstairs — he's
got the key and he's not here right now.
BEADLE: When will he be
back?
MRS. LOVETT: Couldn't say, I'm sure.
BEADLE (Finds a
particular song): Ah, one of mother's favorites . ..
(Sings)
If
one bell rings in the Tower of Bray,
Ding dong, your true love
will stay.
Ding dong, one bell today
In the Tower of
Bray...
Ding dong!
TOBIAS (Joining in from the bakehouse):
One
bell today in the Tower of Bray ...
Ding dong!
BEADLE (Stops
playing): What's that?
MRS. LOVETT: Oh, just my boy — the lad
that helps me with
the pies.
BEADLE: But surely he's in the
bakehouse, isn't he?
MRS. LOVETT (Almost beside herself): Oh yes,
yes, of course. But you see ... he's — well, simple in the head.
Last week he run off and we found him two days later down by the
embankment half-starved, poor thing. So ever since then, we locks him
in for his own security.
BEADLE: Then we'll have to wait for Mr.
TODD, won't we?
(Sings)
But if two bells ring in the Tower of
Bray,
Ding dong, ding dong, your true love will stray.
Ding
dong —
(Speaks)
Since you're a fellow music lover, ma'am, why
don't you raise your voice along with mine?
MRS. LOVETT: All
right.
BEADLE (Sings):
If three bells ring in the Tower of Bray
...
Ding dong!
MRS. LOVETT (Another "inspiration"):
Oh yes, of course! Mr. Todd's gone down to Wapping. Won't be back for
hours. And he'll be ever so sorry to miss you. Why, just the other
day he was saying, "If only the BEADLE would grace my tonsorial
parlor I'd give him a most stylish haircut, the daintiest shave —
all for nothing." So why don't you drop in some other time and
take advantage of his offer?
BEADLE: Well, that's real friendly of
him. (Immovable, he starts to sing another verse) If four bells ring
in the Tower of—
MRS. LOVETT: Just how many bells are
there?
BEADLE: Twelve.
(Resumes singing)
Ding dong!
MRS.
LOVETT (Resigned):
Ding dong!
TOBIAS:
Ding
dong!
BEADLE:
Ding dong!
BEADLE, MRS. LOVETT and
TOBIAS:
Then lovers must pray! ... (During this, TODD enters,
reacts on seeing the BEADLE)
MRS. LOVETT (With a huge smile of
relief): Back already! Look who's here, Mr. T. on some foolish
complaint about the bakehouse or something. He wants the key and I
told him you had it. But... (Coquettishly, to BEADLE) there's no
hurry, is there, sir? Why don't you run upstairs with Mr. TODD and
let him fix you up nice and pretty — there'll be plenty of time for
the bakehouse later.
BEADLE (Considering): Well . . . tell me, Mr.
Todd, do you pomade the hair? I dearly love a pomaded head.
MRS.
LOVETT: Pomade? Of course! And a nice facial rub with bay rum too.
All for free!
BEADLE (To TODD) : Well, sir, I take that very
kindly
TODD (Bowing to the BEADLE) : I am, sir, entirely at your —
disposal. (The two men exit. MRS. LOVETT hesitates, then speaks)
MRS.
LOVETT: Let's hope he can do it quietly. But just to be on the safe
side, I'll provide a little musical send-off. (She goes to the
harmonium, sits down on the stool and starts playing and singing a
loud verse of "Polly Plunkett" which continues distantly
during the following. In the bakehouse, TOBIAS stands by the grinding
machine eating a pie. He feels something on his tongue, puts a finger
in his mouth and pulls the something out, holding it up for
inspection).
TOBIAS: An 'air! Black as a rook. Now that ain't Mrs.
Lovett's
'air. Oh, well, some old black cow probably. (He
continues to eat. He bites on something else, takes it out of his
mouth, looks at it) Coo, bit of fingernail! Clumsy. Ugh! (He drops
the pie. Bored, he starts around the room, inspecting. He peers at an
unidentifiable hole in the wall — the chute. He is baffled by it.
As he does so, we hear a strange, shambling, shuffling sound as if a
heavy object is falling inside the wall. TOBIAS spins around just as
the bloody body of the BEADLE comes trundling out of the mouth of the
chute. TOBIAS screams)
No! Oh no! (He dashes to the door, tries
the handle; it is locked. He starts beating on it) Mrs. Lovett! Mrs.
Lovett! Let me out! Let me out! (Wildly he tries to break down the
door. It is too solid for him. Whimpering, he stands paralyzed. Then
he sees the open trap door leading to the cellar steps. He runs and
disappears down them. In the parlor, MRS. LOVETT continues to sing
and play. After a suitable period, she stops)
MRS. LOVETT:
With
a row dow diddle dow day.
(As she gets up from the harmonium, TODD
hurries in)
TODD: It's done.
MRS. LOVETT: Not yet it isn't! The
boy, he's guessed.
TODD: Guessed what?
MRS. LOVETT: About
PIRELLI. Since you weren't here, I locked him in the bakehouse. He's
been yelling to wake the dead. We've got to look after him.
TODD
(Fiercely): But the JUDGE is coming. I've arranged it.
MRS.
LOVETT: You — worrying about the bloody JUDGE at a time like this!
(Grabbing his arm and pulling him toward the door) Come on. (The
scene blacks out. Members of the company appear and sing)
COMPANY
(Variously):
The engine roared, the motor hissed,
And who could
see how the road would twist?
In Sweeney's ledger the entries
matched:
A beadle arrived, and a beadle dispatched
To satisfy
the hungry god
Of Sweeney TODD,
ALL:
The Demon Barber of
Fleet. ..
Street.
Sweeney! Sweeney!
Sweeney! Sweeney!
Sweeney!
Sweeney!
Sweeeeeneeeeey!
(And as they sing the
name, they transform themselves into the inmates of Fogg's Asylum,
which is now revealed: a huge stone wall and a heavy iron door.
Behind the wall, the ragged inmates are crawling, lolling, capering,
giggling, shrieking. In the center of them sits JOHANNA, her long
yellow hair tumbling about her)
INMATES (Intoning, chattering,
screaming):
Sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeneeeeeeeeeeeeey...
Sweeneysweeneysweeneysweeney.
..
(These moans and humming noises continue under the following,
occasionally interrupted by little mad birdlike outbursts of song.
Mr. Fogg enters with ANTHONY in his wigmaker's disguise. He carries a
huge pair of scissors. Behind them is the asylum wall)
FOGG: Just
this way, sir.
ANTHONY: You do me honor, Mr. Fogg.
FOGG: I
agree it would be to our mutual interest to come to
some
arrangement in regard to my poor children's hair.
ANTHONY:
Your—children?
FOGG: We are one happy family here, sir, and all
my patients are my children, to be corrected when they're naughty,
and rewarded with a sweetie when they're good. But to our business.
(As they enter the inside of the asylum, lights come up behind the
scrim wall revealing the shadows of the inmates. Mr. Fogg, as in a
shadow play, grabs one female by the hair, pulling her head up for
ANTHONY's inspection) Here is a charming yellow, a little dull in
tone perhaps, but you can soon restore its natural gleam. (He drops
the head, moves to a man and grabs his head up by the hair) Now here!
A fine texture for a man and, as you must know, sir, there is always
a discount on the hair of a male. (ANTHONY has been looking around
and has spotted JOHANNA)
ANTHONY: This one here has hair the shade
I seek.
FOGG: Poor child. She needs so much
correction. She sings all day and night and leaves the other inmates
sleepless. (He goes to JOHANNA and tugs her, indignantly struggling
across the floor toward ANTHONY, by the hair)
Come,
child. Smile for the gentleman and you shall have a sweetie. (He
brandishes the scissors) Now, where shall I cut?
JOHANNA (Sees
ANTHONY): Anthony!
ANTHONY: Johanna!
FOGG:
What is this? What is this?
ANTHONY (Drawing his pistol): Unhand
her!
FOGG: Why you — ! (Clutching the scissors, he moves
resolutely toward ANTHONY. ANTHONY backs away a few steps, but fogg
keeps coming)
ANTHONY: Stop, Mr. Fogg, or I'll fire.
FOGG:
Fire, and I will stop.
ANTHONY. I cannot shoot.
(Losing his
nerve, ANTHONY drops the gun which Johanna catches in mid-air. Fogg
moves toward ANTHONY, raising the scissors. JOHANNA, holding the gun
with both hands, shoots Fogg, who falls. She drops the gun and
together she and ANTHONY run out. Compelled by the energy released by
Fogg 's death, the lunatics tear down the wall and rush out of the
asylum, spilling with euphoric excitement onto the street)
LUNATICS
(In three contrapuntal groups):
City on fire!
Rats in the
grass
And the lunatics yelling in the streets!
It's the end of
the world! Yes!
City on fire!
Hunchbacks dancing!
Stirrings
in the ground
And the whirring of giant wings!
Watch
out!
Look!
Blotting out the moonlight,
Thick black rain
falling on the
City on fire!
City on fire!
City on
fire!
(During this, police whistles sound. ANTHONY and Johanna are
still visible hurrying away, ANTHONY systematically disposing of the
wigmaker's costume, tossing the hat off here, the cloak off there,
etc. Throughout, JOHANNA is excited and chatty. At one point, ANTHONY
stops briefly to reconnoiter nervously)
JOHANNA:
Will we be
married on Sunday?
That's what you promised,
Married on
Sunday!
(Pensively)
That was last August.. .
(He looks at
her unbelievingly)
Kiss me!
(He drags her off as the lunatics
reappear, this time in two groups)
LUNATICS:
City on fire!
Rats
in the streets
And the lunatics yelling at the moon!
It's the
end of the world! Yes!
City on fire!
Hunchbacks
kissing!
Stirrings in the graves
And the screaming of giant
winds!
Watch out! Look!
Crawling on the chimneys,
Great
black crows screeching at the
City on fire!
City on fire!
City
on fire!
(As they run off, lights come up on the bakehouse. TODD,
holding a lantern, and MRS. LOVETT enter, looking around for
TOBIAS)
MRS. LOVETT (Sings):
Toby!
Where are you,
love?
TODD:
Toby!
Where are you, lad?
MRS.
LOVETT:
Nothing's gonna harm you . . .
TODD:
Toby!
MRS.
LOVETT:
Not while I'm around ...
TODD (Opening trap door,
peering down):
Toby!
MRS. LOVETT:
Where are you
hiding?
Nothing's gonna harm you,
Darling . . .
TODD:
Nothing
to be afraid of, boy...
(Closes the trap door, peers into the
darkness)
MRS. LOVETT:
Not while I'm around.
TODD:
Toby...
MRS.
LOVETT (She and TODD move upstage, where their voices echo):
Demons
are prowling everywhere
Nowadays ...
TODD:
Toby...
(They
wander off as the lunatics run on)
LUNATICS:
City on
fire!
Rats in the streets
And the lunatics yelling at the
moon!
It's the end of the world! Yes!
(Lights go down on them
and come up on the beggar woman, peering off through the darkness as
if at the pie-shop)
BEGGAR WOMAN:
Beadle! ... Beadle! . . .
No
good hiding, I saw you!
Are you in there still,
Beadle? ...
Beadle? ...
Get her, but watch it!
She's a wicked one, she'll
deceive you
With her fancy gowns
And her fancy airs
And her
—
(Suddenly shrieking)
Mischief! Mischief!
Devil's
work!
(Quietly calling again)
Where are you, Beadle?
Beadle
...
(As she shuffles off toward the pie-shop, lights dim on her
and come up on the lunatics)
LUNATICS:
City on fire!
Rats in
the streets
And the lunatics yelling at the moon!
It's the end
of the world! Good!
City on fire!
Hunchbacks kissing!
Stirrings
in the graves
And the screaming of giant winds!
Watch out!
Look!
Crawling on the chimneys,
Great black crows screeching at
the
City on fire! . ..
(Light comes up on the tonsorial parlor.
It is empty for a moment, then ANTHONY and JOHANNA, who is now
dressed in a sailor's uniform, enter; music under)
ANTHONY: Mr.
TODD?
JOHANNA: No one here. Where is this Mr. TODD?
ANTHONY: No
matter. He'll be back in a moment, for I trust him as I trust my
right arm. Wait for him here — I'll return with the coach in less
than half an hour.
JOHANNA: But they are after us still. What if
they trace us here? Oh, Anthony, please let me come with you.
ANTHONY; No, my darling, there is no safety for you on the
street.
JOHANNA: But dressed in these sailor's clothes, who's to
know it is I?
ANTHONY: No, the risk is too great. (As she turns
away pouting, he sings)
Ah, miss,
Look at me, look at me, miss,
oh,
Look at me please, oh,
Favor me, favor me with your
glance.
Ah, miss,
Soon we'll be, soon we'll be gone
And
sailing the seas
And happily, happily wed
In France.
(She
looks at him and smiles)
both:
And we'll sail the world
And
see its wonders
From the pearls of Spain
To the rubies of
Tibet—
ANTHONY.
And then come home to
London.
JOHANNA:
And
then home.
Some day. Some day.
(They kiss)
ANTHONY (Starting
out): And I'll be back before those lips have time to lose that
smile. (He rushes off. Music continues under. JOHANNA paces. She sees
the barber chair, starts to move toward it. During this, the BEGGAR
WOMAN can be seen below approaching the pie-shop. A factory whistle
blows. JOHANNA gasps, startled, then goes to the chair. She sits in
it. Her hand moves to inspect the lever, but before she touches it,
the beggar woman approaches, calling)
BEGGAR WOMAN:
Beadle!
...
Beadle!
Where are you?
Beadle, dear!
Beadle!
JOHANNA
{Simultaneously, jumping up): Someone calling the beadle! I knew it!
(JOHANNA looks wildly around, sees the chest, runs to it and clambers
in, closing the lid just as the BEGGAR WOMAN comes shuffing
on)
BEGGAR WOMAN (Vacantly):
Beadle deedle deedle deedle deedle
dumpling,
Beadle dumpling, Be-deedle dumpling . ..
(Whimpers,
growls lasciviously, dimly surveys the room. She sees the chest,
feels it; screams and wails. She mimes opening a window, then
clutches an imaginary baby to her; pats and rocks it, cradles it and
smiles. Lullaby music begins underneath)
And why should you weep
then, my jo, my jing?
Ohh . . .
Your father's at tea with the
Swedish king.
He'll bring you the moon on a silver string.
Ohh
.. .
Ohh ...
Quickly to sleep then, my jo, my jing,
He'll
bring you a shoe and a wedding ring.
Sing here again, home
again,
Come again spring.
He'll be coming soon now
To kiss
you, my jo, my jing,
Bringing you the moon
And a shoe and a
wedding ring.
He'll be coming here again,
Home again . .
.
(Without warning, leaping in like a thunderbolt, TODD appears,
the razor in his hand; music continues)
TODD: You! What are you
doing here?
BEGGAR WOMAN {Clutching his arm): Ah, evil is here,
sir. The stink of evil — from below — from her! (Calling) Beadle
dear, beadle!
TODD (Looking anxiously out the window for the
JUDGE): Out of here, woman.
BEGGAR WOMAN (Still clutching his
arm): She's the Devil's wife! Oh, beware her, sir. Beware of her. She
with no pity in her heart.
TODD: Out, I say!
BEGGAR WOMAN
(Peering dimly at him, sings):
Hey, don't I know you, mister?
(On
the street the JUDGE approaches the tonsorial parlor)
TODD (Seeing
him): The Judge. I have no time.
(He turns on the BEGGAR WOMAN,
slits her throat, puts her in the chair and releases her down the
chute. The JUDGE enters the room. Music continues under)
JUDGE:
Where is she? Where is the girl?
TODD: Below, your Honor. In the
care of my neighbor, Mrs. Lovett. Thank heavens the sailor did not
molest her. Thank heavens too, she has seen the error of her
ways.
JUDGE: She has?
TODD: Oh yes, your lesson was well
learned, sir. She speaks only of you, longing for forgiveness.
JUDGE:
And she shall have it. She'll be here soon, you say?
TODD
(Sings):
I think I hear her now.
JUDGE: Oh, excellent, my
friend!
TODD:
Is that her dainty footstep on the stair?
JUDGE
(Listening): I hear nothing.
TODD:
Yes, isn't that her shadow
on the wall?
JUDGE: Where?
TODD (Points): There!
(The JUDGE
looks, getting excited)
Primping,
Making herself even prettier
than usual —
JUDGE (Sings):
Even prettier . ..
TODD:
If
possible.
JUDGE (Blissful):
Ohhhhhhh,
Pretty
women!
TODD:
Pretty women, yes ...
JUDGE (Straightening his
coat, patting his hair): Quickly, sir, a splash of bay rum!
TODD
(Indicating the chair): Sit, sir, sit.
JUDGE (Settling into the
chair, in lecherous rapture):
JOHANNA,JOHANNA.. .
(TODD gets a
towel, puts it carefully around him, moves to pick up a bottle of bay
rum)
TODD:
Pretty women . . .
JUDGE: Hurry,
man!
TODD:
Pretty women
Are a wonder . . .
JUDGE: You're
in a merry mood again today, barber.
TODD (Joyfully):
Pretty
women!
JUDGE:
What we do for TODD:
Pretty women! Pretty
women!
(During the following, TODD smooths bay rum on the JUDGE
'sface, reaching behind him for a razor)
Blowing out their candles
Blowing out their candles
Or combing out their hair — Or combing
out their hair,
Then they leave —
Even when they leave you
Even when they leave,
And vanish, they somehow They still
Can
still remain Are there,
There with you there ... They're there .
..
(Music continues under)
JUDGE: How seldom it is one meets a
fellow spirit!
TODD (Smiling down): With fellow tastes — in
women, at least.
JUDGE: What? What's that?
TODD: The years no
doubt have changed me, sir. But then, I suppose, the face of a barber
— the face of a prisoner in the dock — is not particularly
memorable.
JUDGE (With horrified realization): Benjamin
Barker!
(The factory whistle blows; the JUDGE in terror tries to
jump up but TODD slashes his throat, then pulls the lever and sends
the body tumbling out of sight and down the chute. Music continues.
For a long moment, TODD stands crouched forward by the chair,
exhaling deeply. Then slowly he drops to his knees and even more
slowly holds up the razor, gazing at it. He sings)
TODD:
Rest
now, my friend,
Rest now forever.
Sleep now the
untroubled
Sleep of the angels . ..
(Suddenly remembering,
speaks)
The boy.
(He starts down the stairs. He stops midway,
remembering his razor)
My razor!
(He starts back up the steps
just as JOHANNA has climbed
out of the chest. She stands
frozen)
You! What are you doing here? Speak!
JOHANNA (Deepening
her voice): Oh, dear. Er — excuse me, sir. I saw the barber's sign.
So thinking to ask for a shave, I —
TODD: When? When did you
come in?
JOHANNA: Oh, sir, I beg of you. Whatever I have seen, no
man shall ever know. I swear it. Oh, sir, please, sir ...
TODD: A
shave, eh? (He turns chair toward her) At your service.
JOHANNA:
But, sir...
TODD: Whatever you may have seen, your cheeks are
still as much in need of the razor as before. Sit, sir. Sit. (TODD
sits JOHANNA in the chair. As he goes for the razor, simultaneously
the factory whistle blows and MRS. LOVETT is heard screaming "Die!
Die!" from the bakehouse below. JOHANNA jumps up and runs out,
TODD lunges after her, misses her. She runs away. TODD pauses;
another scream from the bakehouse sends him running down the stairs,
and as he disappears into the pie-shop, the company appears)
COMPANY
(Sings):
Lift your razor high, Sweeney!
Hear it singing,
"Yes!"
Sink it in the rosy skin
Of
righteousness!
(Light comes up on the bakehouse. MRS. LOVETT is
standing in horror by the mouth of the chute from which the JUDGE,
still alive, clutches her skirt. MRS. LOVETT tries to tug the skirt
away from the vise-like grip)
MRS. LOVETT: Die! Die! God in heaven
— die! (The JUDGE's fingers relax their grip; he is dead. Panting,
MRS. LOVETT backs away from him and for the first time notices the
body of the BEGGAR WOMAN. She pauses) You! Can it be? How all the
demons of Hell come to torment me! (Looks hastily over her shoulder)
Quick! To the oven. (She starts to drag the BEGGAR WOMAN to the oven
as TODD enters, runs to her)
TODD: Why did you scream? Does the
JUDGE still live?
MRS. LOVETT: He was clutching, holding on to my
skirt, but now — he's finished. (Continues dragging BEGGAR WOMAN to
oven)
TODD: Leave them to me. Open the doors.
(He starts to
shove her toward the oven)
MRS. LOVETT (Clutching the BEGGAR WOMAN
's wrists): No! Don't touch her!
TODD (Pushing her to the oven
doors and leaning down to pick up the BEGGAR WOMAN) : What is the
matter with you? It's only some meddling old beggar — (MRS. LOVETT
opens the oven doors and the light from the fire illuminates the
BEGGAR WOMAN 's face. A chord of music as TODD realizes who she is)
Oh no, Oh God . . . "Don't I know you?" she said . . .
(Looks up) You knew she lived. From the first moment that I walked
into your shop you knew my Lucy lived!
MRS. LOVETT: I was only
thinking of you!
TODD (Looking down again, sings):
Lucy. .
.
MRS. LOVETT: Your Lucy! A crazy hag picking bones and rotten
spuds out of alley ash-cans! Would you have wanted to know that was
all that was left of her?
TODD (Slowly looking up): You lied to
me.
MRS. LOVETT (Sings):
No, no, not lied at all.
No, I
never lied.
TODD ( To the BEGGAR WOMAN):
Lucy...
MRS.
LOVETT:
Said she took the poison — she did —
Never said
that she died —
Poor thing,
She lived —
TODD:
I've
come home again . . .
MRS. LOVETT:
But it left her weak in the
head,
All she did for months was just lie there in bed
—
TODD:
Lucy. . .
MRS. LOVETT:
Should've been in
hospital,
Wound up in Bedlam instead,
Poor thing!
TODD:
Oh,
my God . . .
MRS. LOVETT:
Better you should think she was
dead.
Yes, I lied 'cos I love you!
TODD:
Lucy...
MRS.
LOVETT:
I'd be twice the wife she was!
I love you!
TODD:
What
have I done?...
MRS. LOVETT:
Could that thing have cared for
you
Like me?
(TODD rises, soft and smiling; takes a step away
in panic. Waltz music starts)
TODD:
Mrs. Lovett,
You're a
bloody wonder,
Eminently practical and yet
Appropriate as
always.
As you've said repeatedly,
There's little point in
dwelling on the past.
TODD:
MRS. LOVETT:
Do you mean
it?
Everything I did I swear
I thought
Was only for the
best,
Believe me!
Can we still be
Married?
No, come here,
my love ..
Not a thing to fear,
My love . . .
What's dead
Is
dead.
(TODD puts his arm around her waist; she starts to relax in
her babbling, and they sway to the waltz, her arms around his
neck)
TODD:
The history of the world, my pet —
MRS.
LOVETT:
Oh, Mr. Todd,
Ooh, Mr. Todd,
Leave it to me ..
.
TODD:
Is learn forgiveness and try to forget.
MRS.
LOVETT:
By the sea, Mr. Todd,
We'll be comfy-cozy,
By the
sea, Mr. Todd,
Where there's no one nosy ...
(He waltzes her
closer to the oven)
TODD:
And life is for the alive, my
dear,
So let's keep living it — !
BOTH:
Just keep living
it,
Really living it — !
(He flings her into the oven. She
screams. He slams the doors behind her. Black smoke belches forth.
The music booms like an earthquake. TODD, gasping, sinks to his knees
by the oven doors. Then he rises, moves back to the BEGGAR WOMAN and
kneels, cradling her head in his arms)
TODD (Sings):
There was
a barber and his wife,
And she was beautiful.
A foolish barber
and his wife,
She was his reason and his life.
And she was
beautiful.
And she was virtuous.
And he was
—
(Shrugs)
Naive.
(TOBIAS emerges from the cellar, singing
in an eerie voice. His hair has turned completely
white)
TOBIAS:
Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker man.
Bake me a
cake —
No,no,
Bake me a pie —
To delight my eye,
And
I will sigh
If the crust be high ...
(Sees TODD, speaks)
Mr.
TODD.
(Notices the BEGGAR WOMAN) It's the old woman. Ya harmed her
too, have ya? Ya shouldn't, ya know. Ya shouldn't harm nobody. (He
bends to examine the body; TODD, suddenly aware of someone, pushes
him violently aside. As TOBIAS staggers back and recovers his
balance, he notices the razor on the floor, picks it up, plays with
it) Razor! Razor! Cut, cut, cut cadougan, watch me grind my corn. Pat
him and prick him and mark him with B, and put him in the oven for
baby and me! (Cuts TODD'5 throat. TODD dies across the body of Lucy
as the factory whistle blows. ANTHONY, JOHANNA and officers of the
guard come running on. Seeing the carnage, they all stop) You will
pardon me, gentlemen, but you may not enter here. Oh no! Me mistress
don't let no one enter here, for, you see, sirs, there's work to be
done, so much work. (While they watch in horror, he moves to the
grinding machine and slowly starts to turn the handle) Three times.
That's the secret. Three times through for them to be tender and
juicy. Three times through the grinder. Smoothly, smoothly ...
(JOHANNA gives a little cry. ANTHONY throws his arm around her. As
the group stands watching, still in silence, TOBIAS continues to
grind. Suddenly, the trap door slaps shut; the light brightens
abruptly, TOBIAS steps back, looks up and sings. .
.)
Epilogue
TOBIAS:
Attend the tale of Sweeney TODD.
His
skin was pale and his eye was odd.
JOHANNA and ANTHONY:
He
shaved the faces of gentlemen
Who never thereafter were heard of
again.
POLICEMEN:
He trod a path that few have trod,
POLICEMEN,
JOHANNA and ANTHONY:
Did Sweeney Todd,
ALL:
The Demon Barber
of Fleet Street.
BEGGAR WOMAN (Rising):
He kept a shop in
London town,
Of fancy clients and good renown.
JUDGE
(Rising):
And what if none of their souls were saved?
They went
to their maker impeccably shaved
BEGGAR WOMAN, JUDGE and
POLICEMEN:
By Sweeney,
By Sweeney TODD,
ALL:
The Demon
Barber of Fleet Street.
PIRELLI and BEADLE (Entering):
Swing
your razor wide, Sweeney!
Hold it to the skies!
Freely flows
the blood of those
Who moralize!
(The rest of the company
enters)
COMPANY:
His needs are few, his room is bare.
He
hardly uses his fancy chair.
The more he bleeds, the more he
lives.
He never forgets and he never forgives.
Perhaps today
you gave a nod
To Sweeney TODD,
The Demon Barber of Fleet
Street.
WOMEN:
Sweeney wishes the world away,
Sweeney's
weeping for yesterday,
Hugging the blade, waiting the
years,
Hearing the music that nobody hears.
Sweeney waits in
the parlor hall,
Sweeney leans on the office wall.
MEN:
No
one can help, nothing can hide you —
Isn't that Sweeney there
beside you?
company:
Sweeney wishes the world away,
Sweeney's
weeping for yesterday,
Is Sweeney!
There he is, it's
Sweeney!
Sweeney! Sweeney!
(Pointing around the theater)
There!
There! There! There!
There! There! There!
(Pointing to the
grave)
There!
(TODD and MRS. LOVETT rise from the grave)
TODD
and company:
Attend the tale of Sweeney Todd!
He served a dark
and a hungry god!
TODD:
To seek revenge may lead to hell,
MRS.
LOVETT:
But everyone does it, and seldom as well
TODD and MRS.
LOVETT:
As Sweeney,
COMPANY:
As Sweeney Todd,
The Demon
Barber of Fleet...
(They start to exit)
. .. Street!
(The
company exits. TODD and Mrs. Lovett ate the last to leave. They look
at each other, then exit in opposite directions, MRS. LOVETT into the
wings, Todd upstage. He glares at us malevolently for a moment, then
slams the iron door in our faces. Blackout)
