Read drama

play is a story that is written so it can be performed for an audience. A play tells you what the actors say and do to help the audience understand the story.

Plays are often divided into different scenes, or parts of the play. When a new scene starts, that shows you that either time has passed or the setting has changed.

Learn with an example

CAST OF CHARACTERS:

  • FERN, a female fairy with silver wings. She is wearing a backpack.
  • OAK, a male fairy, also with silver wings
  • DIXON, an old dragon with a cast on his tail
  • THE SOPGLOP, a messy, hairy monster

SET DESCRIPTIONS:

  • Scene 1: a beautiful, shady wooded area full of flowers
  • Scene 2: a lifeless desert with one large rock. A handmade sign says,
    ‘Warning! Enter Deadland at your own risk. The Sopglop lives here!’

PROPS:

  • Props for Scene 1: a basket and flower petals
  • Props for Scene 2: rope and a book

Scene 1

(Setting: a beautiful, shady wooded area. FERN, a fairy, hums to herself while collecting flower petals in a basket. DIXON, a dragon, enters, dragging his cast behind him but moving as quickly as he can.)

DIXON: Fern!

FERN: (looking worried) I’m over here, gathering petals for tea. What’s wrong, Dixon?

DIXON: (slightly winded from rushing) It’s Oak! The Sopglop got him!

FERN: (dropping her basket) Oh no! What happened?

DIXON: Oak was napping. The Sopglop snuck up, nabbed him and ran off. I tried to fly after him, but since the accident . . . (He pauses, pointing sadly at the cast on his tail, and then sighs.) I’m just not as fast as I used to be. I’m sorry. I know it’s a dragon’s job to protect his fairies.

FERN: (hugging DIXON) Don’t worry! I’ll go after them. Did they head towards Deadland?

DIXON: Yeah . . . I wish I could go with you.

FERN: (twirling excitedly in place) I’ve got this! The Sopglop may be strong. But I have other talents! (FERN smiles, taps her head and winks, before rushing off.)

Scene 2

(Setting: the desert in Deadland. FERN reads the warning sign and enters slowly, looking around. The SOPGLOP is leaning against the rock, snoring loudly. OAK is tied up nearby.)

OAK: (whispering) Fern! What are you doing here?

FERN: (whispering) Saving you, silly!

(The SOPGLOP wakes up, looks around wildly and roars.)

SOPGLOP: What are you doing here, fairy? Are you going to have your broken dragon fight me? (The SOPGLOP laughs loudly.)

FERN: I’ve come to make a deal.

SOPGLOP: (still laughing) A deal? You wish! Owning a fairy brings a year of good luck. Now that I own one, why would I need to make a deal with you?

FERN: Well, would you rather have just one year of good luck or piles and piles of gold?

(FERN pulls a book out of her backpack.)

FERN: This book is called Facts for SilverWinged Fairies. Perhaps you’ve heard of it. (She flips through the pages.) Here it is. Fact number seventy-four tells you where to find a thousand pearls. You do know that one single pearl is worth twenty gold pieces, right? If you let Oak go, I’ll let you read the directions to get to the pearls.

SOPGLOP: Really?

FERN: Really.

SOPGLOP: (throwing up his hands) Fine. Deal! (He unties OAK, who races to FERN’s side.) Let me see it!

(FERN holds up the book.)

SOPGLOP: (reading slowly) Fact number seventy-four: A thousand pearls are in the Endless Ocean!

(The SOPGLOP greedily rubs his hands together and reads silently for a moment.)

SOPGLOP: (thinking aloud) So all I have to do is travel through Ghost Forest, before crossing the Red River. Then I just hike over the Crisscross Mountains. At that point, I’ll reach the Endless Ocean, where the pearls are. Ha! I’m going to be rich!

(The SOPGLOP runs off. FERN and OAK hug.)

OAK: You fooled him, Fern. Thanks!

FERN: (chuckling) When the Sopglop finally reaches the Endless Ocean, he’ll realise that the thousand pearls are all safely tucked inside oyster shells.

OAK: Deep under the water, where they always have been! (He laughs.) It’s a fact!

FERN: (twirling in place) Let’s get home to Dixon. We don’t want our sweet old dragon to worry.

  • Two fairies go on a quest to find and heal their injured dragon friend.
  • An evil monster tries to steal a thousand pearls from the fairy kingdom.
  • A fairy meets a monster in Deadland and learns that he is kinder than she thought.
  • A fairy comes up with a plan to rescue her friend after he is kidnapped by a monster.

In Scene 1, a fairy named Fern learns that her friend Oak was kidnapped by a monster.

In Scene 2, Fern finds the monster and comes up with a plan to rescue Oak.

So, the play is about a fairy who comes up with a plan to rescue her friend after he is kidnapped by a monster.

The King’s Coins

CAST OF CHARACTERS:

  • King Kingston. He is wearing pyjamas and a crown.
  • Prince Preston. He is in his late teens, and he is wearing a cape.
  • Guard Gary. He is wearing a uniform and carrying a sword.

SET DESCRIPTIONS:

  • Scene 1: the sitting room of the king’s chambers. The room is
    decorated with fancy furniture and candles, several large paintings of
    the king and vases of flowers. One wall is covered with a velvet
    curtain. A large pile of gold coins is on a table. The entrance is on the
    right side of the stage. The king’s bedroom is offstage to the left.
  • Scene 2: the same sitting room

PROPS:

  • Props for Scene 2: a handheld mirror

Scene 1

(Setting: the king’s sitting room) 

KING KINGSTON: (slamming his fist down on the table next to the pile of gold coins) Another missing coin? Unbelievable! This is the third night in a row!

PRINCE PRESTON: (sighing) Father, you have so many coins. Are you sure?

KING KINGSTON: (angrily) I am sure because I count them every day! That, my son, is what a king does.

PRINCE PRESTON: Guard Gary! Enter, please!

(The sound of a door opening is heard. GUARD GARY enters the sitting room from the right side of the stage.)

PRINCE PRESTON: During the last three nights, has anyone entered this room while my father was sleeping?

GUARD GARY: No, sir. Nobody has gone in or out.

PRINCE PRESTON: Thank you. You may return to your post.

(GUARD GARY exits.)

KING KINGSTON: Someone is sneaking into this room! Could it be a witch? It could be! Could it be a tiny elf who gets past the guard somehow? It could be! That is why you, Prince Preston, are going to hide here all night. (He points to the curtain.) You will not sleep! You will get to the bottom of this!

PRINCE PRESTON: Father, is this really necessary? I mean, I don’t think . . .

KING KINGSTON: Enough! A thief is in the castle! Now hide! I’m going to bed.

(KING KINGSTON exits the stage to the left. PRINCE PRESTON slips behind the curtain. Soon, snoring is heard from offstage. Then there is a crash. PRINCE PRESTON jumps out from behind the curtain, looking in the direction of the king’s bedroom. His mouth drops open. Then he throws his head back and begins to laugh.)

Scene 2

(Setting: the king’s sitting room. It is the next morning.)

KING KINGSTON: (yawning and walking onstage from the left) I slept well! Tell me. Did you stay up all night? Did you catch the thief?

PRINCE PRESTON: (smiling) I did, Father.

KING KINGSTON: (clapping) Well done! Let me see him.

PRINCE PRESTON: (holding up a mirror to the king) Here’s your thief, Father.

KING KINGSTON: (frowning) What? What sort of joke is this?

PRINCE PRESTON: You’re the thief, Father! You’ve been stealing your own coins while you walk in your sleep.

(PRINCE PRESTON pretends to be the king, walking and fumbling around the room with his eyes closed.)

KING KINGSTON: (angrily) Enough of this! I have NEVER walked in my sleep!

(PRINCE PRESTON sighs. He walks over to a vase of flowers. He tosses the flowers on the floor and holds the vase upside down. Gold coins spill out.)

PRINCE PRESTON: Count them, Father! I bet all your missing coins are here.

(KING PRESTON grabs a handful of coins and then laughs loudly.)

KING KINGSTON: (slapping PRINCE PRESTON on the back) Good job, my son! You have solved the mystery! Who would have thought this crazy king was stealing his own coins in his sleep?

PRINCE PRESTON: (rolling his eyes) Yes, Father, who would have thought?

  • A guard steals coins from a greedy king to help people in need throughout the kingdom.
  • A greedy king has trouble sleeping until he tries sleeping with his favourite coins.
  • A king is convinced someone is stealing his coins, so he has his son hide in his room to catch the thief.
  • A king blames a guard for stealing his coins until he learns that his son is the thief.

In Scene 1, King Kingston complains that some of his coins are missing, and he makes his son hide in his room overnight to catch the thief.

In Scene 2, Prince Preston reveals to the king how the coins have been disappearing.

So, the play is about a king who is convinced someone is stealing his coins, and then he has his son hide in his room to catch the thief.

Let’s practice!