THE
BIG C – 'Pilot'
Writer/Creator
– Darlene Hunt – Director – Bill Condon
30
mins – Comedy / Drama - 2010 – USA
“I
want to be the one who spills the fruit punch”
Episode
synopsis
A
storyline – She needs to tell her family she has Cancer.
B
storyline – Building a swimming pool.
C
storyline – Her relationship with her pupil Audrey
ACT
1 – Cathy wants to build a pool in her back yard, but is easily
talked into a hot tub instead. Her husband Paul wants to be allowed
to move back in, doesn't know why she has kicked him out. She doesn't
give him an answer. She has cancer and has known for a few days. Dr.
Mauer, her oncologist, wants her to focus on telling her family this.
She goes to tell her Brother Sean, but can't do it, tries to offer
him money, which he refuses and tells her she is boring. She goes to
dinner with husband, he tells her she isn't fun. When she gets home
her Son Adam, just returned from a holiday, pretends to be an
intruder. She is angry and sends him to bed.
She
is in stasis. She has, up to this point, too easily been what others
want. The Cancer is the catalyst but she is trying to manage the
change it brings on her terms.
ACT
2 – The next day she insists on a pool, and gets her way. She
attempts to make friends with her Neighbour Marlene but is snubbed.
At school she has no desire to teach anymore, and when she is dissed
by one pupil, Audrey, she turns on her and gives as good as she gets.
Whilst cooking chilli, Adam plays another prank, which upsets her.
The Police arrive to tell her Marlene has complained about the
building work. She storms into Marlene's house and gives her a piece
of her mind, and in doing so comes the closest yet to talking about
the cancer. Her husband comes back, tells her it is all about her
now. She is ready to tell him her news, but he jumps to the wrong
conclusion, thinks she is having an affair, and storms out.
She
has grown enough to be ready to tell others, but they fail to listen.
False Victory / Defeat.
She
has lunch with the Doctor, flirts whit him a little, he tells her she is his first terminal
patient. She challenges Audrey to get smart and lose weight. Marlene
introduces herself, they talk about dying.
She
is taking control, and those around her are starting to pay attention
to her.
ACT
3 – She pranks Adam back by pretending to have committed suicide.
He freaks. She tells him he needs to grow up and take responsibility
as she won't be around all the time. She locks Adam in the bathroom
until he has learnt to plunge the toilet. She pours herself a glass
of red wine, and then, pours the rest over her cream sofa. Satisfied,
she flips the cushions over, hiding the stain, and sits, happy. She
takes her Brother the last of the chilli and invites him to come and
help burn her sofa. He tells her she is starting to get her weird
back. She tells him “you have no idea.”
She
finally sits on the sofa and opens her heart about the cancer and how
she is feeling, she laughs, jokes, cries, let's it all out. She has
finally found someone to tell. It turns out she is only talking to
Marlene's dog. But he is enough.
The
main character is CATHY JAMISON, A Suburban Mom and high school
teacher who has just discovered she has cancer.
We
first meet her instructing the pool guy on where and how to build a
swimming pool. She is light and happy. It is the first day of summer.
He quickly points out the problems in her plan and suggests a hot tub
instead. She gives in and agrees. This is a woman too used to being
the sensible one, to subduing her own desires. Some of her light
fades at this. We recognise her disappointment, it is a universal
feeling. We are with her. She also has an urgency to getting this
done that intrigues us. Her husband Peter arrives and we learn that
she has kicked him out. He pleads to be let back home, she says she
has to leave. He says he doesn't know who she is any more. We want to
know what has happened here, to them, to her. ? We have connected
with her, felt her disappointment, but do not know why is she acting
this way towards this man ? Several questions are set up in this one
scene.
The
secondary regular characters are all those who orbit her in her world
Her
Husband, PETER, whose every word and action is that of a child. He
drives a scooter, uses words like Meany, and Stinky poopoo, is needy,
tells her it is all about her, but seconds later asks “how could
you do that to me ? “
Her
son, ADAM, who at least has the excuse of still being a teenager to
explain his juvenile behaviour and disrespect.
Her
brother, SHAUN, an eco warrior drop out who still relates to her as
they did as young siblings.
Her
Doctor, TODD MAUER, young and handsome.And concerned.
Her
neighbour, MARLENE, who has lost everyone she cared about and is
literally waiting to die.
Her
pupil, ANDREA, whose weight issues have marginalised her in her
world.
All
the men are in some way juvenile, and all the women have, like her, been sidelined by the wider world.
The
underlying theme of the episode is death and time. Aside from her
contemplation of her own demise, and her pretend suicide, Shaun talks
about suffocating a child with a plastic bag, and later fakes hanging
himself outside the supermarket, Marlene's husband and friends are
all dead, even her lawn mower is. They all talk of the first day of
summer, Shaun declaims “don't let it be the last” When Adam
pretends to be an intruder she pleads to not be killed. Peter tells
her people die in Pools.
Given
the subject matter, the tone of the show is set before we even see
anything, in the title music, which is catchy and bouncy. From this
we go to two people, in a sun drenched garden, discussing pools.
Cathy carries this light quality over into the next scene in the
hospital where, despite the examination table and gown, her talk is
of summer memories swimming with her brother.
The
need for a pool is how she externalises her cancer. She has fixed on
needing to recreate for her son this one perfect memory of diving
into a pool. All her fear and anger displaced to this one goal. In
the opening scene we wonder why she needs this pool so urgently. As
the episode unfolds we learn what it means to her, what she values,
and wants to pass on to her son before she goes. A wisdom she, in the
end, can only pass on to the dog, sitting in the hole in the yard
that might one day be the pool, but not yet.
THINGS
LEARNT
A
good example of the rule of three for comedy beats. ( set up,
development, punchline ) She accidentally exposes her breast to Dr
Mauer during her examination, she laughs and apologies, he says he
didn't notice. Then screw you she tells him. Later, her robe falls
open when talking to the Police. He tells her her boob is hanging
out, embarrassing her. And at the end, when she has opened her heart,
she lifts the scene to a close with her final line by asking the dog
if it wants to see her breasts, “because no one else seems to give
a shit” These three beats sit at the beginning, middle and end of
the episode like ribbon on map pins, tying the whole script together.
Adam's
pranks run along the same beats. He first pretends to be an intruder,
scaring her, then, later he pretends to have cut off his finger, and
finally, she pretends to have commuted suicide. Each prank escalates
on the last, and her's emphasises the cruelness of all three. She
takes Adam on in his own language.
Favourite
lines
Cathy
to Paul when told what to order in the restaurant
“
I'm
having deserts, and liquor.”
Shaun
to Cathy, when she tries to give him money
“
I
don't want to judge, that's your thing.”