I loved William Ingle’s “Come Back Little Sheba” and had been interested in reading “Bus Stop” and decided on reading after just recently seeing the movie with Marilyn Monroe and Don Murray, which had a wonderful cast. The movie and play are basically similar except the book tells more about some characters and also the sideline story of the doctor of philosophy. The movie has more license to go to different locations, as the bar where Cherie worked and also the rodeo, whereas the play all the scenes are at the bus stop and all activities that the movie had were talked about having happened.
The differences are in my spoiler section. This is a truly romantic story and while reading I thought about the cast, except Hope Lange who did not seem to be Elma in my mind.
Story in short- An innocent cowboy wants to marry an experienced girl who is not interested in his rough ways, refuses to marry him.
I read this play from a collection of Ingle's works.
"BUS STOP was first presented by Robert Whitehead and Roger L. Stevens at The Music Box, New York City, on March 2, 1955, with the following cast:
ELMA DUCKWORTH, GRACE, WILL MASTERS, CHERIE, DR. GERALD LYMAN,
CARL, VIRGIL BLESSING, BO DECKER”
"SCENE: The entire play is set inside a street-corner restaurant in a small Kansas town about thirty miles west of Kansas City. The restaurant serves also as an occasional rest stop for the bus lines in the area. It is a dingy establishment with few modern improvements: scenic calendars and pretty-girl posters decorate the soiled walls, and illumination comes"
"It is 1:00 A.M. on a night in early March and a near blizzard is raging outside. Through the windows we can see the sweeping wind and flying snow. Inside, by comparison, the scene is warm and cozy, the Franklin stove radiating all the heat of which it is capable. Two young women, in uniforms that have lost their starched freshness, are employed behind the counter. ELMA is a big-eyed girl still in high school. GRACE is a more seasoned character in her thirties or early forties."
"ELMA Gee, I’m glad I’m not traveling on the bus tonight. GRACE I wonder who’s drivin’ tonight. This is Carl’s night, isn’t it? ELMA I think so. GRACE Yes it is. (Obviously the idea of CARL pleases her. She nudges ELMA confidentially) Remember, honey, I always serve Carl."
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The movie has all the saloon scenes and at the beginning Bo and Virgil first stop at the bus stop before heading to the rodeo and meeting Cherie. They return and it is pretty similar except the fight is between the sheriff, Will and Bo in the play and in the movie Carl and Bo. The play has Bo going to jail and Cherie and Virgil go to help release him. Virgil tells Bo to apologize It seems that Cherie and Bo had made love before coming to the bus stop because of physical attraction which causes the virgin Bo to want to marry Cherie. In the movie Grace and Carl flirt but in the play Carl sleeps with Grace in her private room. Grace is a grass widow, her husband is alive but not around. The doctor is not in the movie but instead some children. The doctor is middle age and has a history of seducing young girls, Elma likes him and does not see what he is doing, even when he wants to meet her in the city, making sure she does not tell anybody. He is a drunk and since she is so nice, he cannot go through with his plan to seduce Elma. At the bus stop in the play, the group of people decide to entertain each other but No feels
"(The door swings open, some of the snow flying inside, and CHERIE, a young blond
of about twenty, enters as though driven. She wears no hat, and her hair, despite one brilliant bobby pin, blows wild about her face. She is pretty in a fragile, girlish way. She runs immediately to the counter to solicit the attention of GRACE and ELMA. She lugs along an enormous straw suitcase that is worn and battered. Her clothes, considering her situation, are absurd: a skimpy jacket of tarnished metal cloth edged with not luxuriant fur, a dress of sequins and net, and gilded sandals that expose brightly enameled toes. Also, her make-up has been applied under the influence of having seen too many movies. Her lipstick creates a voluptuous pair of lips that aren’t her own, and her eyebrows also form a somewhat arbitrary line. But despite all these defects, her prettiness still is apparent, and she has the appeal of a tender little bird. Her origin is the Ozarks and her speech is Southern)"
"WILL (Coming to CHERIE with a professional interest) What’s the trouble, miss? CHERIE (Looking at WILL suspiciously) You a p’liceman? WILL I’m the local sheriff. ELMA (Feeling some endorsement is called for) But everyone likes him. Really!
CHERIE Well ... I ain’t askin’ t’have no one arrested. WILL Who says I’m gonna arrest anyone? What’s your trouble? CHERIE I ... I need protection. WILL What from? CHERIE There’s a man after me. He’s a cowboy. WILL (Looking around) Where is he? CHERIE He’s on the bus, asleep, him and his buddy. I jumped off the bus the very second it stopped, to make my getaway. But there ain’t no place to get away to. And he’ll be
here purty soon. You just gotta make him lemme alone."
"CHERIE He put me on the bus. I’m bein’ abducted. WILL Abducted! But you took time to pack a suitcase! CHERIE I was goin’ somewhere else, tryin’ to get away from him, but he picked me up and carried me to the bus and put me on it. I din have nothin’ to say about it at all. WILL Where’s he plan on takin’ ya?
CHERIE Says he’s got a ranch up in Montana. He says we’re gonna git married soon as we get there. ELMA You’re safe with Will here. Will is very respected around here. He’s never lost a fight. WILL What’re ya talkin’ about, Elma? Of course I’ve lost a fight ... once. ELMA Grace always said you were invincible. WILL There ain’t no one that’s ... invincible. A man’s gotta learn that, the sooner the better. A good fighter has gotta know what it is to get licked. Thass what makes the diff’rence ‘tween a fighter and a bully."
"CARL Make it a ham and cheese on rye. GRACE I’m sorry, Carl. We got no cheese. CARL What happened? Did the mice get it? GRACE None of your wise remarks. CARL O.K. Make it a ham on rye, then. GRACE (At breadbox) I’m sorry, Carl, but we got no rye, either. DR. LYMAN (Chiming in, from his table) I can vouch for that, sir. I just asked for rye, myself, and was refused. CARL Look, mister, don’t ya think ya oughta lay off that stuff till ya get home and meet the missus? DR. LYMAN The missus, did you say? (He laughs) I have no missus, sir. I’m free. I can travel the universe, with no one to await my arrival anywhere. CARL (To GRACE, bidding for a little sympathy) That’s all I ever get on my bus, drunks and hoodlums. GRACE How’s fer whole wheat, Carl? CARL O.K. Make it whole wheat."
"ELMA (Setting the doughnuts before her) Do you honestly work in a night club? CHERIE (Brightening with this recognition) Sure! I’m a chanteuse. I call m’self Cherie. ELMA That’s French, isn’t it? CHERIE I dunno. I jest seen the name once and it kinda appealed t’me. ELMA It’s French. It means “dear one.” Is that all the name you use? CHERIE Sure. Thass all the name ya need. Like Hildegarde. She’s a chanteuse, too. ELMA Chanteuse means singer. CHERIE How come you know so much? ELMA I’m taking French in high school. CHERIE Oh! (A reflective pause) I never got as far as high school. See, I was the oldest girl left in the fam’ly after my sister Violet ran away. I had two more sisters, both younger’n me, and five brothers, most of ’em older. Was they mean! Anyway, I had to quit school when I was twelve, to stay home and take care a the house and do the cookin’. I’m a real good cook. Honest!"