Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Frontispiece
- Love, Grime And Johannesburg
- Scene 1 A Public Square
- Scene 2 The Prison Cell
- Scene 3 The Office of the Chief of Police
- Scene 4 The Prison Cell.
- Scene 5 A City Council Boardroom
- Scene 6 The Prison Cell
- Scene 7 Bokkie's Study
- Scene 8 The Prison Cell
- Scene 9 A Melville
- Scene 10 Office of the Chief of Police
- Scene 11 The Open Door
- Scene 12 The Prison Cell
- Scene 13 A Melville Cafe
- Scene 14 A Melville Cafe.
- Scene 15 The Prison Cell
- Scene 16 Office Corridors
- Scene 17 Bokkie's Study
- Scene 18 A Melville Cafe
- Scene 19 The Prison Cell
- Scene 20 The Doorway
- Scene 21 A Melville Cafe
- Scene 22 The Office of the Chief of Police
- Scene 23 A Cheap Bruma Lake Hotel Room
- Scene 24 The Public Square
Scene 17 - Bokkie's Study
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 June 2019
- Frontmatter
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Frontispiece
- Love, Grime And Johannesburg
- Scene 1 A Public Square
- Scene 2 The Prison Cell
- Scene 3 The Office of the Chief of Police
- Scene 4 The Prison Cell.
- Scene 5 A City Council Boardroom
- Scene 6 The Prison Cell
- Scene 7 Bokkie's Study
- Scene 8 The Prison Cell
- Scene 9 A Melville
- Scene 10 Office of the Chief of Police
- Scene 11 The Open Door
- Scene 12 The Prison Cell
- Scene 13 A Melville Cafe
- Scene 14 A Melville Cafe.
- Scene 15 The Prison Cell
- Scene 16 Office Corridors
- Scene 17 Bokkie's Study
- Scene 18 A Melville Cafe
- Scene 19 The Prison Cell
- Scene 20 The Doorway
- Scene 21 A Melville Cafe
- Scene 22 The Office of the Chief of Police
- Scene 23 A Cheap Bruma Lake Hotel Room
- Scene 24 The Public Square
Summary
LULU is circling BOKKIE, who is sitting hunched with his back to us in his armchair. LULU throws various photographs, letters and post cards into his lap.
LULU: This is Freda Gildenstein. You had a love affair with her from 1966 to 1969. You used to meet at a Fox Street hotel! While you were gefuffeling in the back streets of Jo'burg, mummy was pregnant with me! And this is Toodles Shakanovski. You met her at the Cafe Wien in Hillbrow before it became Hillbrow. She had a fake French accent! You only found out in 1972 that she came from Rosettenville! This is a post card from Cookie Lazarus, who writes here, T look forward passionately to being the second mother of your darling child!'. And this is a photograph of Blossom Nicolby-Smith. You used to spend dirty weekends with her at the Four Seasons Hotel in Durban!
BOKKIE: Rubbish!
LULU: And we won't mention the ongoing liaison with Dinky Cohen, your young secretary.
BOKKIE: How did you find all this out?
LULU: Mom put a private detective on you years ago.
BOKKIE: Oh my baby, I never knew you knew!
LULU: Well now you know!
BOKKIE: My little baby girl, my princess, I was trying to protect you!
LULU: I don't need protection!
BOKKIE: Your mother was cold beyond cold! An ice maiden! And a man is a man!
LULU: Pathetic!
BOKKIE: How can I make it up to you! What must I do? What do you want?
LULU: I want Jimmy ‘Long Legs’ Mangane free!
BOKKIE rises, faces the audience, and sings.
WHY IS A CITY ALWAYS A WOMAN?
Why is a city always a woman
And because she's a woman, almost always a whore
A man can possess her, he can love and caress her
But don't be fooled, when the chips are down, she's gone!
Berlin's a bitch, and Amsterdam is addled
I keep a little diary of the cities I have travelled
Venice thinks she's classy, Vienna, I find rather brassy
My little black book is full of the towns I have known!
Barcelona's a beauty, brings out the bull in me
Ancient Rome lies back, always ready for a grope
But when the spirit calls she prefers to service the Pope
Manhatten's a dry martini, she's fast paced and she's chic
- Type
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- Information
- Love, Crime and Johannesburg , pp. 40 - 42Publisher: Wits University PressPrint publication year: 2000