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Prairie Home Companion, A (movie tie-in) Page 5


  Don’t expect to wake up and get toast for breakfast.

  The toast is you.

  YOLANDA lets a long silent moment pass.

  LOLA

  Like it?

  YOLANDA (TO RHONDA)

  You remember that song we sang with

  Rusty?

  (TO LOLA)

  We used to have a dog in the act when

  Connie and Wanda were in it and we’d sing

  this song with him and he’d howl.

  YOLANDA & RHONDA (SING)

  Go tell Aunt Gladys

  Go tell Aunt Gladys

  Go tell Aunt Gladys

  Her old brown dog is dead.

  YOLANDA & RHONDA (SING) (CONT’D)

  An old brown dog named Rusty

  An old brown dog named Rusty

  An old brown dog named Rusty

  He just laid down and died.

  They howl in two-part harmony.

  YOLANDA & RHONDA (SING)

  He died from chasing squirrels

  He died from chasing squirrels

  He died from chasing squirrels

  He ate one and got sick.

  It must’ve been a bad one

  It must’ve been a bad one

  It must’ve been a bad one

  He just lay down and died.

  They howl in harmony.

  LOLA

  You sang that in public?

  RHONDA

  That was the summer we auditioned for the

  Lawrence Welk Show and Mama made those

  big yellow dresses with the puff sleeves and

  the petticoats.

  YOLANDA

  We went to Hollywood on the train and we

  promised Mama that we would lock

  ourselves into our hotel rooms and not walk

  the streets—

  LOLA

  At night?

  YOLANDA

  Anytime. And we promised we were going

  to sing “Softly and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling,

  Calling for You and for Me”—

  RHONDA

  And we would have, except that “Softly and

  Tenderly Jesus Is Calling” just didn’t show

  us off to advantage. It wasn’t going to get us

  the job.

  YOLANDA

  So we did our bird medley instead.

  LOLA

  You never told me about this.

  RHONDA

  It was absolutely terrific. “When the Red Red

  Robin Comes Bob Bob Bobbin Along,” which

  segued into “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” and

  “Bluebird of Happiness” and then “Bye Bye

  Blackbird.” The audience went nuts. They

  were standing, clapping, waving hankies,

  throwing babies in the air. And you know

  something? They cut that number out of the

  show. You want to know why? Envy. Pure

  and simple. They could not bear to see four

  little girls from Oshkosh, Wisconsin, tear up

  an audience like that and show up the

  Lennon Sisters. So all they left in was “Go

  Tell Aunt Gladys the Old Brown Dog Is

  Dead,” which we did as an encore. It was

  pure envy. The Lennon Sisters. We could sing

  circles around the Lennon Sisters. So they

  dumped us. The Lennon Sisters were

  communists. It’s true. That is not generally

  known.

  (TO YOLANDA)

  Don’t look at me like that. It’s true. We had

  more talent in our little pinkie than the four

  of them put together. They hated us because

  we were better than they were.

  YOLANDA

  Mr. Welk was nice.

  RHONDA

  We didn’t know it at the time but that was

  the high point of our career. Only time we got

  to Hollywood. I was thirteen, you were ten,

  Wanda was, what?

  YOLANDA

  Sixteen. And Connie was fifteen.

  RHONDA

  That was it. End of the road. Envy.

  YOLANDA

  Anyway, Wanda took it hard, and a week

  later, she got arrested.

  LOLA

  For what? You never told me about this.

  YOLANDA

  Shoplifting.

  RHONDA

  She was in a café having a cup of coffee and

  she ordered a glazed doughnut and started

  eating it and got a sugar rush and jumped

  up, forgetting that she hadn’t paid for it and

  she walked out the door . . . and two minutes

  later there were red lights flashing and she

  RHONDA (CONT’D)

  was in handcuffs and the TV cameras were

  there and she was bawling and her hair was a

  mess and it was on the ten o’clock newscast

  and Daddy saw it—

  YOLANDA

  He was in the hospital with Mama who was

  having her tubes tied after Johnny was born.

  RHONDA

  Daddy saw Wanda on TV getting arrested for

  shoplifting and he had a major coronary

  occlusion.

  LOLA

  That was when he died?

  RHONDA

  It was fatal, yes.

  YOLANDA

  He just pulled the sheet up over his own face,

  and when the nurse came in, he was dead.

  RHONDA

  He left a note for Wanda. She was released

  from jail for the funeral. The note said, “You

  broke my heart.” Signed, Daddy.

  YOLANDA

  She did thirty days in jail for one glazed

  doughnut.

  LOLA

  That’s terrible.

  RHONDA

  Fifty-nine-cent doughnut.

  RHONDA is putting on her eyelashes.

  RHONDA

  If it was rock ’n’ roll, she could’ve thrown

  sofas out of the hotel window, but when

  you’re working to Christian family audiences

  like we were, if you so much as forget to pay

  for a doughnut, they’ll dump you like you

  were a piece of garbage.

  YOLANDA

  She quit the act and joined the Sisters of

  Perpetual Sorrow and went off to live in a

  convent in Minot where you spend eight

  hours a day on your knees rocking back and

  forth and moaning.

  RHONDA

  One week we’re in Hollywood on the verge

  of stardom and a week later we’re back

  playing the county fair circuit and doing our

  costume changes in the ladies’ toilet and boys

  trying to peek in and then you go and sing

  outdoors with a cloud of mosquitoes around

  your head . . . I remember that time when a

  dragonfly came right in my mouth, almost

  choked me—I thought I’d swallowed a bird.

  YOLANDA

  It was “I’ll Fly Away.” She finished the rest of

  the verse and then she turned around to spit

  during the instrumental.

  LOLA is moved by this tale of sorrow and disappointment, her eyes are teary.

  LOLA

  What happened to your mother?

  RHONDA

  Your grandma lost her marbles when Daddy

  expired. She always had been wound sort of

  tight and she went off the deep end and she

  started cleaning her house more or less

  twenty-four hours a day.

  YOLANDA

  The neighbors could hear her vacuum

  cleaner at three and four in the morning. It

  was obsessive-compulsive. She vacuumed

 
the hell out of that carpet. Vacuumed it right

  down to bare threads.

  RHONDA

  We had to shovel her into the Good Shepherd

  Home. And Connie left the act to stay and

  take care of Mama and then there were just

  the two of us. And your dad—he was the one

  who got us on the radio. Before he ran off

  with the yodeler. Your mom’s best friend.

  Ardelle.

  LOLA

  She could yodel?

  RHONDA

  When she met him she could. And then he

  just gradually wore the yodeling out of her.

  She sang at Mama’s funeral. We couldn’t. We

  were basket cases. So your dad and Ardelle

  sang.

  LOLA

  What did they sing at the funeral?

  YOLANDA (SINGS)

  Softly and tenderly Jesus is calling

  Calling for you and for me,

  See on the portals he’s waiting and watching,

  Watching for you and for me.

  YOLANDA & RHONDA (SING)

  Come home, come home,

  Ye who are weary come home—

  RHONDA

  And that night your dad ran off with Ardelle

  and they drove to Bakersfield, California.

  LOLA

  My father ran off with my mother’s best

  friend after singing a hymn at Grandma’s

  funeral? Jesus.

  YOLANDA

  You were two years old. And you know

  something? I didn’t care about him so long as

  I had you. That’s the truth.

  16 INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE THE DRESSING ROOM—SAME TIME

  GK knocks on the door with “JOHNSON SISTERS” written on it.

  The door opens. RHONDA is there. Inside, YOLANDA and LOLA are singing.

  YOLANDA & LOLA

  Come home, come home

  Ye who are weary come home—

  RHONDA

  Are we on?

  GK

  Got a few minutes.

  MOLLY stands behind him.

  YOLANDA

  What are we doing?

  MOLLY

  You’re on in the Powdermilk segment doing

  “Gold Watch & Chain”—with him—

  YOLANDA

  Haven’t done that for years.

  (SHE SINGS)

  I will pawn you my gold watch and chain, love

  (GK JOINS)

  I will pawn you my gold wedding ring

  I will pawn you this heart in my bosom

  If you only will love me again.

  RHONDA (TO GK)

  I’m getting a head start on getting pie-eyed.

  YOLANDA

  How about “Red River Valley”?

  GK

  Whatever you want.

  YOLANDA takes a look in the mirror, dabs at her eyeliner with a tissue.

  YOLANDA

  I want to make sure there’s a spot for Lola

  later—

  GK

  I saw her name on the order.

  LOLA

  Is this really the last show?

  GK

  Every show is the last show. That’s my

  philosophy.

  RHONDA

  Thank you, Plato.

  He leaves as JEARLYN STEELE enters, an African American woman in a golden dress, hair done up high on her head.

  JEARLYN

  Hi, everybody.

  YOLANDA

  Jearlyn!

  (TO LOLA)

  Jearlyn used to babysit you, remember?

  (TO JEARLYN)

  You look fantastic.

  JEARLYN

  When you’re this big, honey, you gotta look

  fantastic, there is no way around it. I was

  going to say good-bye, but I’m afraid I’m

  gonna start crying, so I won’t.

  YOLANDA

  Good. Let’s not.

  MOLLY

  Let’s go, everybody.

  YOLANDA

  Lola’s going to sing tonight.

  JEARLYN

  Hey. Sing something with me, baby.

  She turns to see LOLA looking at herself in the mirror, holding up in front of her a show dress like her mother’s.

  LOLA

  Do you think I’m attractive?

  CUT TO:

  16A INT. MAKEUP ROOM

  The LUNCH LADY stands behind DUSTY who is sitting on a chair. She is kneading his shoulders.

  DUSTY

  A little to the left. Oh, God, that’s good.

  Down a little. Mmmmmmm.

  LUNCH LADY

  I should be getting back upstairs. I told Lola

  I’d make her a turkey sandwich.

  DUSTY

  Don’t stop yet. You’re driving me wild.

  You’re a good back rubber.

  (HE SINGS)

  I used to work in Chicago

  At a department store

  I used to work in Chicago

  I did but I don’t anymore.

  A lady came in for a girdle,

  I asked her what kind she wore.

  “Rubber,” she said, and rub her I did

  And I don’t work there anymore.

  LUNCH LADY

  This is our last show. I can’t believe it. I’ve

  been working here twenty-five years. What’s

  going to happen to me?

  DUSTY (SINGS)

  I used to work in Chicago

  At a department store

  I used to work in Chicago

  I did but I don’t anymore.

  A lady came in for a birthday cake,

  I asked her what kind and what for.

  “Layer,” she said, and lay her I did

  And I don’t work there anymore.

  17 INT. FITZGERALD THEATER—SAME TIME

  Onstage, the band is switching over, musicians coming and going, stagehands moving microphones. GK at the podium.

  GK

  —and right now let’s bring up an old favorite

  here on A Prairie Home Companion and that’s a

  couple of fine ladies who’ve been singing

  together since they were little girls in

  Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

  CUT TO:

  18 INT. FITZGERALD WINGS—SAME TIME

  RHONDA and YOLANDA slip through the crowd in the wings toward the stage.

  GK (O.C.)

  They’ve kept alive all the wonderful old

  songs that have been around forever, and

  they’ve been like sisters to all of us, and let’s

  all welcome the Johnson Girls.

  RHONDA sticks her tongue out at GK as she passes upstage of him and she and YOLANDA come to the front of the stage. YOLANDA waves to the audience.

  GK (CONT’D)

  Yolanda and Rhonda, it wouldn’t be a show

  without you.

  YOLANDA

  Thank you so much. Thank you.

  RHONDA is gesturing to the audience for more applause. YOLANDA gestures for her to stop.

  YOLANDA

  I just want to say how happy I am that my

  daughter Lola came tonight.

  (SHE GLANCES TOWARD THE WINGS)

  Thank you, sweetheart. It means a lot to me. I

  named my little girl after my mother, Lola.

  And now we’d like to do an old song that

  Mama loved—she was our inspiration, you

  know. Nobody worked harder than our

  mama—washing and cleaning and cooking

  and looking after six kids—and the main

  reason we wanted to make music was that it

  YOLANDA (CONT’D)

  was the only way we knew to make Mama

  happy. She’d be on her knees scrubbing the

  kitchen floor and if you stood in the doorway

  and sang a song she liked, she’d look up and<
br />
  smile, worn-out as she was, and you could

  see her gold tooth.

  Behind her, RHONDA is counting off the tempo to the band.

  RHONDA (TO BAND ONSTAGE)

  Not too fast—

  (COUNTING OFF TIME, SNAPPING FINGERS)

  —or I’ll kill you sons of bitches, and I

  mean it.

  She turns and smiles to the audience, as band plays.

  YOLANDA & RHONDA (SING)

  Way down upon that old Mississippi River,

  Not so far away

  That’s where my folks have lived forever,

  That’s where I’m going to stay.

  I’ve been looking cross the whole creation

  Half my life and more.

  And then I found my sweet satisfaction

  Right here on the muddy river shore.

  CUT TO:

  19 INT. BACKSTAGE—SAME TIME