MUSIC OF THE HEART
Written by
Pamela Gray
SHOOTING DRAFT
January 25, 1999
FADE IN:
CREDITS OVER PHOTOS IN AN ALBUM
The photos include a sepia-tone portrait of an Italian
immigrant family... a b&w snapshot of ROBERTA, a nine-year-
old girl playing violin in front of a refrigerator (1950)...
...Roberta and her dashing Italian father, hand-carving a
wooden music stand... a b&w snapshot of Roberta in a communion
dress... Roberta at 15, playing violin in front of the same
refrigerator, eyes on the music stand...
...a color photo of two cute blonde little boys building a
sandcastle on a beach... a color photo of a groom in a white
naval uniform and his pretty bride, (Roberta at 25), her
hand over his as they cut their wedding cake with a sword...
...a color photo of Roberta and her husband Greek dancing
with another couple at an outdoor taverna. Roberta's husband
and the other man's sexy wife are exchanging a slight smile...
HOLD ON THIS LAST PHOTO as we now see the ALBUM open on the
floor of a bedroom, as if it's been tossed. We are:
INT. GUASPARI HOUSEHOLD, ROME, N. Y. - BEDROOM - DAY (1988)
WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
Wake up, Roberta!
We hear the sound of KNOCKING as the CAMERA PANS a small,
darkened guest room. A few streaks of daylight filter through
Venetian blinds.
WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
Come on, Bert -- get out of bed!
The CAMERA finds a WOMAN lying face down on a twin bed, thick
wavy hair sprawled across her shoulders.
WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
Please, Bert -- you need to get out
of that bed.
The KNOCKING continues, and she puts the pillow over the top
of her head.
END CREDITS
INT. GUASPARI BEDROOM - DAY
The WOMAN -- ROBERTA GUASPARI-DEMETRAS (38) -- retrieves the
photo album from the floor, looks at a photo and removes it.
She's a beautiful woman with large, expressive eyes, but
right now she looks like hell. She stares at the photo --
it's the two couples dancing. A quick glimpse of hurt on her
face, then her jaw tightens and she rips the picture in half.
There's muffled talking outside the door, and then two young
boys' voices.
BOY'S VOICE (O.S.)
Can you come out now, Mommy? Please?
She puts the half with her and her husband on the dresser,
then tears the woman off the other half and rips her into
pieces.
BOY #2 (O.S.)
Mommy, Nick broke my crayon!
BOY #1 (O.S.)
Well, Lexi hit me and he almost
broke... he almost broke my ear!
O.S. arguing "I DID NOT!" "YES YOU DID!" "LIAR!" etc. As if
that one action siphoned all her energy, Roberta returns to
bed, gets into fetal position, and stares at a point beyond
the wall, ignoring the O.S. voices.
WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
Hear that? Your boys need you.
EXT. GUASPARI HOUSE - DOORWAY - DAY
ASSUNTA GUASPARI (58), Roberta's slender, tired Italian-
American mother, stands in the doorway of a well-tended
working-class home, addressing a young NAVAL OFFICER who
holds a lengthy delivery inventory. It's a gray day with
ominous storm clouds. Late 70's CARS are parked on the street.
ASSUNTA
But I have no room for this!
OFFICER
I'm sorry, M'am. We have orders to
deliver these.
Assunta looks beyond the man, dismayed.
HER POV
Large wooden CRATES cover her front lawn, and TWO MOVERS
plant down another. They hurry back to the TRUCK, grabbing
the next crate too quickly this time. It slips from their
hands, CRASHES to the ground and splinters open. Several
VIOLIN CASES spill out. The crate looks like it holds a whole
lot more.
BACK TO SCENE
Instantly a second-story window is flung open, and Roberta
sticks her head out, a hundred times more energized than
we've seen her so far.
ROBERTA
Watch it, you idiots! Be careful
with those!
The men scramble to pick them up. Assunta looks at all the
violins, then up at Roberta.
ASSUNTA
Why so many?
Roberta disappears inside and slams the window shut.
INT. GUASPARI LIVING ROOM - DAY
The living room is filled with boxes shipped from Greece,
labelled by the U.S. NAVY. And on the floor, in the middle
of the boxes, are FIFTY VIOLIN CASES of various sizes, also
with Greek and U.S. NAVY labels. NICK (7) and LEXI (5) climb
over the boxes as if they were giant blocks.
NICK
(calling)
Mommy, which box has our toys?
INT. GUASPARI HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS
ROBERTA'S on the phone, yelling at someone. She's still in
the same ratty nightgown.
ROBERTA
Look, I know he's there, so quit
lying to me!... Then check under
Lana Holden -- Mrs. Lana Holden...
Fine. Just tell Lieutenant Demetras
that his wife called and --
ASSUNTA grabs the phone from her hand and hangs it up.
ROBERTA
Ma!
ASSUNTA
No. I want you to listen to me. You
can't keep doing this to yourself --
or to the boys. They need their mother
now. You're a beautiful, talented
woman and you have your whole life
ahead of you.
ROBERTA
If I'm so beautiful and talented,
why did Charles leave me?
ASSUNTA
Because Charles is a big jerk.
(beat)
Now get dressed.
She exits, leaving Roberta to mull over her words.
INT. GUASPARI KITCHEN - DAY
Coffee is brewing and homemade cinnamon rolls are cooling on
a rack. We recognize the kitchen from the home movie footage.
As Assunta clears the boys' breakfast dishes from the table,
Roberta enters. She's dressed, but hasn't put on makeup or
done much with her hair. It's a start.
ROBERTA
You really think Charles is a jerk?
ASSUNTA
From the day you married him.
ROBERTA
Why didn't you say something?
ASSUNTA
Since when do you listen to me?
Roberta half-smiles, pours herself some coffee, then sits
down at the table.
ROBERTA
(sighs, then)
What am I gonna do?
ASSUNTA
First, you eat breakfast. Second,
you go out and get a job -- any job.
Your boys, god-bless-em, are good
eaters -- but I can't afford it.
ROBERTA
Mama, he's gonna get tired of her --
you'll see.
Assunta's face shows she's doubtful about this.
ASSUNTA
Well in the meantime, get a job.
INT. DEPARTMENT STORE - GIFT WRAP COUNTER - ROME, N.Y. - DAY
Roberta is behind the counter, meticulously wrapping a present
with ribbons, bows and stickers. At one point she even unties
a ribbon and redoes it because it's not perfect. She looks
pretty, but she's dressed conservatively, like a navy
housewife. There's only one other clerk wrapping gifts and a
long line of impatient customers. A male SUPERVISOR appears
behind Roberta.
SUPERVISOR
Just wrap. You're not Picasso.
He exits, and Roberta quickly tries to finish her task.
MALE VOICE (O.S.)
Picasso would probably put the bows
on the back of the box.
Roberta looks up to find BRIAN TURNER (40), a handsome, sexy
guy with longish hair and a beat-up leather jacket.
ROBERTA
Brian Turner?
BRIAN
Hello, Roberta.
ROBERTA
I thought you moved away.
BRIAN
I did. I'm in town for my Mom's
birthday.
He holds out his hand. Roberta misunderstands the gesture
and tries to shake his hand.
BRIAN
No -- that's her gift.
ROBERTA
(embarrassed)
Oh! Sorry.
Roberta hands him the gift she's been wrapping.
BRIAN
It looks very pretty.
ROBERTA
Thank you.
(beat)
I heard you had a book published. I
didn't read it but...
BRIAN
That's O.K. My parents didn't read
it either. It looks good on their
coffee table, though.
Roberta smiles.
BRIAN
So what are you doing here? I thought
you'd be in Carnegie Hall by now.
HOLD ON ROBERTA as she takes this in.
INT. COFFEE SHOP - ROME, N.Y. - DAY
Roberta sits opposite Brian. Her lunch is untouched.
ROBERTA
My college professors said it was
too late -- I hadn't had enough
training to be a concert violinist.
So I got a teaching degree instead.
BRIAN
I'll bet you're a great teacher.
ROBERTA
I think I am. It's just that...
(sighs)
See, every time I'd get started
somewhere, Charles would be
transferred... then I had my kids
and took time off to raise them...
and then when I decided to teach
again, no one would hire me 'cause
you can't count on a navy wife to
stick around. I finally decided I'd
start my own program -- Charles gave
me the money and I bought fifty
violins from this little Greek shop --
got started at a private school and
then...
BRIAN
Your husband ran off with your best
friend.
A beat.
ROBERTA
She wasn't my "best" friend. She was
a friend.
(beat)
Charles is the last person you'd
think would cheat on me -- he never
broke a rule...
(a few beats)
I wake up one night -- it's like one
in the morning -- and he's not in
bed. I go outside and our neighbor --
this old Greek guy -- is sitting out
there, smoking a cigar, so I ask if
he's seen my husband. "He's taking a
walk with the other officer's wife,"
he says. "He takes a walk every night
with the other officer's wife."
A beat as she gets lost in the memory. She takes a bite of a
french fry.
ROBERTA
God, these are cold.
BRIAN
So you're just gonna wrap presents
and wait for him to come back?
ROBERTA
You sound like my mother.
BRIAN
That's not very sexy.
ROBERTA
Are you trying to be sexy or be my
friend?
BRIAN
A little of both.
Roberta smiles, blushing a bit. Brian looks at her, getting
an idea.
BRIAN
You know, I know this really cool
lady who runs this elementary school --
I wrote a piece on her. It's a public
school, but it's alternative -- she
might be able to create some kind of
gig for you. Let me give her a call.
ROBERTA
Great!
BRIAN
(takes his last bite
of sandwich)
If she hires you, though, you have
to be willing to relocate.
ROBERTA
Where is it?
EXT. SPANISH HARLEM, NEW YORK CITY - TRAVELLING SHOT - DAY
A SALSA SONG PLAYS OVER as we see stores with Spanish names
and signs; Black and Latino elementary school children walking
home from school; some burned-out buildings; Black and Latino
teens playing basketball on a cement court; Spanish graffiti
on walls; elderly women buying fruit at a produce stand.
PULL BACK TO REVEAL this is the POV of Roberta from the back
seat of a cab. The SALSA SONG plays on the cab's radio.
Roberta looks scared shitless.
Suddenly, two YOUNG MEN flash down the middle of the street,
dart IN FRONT of the cab and the driver SLAMS on the brakes,
jerking Roberta forward.
TAXI DRIVER
Welcome to East Harlem.
EXT. CENTRAL PARK EAST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL (CPE 1) - EAST
HARLEM - ESTABLISHING - DAY
INT. JANET WILLIAMS' OFFICE - DAY
JANET WILLIAMS, a Black woman (40's) with a kind face, sits
behind her desk and looks at Roberta's resume. A sign on her
desk indicates that she's the DIRECTOR. Also on the desk is
a FRAMED PICTURE of Janet, her husband, daughter (14), and
son (12). Roberta sits nervously in the chair opposite her.
JANET
(looking at resume)
Aside from half a term in a private
school -- in Greece -- and a year
teaching chorus in Hawaii -- ten
years ago -- it doesn't look like
you've had any other teaching
experience.
ROBERTA
Well, not traditional teaching
experience. I've been doing private
lessons...
Janet looks for this on the resume.
ROBERTA
It's not on there... I taught my
sons.
Janet smiles politely.
JANET
I'd like to help you, Mrs. Demetras.
Brian spoke highly of you and I told
him I'd consider starting a violin
class... But without the proper
qualifications, and without any
experience in an inner city school...
Roberta nods, defeated.
JANET
I'm very sorry.
INT. CPE 1 - HALLWAY - DAY
Roberta stands outside Janet's office, dejectedly watching
the children noisily running through the hall.
INT. AREA OUTSIDE JANET WILLIAMS' OFFICE - THE NEXT DAY
Roberta knocks on Janet's door.
JANET (O.S.)
Yes?
As Roberta opens the door, we see that Nick and Lexi are
with her. All three have violins. INSIDE, Janet's in
conversation with DENNIS RAUSCH (38), an uptight man with a
tie that doesn't match his suit jacket. He's showing Janet a
large scheduling chart.
ROBERTA
I'm sorry to interrupt, but I wanted
you to meet my sons -- Nick, Lexi...
They enter.
INT. JANET'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
Janet smiles at the boys, but clearly thinks Roberta's a
little off. Roberta holds her hand out to Dennis.
ROBERTA
Roberta Guaspari-Demetras.
Dennis shakes her hand, regarding her warily.
JANET
This is Dennis Rausch, our music
teacher and program coordinator.
(beat)
Mrs. Demetras, didn't I make things
clear yesterday?
ROBERTA
If I could just show you something --
it'll only take a minute.
Before Janet can answer, Roberta and the kids quickly take
out their violins and get into position. Janet and Dennis
exchange a look.
DENNIS
Are we having a talent show? I should
have brought my tap shoes.
Roberta ignores the jab, then nods to the boys. The three of
them begin an incredibly impressive violin trio, playing an
ETUDE in three-part harmony. For the first measures, Janet's
still annoyed by the intrusion, but she's quickly won over.
Dennis watches impassively.
Roberta and the boys finish their piece; Janet applauds and
Dennis joins in to be polite. The three take bows. A beat.
LEXI
Will you hire her now?
Janet laughs, then gestures for them to sit.
JANET
How long have you boys been playing?
NICK
Since I was three.
LEXI
(contemplates, then)
Maybe since I was three and a half.
JANET
Your mom must be a good teacher.
NICK
(shrugs)
She's O.K.
Roberta gives Nick a look, but Janet smiles.
JANET
(to Roberta)
If you could teach our students to
play like that, I'd be thrilled, but --
ROBERTA
I can. Any child can learn the violin.
DENNIS
Assuming they had the discipline.
ROBERTA
I'll teach them to have discipline.
JANET
A lot of our parents are struggling
to feed their kids and pay the rent --
they don't have time to help them
learn violin.
ROBERTA
They don't have to. If they can help,
great -- but these kids will be
committed. They'll practice on their
own, they'll help each other in the
classroom --
Dennis laughs. Roberta looks at him, a bit miffed.
DENNIS
(with an edge)
I think I know these students, Miss
Demetras. Their attention span doesn't
go past do-re-mi. Maybe on a good
day, I can get them to "fa."
ROBERTA
You're underestimating them. They
can play as well as any other kids.
DENNIS
That I'd like to see.
ROBERTA
You will.
A beat. Janet observes the tension, then turns to Roberta.
JANET
(to Roberta)
For now I'll put you down as a sub,
but I have to warn you -- even if it
works out, the Board may not let me
create a permanent position for you.
ROBERTA
That's O.K. I'll worry about that
later.
(with a grateful look)
Thank you.
We see relief -- and fear -- in Roberta's face.
DENNIS
(to Janet)
Well, I've already planned out the
whole term, and I can tell you right
now, there's no room for this!
Besides, where you gonna find money
for violins?
ROBERTA
You need violins?
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
In a noisy music room with bad acoustics, Roberta tries to
take control of fifty kids, third through fifth-graders, who
are in a state of manic excitement over the FIFTY VIOLIN
CASES on the floor.
ROBERTA
(gently)
Please do not open the cases, O.K.?
They ignore her.
ROBERTA
Look, can everyone just settle down
and listen to me -- please?
ANGLE - Three girls open their cases.
ROBERTA
(starting to lose it)
Keep them closed! Please.
ANGLE - Two boys open their cases.
ROBERTA
(to the boys)
Did you hear what I just said?
ANGLE - Three kids are using the violin cases as pretend
machine guns -- and shooting each other.
ROBERTA
Put those down, please!
ANGLE - A boy and a girl are having a "sword fight" with
their bows.
ROBERTA
(to the fencers)
Don't do that! Put the bows back in
the cases -- right now!
There's the SOUND of violin strings being plucked.
ROBERTA
Who's plucking?
Roberta wheels around to find a girl plucking her violin
like a banjo, and doing a little dance. This is LUCY, a skinny
Puerto Rican girl in perpetual motion.
ROBERTA
What have I been saying? Put that
away! Back in the case!
Roberta takes a breath. The kids settle down a bit.
ROBERTA
O.K. Thank you. That's much better.
(takes another breath)
I'll be dividing you into five
classes, but for today --
ANGLE - A boy plays "bongos" on his violin case.
ROBERTA
O.K. -- that's it! You! Stand up!
The bongo player stands.
ROBERTA
You will be the first student who
will NOT be in my violin class. Out!
The child looks stunned.
ROBERTA
I said OUT!
With a sheepish expression, he exits. The room is finally
quiet -- and Roberta's amazed that something worked. She
puffs up a little bit, enjoying the feeling of control.
ROBERTA
Who else would like to be kicked out
of my class?
The students stare at her, afraid of her now. DE SEAN, a
small but tough Black boy, raises his hand.
ROBERTA
Are you raising your hand because
you want to be kicked out?
DE SEAN
Yeah.
ROBERTA
Why?
DE SEAN
I don't wanna learn no stupid violin.
It's for wimps.
ROBERTA
Who told you that?
DE SEAN
I just know.
ROBERTA
What's your name?
BOY
De Sean.
ROBERTA
Well, De Sean -- you haven't given
me a good enough reason, so you're
staying.
She looks around the room.
ROBERTA
Anyone else?
Silence.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - LATER
In front of the class, Roberta helps NAEEM, a graceful Black
boy, hold the violin. He has a serious expression and a scar
on his left cheek. Roberta controls the bow and fingerboard,
but it appears that the boy is playing music. He smiles.
NAEEM
Hey, I play pretty good.
Roberta laughs.
ROBERTA
(to Naeem)
See how easy it is?
(to the class)
Maybe in the spring, we could have a
big concert for your families and
for the whole school.
(to the boy)
What's your name?
NAEEM
Naeem.
Roberta writes in a notebook and we see that she's measuring
for violin sizes.
ROBERTA
(to class)
If you listen to me and do exactly
what I say, you're gonna sound
beautiful at the concert and you're
gonna be so proud of yourselves.
(to Naeem)
Good, Naeem. Your hand's staying
soft.
(to the class)
But if you don't listen to me, you'll
sound so bad that your own parents
will feel sick when they hear you.
They might even throw up.
ON THE KIDS, not used to a teacher speaking like that.
INT. BRIAN'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
A funky apartment on the Upper West Side. Nick and Lexi are
both asleep in sleeping bags on top of a futon on the floor,
their suitcases nearby. Brian tiptoes past them, carrying
two glasses of champagne. He knocks on his office door.
ROBERTA (O.S.)
Come in.
INT. BRIAN'S APARTMENT - OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
Roberta's in a bathrobe and nightgown, some rollers in her
hair. She's tidying up her suitcase, etc., next to an old
couch that's been made up as a bed. Leftist political books
line a shelf above Brian's desk, including copies of his
own, TO HELL AND BACK: INTERVIEWS WITH VIETNAM VETS by BRIAN
TURNER. His desk is covered with files and books pertaining
to MIGRANT WORKERS. Brian enters.
ROBERTA
(referring to champagne)
What's this?
BRIAN
It's a toast.
(giving her a glass,
holding his up)
To Roberta, who's made it through
her first week.
They clink glasses and drink.
ROBERTA
I don't know, Brian. I'm hanging on
by a thread there. Out of fifty kids,
maybe six are listening to me.
BRIAN
Look at the progress. Didn't you say
no one was listening to you on Monday?
Roberta laughs.
ROBERTA
I really appreciate all you've done
for us. And I promise -- this weekend
I'll start looking for a place.
BRIAN
There's no rush.
ROBERTA
No, we've put you out enough. You're
supposed to be writing, not
babysitting for us.
(crosses to his desk,
flips through his
Vietnam book)
I've started your book. It's very
powerful.
BRIAN
Thank you.
Brian comes up behind her and starts to kiss her neck.
Roberta's scared -- so she keeps talking, as if it's not
really happening.
ROBERTA
So what made you choose migrant
workers for your next book? I mean,
how do you know what to write about?
BRIAN
(kissing her neck)
I follow my gut, pay attention to
what I'm being drawn to...
Roberta's aroused, in spite of herself. She turns around and
faces him.
ROBERTA
What are you doing?
BRIAN
I've been waiting to do that since
Mr. Baines' orchestra class.
ROBERTA
You didn't even notice me!
BRIAN
Sure I did. You used to ignore me
and it drove me wild.
ROBERTA
You had at least five different
girlfriends.
BRIAN
It didn't mean I had the one I wanted.
He gives her a flirtatious smile, then takes out one of her
rollers.
BRIAN
You're not a navy wife anymore...
He moves to takes out another roller and Roberta stops him.
ROBERTA
Yes I am... legally.
BRIAN
And is it a navy requirement that
you dress like it's the 1950's?
ROBERTA
I do not!
BRIAN
(goading her)
Who did you vote for in the last
election?
ROBERTA
What does that have to do with
anything?
BRIAN
Tell me.
ROBERTA
(hesitates, then)
I don't know. Charles filled out my
absentee ballot.
BRIAN
Oh my God -- it's even worse than I
thought!
(touching her hair)
Is this the same Roberta who got the
orchestra to strike until they gave
us new uniforms?
She laughs wistfully, then looks a little sad.
ROBERTA
That Roberta's not around anymore.
He pulls her towards him by the belt to her robe.
BRIAN
I don't believe that.
They kiss and it heats up quickly. Roberta pulls back.
ROBERTA
I shouldn't.
BRIAN
Because?
ROBERTA
The boys --
BRIAN
They're sleeping.
ROBERTA
I know, but... I'm still married.
BRIAN
And what's your husband doing right
now?
A few beats, and she moves towards him.
INT. BRIAN'S BEDROOM - DAY
Sun streams into the room as Roberta awakens in Brian's bed,
a look of afterglow on her face. She suddenly remembers where
she is, and quickly looks at the clock.
ROBERTA
Oh shit -- the boys.
BRIAN (O.S.)
They're still sleeping.
She turns, relieved, until she sees that Brian's packing a
suitcase.
ROBERTA
Where are you going?
BRIAN
Texas.
He dashes out. Roberta sits up, rattled by this news.
INT. BRIAN'S OFFICE - DAY
Brian excitedly gathers papers and files scattered around
his electric typewriter.
ROBERTA (O.S.)
What's in Texas?
He turns to see Roberta in the doorway.
BRIAN
Farm workers. I just got the call --
it came through -- my research grant!
It came through! Isn't that great?
ROBERTA
Today?
He places items into a carry-on bag, packing at a rapid clip.
In contrast, Roberta seems to be moving in slow motion.
BRIAN
I've got a few families lined up
there, some in California --
ROBERTA
How long will you be gone?
BRIAN
Two, three months.
ROBERTA
What?
INT. BRIAN'S BATHROOM - DAY
Brian throws toiletries into a plastic bag. Roberta enters.
ROBERTA
I thought... I just thought you were
gonna be around. And then last night --
He stops what he's doing and looks at her.
BRIAN
Whoa. Roberta -- last night was great
but did you think I was gonna marry
you in the morning?
ROBERTA
No! Of course not.
We see in her face that part of her did think that.
ROBERTA
It's just that... we just got here
and we're barely... I don't even
know where to buy groceries.
Brian softens as he sees how vulnerable she is. He takes her
in his arms.
BRIAN
You're gonna be fine. You have a
job, a place to stay, your kids have
a school to go to -- and there's a
D'Agostino's around the corner.
She attempts a smile.
ROBERTA
Congratulations.
He kisses her forehead, then exits. HOLD ON ROBERTA, looking
hurt and frightened.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Roberta rosins her bow, standing in front of ten kids --
third through fifth-grade -- who sit on the floor next to
their violin cases. The kids are Black and Latino, with a
couple of white faces. They're all talking and ignoring
Roberta except for NAEEM and GUADALUPE, a petite Mexican
girl with a long dark braid. [NOTE: We'll see other violin
students from time to time, but this is the class we'll follow
for Roberta's first year]
ROBERTA
And what am I doing now?
NAEEM/GUADALUPE
Rosining the bow.
ROBERTA
Good. And what am I doing when I
turn this little screw?
(raising her voice)
Everyone stop talking. Right now!
The kids quiet down. Only Naeem raises his hand.
ROBERTA
Naeem?
NAEEM
Tightening the horse hair.
ROBERTA
(touches the heel of
the bow)
And what do we call this?
Again, only Naeem raises his hand. Roberta sees him but turns
to DE SEAN, who's talking to his neighbor.
ROBERTA
De Sean?
DE SEAN
Yeah?
ROBERTA
What do we call this?
DE SEAN
I don't know.
ROBERTA
Why not?
DE SEAN
I wasn't here.
ROBERTA
Yes you were but you weren't paying
attention! Do you want people to
think you're stupid?
This makes De Sean blush -- and it pisses him off.
ROBERTA
All right, Naeem -- tell them.
NAEEM
It's called the frog.
Some kids giggle and joke about this. Roberta points to the
scroll of the violin.
ROBERTA
Anyone remember what this is?
LUCY, the fidgety girl, snaps her fingers.
ROBERTA
Lucy! Do you like people snapping
their fingers when you're talking?
LUCY
Yeah!
The kids laugh. Roberta doesn't. She points to the scroll.
ROBERTA
What is this called?
LUCY
The jeri curl?
Roberta laughs, even though she's trying to be tough.
INT. DENNIS' MUSIC CLASSROOM - DAY
Dennis's twenty students play recorder in rows of attached
theatre-style seats. Dennis sits at his desk, a METRONOME
ticking, and apathetically leads them in scales, using a red
pen as a baton. He keeps one eye on a stack of quizzes that
he's marking, stopping to circle mistakes with the pen.
DENNIS
C-C-C-C, D-D-D-D, E-E-E-E...
ANGLE - Roberta stands in the hallway at the open door,
dismayed by Dennis' uninspired teaching. She enters and
crosses to Dennis, speaking quietly to him.
ROBERTA
Excuse me -- sorry to interrupt --
The students immediately start to chatter.
DENNIS
No talking!
He looks back at Roberta, annoyed by her intrusion.
ROBERTA
I'm supposed to take kids out of
Miss Cooper's classroom for my ten
o'clock class -- there's nobody there.
DENNIS
Miss Cooper's students have phys ed
on Tuesdays.
ROBERTA
But you scheduled them for violin.
DENNIS
You must have read the schedule wrong.
ROBERTA
(trying to remain
polite)
I don't think so.
DENNIS
Well, I can't solve this problem for
you right now.
(nods to his class)
I'm trying to teach.
ROBERTA
So am I.
She exits.
INT. BRIAN'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Lexi and Nick are in Brian's bed. Roberta's tucking in Lexi;
he holds a toy truck with Greek writing on it.
LEXI
Can I bring a puppy for show and
tell tomorrow?
ROBERTA
Honey, we don't have a puppy.
NICK
Daddy said we could get one when we
moved back to America.
Roberta looks at Nick, then turns back to Lexi.
ROBERTA
How about your truck? I'll bet you're
the only one in school with a truck
from Greece.
NICK
When's Daddy coming back?
Roberta turns to Nick and tucks him in.
ROBERTA
Well, he's still on his tour, so
we'll just have to see but... It
shouldn't be too much longer.
LEXI
Is he gonna live with us and Brian?
ROBERTA
No, honey. We're just staying at
Brian's house for a little while.
She turns back to Nick who looks worried. She kisses him.
ROBERTA
Good night, sweetie.
She kisses Lexi, then reaches to turn off the lamp.
NICK
No! Leave it on.
Roberta nods, smiles at her sons, and exits.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Nine children stand, violins under their right arms, bows
hanging down from their right hands, and try to position
their feet as Roberta addresses them.
ROBERTA
Now take the right foot and put it
on a tile. Good. Now with the other
foot take a tiny step forward and
put it on a line. Try to make a box
with your feet --
She walks over to BENJAMIN, a white boy with glasses, and
corrects his feet. She sees Lucy dancing in place.
ROBERTA
Lucy! Would you like to leave the
class right now?
Lucy nods, giggling. Roberta walks down the row of students.
ROBERTA
You should feel very strong -- so
strong and balanced that if I wanted
to knock you over I couldn't.
She crosses to TANISHA, a sweet-natured Black girl with her
hair in tiny braids, and gently pushes her belly.
ROBERTA
You see? If you're standing strong,
I can't even push you.
Roberta turns to De Sean, who's talking to JAMES, a pudgy
Black/Puerto Rican boy.
ROBERTA
De Sean! James! Quiet!
(as she crosses to
another student)
Does anyone know where Naeem is?
TANISHA
I saw him this morning but he's not
here.
ROBERTA
Yes, I know he's not here -- that's
why I'm asking.
She gently pushes Guadalupe's belly. The girl stumbles back.
ROBERTA
See how I pushed you? It means your
feet aren't centered.
Guadalupe tries to correct her feet. Roberta bends down to
help and sees that the little girl wears LEG BRACES under
her pants. Roberta stands and gestures to one of the boys.
ROBERTA
Can you bring over a chair?
(to Guadalupe)
It's probably better for you to sit.
The boy brings the chair. Guadalupe sits, embarrassed.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - DAY
Roberta walks through a school yard filled with kids and
parents picking them up. She sees Naeem and crosses to him.
ROBERTA
Where were you today, Naeem?
NAEEM
I can't be in violin class anymore.
ROBERTA
Why not?
NAEEM
My mother won't let me.
ROBERTA
What?
NAEEM'S MOTHER, MRS. ADISA, steps INTO FRAME. She's an
attractive Black woman in a dress and head scarf made of
African fabric.
MRS. ADISA
My son's got more important things
to do than learn dead white men's
music.
ROBERTA
They're gonna learn "Twinkle Twinkle
Little Star"!
MRS. ADISA
How many Black classical composers
can you name? How many Black classical
violinists do you know?
ROBERTA
That doesn't mean it's the way it
should be. Naeem's learning to play
music -- and that makes him feel
good about himself. Why should it
matter who wrote it?
NAEEM
Please, Mom? Can't I be in the class?
Mrs. Adisa puts a protective arm around her son, then
addresses Roberta.
MRS. ADISA
Look. I've seen this before. You
white women come up here and think
you can rescue our poor inner city
children who never asked to be rescued
in the first place. No thank you.
She walks off with Naeem. He glances back at Roberta, then
turns away quickly. Roberta watches after them.
INT. BRIAN'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta attempts to read Brian's book, To Hell and Back:
Interviews with Vietnam Vets, but she's distracted. She
glances at her purse, then back to the book. She puts the
book down and dials the phone.
ROBERTA
Brian Turner's room, please.
While she waits, she looks at Brian's picture on the book
jacket. There's no answer and she hangs up. She starts to
straighten the already clean room, then gets her purse, takes
out her wallet, and opens it to the plastic covered pictures.
INSERT - PICTURES
Charles in uniform; a studio shot of the boys when they were
3 and 1; the whole family posed on the terrace of their home
in Greece, a view of the ocean behind them.
BACK TO ROBERTA
She's really depressed herself now.
INT. CLASSROOM - DAY
ALICE CROWLEY (50's), a no-nonsense Black teacher, shows her
fifth-graders a globe. She doesn't turn as Roberta enters
and crosses to her. In the b.g. we see ROBERTA'S STUDENTS
waiting in THE HALL.
ALICE
And which ocean is this?
Kids simultaneously yell out "ATLANTIC" and "PACIFIC."
ROBERTA
Excuse me... I'm here for the violin
students.
ALICE
(icy)
You're late.
ROBERTA
Just a couple of minutes -- I'm sorry.
ALICE
They're having a lesson now.
ROBERTA
But this is when they have violin
class!
ALICE
That's not my problem.
Roberta's reluctant to argue in front of the kids; she exits.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - DAY
Lots of noise and chaos as kids run wild during lunch recess.
Janet rushes through the throngs while Roberta tries to keep
up.
ROBERTA
I thought all the teachers agreed to
this.
JANET
In theory.
(to a student)
Adam! I want you in my office right
after lunch, you understand?
ADAM
What'd I do?
JANET
Think about it!
(to Roberta)
Whenever you pull kids out, it's a
disruption, plus it's extra work for
the teacher 'cause they have to fill
the kids in on what they missed.
Some teachers resent it.
ROBERTA
Well, can't you talk to them?
Janet stops walking and pulls a box cutter out of her pocket.
JANET
I took this off a second-grader this
morning. I'll help you Roberta --
but I can't hold your hand here.
Janet starts to walk away, then turns.
JANET
A word of advice? When you're picking
up your students, go to Alice's
classroom first.
Roberta stands there as Janet walks on ahead.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
The nine children hold their violins in position as Roberta
addresses them.
ROBERTA
So pretend you're driving a car and
I'm the policeman and I say STOP!
Thumb up, fingers straight up, flat
palm. Now you be policemen, but turn
your hand and make it say stop to
yourself.
ON THE CHILDREN, attempting this. She walks around and helps.
DE SEAN
(to himself)
You're under arrest.
Some kids crack up and start joking and chatting.
ROBERTA
Knock it off, De Sean!
(to all)
If you kids can't take this seriously,
I don't want you here. I'm teaching
you a difficult instrument because I
respect you and have faith that you
can learn it. But none of that matters
if you don't have respect for
yourself.
Some of the children think about what she's saying. A couple,
uncomfortable with the intensity, hold back giggles.
ROBERTA
Now turn your wrist so it's flat
against the fingerboard, and that's
how you'll set up your hand...
Roberta sees Guadalupe struggling.
ROBERTA
Guadalupe! You've got the violin in
the wrong hand! How did that happen?
Embarrassed, Guadalupe corrects her position.
INT. BRIAN'S KITCHEN - NIGHT
At the small kitchen table, Nick does homework and Lexi puts
stickers in a sticker book. Roberta's cooking dinner; she
grabs a potholder and checks on a bubbling lasagna in the
oven. The PHONE RINGS and she answers it.
ROBERTA
Hello?
CHARLES (O.S.)
Hello, Bobbi.
Her face falls as she hears the voice. She holds onto the
counter to steady herself.
ROBERTA
Where are you?
CHARLES (O.S.)
(calm, detached)
I'm back in the States. I'm at my
parents.
Roberta closes the oven and gathers her courage.
ROBERTA
Are you still with her?
A beat.
CHARLES (O.S.)
No.
We watch Roberta's body collapse into a sense of overwhelming
relief. FOLLOW HER as she steps into THE HALLWAY, then
stretches the phone into:
INT. BRIAN'S BATHROOM - CONTINUOUS
She half-closes the door, leans against the sink and starts
to cry.
ROBERTA
(through tears)
We've missed you so much, Charles.
The boys... they can't wait for you
to come home... I know we'll have a
lot to work out and it won't be easy
right away, but we're gonna get
through this, you know? We're a family
and we belong together and --
CHARLES (O.S.)
(more emotive than
before)
Bobbi -- stop, O.K.? Just stop.
Roberta looks as if she's been slapped. A beat.
CHARLES (O.S.)
I want a divorce.
ROBERTA
What?
Silence.
ROBERTA
But you said... you and Lana... you
said it was over.
CHARLES (O.S.)
It is.
(beat)
It's over between us too, Bobbi.
HOLD ON ROBERTA, devastated. ANGLE on NICK, watching her
through the door.
INT. BRIAN'S HOTEL ROOM, TEXAS - NIGHT
Brian's on the phone with Roberta. He's in a t-shirt and
sweats, and his papers are scattered on the bed.
ROBERTA (O.S.)
He wouldn't even talk about it! No
explanations, no discussion...
INTERCUT
Roberta in Brian's living room. She's extremely agitated and
her eyes are puffy from crying.
BRIAN
I can't believe you were still holding
out hope. The guy hasn't called you
or the kids in three months -- I
thought you'd moved on.
ROBERTA
I never said that.
BRIAN
No? Maybe not with words.
This embarrasses her, then pisses her off.
ROBERTA
You know what? I shouldn't have called
you. This was a mistake.
BRIAN
No, no -- I'm sorry. Look, I know it
hurts, but you're gonna get through
this, Roberta -- you will.
ROBERTA
I'm moving back to my Mom's.
BRIAN
What? You're gonna quit teaching in
the middle of the term?
ROBERTA
I don't fit in there -- I'm not making
any progress with the kids...
BRIAN
What are you gonna tell Janet --
your husband left you and nothing
else matters?
ROBERTA
I don't know yet.
INT. BRIAN'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta lies awake on the futon, heartbroken.
INT. BRIAN'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Roberta stands and watches Nick and Lexi sleep. She lies
down beside them and closes her eyes.
INT. SCHOOL HALLWAY - DAY
Roberta walks through crowds of kids towards Janet who's in
the middle of confronting a boy student. Janet holds a FIFTY-
DOLLAR BILL. Roberta hangs back and waits for a chance to
speak.
BOY
My mother gave it to me.
JANET
Why would she give you fifty dollars?
BOY
To buy breakfast.
Janet gives him a stern look.
JANET
Do you know how hard your mother
works? Do you think it's right for
you steal from her?
BOY
I didn't!
JANET
Well let's go call her right now and
ask her.
As Janet turns to walk off, Roberta crosses to her.
ROBERTA
I need to speak to you. It's
important.
JANET
It'll have to wait.
(to the boy)
Come on. In my office.
Roberta watches as Janet dashes off with the boy in tow.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Guadalupe sits on a chair in the empty room, struggling to
set up her violin. Roberta enters, surprised to see her.
ROBERTA
Guadalupe? What are you doing here?
GUADALUPE
I can't get the stop sign.
ROBERTA
Honey, your teacher's probably looking
for you.
Guadalupe sighs, then hands Roberta the violin.
GUADALUPE
I can't come anymore. It's too hard.
ROBERTA
The violin is hard for everyone.
GUADALUPE
But everyone else is better than me.
I'll always be slow.
Roberta looks at her sadly and puts the violin in its case.
ROBERTA
Did you ever hear of Itzhak Perlman?
GUADALUPE
No.
ROBERTA
He's one of the greatest violinists
in the world, and he has problems
with his legs too. He walks with two
canes -- but he still makes the most
beautiful music.
GUADALUPE
And he sits down when he plays?
ROBERTA
He has to.
Guadalupe takes this in.
GUADALUPE
He was your student?
Roberta laughs.
ROBERTA
No. But if he was, I'd tell him the
same thing I'm telling you. You
shouldn't quit something just because
it's hard.
GUADALUPE
But I can't stand strong.
ROBERTA
Standing strong doesn't only mean
using your legs. You can stand strong
on the inside too.
(beat)
Know what I mean?
Guadalupe nods. Roberta holds out the violin case. Guadalupe
lunges forward and hugs her around the waist. Roberta
awkwardly accepts the hug, startled and touched by it, and
strokes the girl's hair. Guadalupe lets go, takes the violin
and exits. HOLD ON ROBERTA as she absorbs what just happened.
JANET pokes her head into the room.
JANET
You wanted to speak to me?
ROBERTA
Oh. Umm -- that's O.K. It's taken
care of.
Janet looks at her curiously, then exits.
INT. EMPTY APARTMENT - EAST HARLEM - DAY
Roberta walks around an empty, rundown apartment, her
expression somber. Crayon markings on the walls, cigarette
burns on the floors, a filthy bathroom and kitchen. An older
Puerto Rican woman stands back as Roberta inspects the place.
Roberta wipes grease off one of the windows.
LANDLADY
Is just for you and your boys?
ROBERTA
Yes.
LANDLADY
No husband? No boyfriend?
A beat.
ROBERTA
No.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - LUNCH RECESS - DAY
Roberta enters the yard from inside the school. It's filled
with kids playing, including Nick and Lexi. She waves to
them and Lexi runs up to her, carrying a piece of artwork.
LEXI
Look what I made you, Mommy!
He gives her a tempera PAINTING of a man's face, the
background decorated with glued-on macaroni. It says DADDY.
ROBERTA
(covering her
discomfort)
That is so beautiful!
He runs off. Roberta exhales, sits down alone on a bench and
takes out her lunch. She smiles at ALICE CROWLEY and another
TEACHER but they cross to another bench. ISABEL VASQUEZ (25)
approaches, a lively Puerto Rican woman with a strong New
York accent.
ISABEL
Whatsa matter -- you got cooties?
ROBERTA
Apparently.
ISABEL
I'll take my chances.
(extends a hand)
Isabel Vasquez. Second grade.
ROBERTA
Roberta Demetras. I'm the --
ISABEL
Violin teacher. I know.
She sits down beside Roberta, takes out her lunch.
ROBERTA
Is it my imagination, or does everyone
hate me?
ISABEL
It's hard to fit in when you're doing
a special program. People figure
you're not gonna be here very long,
so why make the effort?
(beat)
It may take a while for folks to
warm up, but nobody hates you.
ROBERTA
(sotto)
What about Alice Crowley?
ISABEL
(sotto)
A) she thinks the violin's a waste
of time... and B) -- she's a bitch.
Roberta laughs.
ROBERTA
And then there's Dennis.
ISABEL
The Music Man. You've had the bodacity
to threaten his private little empire --
not to mention the fact that you
messed up his sacred scheduling chart.
ROBERTA
How come you're being nice to me?
ISABEL
Ulterior motives. I want my daughter
in your class next year.
Roberta smiles.
ROBERTA
If I'm here next year.
ISABEL
You will be.
INT. ROBERTA'S NEW APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
LEXI'S PAINTING is on the wall, along with a crayon drawing
of himself, Roberta, and Nick in front of a house.
ANGLE - ROBERTA looks out the window. She's gotten some used
furniture, cleaned the place, and it's less depressing.
ROBERTA'S POV OUT THE WINDOW
On the street below, three prostitutes stand at the corner.
Two men sit on a stoop, smoking a joint, and in a parked
car, three men seem to be making a drug deal. One of the
buildings on the street is burned out, missing a front door.
BACK TO SCENE
Nick, in his pajamas, enters and crosses to his mother. She
smiles at him and they both look out the window.
NICK
In Greece, we could see the ocean.
Remember?
ROBERTA
I remember. And the fishing boats...
NICK
And the octopuses.
Roberta smiles and puts her arm around him.
NICK
Is Daddy coming here soon?
Roberta tenses up.
ROBERTA
Well, that's something I've been
wanting to talk to you about. Daddy's
not gonna live with us anymore. You
and Lexi will have special times
when you stay with him, like at
Christmas.
A beat.
NICK
Can you tell the birthday story?
Roberta looks at him, concerned that he's not responding to
her news.
ROBERTA
Don't you want to talk about what I
told you?
NICK
I want to hear the birthday story.
A beat as she contemplates whether to push or not, then:
ROBERTA
It was the day of Grandpa's birthday,
and I was sad because he had died a
few months back.
NICK
But you knew I'd be born that day.
ROBERTA
So I packed a bag and got all ready --
NICK
And Daddy laughed.
ROBERTA
I said, "It's my father's birthday,
and the baby's gonna be born today."
NICK
He didn't believe you. But I was
born. The same day as Grandpa.
ROBERTA
It was a happy day.
NICK
Was Daddy happy too?
She looks at him, taken aback by the question.
ROBERTA
Of course he was.
NICK
Then why is he leaving me?
Roberta, overcome with emotion, can barely answer.
ROBERTA
He's not leaving you, Nick. He loves
you and Lexi very much.
NICK
Then why can't he live here?
ROBERTA
(struggling)
It's very hard to explain... Sometimes
things happen between grown-ups...
and they just can't be together.
The CAMERA moves behind them as they continue to look out
the window, and we see Nick move away from his mother.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
The kids play "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" and they sound
awful. Roberta looks disgusted as she leads them.
ROBERTA
Slow bows! Slow bows! Don't squeeze!
Stop! Everybody stop!
(to De Sean)
How much did you practice this week?
DE SEAN
My asthma -- it was very bad and I
had to go to the hospital.
ROBERTA
Again? You told me you went to the
hospital last week.
DE SEAN
Oh yeah. Maybe it was last week.
Roberta rolls her eyes, then turns to Lucy.
ROBERTA
Lucy -- you sounded the worst of
all. Have you practiced?
LUCY
No.
ROBERTA
Why not? You can't be in this class
if you don't practice!
LUCY
My grandma got mugged.
A beat.
ROBERTA
Oh. I'm sorry. Is she O.K.?
LUCY
She died.
Roberta stands there, sobered.
ROBERTA
I'm really sorry, Lucy.
(tries to get her
bearings)
Just do the best you can.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - DAY
A group of kids stand together with their violins and chat.
Roberta exits the building and they greet her. She waves
back, but she's clearly still upset by her interaction with
Lucy. She sees Naeem and his mother and approaches them.
NAEEM
Hi, Roberta.
ROBERTA
Hi, Naeem. Can I talk to your mom
for a minute?
Naeem nods and moves off.
ROBERTA
Look, I didn't come up here to rescue
anybody. I'm a single mother and I
needed a job. And I know you think
you're protecting your son, but you're
not. I mean, what if Arthur Ashe's
mother had stopped him from playing
tennis because it's a "white man's
game"?
(beat)
The important thing is that when
Naeem plays music, his whole face
lights up. You should see him.
Mrs. Adisa takes this in. Roberta exits. Mrs. Adisa looks
for Naeem and sees him watching the violin students, longing
to be among them. She watches her son with compassion.
EXT. OUTDOOR MARKET - DAY
Roberta and the boys shop in a colorful outdoor produce market
in their neighborhood.
The boys suddenly rush over to A MAN sitting on the ground
with mixed-breed PUPPIES in a cardboard box. The boys pet
them excitedly. Roberta watches her sons; they're happier
than she's seen them in ages.
INT. ROBERTA'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
A brown puppy is jumping all over Nick and Lexi who laugh
delightedly. Roberta is putting down newspapers.
ROBERTA
We all have to take turns cleaning
up, O.K.?
The boys are oblivious to her -- they're in heaven.
ROBERTA
(to herself)
Yeah, right.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Roberta's SCREAMING at the kids as they play "Twinkle Twinkle
Little Star."
ROBERTA
First finger on the E! Three -- two --
one -- open!
(to a white girl with
pigtails)
Wrong string, Becky! We've done this
fourteen times! And look at your
nails! You're supposed to cut them
for violin class! O.K, everybody
stop! It sounds horrible! I can't
believe how bad it sounds!
They stop playing. Tanisha raises her hand.
ROBERTA
Is this an important question,
Tanisha?
Tanisha nods.
TANISHA
Do you have two of those skirts?
ROBERTA
What?
TANISHA
You wore a skirt just like it on
Monday.
Some of the kids crack up.
ROBERTA
You know, Tanisha -- I don't think
that's such an important question.
(to class)
O.K. Let's try --
The door opens and Naeem enters with Mrs. Adisa. Roberta
crosses to them.
MRS. ADISA
Naeem and I were wondering if he
could still be in the class.
A beat.
ROBERTA
I'd love that.
(to Naeem)
You'll have a lot of catching up to
do. You think you can work that hard?
NAEEM
Yeah, I can.
ROBERTA
Maybe we can also arrange some private
lessons at my house.
MRS. ADISA
I wouldn't have the money for that.
ROBERTA
That's O.K.
(to Naeem)
Why don't you go grab one of my spare
violins?
Naeem happily runs to the extra violins at the front of the
room; Mrs. Adisa nods to Roberta with a look of gratitude,
then exits. Roberta crosses back to the front of the room.
ROBERTA
(to class)
Let's try it again.
They begin again, and we see Naeem take out a violin and
join in. As they play, Roberta's ears perk up at something
she's hearing. She crosses to Lucy.
ROBERTA
What are you playing?
LUCY
Twinkle.
ROBERTA
(to class)
Everyone stop!
(to Lucy)
Let me hear.
Lucy hesitates, thinking she's in trouble. She plays a jazz
variation of the song. Roberta smiles.
ROBERTA
Did someone teach you that?
LUCY
No. I made it up.
ROBERTA
That's really great, Lucy. I'm proud
of you.
Lucy beams.
ROBERTA
(to class)
All of you -- try it.
The class plays Lucy's jazz variation and Naeem happily joins
in.
INT. JANET WILLIAMS' OFFICE - DAY
Roberta sits opposite Janet and MRS. LAMB, a white woman in
her 30's.
MRS. LAMB
You're shouting at them. All the
time.
ROBERTA
Not all the time. But if they don't
listen --
MRS. LAMB
Didn't you tell them that they were
making their parents sick?
Janet raises her eyebrows at this.
ROBERTA
That wasn't exactly what I said --
MRS. LAMB
I'm raising Becky in a supportive
atmosphere. I don't send her to school
to be abused.
ROBERTA
I'm just trying to discipline them.
If they're gonna learn an instrument,
they need to take it seriously --
JANET
I think what Mrs. Lamb is trying to
say, Roberta, is that you're a little
too harsh. I'm sure you might be
able to soften some of your comments
to the children?
She gives Roberta a long hard look. Roberta nods.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Roberta listens to the students play "Go Tell Aunt Rhody" --
badly. They finish and stare at her, afraid of her response.
ROBERTA
Well, that was... that was pretty
good... that wasn't too bad...
They look at her in disbelief, then look at each other.
DE SEAN
It wasn't? I thought we stunk.
ROBERTA
I wouldn't put it that way... You
all just need to practice a bit more.
(to James)
James, have you practiced this week?
The boy nervously shakes his head no.
ROBERTA
Can you please try a little harder
for next week?
James nods. The kids are baffled by her politeness.
ROBERTA
Good. Just do the best you can.
DE SEAN
Why you acting like that?
ROBERTA
Like what?
DE SEAN
Nice.
ROBERTA
Don't you want a nice teacher?
DE SEAN
I already got nice teachers. You
added some variety.
LUCY
Yeah. We like you better the way you
used to be.
ROBERTA
Oh.
(to Becky)
What about you, Becky?
BECKY
Yeah. This is even worse. You're
acting weird now.
A beat.
ROBERTA
Well, then -- I take it back. You
all stunk.
The kids laugh.
ROBERTA
But don't tell your parents I said
so!
The kids laugh again.
INT. KENNEDY AIRPORT - DEPARTURE GATE - DAY
Christmas MUZAK plays in the b.g. as Roberta kisses and hugs
Lexi and Nick goodbye. A FLIGHT ATTENDANT stands nearby.
LEXI
Can't you come with us? Please?
ROBERTA
Honey, I told you. This is Daddy's
special time with you.
Lexi looks upset; Nick is stoic. Roberta hugs them one last
time. The FLIGHT ATTENDANT steps forward.
FLIGHT ATTENDANT
I'll take good care of them.
The FLIGHT ATTENDANT escorts them into the jet way. Roberta
holds back tears as they get further away from her. At the
last moment, Lexi turns and waves; Nick does not. Roberta
waves, tears starting to fall, and the boys disappear from
sight. She observes all the families travelling together,
and feels like the loneliest person in the airport.
INT. ROBERTA'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta enters her apartment, back from the airport, and
double-locks the door behind her. You can see on her face
that she's dreading the emptiness. She crosses to a small
Christmas tree, obviously decorated by her and the boys, and
plugs in the tiny blinking lights. It's not exactly
Rockefeller Center. She turns on the T.V., playing IT'S A
WONDERFUL LIFE.
She crosses to the kitchen, then returns with a carton of
eggnog, a glass, and a bottle of rum. She sits down on the
couch, pours herself some eggnog, adds rum, adds more rum,
goes back into the kitchen, returns with nutmeg, sprinkles
some on top, then drinks. She sighs, glancing miserably at
the tree and the T.V. Pathetic. She couldn't look any less
festive if she tried. There's a KNOCK on the DOOR.
Roberta gets up and warily approaches the door.
ROBERTA
Who is it?
BRIAN (O.S.)
Santa Claus.
She looks through the peephole, then quickly unlocks the
door and opens it, revealing BRIAN, giving her a big smile.
He looks sexy as hell (even with a silly lit-up Santa Claus
pin on his leather jacket), and he holds a long-stemmed red
rose in one hand, and a Christmas present in the other.
BRIAN
I'm back.
Roberta's thrilled and relieved to see him. She embraces
him, and they kiss passionately.
INT. BROWNSTONE - DAY (TIME CUT - TWO MONTHS LATER)
CLOSE ON plaster walls being knocked down with sledgehammers.
REVEAL Brian, Roberta, and a couple of workmen knocking down
the walls in an old brownstone.
EXT. BROWNSTONE - EAST HARLEM - THE SAME DAY
A mild winter day. Roberta, covered with plaster dust and
overheated from working, leans against a car and drinks a
beer. The three-story brick building has some graffiti on it
and is badly in need of a paint job; there are a few broken
windows, and the front stairs need repairing. WORKMEN file
in and out. We can see from the STREET SIGNS that we're on
118th STREET, a few houses off FIRST AVENUE.
Brian (also dust-covered), Nick and Lexi toss around a
football. LAWRENCE (6), a Black boy who lives next door,
joins them. Brian crosses to Roberta, sweaty and out of
breath. He takes a swig of her beer.
ROBERTA
O.K., enough goofing off -- back to
work.
BRIAN
You trying to kill me?
She laughs and they kiss.
ASSUNTA comes up the street with a bag of take-out food. She
casts a dubious glance at the lovers.
ASSUNTA
I was the only person in the whole
coffee shop not speaking Spanish.
Roberta rolls her eyes. O.S. a car BACKFIRES.
ASSUNTA
You hear that? Gunshots! How you
gonna live here by yourself?
(calling)
Boys, come eat!
ROBERTA
I work in this neighborhood, Mama. I
want to live here.
The boys approach and Assunta hands them sandwiches. Lawrence
hangs back. Assunta calls to him.
ASSUNTA
What's your name?
LAWRENCE
Lawrence.
ASSUNTA
You hungry, Lawrence?
Lawrence nods and she hands him a sandwich. Roberta smiles
at her mother's gesture. The kids move off to Lawrence's
front steps and Assunta gives Roberta and Brian sandwiches.
ASSUNTA
(to Brian)
Why did you let her buy this house?
BRIAN
Hey, your daughter does what she
wants -- or haven't you noticed?
ASSUNTA
I've noticed.
INT. ROBERTA'S APARTMENT - KITCHEN - DAY
Robert washes dishes and Assunta dries. The leftovers from
an Italian dinner are on the counter.
ASSUNTA
I still don't understand the rush.
ROBERTA
Having my own place will make me
feel like I'm really starting my
life again.
ASSUNTA
But if you invested your divorce
settlement, you could buy something
nice someday. It's bad enough that
you've been renting in this
neighborhood, but to lock yourself
into a mortgage --
ROBERTA
(snapping)
Mama, please. Just stop!
Assunta backs off. Roberta feels guilty and moves to her.
ROBERTA
Don't worry, O.K.? Besides, if things
keep going well, I'm sure eventually
Brian will move in with us.
A few beats.
ASSUNTA
How much do you know about this man?
ROBERTA
Brian's a good person, he's helped
me a lot, he's great with the boys --
since he got back to town, it's been
really sweet.
ASSUNTA
(with an attitude)
And how long has he been back?
ROBERTA
Two months.
ASSUNTA
That's not very long. Don't make the
same mistake twice, Bert. You barely
knew Charles when you married him.
ROBERTA
(defensive)
I don't get it -- you're ragging on
me about buying the house -- I would
think you'd want Brian to live with
me.
ASSUNTA
Not if he's the wrong person.
Roberta locks her jaw, not wanting to believe that she's
right.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
The kids play "Allegro," Roberta leading them.
ROBERTA
Get ready, now -- we're coming up to
the fermata...
They reach a certain note, then pause.
ROBERTA
Hold... Hold... Don't anybody move.
Now at the Spring Concert, the
audience is gonna be dying for that
next note -- but we'll make them
wait. As a matter of fact, I think
I'll go grab a cup of coffee.
She starts for the door and the kids moan and groan: "Come
on, Roberta!" "Roberta, get back here!" She smiles.
ROBERTA
Well, O.K. But you have to promise
you'll all start together.
She nods. They begin again -- all at different times.
DE SEAN
Man. We'll never get that right.
ROBERTA
That's not a very nice thing to say
about your classmates.
(to class)
How many people think they can get
it right by the concert?
All the kids raise their hands. De Sean looks around,
embarrassed, then raises his too. Roberta smiles.
INT. ROBERTA'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Brian and Roberta finish making love on the futon. They lie
in each other's arms, still breathing heavily.
ROBERTA
I love you.
Brian makes a sound that's either panting or laughing.
ROBERTA
Did you just laugh?
BRIAN
I'm sorry. It's just...
Roberta looks at him, offended.
ROBERTA
What?
BRIAN
Why do people feel like the minute
something's going great, they gotta
name it?
(beat)
Once you name something, you snuff
the life out of it.
She disentangles from him.
ROBERTA
Jesus, Brian. Do you still get away
with that crap? It's not the Sixties
anymore.
BRIAN
Well, maybe if you'd actually gone
through the Sixties, you'd know what
I'm talking about.
ROBERTA
Fine! We won't name it, we won't
talk about it, we'll act like we
have no feelings for each other
whatsoever!
She angrily turns on her side with her back to him. Brian
regrets hurting her and moves to her, kissing her shoulder.
BRIAN
I'm sorry. I'm being an asshole.
(sweetly teasing)
You can say you love me if you want.
ROBERTA
Forget it. I changed my mind.
He laughs and coaxes her to kiss him -- a temporary truce.
INT. BROWNSTONE - DAY
ERNIE (70's), a rickety Black man in work boots, looks baffled
by a tangled mess of wires protruding from a wall. Roberta
approaches.
ROBERTA
How's it coming, Ernie?
ERNIE
Well, if I could just remember what
I did here yesterday, I'd be moving
a whole lot faster.
(beat)
You look real pretty today, honey.
Brian overhears, rolls his eyes and pulls her aside.
BRIAN
You're crazy. Why did you hire him?
ROBERTA
He needed a job. Besides, he's wired
all of East Harlem.
BRIAN
When? Fifty years ago?
Brian sighs and walks off into another room. Two MEN carry
in large panels of sheetrock with old WALLPAPER on it.
ROBERTA
Why is there wallpaper on it?
MAN #1
That's how it comes.
They lean the panels against a wall. Roberta turns to Ernie.
ERNIE
Yep, that's how it comes now.
The guys quickly exit. Brian re-enters and sees the panels.
BRIAN
What the hell is this?
ROBERTA
Sheetrock.
BRIAN
You've gotta be kidding. Those ex-
cons you hired ripped this off --
and you too!
Roberta feels stupid but doesn't want to show it.
ROBERTA
Look -- this house is taking every
penny of my settlement. I can't afford
fancy union workers!
BRIAN
(throwing up his hands)
Fine. Do it your way.
He stomps off. ANOTHER ANGLE - Nick watches them fight and
looks distressed.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - DAY
Lots of screaming and commotion as the kids crowd around a
fight in progress. As we move through the crowd we see that
NICK's in a fight with another boy; Nick's nose is bleeding
and he has the boy in a headlock. TWO TEACHERS run over to
break it up.
INT. AREA OUTSIDE JANET'S OFFICE - DAY
Nick sits outside, holding an ice pack to his bloody nose.
INT. JANET'S OFFICE - DAY
Roberta stands opposite Janet.
JANET
I'm giving him a two-day suspension --
but next time he'll be expelled.
ROBERTA
There won't be a next time -- I
promise.
JANET
Have you noticed your son lately?
He's tied up in knots and he needs
help.
ROBERTA
Janet, kids fight. You're making too
much of this.
JANET
He was choking the kid.
(beat)
Nick's in trouble, Roberta. You need
to deal with it.
Roberta takes this in, upset.
INT. ROBERTA'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta plays "Go Tell Aunt Rhody" with Guadalupe, De Sean,
Naeem, Benjamin, and two kids from the other classes. Lexi
plays along with them. Nick enters from the kitchen, eating
a cookie, ignoring the students. He turns on the T.V.
ROBERTA
(to students)
Keep playing, guys.
Roberta crosses to Nick and shuts off the T.V.
ROBERTA
You can watch when we're done.
NICK
It's my house! They don't live here --
I do!
ROBERTA
(sotto)
Nick honey -- the kids are real
nervous about the Spring concert.
You could probably give them some
pointers.
NICK
I don't feel like it.
He reaches for the T.V. dial and she stops him.
ROBERTA
I said no.
She crosses back to her students; Nick turns on the T.V.
EXT. CENTRAL PARK - DAY
Brian, Nick and Lexi laugh as they play frisbee alongside a
DUCK POND. Roberta watches, relieved to see Nick enjoying
himself.
BRIAN
Good catch Nick!
Nick throws it back to Brian and it lands in the WATER.
BRIAN
(mock sternly)
Uh-oh. You know what that means?
He stalks towards Nick menacingly, picks him up and pretends
he's going to throw him into the water. Nick laughs
hysterically.
NICK
(through laughter)
Don't! Don't throw me in!
BRIAN
Whatsa matter? Afraid of a little
water? The ducks aren't afraid! Are
you a chicken or a duck?
NICK
Don't! Don't throw me!
BRIAN
Looks like you got yourself a chicken,
Roberta!
NICK
I'm not a chicken!
BRIAN
Well then you must be a duck!
He pretends again to throw Nick in, then puts him down. Lexi
holds out his arms to Brian.
LEXI
Throw me in the water, Brian! Do it
to me!
Brian swoops him up and Lexi starts laughing. Roberta laughs
along, happy to see the affection between Brian and her sons.
EXT. CENTRAL PARK - A LITTLE LATER
Brian and Roberta speak as they stroll; the boys run ahead
of them, dragging sticks along the pavement. In the b.g. we
see HARLEM STREETS bordering the park.
ROBERTA
You seem to be the only one who can
get Nick to laugh these days.
BRIAN
He misses his dad. I'm just a
surrogate.
ROBERTA
No -- I think Nick really likes you.
(taking his arm)
You know... we're all hoping you'll
move into the new house with us.
BRIAN
Whoa. Can we just slow down here a
minute? It's too much like getting
married.
ROBERTA
What's so bad about that?
BRIAN
That kind of commitment just isn't
realistic. I mean, how can we know
that you and I will even be able to
stand each other in five years?
ROBERTA
Well, we don't. But if two people
care about each other, they take a
chance.
BRIAN
And look what happened to you and
Charles.
ROBERTA
I'm not talking about Charles. I'm
talking about us.
BRIAN
Look, Roberta. Marriage is based on
a belief that one person can
completely meet another person's
needs. I just don't buy that.
This is making her nervous. She looks at him, afraid of what
he might be saying.
ROBERTA
(carefully)
What are you saying? If there's some
need you have that I don't meet,
you'd go and get it "met" by someone
else?
He heaves a sigh of frustration, not wanting to answer the
question.
BRIAN
I'm saying that it's the 80's and
it's a fantasy to think of marriage
lasting these days. One out of two
marriages ends in divorce!
ROBERTA
You didn't answer my question.
(beat)
If I don't meet all your needs, and
we're in a committed relationship --
forget marriage for a minute; I'm
just talking about a relationship --
would you go to someone else?
A beat.
BRIAN
In theory, yes.
ROBERTA
In theory.
Roberta looks very disheartened. Brian feels badly.
BRIAN
Roberta, we've got something good
right now -- that's the important
thing. Let's just keep it that way,
O.K.?
He pulls her to him, kissing her neck, but she pulls away
from him. ON NICK, observing with an anxious expression.
INT. ROBERTA'S APARTMENT - NIGHT
NICK (O.S.)
(whining)
Why can't he?
Roberta looks distressed by her talk with Brian as she and
the boys enter, back from the park.
ROBERTA
He just can't, O.K.? Brian's at his
house tonight, and we're at ours.
NICK
Well then I wanna go to his house.
ROBERTA
Enough, Nick. Now why don't you and
your brother practice while I make
dinner.
NICK
I don't feel like practicing.
ROBERTA
Well do it anyway.
NICK
I wanna go to Brian's!
ROBERTA
Stop whining, and get your violin.
Nick stomps off to get his violin. Lexi follows. Roberta
puts down her bag and takes off her coat. While Lexi sets up
his violin, Nick opens his violin case, takes out the violin
and angrily starts playing, loudly and roughly.
ROBERTA
What the hell are you doing?
NICK
The problem with you is you're mean
to everybody and then they don't
want to be with you!
ROBERTA
I've heard just about enough from
you, young man. Now set your violin
up properly and start practicing.
Nick THROWS the violin against the floor. Roberta's
speechless.
NICK
I hate the violin!
ROBERTA
You pick that violin up right now
and don't you ever ever --
Nick picks up the violin and THROWS the violin down even
harder, then YELLS at Roberta before she can even respond.
NICK
It's all your fault! You made Daddy
leave and you're gonna make Brian
leave too! You're gonna be all alone
and I'll have to take care of you!
Roberta is stunned. The anger drains out of her as she
suddenly sees what this is all about.
ROBERTA
Nick -- you don't have to take care
of me.
NICK
Then who's going to?
ROBERTA
I'll take care of myself -- and I'll
take care of you and Lexi. I promise.
NICK
You didn't try hard enough. You made
Daddy leave us.
This hits her in the solar plexus. Her hurt and vulnerability
start to pour out.
ROBERTA
That's not true. I begged him not to
leave, but he didn't listen.
NICK
Why not?
Roberta hesitates, but knows she has to tell them the truth.
She addresses both boys.
ROBERTA
Your father met someone he liked
more than Mommy, and then --
NICK
Who?
Roberta swallows, shocked to hear him ask this. She can hardly
answer him.
ROBERTA
Lana. Remember our friends Lana and
Tom?
NICK
Is he gonna marry her now?
ROBERTA
No, but he's not coming back... to
me.
Nick and Lexi look very upset, not only from hearing the
finality in her words, but from seeing their mother's pain.
Roberta moves closer to them.
ROBERTA
I'll take care of you, Nick. You
too, Lexi. I promise. I'm not going
anywhere. We're still a family.
Nick starts crying. Roberta takes him in her arms. Lexi starts
to cry and Roberta holds him too.
ROBERTA
(softly, to both)
I promise.
INT. BROWNSTONE - DAY
Ernie's radio plays a BLUES SONG. The BRICK WORKERS radio
plays SPANISH MUSIC, and the PAINTERS' radio plays a RAP
SONG. Roberta stands in the middle, about to lose her mind.
HER POV - Ernie sits on a stool facing his wiring. He's fast
asleep. ANOTHER ANGLE - The brick workers build a crooked
fireplace.
BACK TO SCENE
Roberta sighs heavily, then crosses to the painters.
ROBERTA
What color is this?
PAINTER
White.
ROBERTA
I told you Eggshell.
PAINTER
Eggshells are white.
Brian watches this interaction as he sands a door.
BRIAN
You're an idiot! I told you -- you
can't be your own contractor.
ROBERTA
You're right. I'm an idiot.
She crosses to Ernie and shakes him.
ROBERTA
Wake up, Ernie.
He looks at her groggily.
ROBERTA
You're fired.
She crosses to the brick workers.
ROBERTA
You're fired.
She crosses to the painters.
ROBERTA
You're fired.
Brian smiles at her, impressed.
BRIAN
That's more like it.
ROBERTA
You're fired too.
Brian laughs.
ROBERTA
No, Brian. I mean it. I need to be
with a man who can make a commitment
to me. I need that, and my sons need
that.
(beat)
So can you?
BRIAN
(hesitates, then)
Roberta --
His tone and expression tell her the words are not
forthcoming.
ROBERTA
Get out.
He looks at her, shocked by her toughness, but knows he can't
give her what she wants. He exits. Roberta stands in the
middle of the room, a determined look on her face.
INT. SCHOOL AUDITORIUM - NIGHT
ROBERTA
Stands in the aisle, leading the students and playing violin.
ON STAGE
The fifty fifth-grade students play the "Twinkle" variations.
Their playing is impeccable and they look terrific.
As the CAMERA PANS the audience, we recognize: MRS. ADISA,
tears in her eyes as she watches Naeem; MRS. LAMB and her
husband, watching Becky in amazement; ISABEL and her daughter
sitting with ASSUNTA, NICK and LEXI; JANET, impressed as
hell; and DENNIS, seething with jealousy. As the kids start
the jazz variation of "Twinkle," a WOMAN elbows her husband:
WOMAN
That's the one Lucy wrote!
The CAMERA returns to the children and captures their own
pride in their playing, including LUCY, who smiles as she
hears her song played by fifty.
THE CONCERT - TIME DISSOLVE
The students are now playing "Allegro," and they reach the
fermata. They hold their positions in silence and the audience
watches in anticipation. Roberta cues them and they play the
next note in perfect unison. An involuntary smile lights on
DE SEAN's face. They finish the song, the audience applauds,
and Roberta turns to face them.
She lights up when she sees how thrilled Janet looks, and
Janet in turn raises her hands higher as she applauds Roberta.
DISSOLVE TO:
EXT. CPE 1 - DAY - ESTABLISHING - TIME CUT (1998)
The side of the building now has an impressive mural: an
urban landscape with three super heroes -- Puerto Rican,
Black, and white -- rising up out of the street. It reads
ONLY THE STRONG SHALL SURVIVE.
INT. CLASSROOM - DAY
Roberta stands in front of a classroom of twenty cute first-
graders -- mostly Black and Latino, a few white -- sitting
on the floor, chatting excitedly. Even though Roberta's ten
years older, she seems more youthful; her wavy hair is loose
over her shoulders, her clothing's casual and artistic. Beside
her is Janet, her hair flecked with gray, and Dennis, who
looks pretty much the same. The classroom teacher is ISABEL,
a little older, a little tougher.
ISABEL
C'mon everybody, settle down -- Janet
wants to talk to you.
JANET
Today's a very special day because
we're starting the tenth year of the
East Harlem Violin Program. This is
a wonderful opportunity for you, so
I want you to talk to your parents
about whether you'd like to try this.
ISABEL
My daughter took violin with Roberta
when she was your age, and now she's
in high school and she still talks
about how much she loved it.
DENNIS
Janet and I started this program
because we knew how much you kids
could benefit from it.
CUTAWAY to Roberta and Janet exchanging glances over Dennis
taking credit for the program.
DENNIS
You should know, however, that the
violin is a difficult instrument.
JUSTIN, a Black boy with attitude, raises his hand. He always
wears a puffy red, yellow and green crocheted beret. Isabel
nods to him.
JUSTIN
Who's that lady in the back?
ANGLE - DOROTHEA (Doro-taya) VAN HAUFTEN (40's), an elegant,
beautiful woman, smartly dressed, takes photographs from the
back of the room.
JANET
That's Dorothea Van Hauften --
JUSTIN
Say what? What kinda name is that?
ISABEL
Justin -- sshh!
JANET
-- and she's taking pictures of
Roberta's classes for a magazine
article about music education.
JUSTIN
I wanna be in the magazine!
ISABEL
First things first, Justin. Roberta's
gonna explain to you about the
"lottery."
Roberta steps forward. RAMON OLIVAS (7), a small, adorable
Puerto Rican boy with a crew cut, watches her with adoration.
ROBERTA
I used to just teach fifty kids at
this school. But now I teach a hundred
and fifty kids at three East Harlem
schools and there's so many children
who want to take violin classes that
we have to have a lottery.
VANESSA raises her hand, a white girl whose clothes and
accessories are always adorned with cats.
VANESSA
Can I be in the class?
ISABEL
Roberta's explaining that. Just
listen.
ROBERTA
After your parents sign your
permission slips, I'm gonna put them
in a sack, and I'll pick fifty names
from each school.
ANGLE - Ramon listens intently with his fingers crossed.
ROBERTA
So everyone bring in your slips by
Friday, and I'll come back and tell
you who's in violin class.
ISABEL
Remember, she's just picking names
from a hat. It doesn't mean that
anyone's better than anyone else.
RAMON raises his hand.
RAMON
(to Roberta)
I really really hope that I get in
the class.
Roberta looks at him, struck by his sweetness.
ROBERTA
I hope so too.
EXT. 118TH STREET - STREET SIGN - ESTABLISHING - DAY
EXT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - DAY
The brownstone looks a lot better than when we last saw it.
Graffiti's been removed, the stairs have been repaired, the
windows have security bars, and there are flowers blooming
in pots in front of the building. Roberta steps INTO FRAME,
walking Allegra, now a 10-year-old dog.
INT. BROWNSTONE - DAY
The house is transformed: the first floor is one long open
room with oak floors, a living room in front with a beautiful
fireplace and a grand piano, and a country kitchen in the
rear, complete with pots hanging over a large butcher block.
NICK (17) practices cello and LEXI (15) practices piano;
they play Haydn's "Trio #13." Now handsome young men, their
blonde hair has darkened to brown. Nick is huskier; Lexi has
a slighter build. Both are passionate, talented musicians.
On the couch, RACHEL (12), a mature, beautiful Black girl,
rosins her bow.
RACHEL
How come you guys don't play the
violin?
LEXI
Well, picture her being your teacher
and your mother.
Rachel cracks up but stifles her laughter as Roberta enters
from outside with Allegra.
ROBERTA
Hi Rachel. Be right with you.
As Roberta removes Allegra's leash, Rachel and Lexi share a
conspiratorial look. In the b.g., Nick packs up his cello.
ROBERTA
(to Nick)
You're gonna practice upstairs?
NICK
No. I'm done.
ROBERTA
Already? You've barely practiced.
NICK
What -- are you timing me with a
stop watch? Why don't you pick on
Lexi for a change?
LEXI
'Cause I'm perfect.
Nick jostles him and heads upstairs. Lexi gets up from the
piano.
LEXI
(to Rachel)
Have a good lesson.
He crosses to a sharp-looking bike parked behind the front
door and addresses Roberta.
LEXI
I'll be back in a couple of hours.
ROBERTA
Be careful.
Lexi mouths "be careful" along with her.
EXT. RIVER EAST PARK - DUSK
Lexi plays basketball with a group of Black and Latino guys.
Despite his small stature, he's a great athlete, and an
accepted part of the group. The game ends. He and his buddy
Lawrence (now 16), both all sweaty, cross to a water fountain.
As Lexi takes a drink --
MALE VOICE (O.S.)
Can I try your bike?
Lexi wipes his mouth and looks up at HENRY (18), a tall,
intimidating Black teenager who towers over him. Lawrence
watches tensely.
LEXI
I'm gonna be leaving pretty soon.
HENRY
Just wanna take it for a spin.
LAWRENCE
C'mon, Henry -- he don't want to
loan you his bike.
HENRY
I didn't hear him say that.
(to Lexi)
Is that true? Did you say that?
Lexi looks at him, knowing there's only one right answer.
INT. LIVING ROOM - DAY
Roberta and Rachel play Bach's "Minuet One" together on the
violin. The girl has obvious talent.
ROBERTA
Vibrato... don't wiggle your wrist.
Rachel stops, frustrated.
RACHEL
Dang! I can't get that right.
ROBERTA
You almost have it.
RACHEL
Almost isn't good enough.
ROBERTA
Did I turn you into such a
perfectionist?
RACHEL
No. I came that way.
ROBERTA
(smiles, then)
Just as long as you get it right for
your Julliard audition.
RACHEL
What?
ROBERTA
I've recommended you for a gifted
kids scholarship.
Rachel looks at her in wide-eyed gratitude.
ANGLE - Lexi enters the front door, a glum look on his face.
ROBERTA
Where's the bike?
INT. HONDA/EXT. EAST HARLEM STREETS - NIGHT
Roberta drives with Nick in the front, Lexi and Lawrence in
the back. They're in a dangerous looking part of East Harlem.
LEXI
Mom, please. Don't do this to me!
NICK
C'mon, Mom -- why don't you let me
handle this?
ROBERTA
Are we getting closer, Lawrence?
LAWRENCE
It's the next block up.
LEXI
(to Roberta)
You don't have to do this. I'll pay
you back.
ROBERTA
How? It took me six months to save
up for it.
NICK
I'll help him, O.K.? We'll both pay
you back.
LEXI
Or we'll ask Dad -- he'll help us
out.
ROBERTA
Yeah, right.
LAWRENCE
O.K., slow down. It's the second one
on the right.
Roberta slows the car down next to a HOUSING PROJECT.
EXT. HOUSING PROJECT - NIGHT
Not a place you'd want to go into, even in the day time.
PULL BACK TO REVEAL this is their POV from INSIDE THE CAR.
The boys look frightened, but Roberta's on a mission.
NICK
C'mon Mom, let's get out of here.
ROBERTA
Lock the doors.
And she exits. The boys watch as she heads for the building,
then Lexi shakes his head and covers his face.
LEXI
I'm dead. She's gonna get me killed.
Nick jumps out of the car and heads after her.
NICK
I'm coming with you!
ROBERTA
No. Get back in the car and stay
with the boys.
Nick hesitates and heads back. Roberta presses on. Lawrence
opens the window and calls to her.
LAWRENCE
Don't take the stairs!
INT. TENEMENT BUILDING - LOBBY - NIGHT
CLOSE ON THE ELEVATOR DOOR with a handwritten SIGN that reads
OUT OF ORDER.
WIDER - Roberta stands in front of the elevator, staring
tensely at the sign. She takes a deep breath, then heads for
the staircase.
INT. TENEMENT BUILDING - STAIRWELL - NIGHT
Roberta climbs the dimly-lit stairs of a dilapidated, scary
building. O.S. a BABY CRIES, a couple of TV's BLARE.
INT. TENEMENT BUILDING - HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS
At the top of the stairs, Roberta turns down the hall, passing
a door riddled with bullet holes. She finds the apartment
and knocks. No response. She knocks again.
OLD WOMAN (O.S.)
Yeah?
ROBERTA
I'm a school teacher. Henry has taken
my son's bicycle and I want it back.
A beat, then the door cracks open, an OLD WOMAN visible
through the chain lock.
OLD WOMAN
Henry's not here.
ROBERTA
Well you tell Henry that if he returns
the bike, I won't have to notify the
police -- or his school principal.
Although since I am a teacher, it
would be very easy for me to do that.
A couple of beats.
OLD WOMAN
He's not home. He doesn't get home
till late.
ROBERTA
How late?
OLD WOMAN
Not till after ten.
ROBERTA
I'll be on the steps of CPE 1 at 11
P.M. I'll be waiting for him.
The door closes. Roberta exhales. Did she just do that?
EXT. CPE 1 - NIGHT
Roberta, Nick, Lexi and Lawrence sit on the front steps of
the school. The street is deserted.
LEXI
You're crazy. He's not gonna show.
Roberta sits confidently.
NICK
You think he actually cares that
you're a teacher? You think he even
goes to school?
LEXI
C'mon, Mom -- let's just go.
ROBERTA
It's only five after eleven.
Nick and Lexi roll their eyes and exchange a look: she's
nuts. Suddenly, there's the SOUND of a bicycle. Nick, Lexi
and Lawrence look towards the sound, incredulous. Lexi stands.
Henry rides up on the bike and dismounts. Lexi looks directly
at him as he takes the bike from him.
HENRY
I was just borrowing it.
He glances at Roberta, then walks off.
INT. CPE 1 - CLASSROOM - DAY
Roberta stands in front of Isabel's class and calls out names,
handing the selected children acceptance letters. The kids
are charged up; "My heart is pounding!" "Please pick me!"
ROBERTA
Shandra Wilson.
A pretty Black girl with braids and tons of barrettes jumps
up and down, then runs up for her letter. The kids SQUEAL
and CHEER for each student called. Shandra hugs her best
friend MYESHA, a chubby Black girl who also holds a letter.
ROBERTA
Justin Brady.
JUSTIN raises his fists in triumph. ANGLE - RAMON anxiously
waits to see if his name will be called. JUSTIN sits down
next to him, waves his letter in Ramon's face, taunting him.
ROBERTA
Vanessa Klein.
Vanessa takes her letter and smiles. She puts it into her
cat-shaped backpack.
ROBERTA
O.K. One more name...
Ramon crosses his fingers and holds his breath.
ROBERTA
Leonard Hood.
RAMON looks crushed. JUSTIN taunts him some more. LEONARD, a
scrawny white boy takes his letter, scared by it. He starts
to cry.
LEONARD
It's too hard! I don't wanna do it!
ISABEL
Don't you even wanna try, Leonard?
LEONARD
(through tears)
I don't want to!
Isabel looks at Roberta.
ROBERTA
Well, O.K. then. I'll pick someone
else.
(she picks a name)
Ramon Olivas.
Ramon's face lights up.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - DAY
As Roberta walks through the yard, she sees kids excitedly
showing acceptance letters to their moms.
SHANDRA and MYESHA hold hands as they run to Shandra's mom,
BEVERLY WILSON, pushing a stroller. She looks at the letter
and hugs Shandra.
ANGLE - RAMON reads his letter to his mother, CONCEPCION
(45), whose eyes tell you that she's lived through a lot.
She speaks with a Puerto Rican accent.
RAMON
This is to inform you that your child,
Ramon Olivas, has been chosen by
lottery to be in the violin program.
CONCEPCION
You happy?
Ramon spins round and round with the letter in his hand.
CONCEPCION
I think you're happy.
EXT. RIVER EAST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - DAY
Roberta illegally parks her old Honda, rushes out of the
car, grabs her book bags and three violins, pulls a parking
ticket from her pocket and puts it on the windshield.
WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
(German accent)
Does that really work?
Roberta turns. It's DOROTHEA, the PHOTOGRAPHER we saw in the
classroom.
ROBERTA
No. But I keep trying. And maybe
someday the school will give me a
parking space!
She rushes towards the school and Dorothea follows her.
DOROTHEA
Wait --
She hands Roberta a thin box. Roberta puts down her violins,
glances inside it and forgets about being late.
INSERT
-- Terrific black and white shots of Roberta's advanced
classes playing violin.
ROBERTA (O.S.)
God, these are great.
BACK TO SCENE
DOROTHEA
Those copies are for you.
ROBERTA
Thank you. Can I... pay for you them?
DOROTHEA
Don't be silly. Besides -- you'll
need your money for parking tickets.
They smile at each other.
DOROTHEA
What you're doing for these children
is wonderful. My husband's a violinist --
he was quite impressed when I told
him about you.
ROBERTA
What's his name?
DOROTHEA
Arnold Steinhardt.
ROBERTA
Of the Guarneri String Quartet?
Dorothea nods, and hands Roberta a card.
DOROTHEA
Stay in touch. Let us know when the
kids have a concert.
RACHEL, heading for school, calls out to Roberta.
RACHEL
Don't be late for violin class! I
hear the teacher's really mean.
Roberta smiles, slips the card in her pocket, nods to Dorothea
and follows Rachel.
INT. RIVER EAST SCHOOL - MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Roberta's advanced class plays "Can-Can." Rachel's one of
the eight sixth-graders. Roberta plays along, crossing to
AMANDA, a white girl in a country-western outfit.
ROBERTA
Amanda, what did I tell you about
wearing cowboy boots to violin class?
They're too slippery!
She crosses to a pudgy Black/Puerto Rican boy with glasses.
ROBERTA
Relax your two, Simon...
She glances at STEPHANIE, a white girl with red hair, next
to KENNY, a Black boy with an earnest expression.
ROBERTA
Your stop sign has to be up, Kenny!
Stephanie, it doesn't look like you
ever had a lesson with me!
CARLOS (13) hurries in, a handsome Black boy in a baseball
jacket that says "LOS LEONES." He looks 15.
ROBERTA
Where's your violin, Carlos?
CARLOS
It's coming.
He nervously looks down the hall.
ROBERTA
What, is it walking here by itself?
A Black third-grade girl rushes into the room and hands Carlos
his violin, then runs off. Roberta crosses to Carlos as he
quickly readies the violin.
ROBERTA
Your buddies giving you a hard time?
CARLOS
Look, it's just not cool. You wouldn't
understand.
ROBERTA
Hey, you want your sister to carry
your violin, that's fine. But is she
practicing for you too? Because
lately, that's how it sounds.
CARLOS
I've been busy! I've been --
ROBERTA
I'm not interested! Just get here on
time, and commit to this class or I
don't want you in here, you
understand?
He nods sullenly.
ROBERTA
You're a good violinist, Carlos --
and it's definitely not "cool" to
waste your own talent.
Carlos takes this in as Roberta crosses to another student.
EXT. RAMON'S APARTMENT - EAST HARLEM - ESTABLISHING - NIGHT
It's upstairs from a grocery store on a busy street.
INT. RAMON'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Ramon sits on the floor, upset, half-heartedly building with
Legos, while his parents argue in the KITCHEN. His father
MANUELO is a stocky, muscular man. INTERCUT between the two
areas. This is a modest, well-kept apartment. Off the kitchen,
religious candles burn on a shelf above a washing machine.
MANUELO
Why didn't you show it to me?
CONCEPCION
It just needed one parent's signature.
MANUELO
(with some Spanish)
Well, I'm his parent and I don't
give permission! He should be playing
baseball, not the violin!
CONCEPCION
It makes him happy.
ON RAMON, looking far from happy at the moment.
EXT. RIVER EAST SCHOOL - DAY
Rachel steps off a city bus, carrying her violin. She passes
two sixth-grade boys and a girl.
BOY #1
(loudly)
Ooh, check out little Miss Violinhead.
GIRL
She carry that violin with her all
the time 'cause she think she special.
Rachel turns to them.
RACHEL
I am special.
She proudly continues on, then sees Roberta walking towards
the school and catches up to her.
RACHEL
(nonchalant)
So I heard from Julliard.
Roberta stops and looks at her.
ROBERTA
And?
RACHEL
They said yes!
Roberta gives her a big hug.
INT. CPE 1 - MUSIC ROOM - DAY
ON THE BEGINNER'S CLASS, including Ramon, as they play
"Lightly Row." Roberta walks around, making corrections as
she addresses the students. She doesn't see Justin poking
Ramon with his bow; Ramon swats the bow away and glares at
his nemesis. Roberta moves some of Shandra's braids away
from the violin.
ROBERTA
So when you take the violins home,
tape your music to the wall directly
in front of your nose so you can
play with perfect posture. Your
parents are gonna be so excited to
hear you play!
INT. RAMON'S HOUSE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
SCREECHING comes from Ramon's room as he practices "Lightly
Row." His brothers, PEDRO (18) and ERNESTO (17), cringe as
they try to watch T.V. Ernesto gives up and puts on his
Walkman; Pedro's ready to break the violin. Concepcion listens
patiently as she folds laundry, but even she winces.
PEDRO
(yelling)
Ramon! How many cats you killing in
there?
INTERCUT RAMON - He plays with pride, eyes on the music taped
to the wall.
INT. CPE 1 - MUSIC ROOM - DAY (A FEW MONTHS LATER)
ON RAMON, his improved playing showing that time has passed.
WIDER - the beginner's class plays "Lightly Row."
JUSTIN is struggling more than the other students. Roberta
plays along with the class, eyeing each student.
ROBERTA
More bow! To the frog! Myesha, your
stop sign line should be touching.
Don't let it wiggle! You're on the
wrong string, Justin! And look at
your feet!
Vanessa enters the front door without her violin.
ROBERTA
Where's your violin?
VANESSA
I forgot.
ROBERTA
Goodbye! And you may be dropped.
Vanessa pouts and exits. Roberta moves to ROSARIO, a Puerto
Rican girl.
ROBERTA
Look at those nails, Rosario!
She pulls a clipper from her pocket and swiftly clips them.
MYESHA nervously glances at her own nails.
ROBERTA
I see you over there, Myesha.
She moves to Ramon and corrects his bowing position.
ROBERTA
(to Ramon)
You're doing much better.
As Roberta walks on to the next student, Justin purposely
knocks over Ramon's music stand.
RAMON
Drop dead, Justin!
JUSTIN
It was a accident!
RAMON
Was not!
ROBERTA
Ramon, I don't like that kind of
talk. Justin, pick up his stand,
now! Our spring concert is in three
weeks and you might not be in it. Is
that what you want?
EXT. CPE 1 - DAY
As Roberta heads for her car, she sees Vanessa being helped
into a car by her FATHER, his suit wrinkled and tie loosened.
There's SNOW on the ground.
ROBERTA
Mr. Klein? I'm gonna have to drop
Vanessa from the class if she keeps
forgetting her violin.
MR. KLEIN
(sotto)
She's going back and forth between
houses. My wife and I split up.
ROBERTA
(softening)
Oh. I'm sorry.
Roberta leans into the car window.
ROBERTA
Vanessa, maybe you could write down
for your Mom and Dad which days are
violin days.
VANESSA
(almost in tears)
The tape doesn't stick.
ROBERTA
What?
VANESSA
I taped the music to the wall at my
Mom's house and then I took it to my
Dad's house and it doesn't stick
anymore.
Mr. Klein's eyes tear up and he quickly wipes them.
ROBERTA
Well you know what? That's an easy
problem to solve.
She looks through her book bag, takes out a piece of music
and gives it to her.
ROBERTA
Now you have two, O.K.? One for each
house.
Vanessa nods, clutching the piece of music. Roberta and Mr.
Klein exchange a look. She touches his arm, then walks off.
INT. RAMON'S HOUSE - NIGHT
Ramon, holding his bow and violin, crosses to his father
who's watching a baseball game on T.V.
RAMON
You wanna hear my new song, Papa?
MANUELO
(in Spanish)
Not right now.
Ramon exits, hurt. Concepcion watches from the side, and
crosses to her husband.
CONCEPCION
We made mistakes with Pedro and
Ernesto and we can't fix them now,
but Ramon -- he works so hard. The
violin makes him want to be good at
everything.
He shows no response, and she exits. Manuelo ponders what
she said.
EXT. CPE 1 ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - DAY (MORNING)
Roberta approaches the school on a winter morning. She smiles
as she sees Vanessa get out of her MOTHER'S car with her
violin. Roberta nears the front door and finds Isabel and
some teachers huddled in conversation. A few students are
crying.
ROBERTA
(to Isabel)
What happened?
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
The beginners sit on the floor and rosin their bows. A few
chat, but it's quieter than usual, except for RAMON who is
"blessing" kids with his violin bow.
RAMON
You go to heaven... You go to hell...
You go to hell... heaven...
Roberta enters slowly. She looks very shaken up. She takes
note of what Ramon is doing, and overhears Toussaint and
Shandra in mid-conversation.
TOUSSAINT
My grandpa died and my uncle, so
that makes six.
SHANDRA
I know more than that. At least seven
people... maybe even nine.
Roberta gently tells Ramon to sit, and then she sits down on
a child-sized chair in front of them.
ROBERTA
(quietly)
I know that you've all heard the bad
news about Justin.
MYESHA
I didn't hear.
TOUSSAINT
There was a drive-by shooting by his
house and he got shot on accident
and he died.
Myesha takes this in, looking sad.
ROBERTA
Does anyone want to talk about it?
RAMON
(angry)
I think we should just play violin.
Roberta watches him.
INT. RAMON'S HOUSE - LIVING ROOM/KITCHEN AREA - DAY
Concepcion cooks chicken and Pedro sets the table, whistling
along to Ramon's O.S. violin playing "We Shall Overcome."
There's a KNOCK on the door. Concepcion answers it, revealing
Roberta.
CONCEPCION
Roberta! Come in.
Roberta enters.
ROBERTA
I came by to check on Ramon.
CONCEPCION
(confused)
Why?
ROBERTA
Didn't he tell you what happened at
school?
Concepcion shakes her head no.
INT. RAMON'S ROOM - DAY
Ramon is still playing violin as Concepcion and Roberta enter.
When he sees Roberta he straightens up even more.
CONCEPCION
Roberta wants to talk to you, O.K.?
He nods. Concepcion touches his head, then exits.
RAMON
Did that sound O.K.?
ROBERTA
Yeah, it did.
Ramon smiles, pleased with himself.
ROBERTA
I've been thinking about Justin.
Remember how mad I got the last time
I saw him?
RAMON
Yeah. You got very strict with him.
ROBERTA
It wasn't always so easy to be nice
to him, you know?
Ramon looks away from her, upset.
RAMON
You think Justin's in heaven or hell?
ROBERTA
Heaven.
Ramon runs his fingers along his bow.
RAMON
I told him to drop dead.
Roberta touches Ramon's back.
ROBERTA
Justin didn't die because of what
you said. I promise.
RAMON
How do you know?
ROBERTA
I don't think you're that powerful,
do you? I mean, if you had such
powers, just imagine what kind of
violin player you'd be by now!
RAMON
Yeah. I'd be better than you!
They laugh together, then Ramon looks sad again.
ROBERTA
It's O.K. to cry, you know.
RAMON
Not for a man.
ROBERTA
My boys still cry and they're big,
strong young men now.
(beat)
I bet Justin's daddy cried.
Ramon's eyes get teary. Roberta quietly leaves the room.
EXT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - ESTABLISHING - DAY (SPRING)
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - DAY
Roberta brings in the mail, looking curiously at a manila
envelope with a return address from the NY REVIEW OF BOOKS.
She opens it, looks inside, then pours out a batch of other
letters onto the table. They're addressed to BOX HOLDER 127.
She opens one, reads it, then rushes to an INTERCOM.
ROBERTA
Nick, Lexi! Get down here right now!
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - MOMENTS LATER
NICK
We were just trying to help!
Nick and Lexi stand by the table, opposite Roberta -- with
the incriminating pile of letters between them.
ROBERTA
This is humiliating!
NICK
Mom, no one knows it's you! I mean,
you don't even have to read them if
you don't want to.
(glances at pile)
Although obviously, a lot of guys
are interested in dating you.
ROBERTA
No. A lot of guys are interested in
dating you and Lexi.
(beat)
What did you say about me, anyway?
They thought she'd never ask.
NICK
"Beautiful musician, late 40's, tired
of playing solo --
LEXI
-- seeks a healthy, stable, attractive
man who's not afraid of a duet with
a strong, independent woman.
NICK
My violin playing will feed your
soul...
LEXI
...And my lasagna will be music to
your palate."
They beam with pride. Roberta looks at them, mortified.
ROBERTA
Oh, my God.
LEXI
Did you catch all the music metaphors?
ROBERTA
Don't you think it's a little weird
that you're trying to get your mother
a date?
NICK
Don't you think it's a little weird
that you're not even interested in
dating?
ROBERTA
Boys, look. Number one -- even if I
wanted to date, I don't have time.
And number two -- I've got my
teaching, I've got you guys -- that's
all I need.
The boys nod, disappointed, and she exits. They look at each
other with glum expressions.
LEXI
(to Nick)
I really thought she'd like the music
metaphors.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta lies on the couch, reading the personal ad letters.
She tosses one aside, then opens another.
INSERT
The letter is designed like a newspaper with a headline that
reads: JOURNALISM PROFESSOR DAN PAXTON ANSWERS PERSONAL AD;
HOPES RUN HIGH BEAUTIFUL MUSICIAN WILL CALL FOR A DATE!
BACK TO SCENE
Roberta can't help but be charmed.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta, Nick and Lexi play Haydn's "Trio #13" together on
their respective instruments. We sense that this is a special
family ritual. They play throughout their conversation:
ROBERTA
I think you're flat, Nick.
NICK
I'm not flat.
ROBERTA
The B sounded flat.
NICK
Just play the violin, Mom. I'll take
care of the cello.
They play for a few beats.
LEXI
You nervous, Mom?
ROBERTA
No. I'm fine.
The DOORBELL rings and Roberta jumps up, bolting into the
bathroom down the hall.
Lexi and Nick exchange a smile, then Lexi crosses to the
door and opens it.
INT. DOORWAY - CONTINUOUS
Standing in the doorway is a man in casual college professor
attire. He's nice-looking, but no Prince Charming. He shakes
Lexi's hand and smiles warmly.
DAN
Hi. I'm Dan Paxton.
Lexi shows him in.
INT. ROBERTA'S BATHROOM - CONTINUOUS
IN THE MIRROR - Roberta takes a last look at herself,
wondering if he'll find her attractive. She touches her hair,
adjusts her dress, then takes a deep breath as she builds up
her courage.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - CONTINUOUS
Roberta enters the living room where Dan is chatting with
Nick and Lexi. Dan sees her and is instantly smitten.
DAN
(shaking her hand)
Wow. An honest woman.
ROBERTA
Honest?
DAN
Your ad. When you said you were
beautiful, you were telling the truth.
She smiles, blushing, and avoids eye contact with her sons
who are trying really hard not to laugh. As she and Dan start
to exit:
NICK
Make sure you're home by midnight,
young lady.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
CLOSE ON CLOCK
It reads 12:30.
WIDER - Nick and Lexi play a video game on the TV screen.
O.S., there's the SOUND OF A CAR. They race to the window.
LEXI
Ten bucks he tries to kiss her.
NICK
That's a no-brainer. Of course he'll
try. The real question is whether
she'll let him.
LEXI
O.K. -- ten bucks she lets him.
NICK
You're on.
They stare out the window intently.
INT. DAN'S CAR - NIGHT
Dan pulls his car up in front of Roberta's house. Beside
him, Roberta holds a program from a Lincoln Center concert.
Roberta's tense, but Dan seems relaxed and centered in his
attraction to her.
DAN
I had a lot of fun tonight.
ROBERTA
Yeah, I did too.
DAN
I have a confession -- I've never
answered an ad before. I did it on a
dare.
ROBERTA
Well, I have a confession -- my boys
placed the ad behind my back.
They both laugh, then smile at each other. An awkward beat:
will he or won't he? Dan leans in to kiss her, and Roberta
turns away, uncertain.
ROBERTA
Look, Dan -- I went along with this
'cause it's been a while. Quite a
while... And I had a very nice time...
but I'm not sure if I'm ready to get
involved with anyone right now.
A beat. Roberta feels badly about rejecting him.
DAN
(deadpan)
Does this mean I don't get any
lasagna?
Roberta cracks up. Dan smiles at her.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - NIGHT
Roberta enters. The boys are back to their video game,
covering that they've been spying on her.
ROBERTA
Why are you guys still up?
NICK
(all innocence)
Why? Is it late?
ROBERTA
Good try, Nick.
LEXI
So how was it?
ROBERTA
Well... he's nice.
NICK
"Nice"? As in "let's just be friends"
nice?
ROBERTA
I don't know yet. We'll see.
Nick looks disappointed.
NICK
There's still a lot more letters.
ROBERTA
Good night, Nick.
She starts heading upstairs.
LEXI
Hey, Mom -- can you loan me ten
dollars?
INT. CPE 1 - MUSIC ROOM - DAY
THE BLACKBOARD reads: SPRING CONCERT IN 10 DAYS! PRACTICE
PRACTICE PRACTICE!
Roberta rushes in, frazzled, not noticing at first that the
beginners are very quiet -- and that most don't have violins.
ROBERTA
Guys, I'm so sorry -- I got stuck
over at CPE 2...
She puts her stuff down, then looks at the kids.
ROBERTA
What's going on? Where are all your
violins?
RAMON
We heard you got fired.
ROBERTA
What?!
EXT. HALLWAY - DAY
Janet and Dennis talk outside Janet's office. Roberta storms
over to them. Janet looks at her, alarmed.
ROBERTA
Is it true?
JANET
Why don't you come in my office?
ROBERTA
It's true? You're firing me?
JANET
It's not me, Roberta. The Board of
Ed. cut the budget, the District had
to comply, and as of the end of this
term, the violin program has been...
excessed.
Roberta takes this in, momentarily speechless. In the b.g.,
the beginners slip into the hall to watch.
ROBERTA
Excessed.
(beat)
They specifically said that my violin
program has to go.
JANET
They've slashed the budget -- music
and art programs got hit the worst.
ROBERTA
What about Dennis' classes?
DENNIS
I'm tenured, Roberta.
Roberta looks at him, then back to Janet.
ROBERTA
When was this decided?
JANET
Things happened very quickly... I
wanted to tell you myself --
ROBERTA
(reeling)
I just... I can't even believe this
is happening!
DENNIS
Why not? You're a sub. Your position
has never been permanent.
JANET
Shut up, Dennis! You're not helping!
(softly, to Roberta)
Come into my office, please.
They leave Dennis standing there, looking as if he's had his
face slapped.
INT. JANET WILLIAMS' OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
ROBERTA
There's gotta be a way to fight this!
JANET
Fight it with what? I don't have any
other extra programs to give them
instead.
ROBERTA
Oh, I see. So after ten years, after
fourteen hundred children have learned
to play the violin, this is just an
"extra program."
JANET
You know I don't feel that way and
you know damn well I've been standing
by you all these years! You think I
haven't noticed what you've done for
these kids?
ROBERTA
Then do something!
JANET
(points to her phone)
I've been on this phone for the past
three days trying to "do something" --
the District office can't even stand
the sound of my voice. Believe me,
there are some people around here
I'd much rather get rid of. But as
far as the Board's concerned, violin
classes are not a priority.
Roberta's fury starts to give way to grief. She looks terribly
wounded. Janet looks at her helplessly.
JANET
I don't have the power here, Roberta.
I'm so sorry.
A beat, and Roberta exits.
EXT. SCHOOL YARD - DAY
Roberta's dazed and in pain as she walks through the crowds
of children, oblivious to kids calling her name and waving.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - DAY (LATE AFTERNOON)
Nick and Lexi enter the darkened house, chatting as Nick
wheels in the bike and Lexi bounces a basketball. They turn
on a light to reveal
ROBERTA
sitting at the kitchen table with a
glass of wine, her face ashen.
NICK
What happened?
EXT. STREETS - DAY (LATE AFTERNOON)
Roberta, Nick and Lexi walk Allegra in their neighborhood.
Roberta looks worn out.
ROBERTA
I'm a good teacher. I've worked so
hard to give these kids something to
be proud of.
Lexi moves to comfort her.
LEXI
I'm so sorry, Mom. I can't believe
they did this to you.
ROBERTA
It's like when my father got killed.
For twenty years, he followed every
safety rule the factory had, and
then someone else flips the wrong
switch...
(she chokes up)
It's not fair. You do everything
right and then...
NICK
It's the wrong analogy. You couldn't
do anything about Grandpa's death.
It was irreversible. This isn't.
ROBERTA
Tell that to the Board of Education.
NICK
Let me ask you something. Why did
you risk your life for a bicycle?
Roberta and Lexi look at Nick, baffled as to the relevance
of the question.
ROBERTA
I did not risk my life.
NICK
Of course you did! That building?
Threatening Henry? And for what --
two hundred dollars?
ROBERTA
No. Not for that.
LEXI
Then why?
ROBERTA
When someone steals something that
belongs to my kids, I'm not gonna
sit back and let that happen!
A beat as she realizes what she's just said. The boys look
at her and the three of them stop walking.
ROBERTA
Guys -- you need to think about this.
If I try to fight this -- with no
salary coming in -- I could lose the
house, screw up your college plans...
It would be a lot safer to just go
out tomorrow and get a job in a
private school.
LEXI
Yeah, but is that where you really
want to be?
INT. ROBERTA'S HOUSE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Roberta frantically searches through her purse, then crosses
to a hall closet and quickly checks the pockets of her coats
and jackets.
She feels inside a jacket pocket, then finds it: DOROTHEA'S
BUSINESS CARD.
EXT. COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - ESTABLISHING - DAY
INT. COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - DEPT. OF JOURNALISM - DAY
FOLLOW DAN PAXTON as he walks down the hall towards his office
and sees a strange silver object on the floor in front of
his office door. He picks it up.
INSERT
-- A foil-covered plate with a note on top: DO YOU KNOW ANYONE
AT THE NEW YORK TIMES?
BACK TO SCENE
Dan lifts up the foil to reveal a large piece of LASAGNA.
INT. CPE 1 AUDITORIUM - THE CONCERT - STAGE - NIGHT
SEVENTY-FIVE KIDS play "We Shall Overcome" and it's incredibly
moving. Nick's on cello, Lexi plays piano. ROBERTA proudly
leads the children. At the side of the stage, we see DOROTHEA
photographing the concert. THE CAMERA PANS THE AUDIENCE of
teary-eyed parents, many of them with CAM CORDERS. We FIND
Ramon's family. Manuelo is riverted by his son's playing,
and he starts to cry. Concepcion knows this without looking.
She takes his hand.
ANGLE - JANET stands along the side and her eyes start to
fill with tears. She tries to stay composed, then discreetly
exits the auditorium.
The song ends and the audience APPLAUDS, rising from their
seats, including ASSUNTA (now 65), next to ISABEL and DAN.
Someone remains seated: a REPORTER (40's), sitting beside
Dan and taking notes.
The STUDENTS bow, then point to Roberta who bows and takes
the stage. She gestures for people to sit. A beginner student
brings her flowers. Roberta kisses her, then approaches the
mike.
ROBERTA
(to the audience)
The beautiful concert that you just
heard could be the last concert of
the East Harlem Violin Program. The
Board of Education and the District
Superintendent don't think that music
is important for our children. But
they're wrong -- and they're in for
a fight.
The parents stand and applaud. We see the REPORTER writing
quickly. Dorothea snaps more pictures. Roberta extends an
arm towards the kids, directing the applause at them. Ramon
gives her a thumbs up.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
ROBERTA is vacuuming the living room while Assunta dusts.
Extra chairs are set up in the living room in preparation
for a meeting. The doorbell RINGS.
ROBERTA
Someone's early.
FOLLOW ASSUNTA to the DOOR. She opens it, revealing JANET,
who's carrying two bags of groceries. Assunta's demeanor
instantly cools when she sees her. In the b.g. Roberta sees
Janet and turns off the vacuum cleaner.
JANET
Hello, Assunta. How are you?
ASSUNTA
I'd be a lot better if my daughter
had a job next year.
ROBERTA
Ma!
JANET
(to Assunta)
I would too.
Janet briskly walks into THE LIVING ROOM, puts the grocery
bags down on a table, and begins to take things out of them.
Roberta watches her, mystified.
JANET
(to Roberta)
Sorry I'm early, but I figured we'd
need time to set up.
Roberta watches Janet for a beat, then addresses Assunta.
ROBERTA
Mama, why don't you take Allegra out
for a walk?
Assunta hesitates for a beat, then gets the dog and exits.
Janet continues unpacking the bags as if there's nothing
unusual about her being there. Cheeses, crackers, bread,
salads, fruit, paper plates, napkins, etc. She sees Roberta's
confused expression.
JANET
You are having a meeting here tonight,
right? Parents and teachers?
ROBERTA
Well, yes, but ...
JANET
Take it from me. If you want to get
parents to help you with something,
you have to feed them.
She holds up two wedges of cheese.
JANET
You have a cutting board for these?
Roberta crosses into the kitchen and returns with a cutting
board and a knife.
JANET
(as she continues to
unpack)
And if you think parents are bad,
teachers are even worse, no offense.
If you don't feed them, you never
get anything extra out of them. That's
why I got this.
She pulls out an Entenmann's blackout cake.
JANET
Entenmann's gets them every time.
Roberta continues to stare in amazement at Janet.
JANET
What? Don't tell me you expected me
to bring something homemade.
ROBERTA
(as she takes the
cake from her)
Well, no... I --
JANET
Good. Because take it from me -- my
own family begs me to stay out of
the kitchen.
ROBERTA
What I didn't expect was for you to
be here.
JANET
Why not? We've gotta figure out a
way to fight this.
(as she arranges
crackers on a plate)
After ten years, Roberta, I can't
imagine walking through those hallways
and not hearing that off-key,
screechy, scratchy, nails-on-the-
blackboard violin music.
Roberta smiles. Janet holds up a baguette.
JANET
What do you think? Cut it into slices
now, or leave it whole?
ROBERTA
Let's cut it now. It'll be less messy.
Janet hands her the bread. A beat as the two women exchange
a private smile, then return to their respective tasks.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - NIGHT
There's a crowd of PARENTS assembled in Roberta's front room,
talking at once, yelling out ideas, including CONCEPCION,
BEVERLY WILSON (Shandra's mom), MR. ADAMS (Black) and MRS.
ADAMS (Puerto Rican), the parents of James (from Roberta's
first year) and Simon. DOROTHEA, JANET, ISABEL are also there;
ASSUNTA is keeping tabs on the refreshments.
ISABEL
Don't they realize how much this
program helps the kids?
MR. ADAMS
Simon's our third child to study
with Roberta. James is pre-med,
April's valedictorian -- now that
says something!
MR. KLEIN
I think we should inundate the Board
and the District with letters.
JANET
You're wasting your time. The Board
and the District are not gonna pay
for this program, no matter how many
letters they get.
Disappointed grumblings.
ISABEL
What if we raise the money ourselves?
JANET
I can't see how they'd object to
that.
A beat as people take this in.
CONCEPCION
Well once that newspaper article
comes out, that should help bring in
money.
BEVERLY
Yeah, but what if it doesn't? For
all we know, it's gonna be buried on
the back page. Besides, who says
anyone's gonna give a damn about our
kids?
DOROTHEA
(to Roberta)
What if you do a benefit concert? We
can raise a batch of money from ticket
sales, and then the concert itself
could be great publicity. There's
word of mouth... you could get
reviewed...
ROBERTA
It better be a good concert!
Some people laugh but we see the anxiety on Roberta's face.
ROBERTA
We have to offer something more than
me and the kids.
(to Dorothea)
Do you think maybe your husband would
perform with us?
DOROTHEA
(slyly)
I'm sure I could persuade him with a
little pillow talk. And maybe he can
get another violinist too -- Itzhak
Perlman, perhaps.
This gets people's attention.
ROBERTA
That would be fantastic.
DOROTHEA
We could rent a place like the 92nd
Street Y -- it's perfect for this.
It seats about nine hundred people
and if we charge between fifty and a
hundred a ticket --
ISABEL
(to Roberta)
We could probably raise enough to
reinstate your program for a year.
JANET
Sounds like a plan.
ROBERTA
(half to herself)
It better be a good concert.
The DOORBELL RINGS and Roberta crosses to get it. DAN enters,
holding copies of the NY POST, the DAILY NEWS, and a couple
of other papers. Each paper has been opened to a specific
page.
DAN
Take your pick.
Roberta grabs the top one -- the POST -- opened to page 5.
INSERT
The page has a photo of Roberta at the Spring Concert, and a
large article headlined A VIOLIN TEACHER FIGHTS BACK.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Lots of chaos as a TELEVISION NEWS CREW sets up. Roberta
tries futilely to get the beginners to pay attention to her.
ROBERTA
Kids, listen to me -- it's really
important that you don't look at the
camera and you try to act as natural
as possible.
Dennis storms in.
DENNIS
Who authorized this?
ROBERTA
Janet.
DENNIS
Well Janet's not here today and I
want these people out of here.
The kids quiet down and watch them argue. A CAMERA GUY starts
shooting the argument and Dennis sees him.
DENNIS
Turn that off, you hear me?
ROBERTA
Why are you doing this? We're not
bothering anyone.
DENNIS
You're disrupting school and I want
them out of here -- now.
ROBERTA
You still don't get it, do you? I
don't care if you hate me, Dennis --
that's your business. But think about
the students for once. Every time
you interfere, you're not hurting me --
you're hurting them.
She points to the kids. They're silent, waiting to see if
Roberta got through to him. A beat.
DENNIS
Get these people out of here or I'm
calling the police.
ROBERTA
Go right ahead, call them. That'll
look real good on the eleven o'clock
news.
A beat and he exits. Roberta takes a deep breath, then turns
back to the kids who are watching her, impressed.
RAMON
I don't hear no sirens.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
ON THE TV is the news segment: ROBERTA speaks to an unseen
interviewer.
ROBERTA
I'm from a blue collar family, and
if it weren't for the lessons I got
in public school, I never would have
learned the violin.
It CUTS TO Roberta's beginners speaking to the interviewer.
INTERVIEWER (O.S.)
How does it make you feel to lose
your violin program?
SHANDRA
It makes us sad!
RAMON
Yeah, like we're never gonna have no
more violin lessons --
VANESSA
And it's bad because... because we
love violin class.
WIDER - REVEAL Roberta, Lexi and Nick watching the TV.
INT. ARNOLD STEINHARDT AND DOROTHEA'S APARTMENT - NIGHT
ON TV - THE SAME NEWS SEGMENT, ANOTHER SOUND BITE
ROBERTA
Yes, I've gotten offers from two
private schools, but this is where I
want to be.
DOROTHEA (O.S.)
Arnold, these kids need help.
WIDER - REVEAL a comfortable Upper East Side apartment and
DOROTHEA watching T.V. while ARNOLD practices violin. There's
FRAMED PHOTOGRAPHY on the walls, signed by Dorothea.
ARNOLD
Didn't we send them a donation?
DOROTHEA
They need something bigger. And you
can't just write a check -- you have
to get involved.
ARNOLD
Involved how?
The look on her face tells him it's more than he bargained
for.
ARNOLD
Uh-oh.
INT. SERIES OF SHOTS - DAY
1. Arnold Steinhardt speaks on the phone. His Roladex is
open to the name ITZHAK PERLMAN. In the b.g., Dorothea tensely
waits to hear if Itzhak Perlman will say yes.
2. Parents, Roberta, Nick and Lexi hang "FIDDLEFEST CONCERT"
posters around their neighborhood, announcing a concert at
THE 92ND STREET Y with ARNOLD STEINHARDT, ITZHAK PERLMAN and
STUDENTS FROM THE EAST HARLEM VIOLIN PROGRAM.
3. Parents -- including Beverly Wilson, Concepcion, Mr. Adams
and Carlos' mom and dad -- stuff envelopes with INVITATIONS
to "FIDDLEFEST" and accompanying LETTERS and TICKET ORDER
FORMS. Roberta and Dorothea open envelopes with filled-out
TICKET ORDER FORMS and CHECKS. They stack the checks in a
pile, address return envelopes and place FIDDLEFEST TICKETS
inside them.
INT. MUSIC ROOM - DAY
Thirty-three excited kids from Roberta's different classes
chat, tune their violins, rosin their bows. The students
include Carlos, Stephanie, Amanda, Kenny, Rachel, Simon,
Ramon, Vanessa, and Shandra. Roberta enters the room, full
of energy, and addresses them as she heads to the front.
ROBERTA
Listen up, everyone! Quiet down!
The students give her their attention.
ROBERTA
You are my very best beginner and
advanced violin students and I've
chosen you to play in Fiddlefest
because I trust that you can handle
the pressure. It's gonna be a lot of
work -- a lot. Right now, we've sold
some tickets, but I'm not gonna be
back here in the fall if the audience
storms out of their seats, demanding
a refund!
She nods to Rachel who starts handing out sheets of music.
ROBERTA
Rachel's gonna be my lieutenant and
I expect you to listen to her.
Ramon looks through his music sheets.
RAMON
Bach's "Minuet One"?
ROBERTA
People are gonna be paying good money
for this concert -- we're not just
gonna play "Twinkle."
(handing out papers)
I'm passing out a contract that you
and your parents need to sign.
The kids read the contracts. Carlos' eyes widen.
CARLOS
Every Saturday and Sunday?
ROBERTA
Plus night time rehearsals during
the week. There's only six weeks
till the concert, so classes in school
won't be enough.
The kids look sobered by this.
ROBERTA
Come to think of it, we'll probably
also need to meet before school.
Lots of grumbling: "Say what?" "No way!" "Before school?"
I'ma be sleepwalking!"
ROBERTA
You've heard of Navy Seal Training?
Well, this is gonna be Roberta String
Training.
ANOTHER ANGLE - Two young men and two young women walk in,
carrying violins. We realize from the scar that one is NAEEM
(20), now a strikingly handsome man, over six feet tall.
With him is DE SEAN (19), a short guy with dreadlocks, looking
more like a rapper than a violinist. GUADALUPE (19), walking
with a cane, is now a beautiful young woman, her long braid
pinned up. The fourth is a reserved Puerto Rican woman (20).
ROBERTA
Oh my god! Naeem! De Sean!
(hugs them)
Guadalupe!
She hugs her, then looks closely at the other woman.
ROBERTA
Lucy? Is that you?
The woman snaps her fingers and smiles. Roberta laughs and
embraces her, then turns to the students.
ROBERTA
Kids, these are four of my very first
violin students and I've asked them
to play in the concert with us.
(to the alumni)
I was just telling them how hard
they're gonna have to work.
DE SEAN
(to class)
Take it from me -- this lady don't
lie. Y'all are gonna work your butts
off.
INT. RAMON'S HOUSE - NIGHT
Ramon's father carefully reads the violin contract while
Ramon and Concepcion anxiously watch. He stops to look up a
word in the English-Spanish dictionary beside him. Ramon and
his mom are squirming. Manuelo nods as he finishes reading,
then SIGNS the contract. Ramon breaks into a smile, throws
his little arms around his Papa and kisses him.
EXT. RIVER EAST - DAY
School's letting out; Carlos' sister exits, carrying Carlos'
violin. A few beats later, Carlos quickly exits, checking
his watch. He sees his LOS LEONES teammates standing in a
group, and tries to bypass them without being noticed, but
they spot him.
TEAMMATE #1
Hey Carlos! Where ya goin'? We got a
game, remember?
CARLOS
Yeah, I know, but... I can't make
it.
TEAMMATE #1
What you talkin' about?
CARLOS
I just can't make it.
TEAMMATE #2
You got a date with the violin
teacher?
A beat.
CARLOS
Yeah. I do.
He dashes off, a barrage of Spanish and English curses behind
him, and crosses to his sister, waiting for him DOWN THE
STREET. He takes the violin from her and carries it himself.
INT. CPE MUSIC ROOM - DAY
The Fiddlefest kids, including Carlos, Vanessa, Shandra,
Ramon, Stephanie, Amanda, Kenny, Simon, Thomas, De Sean and
Guadalupe practice Bach's "Minuet One," Roberta leading them
and giving direction. They're playing badly.
Rachel plays as well, but walks around the room making
corrections. It's early morning, and the kids look half-
asleep.
ROBERTA
Frog! Frog! I need more accents on
the down beat! More bow! More!
They play a few more bars and still sound pretty bad.
ROBERTA
Stop! Stop!
(they do so)
You sound horrible! Isn't anyone
practicing?
CARLOS
How can we practice? We're rehearsing
all the time.
Some kids laugh, including Stephanie.
ROBERTA
(to Stephanie)
You think this is funny, Stephanie?
(to all of them)
You think the four hundred people
who've bought tickets so far will
think it's funny too? You think Itzhak
Perlman will think it's funny that
he's donating his time and you're
all gonna stink?
Vanessa yawns and Roberta sees her. Uh-oh.
ROBERTA
Am I boring you, Vanessa?
VANESSA
No. It's 7:30 in the morning. I'm
just tired.
ROBERTA
There's no time to be tired.
(to all, getting her
violin in position)
Let's try it again.
INT. ARNOLD AND DOROTHEA'S APARTMENT - DAY
Dorothea opens the door for Roberta who just charges in,
agitated, without even saying hello. We sense that Dorothea
too, is troubled by something.
ROBERTA
I must have been crazy to agree to
this. They're never gonna be ready.
And you should hear the Bach Double!
A disaster. So the good news is
tickets are selling like hot cakes,
but the bad news is that the kids
sound like shit.
DOROTHEA
There's more bad news... We've lost
the Y.
Roberta looks at her, aghast.
ROBERTA
What?!
DOROTHEA
They had a flood -- a water heater
burst... The concert hall was damaged
and they've cancelled all events.
ROBERTA
Until when?
DOROTHEA
"Until further notice."
ROBERTA
This can't happen! We've sold tickets!
We've done publicity! The concert's
in three weeks!
DOROTHEA
I've been on the phone all morning
calling other theaters. Nothing's
available.
They both sink into the couch, completely undone by this.
ROBERTA
Just keep looking.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - NIGHT
The Fiddlefest kids are crammed into Roberta's house,
(including De Sean, Guadalupe, Ramon, Vanessa, Shandra,
Carlos, Thomas, Stephanie, Amanda, Kenny, and Simon),
rehearsing "Orange Blossom Special." They play badly. Rachel
helps Roberta correct students.
ROBERTA
Stop! Someone's playing the wrong
notes! And you shouldn't need your
music anymore! Except for the Bach
Double, everything has to be memorized
by next rehearsal!
The kids look at each other, daunted.
ROBERTA
And you sound like you're
sleepwalking. Your heart's not even
in it.
VANESSA
Maybe 'cause we don't have a place
for the concert.
Roberta looks at her, and then notices the despondent looks
on many of the kids' faces.
ROBERTA
Well, you're right. This might all
be for nothing. So we can either
keep on rehearsing in case we find a
place -- or we can just... give up.
DE SEAN
Am I hearing right? Did you use the
words "give up"?
(to the students)
Let's take a vote. How many of you
want to give up?
No one raises a hand. Roberta takes this in.
GUADALUPE
See? You taught us well.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - KITCHEN - DAY
It's early morning. Lexi cooks breakfast while Nick and
Roberta look at scribbled-on, marked-up lists.
ROBERTA
What about in the Bronx?
NICK
There's nothing.
(beat)
Why don't you just do it in one of
the schools? It'll be a lot smaller
but --
ROBERTA
We won't make enough money.
LEXI
What about postponing it?
ROBERTA
Itzhak and Arnold are booked all
summer.
They all look depressed. Lexi places an equally depressing-
looking stack of pancakes on the table. There's a BANGING on
the door, startling everyone.
DOROTHEA (O.S.)
It's Dorothea.
Nick opens the door and Dorothea rushes in, out of breath,
talking a mile a minute.
DOROTHEA
I have good news -- really good news.
Arnold got a call from his friend
Wally Scheur who heard about us losing
the Y and wanted to see how he could
help -- and then Wally had this
brilliant idea and called his friend
Isaac Stern and it's all arranged!
We have a new place for Fiddlefest!
ROBERTA
Where?
DOROTHEA
Carnegie Hall.
Dorothea grins from ear to ear, Nick and Lexi whoop and
holler, and all wait for Roberta to jump up and down for joy --
but she looks stricken.
ROBERTA
(panicked)
Carnegie Hall?
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - DAY
CLOSE ON THE CEILING OF CARNEGIE HALL, revolving slowly.
PULL BACK TO REVEAL THIS IS ROBERTA'S POV
She stands on the empty stage, gazing at the ceiling as she
slowly turns around. She's holding her violin case. She looks
at the UPPER BALCONIES -- THE LOWER BALCONIES -- THE ORCHESTRA
SEATS. Her footsteps echo as she walks towards the front of
the stage, then stops.
CLOSE ON ROBERTA
We can see her imagining the audience on the night of the
concert. She can't believe her eyes. A beat, and she looks
around to make sure she's alone. She takes out her violin,
takes a deep breath as she looks out towards her "audience,"
then starts to play the second violin part of the Bach Double
Concerto. Suddenly, there's the SOUND of a stage door opening.
Roberta stops.
MALE VOICE (O.S.)
Incredible sound in this room, no?
Roberta turns to see ISAAC STERN approaching her. She's
completely flustered.
ROBERTA
Oh my god -- Isaac Stern.
ISAAC STERN
You must be Roberta.
ROBERTA
Thank you so much for helping us.
ISAAC STERN
(looking out at the
hall)
Would you believe in 1960, they tried
to tear this place down? They wanted
to replace it with a bright red
skyscraper -- we called it "the red
terror."
ROBERTA
You're kidding.
ISAAC STERN
We had to fight like hell, but with
a lot of help, we saved Carnegie
Hall.
Roberta takes this in, relating it to her own struggle.
ISAAC STERN
If it's all right with you, I'd like
to play in your concert. Maybe bring
a couple of friends...
ROBERTA
Yes, of course! That would be great!
Isaac nods, then touches her shoulder.
ISAAC STERN
Don't give up.
EXT. SIDEWALK CAFE, UPPER WEST SIDE - DAY
Roberta pours nervous energy into her cappuccino, adding
cinnamon, chocolate, and sugar, stirring loudly. Dan sits
across from her, observing.
ROBERTA
I just don't see how I'm gonna do
this. It's huge. It's gigantic! It's
Carnegie Hall! And listen to this:
now Isaac Stern wants to play with
us -- Diane Monroe, Michael Tree --
there's other people calling --
DAN
That's fantastic!
ROBERTA
Fantastic? I'll never get the kids
up to speed in time, I'll never get
myself up to speed. I'm gonna be
playing side by side with the world's
greatest violinists.
DAN
And "the world's greatest violinists"
are playing side by side with you
because they want to help you win
this fight.
He offers her a forkful of some decadent-looking chocolate
cake, but she shakes her head.
ROBERTA
Yes, but... you don't understand.
Maybe there's a good reason why I
never made it as a violinist -- maybe
I just can't cut it. I keep blaming
it on not having enough early
training, but if I were talented, if
I had a gift --
DAN
But you do have a gift. You're gonna
put thirty East Harlem kids on stage
at Carnegie Hall not because they're
prodigies, but because you got them
to stick with something that's hard
as hell and to strive for excellence --
which, by the way, I certainly wasn't
striving for when I was their age.
Not to mention the other ten years'
worth of students whose lives were
changed because of you. That's your
talent, Roberta.
She takes this in, looks at him gratefully and puts her hand
over his. He strokes her hand.
ROBERTA
I'm scared.
DAN
I know.
(beat)
And by the way, I happen to think
you're a pretty good violinist too.
ROBERTA
You've barely heard me play.
DAN
I've heard enough to know you're
gonna do just fine.
Roberta looks at him with trepidation. Dan takes another
forkful of his cake.
DAN
Besides, no one's gonna be paying
attention to your playing anyway.
Roberta laughs. Dan smiles, glad he got her to lighten up.
EXT. CPE 1 - DAY (EARLY MORNING)
The Fiddlefest kids (including Ramon, Shandra, Vanessa, De
Sean, Naeem, Guadalupe, Lucy, Simon, Stephanie, Amanda and
Kenny -- but RACHEL is absent) stand outside the locked school
gate, waiting for Roberta. Some of the kids have their violins
out of the cases, tuning them.
CARLOS
Teacher's late. I think she should
be dropped, don't you?
Kids laugh.
RAMON
Yeah. I don't think we should let
her play in Fiddlefest!
A few kids start playing "CAN-CAN." It catches on, and more
of them join in. PASSERSBY stop to listen, and some drop
change into the open cases. RAMON and a couple of other kids
grin at this.
CARLOS steps in front of the kids as he plays, and begins an
uncanny imitation of Roberta:
CARLOS
More bow! To the frog! You sound
terrible! I can't believe how terrible
you sound!
The kids crack up, but a few spot ROBERTA heading quickly up
the street. Carlos is oblivious to this -- and no one signals
him that Roberta's watching.
CARLOS
You're gonna make everyone in Carnegie
Hall sick to their stomachs! That's
right, they're gonna pay a thousand
dollars a ticket and you're gonna
make them throw up on their gowns
and tuxedos!
Carlos senses a presence and turns to see Roberta. A tense
beat as he awaits her reaction.
ROBERTA
(in all seriousness)
If you're gonna imitate me, do it
right.
(corrects his posture)
Shoulders back. Violin higher. Check
your feet. There.
(beat)
G'head, Carlos. Continue.
Carlos freezes.
CARLOS
No, that's O.K. You can take it from
here.
Roberta nods, and addresses the kids as she unlocks the gate.
ROBERTA
He's right, by the way. You do sound
terrible, and you are gonna make
everyone in Carnegie Hall sick to
their stomachs.
The kids start filing in. Rachel comes up the street and
catches up to Roberta.
RACHEL
I need to talk to you.
Roberta sees how distressed Rachel looks.
ROBERTA
(to kids)
I'll be right in. Start on Minuet
One.
(to Rachel)
What's wrong?
RACHEL
We're moving away.
ROBERTA
What? Where are you moving?
RACHEL
(looking downward)
It's a secret... My father... he's
been hurting my mom... We have to
leave.
ROBERTA
(gently)
Has he been hurting you too?
Rachel shakes her head no, then starts to cry a little.
RACHEL
I'm sorry about Julliard... and the
concert.
She hands Roberta her violin.
ROBERTA
Keep it. Take it with you.
RACHEL
No... I don't want to play anymore.
ROBERTA
What?! You can't give up violin,
Rachel -- it's a part of you. A very
important part.
Rachel looks anguished. Roberta moves closer and touches her
arm.
ROBERTA
Please honey. Just take it.
RACHEL
I don't want to.
Roberta looks at her, pained, then hugs her. Rachel quickly
kisses Roberta goodbye and exits. Roberta watches her.
INT. CPE 1 - MUSIC ROOM - A LITTLE LATER
Roberta leads De Sean, Naeem, Guadalupe, Lucy, Stephanie,
Thomas, Carlos, Erica and Nicholas in the Bach Double
Concerto. The other kids watch. Roberta's on the edge of
hysteria. She signals the players to stop.
ROBERTA
No, no, no! Accent the up bow after
the slurred notes and then it'll get
you off of those slurred notes! You
Double Concerto kids need to be
working harder! This is the grand
finale of the concert! You're each
gonna be sharing a music stand with
one of the world's greatest
violinists!
The kids say "the world's greatest violinists" along with
her -- they've obviously been hearing this a lot. Roberta
glares at them.
ROBERTA
I think we should forget the Bach
Double.
(to the other kids)
And you guys are never gonna get
Minuet One. I think we should drop
that too.
VANESSA
No! We can do it, Roberta!
CARLOS
And we'll get the Bach Double. We
will.
She stops, takes a breath.
NAEEM
It's gonna be O.K., Roberta.
ROBERTA
(vulnerable)
You think?
All the kids nod. A few beats.
ROBERTA
O.K...
(not believing it)
It's gonna be O.K.
She crosses to take a look at her music, and the kids exchange
looks that say, "Oh shit. What did we just promise?"
REHEARSAL MONTAGE - SERIES OF SHOTS - DAY
1. Carlos practices violin against the fence around River
East School. In the b. g., his buddies make fun of him.
2. Shandra practices in a school stairwell, ignoring a boy
who pulls one of her braids as he passes by.
3. Stephanie practices at a bus stop, her eyes closed, then
looks up and realizes she's just missed her bus.
4. Ramon practices in his living room, his father watching
attentively, then helping him lift the violin higher.
5. Vanessa practices in a crowded school hallway, frustrated
as kids keep bumping into her.
6. Roberta, in her nightgown, practices in front of her
refrigerator in the middle of the night.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - DAY (LATE AFTERNOON)
Pandemonium. Nick and Lexi, both in tuxes, are doing several
tasks at once while Roberta, in a simple black velvet dress
and stockinged feet, tries to put on her makeup but keeps
poking her head out of the bathroom, giving orders. Allegra
BARKS outside the back door.
ROBERTA
Nick -- did you feed Allegra?
NICK
(fixing Lexi's tie)
Yes, Mom.
ROBERTA
Lexi, can you make sure the charts
are still in my bag?
LEXI
I already checked, Mom.
ROBERTA (O.S.)
Check again, please. And look for my
repair kit too.
ASSUNTA descends the staircase, dressed in a formal dress.
She holds a small jewelry box and heads for the bathroom.
ASSUNTA
Bert, which earrings you want?
Roberta sticks her head out and picks the earrings. Assunta
enters the small bathroom to work on her own makeup.
ROBERTA
Nick? Get two more violins.
NICK
You've already got two -- how many
emergencies can there be?
A beat.
ROBERTA
Get three more. And make sure a couple
of them are half-size.
Nick rolls his eyes and runs upstairs while Lexi organizes
things by the door: Nick's cello, Roberta's papers, extra
violins. Roberta rushes out of the bathroom, adjusting the
earrings. She starts compulsively straightening the house.
ROBERTA
Lexi -- can you call about the car
again?
LEXI
Mom, they're not gonna forget to
send a car!
Nick comes running down the stairs with the violins and stares
in disbelief at Roberta fluffing a couch pillow.
NICK
What are you doing?
ROBERTA
Just straightening a little.
NICK
You're insane, you know that?
(grabs the pillow)
Finish getting dressed!
He throws the pillow onto the couch. Roberta heads upstairs.
INT. CARLOS' ROOM - DAY
IN THE MIRROR - Carlos adjusts his tuxedo. We see the
reflection of his baseball bat, glove and trophies in the
room behind him.
INT. GUADALUPE'S ROOM - DAY
Guadalupe's mom pins up her braid, then steps back to look
at her daughter, radiant in a floral gown. Her mom starts to
cry.
INT. SHANDRA'S ROOM - DAY
Beverly puts rhinestone-studded barrettes in Shandra's hair.
INT. RAMON'S ROOM - DAY
ON RAMON - He's in a sharp black suit and looks very dapper.
WIDER - Manuelo and Concepcion stand back to admire him,
then Manuelo straightens Ramon's tie, brimming with pride
over his son.
INT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - FRONT ROOM - DAY
ROBERTA (O.S.)
SHIT!
Nick and Assunta look towards the stairs. Roberta comes
running down.
ROBERTA
Can you believe this?
She turns around, revealing a RIP on the back of the dress,
next to the zipper. The DOORBELL RINGS.
ROBERTA
It can't be time! Is it time?
ASSUNTA
I'll sew it in the car.
EXT. ROBERTA'S BROWNSTONE - DAY
Roberta, Assunta and the boys step outside, amazed to see a
STRETCH LIMOUSINE double-parked in front, a CHAUFFEUR waiting.
LEXI
See? I told you they'd send a car.
Roberta's open-mouthed. She leads her entourage towards the
limo. THE NEIGHBORS come out of their houses to watch. Some
lean out windows, gawking. Ad libs... "Who's that?" "It's
the Violin Lady!" LAWRENCE, dressed in a tux, gives Lexi a
high sign.
The chauffeur helps Roberta and Assunta into the limo while
Nick and Lexi start to load the instruments into the trunk.
INT. LIMOUSINE - CONTINUOUS
Roberta sits down beside Assunta and turns around so Assunta
can mend the tear in her dress. Assunta partially unzips the
dress and starts stitching it from the inside.
ROBERTA
Thank you, Mama.
ASSUNTA
Don't worry about it. You rip -- I
sew.
ROBERTA
Not just for that.
(beat)
Thank you for getting me out of bed.
Assunta stitches, remembering, and smiles.
ASSUNTA
Don't thank me -- thank Charles.
ROBERTA
Charles?!
ASSUNTA
If that jerk hadn't of left you,
none of this would've happened.
Roberta contemplates this. A beat.
ROBERTA
Thank you, Charles.
Her last stitch finished, Assunta rips the needle from the
thread.
EXT. CARNEGIE HALL - ESTABLISHING - DUSK
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACK STAGE - NIGHT
The kids and their parents are practically boiling over with
excitement. Last minute kisses, violin tunings, and clothing
adjustments take place throughout the room.
The boys are in suits or tuxes, the girls in velvet or
flowered dresses, some with bows in their hair, some with
their hair up in buns. Roberta tries to take a head count,
Dorothea confers with a stage manager, Assunta fixes a boy's
tie, and Janet helps one girl with her hair, stopping in the
middle to button the back of another girl's dress.
ROBERTA
Where's Vanessa? Has anyone seen
Vanessa?
Janet looks at her, concerned.
JANET
I'll call her house.
ANGLE - Roberta sees MRS. ADISA enter the room with Naeem.
The two women walk towards each other and embrace. As they
start to chat, Roberta suddenly sees someone and excuses
herself: BRIAN is walking towards her, wearing a tux. They
smile at each other, but Roberta's clearly a bit shaken to
see him. They're not quite sure how to greet each other --
he takes her hand, and then kisses her on the cheek.
BRIAN
Congratulations.
ROBERTA
Thank you...
BRIAN
I knew you'd get here sooner or later.
I'm glad I'm here to see it.
A beat.
ROBERTA
I am too.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACKSTAGE WINGS AREA - NIGHT
Guadalupe shyly approaches Itzhak Perlman, her mother behind
her, silently encouraging her.
GUADALUPE
Excuse me, Mr. Perlman?
He turns around.
GUADALUPE
(extends a hand)
I'm Guadalupe. I've wanted to meet
you for a long time.
He smiles at her and they shake hands.
ITZHAK PERLMAN
A pleasure to meet you, Guadalupe.
As Guadalupe introduces him to her mother, CARLOS approaches.
CARLOS
You nervous, Mr. Perlman?
ITZHAK PERLMAN
Should I be?
CARLOS
Us kids are gonna be great -- I don't
know about you guys. How much did
you practice?
Itzhak Perlman laughs.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACK STAGE - NIGHT
Roberta talks to Janet with a worried expression.
ROBERTA
You called Vanessa's father and
mother?
JANET
No answer at either.
A Carnegie Hall staff person in a suit enters.
STAFF PERSON
Half hour call! It's now half hour
call! So pace yourself accordingly.
Don't get more than thirty minutes
worth of nervous!
The room electrifies with nerves.
VANESSA
rushes into the room with her father. She's out of breath,
her stocking has a big run in it, and she's in tears.
VANESSA
They stole the car!
MR. KLEIN
With the violin.
ROBERTA
Oh my God.
(calling)
Nick, Lexi --
NICK
Done.
The boys rush over to the extra violins and look to find the
right size.
VANESSA
(crying)
And then when we were getting a taxi,
I fell down.
Roberta comforts her and Janet moves in.
JANET
C'mon honey -- let's get you cleaned
up.
ANGLE - DAN enters with a bouquet of long-stemmed red roses.
He's in a tux and looks very handsome. He crosses to Roberta,
hands her the flowers, and they hug.
DAN
You're glowing.
ROBERTA
It's terror.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - NIGHT
The hall is filling to capacity as people take their seats,
the room buzzing with voices.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACKSTAGE - NIGHT
The CARNEGIE HALL staff person enters.
STAFF PERSON
FIVE MINUTE CALL. WE NOW HAVE FIVE
MINUTES.
The tension in the room shoots sky high.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - STAGE - PODIUM - NIGHT
Janet stands onstage and addresses the audience.
JANET
When I became the principal of Central
Park East Elementary, I envisioned a
school where children could fulfill
their highest potential, despite the
challenges of poverty and racism.
Ten years ago, Roberta Guaspari walked
into my office because she needed a
job, and because she had a vision
that any child could learn the violin.
We put our dreams together and created
the East Harlem Violin Program which
has helped more than a thousand
students expand their vision of what's
possible in their lives. When a
program like this is cut, our
children's future is compromised. I
want to thank you for your support.
Enjoy the concert.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACKSTAGE - NIGHT
In the b.g. we hear the audience APPLAUDING Janet. Roberta
holds up her hands to quiet down the anxious students.
ROBERTA
Everyone -- attention please!
They become quiet.
ROBERTA
I want you all to take a second just
to breathe, O.K.? Deep breath.
The kids breathe.
ROBERTA
I would like you all to play with
your heart, all right? Play like I
know you can play. You'll be
wonderful. Watch me, don't look out
in the audience -- you don't need to
be afraid. It's gonna be really
wonderful. So play -- play from here.
She pats her heart.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACKSTAGE CORRIDOR - NIGHT
The kids head out towards the stage, the APPLAUSE getting
louder as they get closer.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - STAGE - NIGHT
CRANE SHOT of the children on stage, in their positions.
REVERSE SHOT - FOUR FILLED BALCONIES
BACK TO THE STAGE
Some of the kids look awestruck by the audience; one subtly
waves hi to her family. Roberta walks out to APPLAUSE. She
bows to the audience, turns to the kids, signals them with a
slight nod and the BACH MINUET ONE begins. We've heard it in
all phases, and now it is flawless.
PAN the STUDENTS watching her: VANESSA, wearing a corsage;
SIMON in his red bow tie; SHANDRA in black velvet with pearls;
NAEEM standing proud and tall, DE SEAN in dreadlocks and a
tux; RAMON playing from his heart...
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACK STAGE - CONTINUOUS
Isaac Stern, Itzhak Perlman, Michael Tree, Arnold Steinhardt,
Diane Monroe, Karen Briggs and Mark O'Connor wait back stage,
chatting and listening to the kids.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - THE STAGE - MOMENTS LATER
The students finish MINUET ONE. There's an exquisite moment
of silence, then APPLAUSE.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - THE STAGE - LATER
Country fiddler MARK O'CONNOR plays ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL
with the kids. He improvises, surprising them as his violin
makes the sound of a TRAIN moving through a tunnel.
RAMON smiles, awed by this -- but he remains calm and
professional.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - BACK STAGE CORRIDOR - LATER
As the guest violinists head for the stage, we hear their
names over a mike, mixed with APPLAUSE:
MALE VOICE (V.O.)
Isaac Stern, Itzhak Perlman, Arnold
Steinhardt, Diane Monroe, Michael
Tree, Mark O'Connor and Karen Briggs.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - STAGE - MOMENTS LATER
CRANE SHOT of the six guest violinists on stage for the Grand
Finale, each one sharing a music stand with a student. Roberta
nods, and they begin THE BACH DOUBLE CONCERTO. She turns to
face the audience as she joins them.
MOVE IN AND PAN the performers and students: NAAEM shares a
stand with ARNOLD STEINHARDT; ISAAC STERN stands and plays
with GUADALUPE, sitting beside him; ITZHAK PERLMAN sits and
plays next to CARLOS, standing beside him; MICHAEL TREE plays
beside DE SEAN; DIANE MONROE plays beside LUCY; KAREN BRIGGS
plays beside THOMAS, and MARK O'CONNOR plays beside STEPHANIE.
NICK plays cello; LEXI plays the piano behind them; and,
playing with her own solo music stand, ROBERTA.
Their expressions are serious and passionate, broken by
occasional smiles lighting on faces: Isaac Stern... Lucy...
Carlos... Itzhak Perlman... Diane Monroe... De Sean.
The song finishes and the APPLAUSE begins. The OTHER
FIDDLEFEST PLAYERS come out from back stage, RAMON in front,
and join the rest. More applause. The CAMERA PULLS BACK TO
INCLUDE the audience facing the stage, then REVERSES to show
the audience standing in the orchestra and balconies.
We see the students' PARENTS; JANET, ISABEL and their
families; ASSUNTA, LAWRENCE and DOROTHEA; DAN; CONCEPCION,
MANUELO and their sons; BRIAN; and DENNIS -- even he can't
stop himself from applauding.
BACK AGAIN to the stage where the students and guest
violinists bow... and MOVE IN CLOSER on ROBERTA in her moment
of triumph.
INT. CARNEGIE HALL - STAGE - PODIUM - MOMENTS LATER
Roberta addresses the audience. Her voice is strong but softer
around the edges; she is a woman in a state of grace.
ROBERTA
We're all here tonight because we
have a bigger mission: to take the
magical spirit of tonight's concert
with us out into the world, and to
fight for music and art to be a part
of every child's education. Thank
you.
The APPLAUSE is DEAFENING, then slowly diminishes as we:
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. CPE 1 - MUSIC CLASSROOM - DAY
Roberta addresses ten first-graders sitting in a circle on
the floor. She points to the horsehair on her bow.
ROBERTA
And this? What's this?
BOY
The frog hair?
Roberta and the kids laugh.
ROBERTA
Did you ever see a frog with hair?
The boy smiles and shakes his head.
A FEW KIDS
It's horsehair!
ROBERTA
That's right.
(to the boy)
But you're right, there is a frog.
Can you show me where it is?
One girl raises her hand with urgency.
GIRL
Ooh! I know!
ROBERTA
Sssh -- let him answer.
The boy points to the frog of the bow and Roberta smiles.
And as she continues her lesson, her voice recedes and we:
FADE OUT:
THE END
CRAWL:
Roberta Guaspari lives in East Harlem with her daughter Sofia,
whom she adopted from El Salvador. Nick is a professional
cellist in a graduate music program, and Alexi has been
accepted to medical school.
Roberta teaches violin to approximately 150 students a year
in three East Harlem elementary schools. The East Harlem
Violin Program, however, is still not funded by the New York
City Board of Education.
The money raised from Fiddlefest supported Roberta's violin
program for three years. Roberta and Opus 118 continue their
fundraising efforts to keep the program alive.
| Music of the Heart
Writers : Pamela Gray
Genres : Drama
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