Vic and Sade Mr. Ruebush's Christmas Present Date: Dec 08 1943

CAST:
ANNOUNCER
SADE
VIC
RUSSELL


NOTE: Bracketed text is crossed out in the original script and presumably did not air.



P&G 'CRISCO'
VIC AND SADE
WMAQ NBC
10:15-10:30 A.M.
DECEMBER 8, 1943
WEDNESDAY

THEME ANNOUNCER: OPENING AND COMMERCIAL CREDITS INTRODUCTION: - Well sir, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gook are in the living-room as we join them at the small house half-way up in the next block now. Our friends are scrutinizing with considerable interest an extremely odd appearing piece of furniture standing beside the davenport. And Sade is saying......... SADE: (SHARPLY) A foot-stool? VIC: Yeah. SADE: You're fooling, ain't ya? VIC: Why should I be fooling? SADE: But...(GIGGLES)...it can't be the kind of a foot-stool a person generally means when they refer to a foot-stool. Is "foot stool" also the name for something else? VIC: (COLDLY) It is a foot-stool, a foot-stool. SADE: (BRIEFLY INQUIRING) Are you mad? VIC: Yes. And disgusted. SADE: You never carried this monstrous big contraption all the way from down town? VIC: Art Williamson hauled it in his car. Didn't you see us out in front? SADE: No. If I had I wouldn't of asked my question. VIC: (SOMEWHAT BITTERLY) Well, -- where'll we hide the half-wit numb-skull foot-stool? SADE: (SHARPLY) "Hide" it? VIC: (COLDLY) I must chew my words like cabbage. I hafta repeat everything. SADE: Oh, ish, Vic. I'm getting tired and cross this afternoon myself. Let's not bicker and..... RUSSELL: (IN KITCHEN) Hi, mom. [In the living-room, are they?] SADE: ...argue and trash. VIC: (RATHER DULLY) Where'll we hide the boss's Christmas present? RUSSELL: (APPROACHING) It's starting to snow out-doors. SADE: (RAISES VOICE, SAYING CASUALLY) Hi, Willie. (TO VIC) Why do we hafta hide it? VIC: (DULLY) I don't know or care. I'm spiritless and uncaring. RUSSELL: (COMING UP) Well, gov, you on deck, too, are they? VIC: (DULLY) Hello, Russell. RUSSELL: It's starting to snow out-doors. VIC: (DULLY) That is remarkable. It'd be still more remarkable, though, if it was starting to snow indoors, wouldn't it? Don't bother answering. RUSSELL: What's this thing? SADE: Foot-stool. RUSSELL: Un-huh, - I see it is. Combination foot-stool and fly-swatter. SADE: (GIGGLES) No, I'm not joking. It's really a foot-stool. Or at least gov claims it is, and he don't act much like he's having fun teasing people. RUSSELL: How would an individual get their feet up on it? SADE: How would they, Vic? VIC: (DULLY) Your ankles fit into these slots there on top. SADE: (DISTASTE) Oh, for mercy sakes. VIC: I am not happy about it either. The sight of those slots you put your ankles in are distasteful to me too. RUSSELL: Who owns the...(CHUCKLES)...foot-stool? SADE: It's the Christmas present the people down at the Plant are giving to Mister Ruebush. RUSSELL: Yeah? SADE: Gov was the fella, ya know, selected to pick out and purchase the Christmas present. RUSSELL: (CHUCKLES) How in heck, gov, did you happen to pick out and purchase this what-cha-ma-funny? VIC: Tell him, Sade, if you like. SADE: I don't know. You never explained it to me. VIC: (DULLY) Who did I explain it to? SADE: Prob'ly Art Williamson while he was hauling you and the foot-stool home here. VIC: (DULLY) Yes, that's prob'ly it. I prob'ly told it to Art while we were riding in the car. I know I told somebody. Yes, it was prob'ly Art I told. You say it isn't you so it must have been Art. Art is no doubt the fella. Good old Art, - he drove me home. He drove me home and I told him about the foot-stool. I told him about the foot-stool while we were coming home in the car. Art is the man and no mistake. SADE: (GIGGLES, BUT SAYS RATHER SHARPLY...) Oh, ish, Vic, you talk like you're out of your head. VIC: (GENTLY) Do I? SADE: Yes. VIC: I am in a state of low nervous tone. I am in a state of foggy perceptions. I am in a state called fuzziness. RUSSELL: You are in a state called Illinois. VIC: (GENTLY) That's right, Russell, I am in a state called Illinois. RUSSELL: Pretty punk joke. VIC: (GENTLY) A very punk joke. I agree with all my heart. A very punk joke. RUSSELL: [Oyster Krecker pulled off a terrible punk joke. "Ever hear the story about the dirty shirt?" he says to Blue-tooth Johnson. "No," says Blue-tooth and then Oyster says..... VIC AND RUSSELL: "That's one on you." RUSSELL: Yeah, one of the oldest, punkest jokes on record. VIC: (DULLY) "We moored our boat and ate our lunch of bacon, bread and peaches. Irene called the police and Harry tore his breeches. 'I am so sick, I am so sick,' poor Wallis cried, and mother got the tonic. The spotted tiger roared at Bill and........." SADE: Oh, cut out the crazy talk. You'll begin to worry me pretty quick.] (CHANGING THE SUBJECT) Do we hafta keep this great big business here in the house till Christmas? VIC: (DULLY) Yes. SADE: (SHARPLY) Why? VIC: Hide it. People always hide Christmas presents. SADE: (SHARPLY) Hey now, listen, we got no space for any monstrous big unwieldy............ VIC: (DULLY) I am so wretched and forlorn over this affair, Doctor Sleetch, I just can't debate with you. SADE: (SHARPLY) Somebody'll sure hafta debate with me. VIC: (DULLY) Yes, indeed. RUSSELL: Hey, how could anybody get their feet 'way up there on that foot-stool? VIC: Your ankles fit into the slots. RUSSELL: No, but I mean how could you even get your ankles up there? If a person sat in an ordinary chair they'd hafta have legs twice as long as ordinary legs to reach 'way up...... VIC: (DULLY) I don't know, Whitehouse honey. Ask mama. RUSSELL: I suppose if an individual sat on a piano or something they could......... VIC: (WITH A FEEBLE EAGERNESS) Yeah, -- on a piano. Let's sit on a piano. Look, you duck up the alley and borrow a piano and bring it back and as soon as it gets dark........ SADE: (SHARPLY) Vic, stop it. I'm not fooling either. VIC: (CHUCKLES HIS NATURAL CHUCKLE) No, but kiddo, the situation is boiling me down to a low gravy. I'm sick and tired of the whole mess. I feel like I wish Christmas and Mister Ruebush and everything else would go jump in the creek. SADE: Explain where this doo-funny come from and why you're saddled with it and.......... VIC: (LITTLE TIRED CHUCKLE) All right. RUSSELL: Oyster Krecker loves to describe how his cousin Lombard.... SADE: (GENTLY) Don't tell about Oyster Krecker and his cousin Lombard, Willie, please. RUSSELL: Um. SADE: Go ahead, Vic. VIC: I was in my office working about two o'clock this afternoon and I got a telephone call from Earl Morrison. He said he was down in Buttleman's Furniture-repair shop there on Center street with Ike Kneesuffer. "Gook," he says, "have you done anything yet about the boss's Christmas present from the factory personnel?" I said, "No." He said, "I think I've happened on the very thing, - dandy elaborate foot-stool. And it's priced at exactly the amount we've got to spend." Well, thunder, I jumped at the chance. See, I've been worrying about this nuisance of a chore they hung on me. I clutched at it like a drowning man clutching at a straw. "For Pete's sake, buy it," I said, "buy it and pay for it and I'll drop past later and pick it up." SADE: And this is the dandy elaborate foot-stool? VIC: (DEJECTEDLY) This is the dandy elaborate foot-stool. RUSSELL: No, but a man would hafta be seven or eight feet high to.... SADE: (AN IDEA) Earl and Ike are playing a joke on you, Vic. VIC: (SADLY) No, apparently not. I stopped in at the furniture repair shop and talked with the old guy in there and he said he'd been paid for the foot-stool and Earl Morrison had the receipt and he had instructions to hand it over on demand to a Mister Gook and....... SADE: Well, didn't your eyes pop out of your head when you saw this hideous funny-ma-doodle? VIC: (SADLY) Yes. RUSSELL: Did you ask the old guy how the foot-stool worked? VIC: Yes. He showed me the notches up at the top and explained they were to accommodate your ankles. RUSSELL: Didn't you inquire how in heck you'd get your ankles up to the slots? VIC: (SADLY) No. I was sick at heart. Sick at heart and weary. RUSSELL: [What's this gadget here with the hook on it? VIC: To hang a sign on. You get a sign and you hang your sign on that hook. SADE: (SHARPLY) What kind of a sign? VIC: (BACK TO HIS SLUGGISHNESS AGAIN) A little oblong sign, I guess. SADE AND RUSSELL: What's it say on the sign? VIC: (DULLY) It makes my head hurt when everybody talks at once. You talk, Sadie. What was the question? SADE: What do you say on your sign you hang on that hook? VIC: (SHOULDER SHRUG) "Keep Out" - "No Smoking" - "Smile, Darn Ya, Smile" - "If You Can Read This You're Too Darn Close" - "Get Off the Grass" - "In Conference" - "Oh You Kid" - "Where'd you Get them Big Blue Eyes" - "Girlie, How about a Ride on the Merry-Go-Round and A sack of pop.......... SADE: (RATHER SHARPLY) Oh, ish. VIC: (RATHER SHARPLY) I don't know what you'd have on a lame-brain sign you hang on a foot-stool. Your guess is as good as mine. RUSSELL: Why didn't you ask the fella in the furniture store? VIC: Because I was weary and uncaring and sick at heart. RUSSEL: Didn't you even inquire how a person could get their feet up on the foot-stool? VIC: No. I was weary and uncaring and sick at heart.] RUSSELL: I don't see how anybody could get their feet up on the nit-wit foot-stool. VIC: (SLUGGISHLY) They sit on a piano somebody told me. RUSSELL: I told you. VIC: (GENTLY) Oh, was it you? Thanks. SADE: The furniture man give you the thing and you marched out with it, huh? VIC: The furniture man give me the thing and I marched out with it weary, uncaring and sick at heart. RUSSELL: Looks awful heavy. VIC: It is awful heavy. I was walking along the street tired and out of breath from my exertions and Art Williamson honked his horn and pulled up to the curbing and offered to give me a lift home. I accepted gratefully and as we rode along he told me I'd hafta sit on a piano to get my feet up on the foot-stool. RUSSELL: (SHARPLY) I told you that. VIC: (SLUGGISHLY) Oh sure you did. It was you told me, not Art. Thanks. I hope Mr. Ruebush owns a piano. Otherwise his foot-stool will be a useless pitiful burden rather than the perfect shining thing we loyal, affectionate, generous employees intended to....... SADE: (SHARPLY) Why did you bring it home? VIC: (SLUGGISHLY) Huh? SADE: (SHARPLY) Oh, straighten up and quit acting silly. Why did you bring the foot-stool home? VIC: (SADLY) Your question makes my head hurt. Where would you have me take it? Peoria? Sweet Esther Wisconsin, Boo Kentucky, Dismal Seepage, [Ohio, Grovelman South Carolina, Yella Jump North Dakota, East Brain Oregon, Sick River Junction Pennsylvania...] SADE: (SHARPLY) Take it to the Plant? VIC: (SLUGGISH) Huh? SADE: (SHARPLY) The Plant. Why didn't you take it to the Plant? VIC: It is the boss's Christmas present. I would of taken a chance on his seeing it. And wouldn't that be disastrous? His heart would most likely break if he saw his present ahead of Christmas. SADE: (SHARPLY) Is it gonna be here till Christmas? VIC: (GENTLY) Where else? SADE: (SHARPLY) You mean it'll be underfoot for everybody to stumble over and trip over and........ VIC: I am in charge of Mr. Ruebush's Christmas present. It is up to me to be responsible for......... SADE: (SHARPLY) No. VIC: (RATHER SLUGGISHLY) No? SADE: (SHARPLY) I'm not going to have any big old unwieldy cumbersome step-ladder-looking doo-funny around underfoot for everybody to trip and stumble over and..... VIC: It'll be hidden. SADE: Hidden where? VIC: In the house some place. SADE: (SHARPLY) Why will it be hidden? VIC: Christmas presents are always hidden. It's an unwritten law. SADE: Who's it going to be hidden from? VIC: Mister Ruebush. SADE: He hasn't been in this house but twice in his life. VIC: (WEARILY) Well, thunder, I don't know. All I know is I'm weary and uncaring and sick at heart. SADE: (SHARPLY) That great big Plant down there with storage space galore and room to accommodate eight elephants and you hafta bring home a......... VIC: (SADLY) Please, Sadie. Have mercy on a poor wretch. SADE: No, but why are we constantly in situations where....(SHARPLY) What ails you, Russell? RUSSELL: (STRAINING) I'm trying to estimate how tall an individual would hafta be to fit his ankles in those slots. SADE: (BRIEFLY) Get up off the floor. RUSSELL: I'd say an individual would hafta be at least seven feet. SADE: (TO VIC) No, there's that enormous great big Plant down there with space enough to hide forty-nine steam-engines and you hafta.... VIC: (SADLY) Let's not talk about it any more today, Sadie. I am too weak and battered and buffeted by Life. Let's talk about it later on. SADE: Um. RUSSELL: (BRIEF PAUSE) Oyster Krecker dearly loves to reduce his warm personal friends to twisted hysterical lumps of screaming uncontrollable laughter by describing how..... VIC: (GENTLY) Tell me about Oyster Krecker another day, Russell honey. RUSSELL: (LITTLE CHUCKLE) O. K. VIC: (AFTER A PAUSE, THOUGHTFULLY AND ALMOST TO HIMSELF) There stands the boss's Christmas present. It is a dandy elaborate foot-stool with slots to put your ankles in. In order to use this dandy elaborate foot-stool, one must sit on a piano. SADE: (AFTER A PAUSE) What you going to do now? VIC: (GENTLY AND SADLY) Lay down. SADE: Um. VIC: (GENTLY AND SADLY) Yes, I am going to lay down. I wonder if you'd leave me alone, please, - both of you, -- thanks. END OF SCRIPT