John Shévin Foster

Scripts

Plenty of Time

by John Shévin Foster

Synopsis

What happens when a spoiled, southern debutant and a Black Panther fall in love?

It is 1968. Character’s Corey and Christina meet in Oak Bluffs—a black section of Martha’s Vineyard. Christina is 17 years old and from an upper class family. Corey is 22 and a member of the Black Panther Party. Despite their obvious differences they are sexually attracted and share a passionate night together. The next...

What happens when a spoiled, southern debutant and a Black Panther fall in love?

It is 1968. Character’s Corey and Christina meet in Oak Bluffs—a black section of Martha’s Vineyard. Christina is 17 years old and from an upper class family. Corey is 22 and a member of the Black Panther Party. Despite their obvious differences they are sexually attracted and share a passionate night together. The next morning, however, they begin to talk and their conflicting worlds unfold. Over the next forty-three years they meet on the same annual date to continue their – sometimes-illicit – affair. We follow Christina’s life, as she attempts to become a best selling author, and a member of New York Society, and Corey’s, as he enters the world of politics and suffers the joys and pains of fatherhood. Each time they return to the small private beach house, they bring with them their personal growth and experiences, as well as, the effects of ongoing social and political changes in African-American (as well as American) history. “I fell in love with Same Time Next Year as a child, but for years I wanted to see our history unfold in a beautiful love story,” says Foster. “As such, Foster's play is written so as to be uniquely African-American (yet universal) and, while it takes its concept from Slade's play, "Plenty of Time" has its own voice and story,” says oobr.