WILLIAM AND THE SEA PEOPLE
• contains references
to : Peter Pan, Robinson Crusoe and Treasure Island.
• William doesn’t find the small objects in the game, vital for winning.
small things can make between FAILURE AND SUCCESS.
Scene 1: The Beach
William plays a video game : an old game called “William and the Sea People”.
He wants to go to the aquarium with his friend Jenny.
William tries to play but loses and says that it is stupid.
The computer talks to him and says that he can stay at the bottom of the sea.
Scene 2: The Bottom of the Sea
William is chained to an anchor. Neptune and Ondine tell William that Jennifer is a prisoner of Captain Hook . He has to free Jenny if he wants to be free
The Genie will help him.
Scene 3: The Desert Island
William is free and sees
Robinson Crusoe and Sunday They tell William he can’t stop playing because he must free Jenny
Robinson gives William a bottle with a parchment :
“In the Coral Reef find a Key.
On the Pirates’ Ship find a Map.
In the Siren’s Cave find a Compass.”
William puts the parchment on the floor. He sees the Genie: now he has three wishes.
Scene 4: The Coral Reef
Fish of all types swim. William wears a snorkel, mask and flippers. He finds an oyster shell which contains the key!
William tells the second wish:
Scene 5: The Pirates’ Ship
William arrives in the port and watches Captain Hook and Smee.
Hook gives Smee the Treasure Map. Smee puts the map under his hat. Hook asks Smee for the key, but Smee can’t find it.
William wants the Treasure Map.
Smee thinks the key must be in the sea.
William takes Smee’s hat, Smee jumps into the sea, and William takes the map.William calls the Genie for the last wish.
Scene 6: The Siren’s Cave
William and the Genie see the Siren.
William asks her if she has the compass. She says yes.
The Siren says that we must listen and ask for help.
William finishes his wishes.
Scene 7: The Voyage
William is alone in the Treasure Island. With the map and compass
Scene 8: Treasure Island
William arrives but Jennifer is no there. Hook says that William has something: the key! William denies so Hook asks the audience and the audience shouts back “NO!”. If he gives him the key he will free Jennifer.
So William gives him the key, but Jennifer is with the sharks.
William fights Hook. Jennifer arrives and takes Hook’s sword and forces Hook until he falls into the sea.
William is the first person to reach level eight. Using the Treasure Map they find the treasure chest and open it with the key.
It is full of jewellery and coins.
The voice of the computer announces that William won the game.
Scene 9: The Beach
William is on the beach. His father arrives looking for the book: “Robinson Crusoe”.
Scene 10: The Aquarium
William is with Jenny at the aquarium. Jenny
is happy with the gift. She goes in the next room and sees the sharks. William looks and for a moment
thinks he can see Hook’s face among them.
Background notes
The Characters
Several characters are from classic British fiction (Hook, Robinson
Crusoe) or from mythology and fable (Neptune, Ondine, Genie,
Siren).
Captain Hook
Hook is the famous villain from the classic children’s story, Peter
Pan, written by James Barrie (1860-1937). James Barrie, was a
Scottish dramatist and novelist (recently played by Johnny Depp
in the film “Finding Neverland”), whose works, both theatrical and
non-theatrical, stress his personal ironic view of life as a romantic
adventure.
The first performance of Barrie’s now world-famous fairy-tale play,
Peter Pan was in 1904. In this fantasy, Barrie dealt with his two
favourite themes, the retention of childish innocence and what he
conceived to be the feminine instinct for motherhood.
Robinson Crusoe
Daniel Defoe, (1660-1731), was an English novelist and journalist,
whose work reflects his diverse experiences in many countries and
in many walks of life.
Defoe’s first and most famous novel, The Life and Strange Surpriz-
ing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner, appeared in
1719, when he was almost 60 years old. The book is commonly
known as Robinson Crusoe. A fictional tale of a shipwrecked sailor,
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it was based on the adventures of a seaman, Alexander Selkirk, who
had been marooned on one of the Juan Fernández Islands off the
coast of Chile, now called Isla Róbinson Crusoe.
Robinson Crusoe is a story of adventure and ingenuity, and also a
travel narrative in which the hero journeys to Africa, Brazil, China,
and Siberia, and then is shipwrecked on a deserted island. But to
view the novel as simply a fascinating travelogue is to ignore much
of what makes it valuable and interesting to modern readers.
Throughout the narrative, Defoe details an individual’s struggle to
survive in basically hostile surroundings. As part of his day-to-day
existence, Robinson Crusoe faces starvation, illness, pain, possible
insanity, even danger from cannibals. Through ingenuity, hard work,
and common sense, he improvises many of the comforts to which he
was accustomed in England. Crusoe never broods about his isola-
tion; rather he occupies his time productively and triumphs over his
unpromising environment, thus becoming an example of the triumph
of the human spirit.
The novel has become one of the classics of children’s literature.
Defoe authored only one novel for young people. He is recognized
today as an important figure in the development of the novel, and as
a master of narrative realism.
Neptune
Neptune, in Roman mythology, is the god of the sea, son of the god
Saturn, and brother of Jupiter, king of the gods. Originally a god of
springs and streams, he became identified with the Greek god of the
sea, Poseidon.
Ondine
Ondine was a water nymph in German mythology. She was very
beautiful and (like all nymphs) immortal. The only threat to a
nymph’s eternal happiness is if she falls in love with a mortal and
bears his child - she will lose her gift of everlasting life.
Genie
In Western fiction, after the Aladdin tale in the Western version of
The Book of One Thousand and One Nights, genies typically come
from small oil lamps and grant three wishes to the person who
rubbed the lamp to release the genie while more mischievous ones
take advantage of poorly worded wishes. Alternately, they may grant
a single wish per day.
The word was first used in English as “geny” to mean a guardian
spirit, with the first recorded use in 1655. The word came from the
French genie, which in turn came from the original Latin word gen-
ius, for a spirit.
Siren
The Siren was a sea nymph in Greek mythology, sometimes de-
scribed as having the body of a bird and the head of a woman or like
mermaids: half woman, half fish. The Sirens are the daughters of a
sea god. The Sirens had such sweet voices that sailors who heard
their songs were lured into grounding their boats on the rocks on
which the nymphs sang. A similarity exists between the stories con-
cerning mermaids and those told about the Sirens, though mermaids
originate in different legends
Objects and Places
Many tales of the sea, pirates and desert islands have introduced
phrases into the language. The popularity of such tales, in fact we
are continuing to add to these tales with stories such as Finding
Nemo.
Treasure Island
Robert Louis Stevenson was born in 1850, in Edinburgh, Scotland,
the only child of a prosperous, middle-class family. Stevenson was
forced to ask his parents for money to supplement the meagre in-
come from his writing efforts.
During a cold, wet summer in Scotland in 1881, Stevenson drew a
treasure map for his stepson — thus originating the world of Treas-
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ure Island. Stevenson set to work creating a story to accompany the
map, and published the novel in 1883. Treasure Island is a swiftly
paced story of a search for buried gold and evil pirates.
Stevenson later settled in the British health resort of Bournemouth,
where he wrote Kidnapped and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, both of
which were published in 1886.
Although Stevenson’s reputation has declined since his death, he
is still recognized as a master storyteller, and Treasure Island and
Kidnapped remain among the most popular adventure stories of all
time for young readers.
Pirates
Piracy is the crime of robbery on the high seas committed by the
captain or crew of a ship outside the normal jurisdiction of any na-
tion, and without authority from any government. The persons who
engage in acts of piracy are called pirates. Pirates are regarded as
common enemies of all people. In that nations have an equal inter-
est in their apprehension and punishment; pirates may be lawfully
captured on the high seas by the armed vessels of any state and
brought within its territorial jurisdiction for trial in its tribunals.
In municipal law, the term piracy has been extended to cover crimes
other than those defined above, such as the illegal copying of CDs
and DVDs.
Coral Reef
A Coral Reef is a ridge or elevated part of a relatively shallow area of
the seafloor, approaching the sea’s surface. It is formed by a rocklike
accumulation of calcium-containing skeletons of coral animals, red
algae, and molluscs. Built up layer by layer by living corals growing
on top of the skeletons of past generations, coral reefs grow upward
at rates of 1 to 20 cm per year. Coral reefs are tropical, forming only
where surface waters are never cooler than 20° C.