The car pulled up in the driveway, and Mrs Jones and her son, Graeme, got out. Mr Jones looked up from inside the house and put down his newspaper.
"So, how did the audition go?" he asked once they'd entered.
"Weird," said Graeme. "It went really, really, weird."
"Oh, shush," said his mother. "It went great."
"Hmmm, I dunno about that."
"So did you get the part or didn't you?" asked his dad.
"Yeah, I did."
"Are we talking Mercutio, Tybald...?"
"No," said Graeme, "no I got the lead role, I got Romeo."
"All right," said his dad, "well I'm really struggling to understand the mixed feelings here."
"Did Mum tell you she was auditioning too?"
"Well, I told her she should," said his dad. "She was a great actor back in the day. She probably would've made it big if she hadn't gotten pregnant."
"Yep," said Graeme. "I'm acquainted with the story of how my existence ruined Mum's career."
His mum laughed. "It's not like that!"
"So what role did you get?" asked Mr Jones. "The nurse? Juliet's mum? Oooh, Romeo's mum? That'd be easy to get into character for."
"Well, she did initially go for the nurse role," said Graeme.
"It was as good as mine, too," she said.
"Yeah, but then she decided to go for more of a lead role."
"Well, the nurse is a pretty prominent role," said his dad.
"Yep. Pretty prominent. Would've been an excellent role."
His mum shrugged. "The other lady going for the nurse role was pretty good too, so I didn't mind giving up that role. On the other hand, the girls going for the Juliet role, well, they were rubbish."
"Oh," said Mr Jones. "You didn't...?"
"Yep," said Graeme. "She tried out for Juliet."
"Well, all right," said his dad. "I always say that your mother still outshines all those young things."
"Oh, stop," she said, although her tone of voice indicated that she was totally fine for him to continue flattering her. "The real reason I got chosen over the younger actresses is entirely down to knowledge of the material."
"That and the current front-runner was just not a good actress," said Graeme.
"See? If it weren't for me you'd have been acting opposite a decidedly mediocre Juliet."
Graeme shrugged. "At least she was younger. Not too many productions of Romeo and Juliet have Juliet be a woman in her forties."
"Well no," said Mr Jones, "historically they'd have men."
"In the text she's fourteen," said Mrs Jones, "would that be better?"
"No, that'd be creepy as hell."
"See? This isn't so bad."
Graeme shrugged. "Having to kiss my mum on stage is kinda weird."
"You wouldn't just do a stage kiss?" asked Mr Jones.
"Not with this director," said Mrs Jones.
"Yeah, he'd need it to be believable," said Graeme. "I'm not sure if I can."
His dad raised an eyebrow. "Thought you were an actor. As an actor, especially if you go for lead roles, you're gonna have to kiss some people you might not usually choose to kiss."
"Trust me," said his mum, "I have kissed my fair share of people I did not want to kiss, in my time. Once you're in character it's fine. You've just gotta get comfortable with each other."
"Sure," said Graeme. "Easy."
"You should try it now," said his dad.
"Come on, in front of you?"
"You're going to have to kiss in front of a full house, and I plan to go to at least one of your shows."
"He's got a point," said Mrs Jones.
Graeme sighed. "You're sure?"
She smiled. "Yeah! Come on and kiss me, Romeo."
He stepped forward and quickly gave her a peck on the lips.
"Wow," said his dad. "Such passion. I can see how you couldn't possibly live without her after a passionate kiss like that."
"Yeah all right, no need to be sarcastic."
"He's right though," said his mum. "The director's not going to be happy with that."
"Right," said Graeme. He took a deep breath, stepped forward, put one side around his mother's waist and the other to her face, then pulled her in and kissed her deeply on the lips.
"Well, it's better than it was," said his dad.
"Could still be better," said his mum. "We'll need to keep working on that. There's that bedroom scene to worry about, too."
"Oh god, that," said Graeme.
His dad raised an eyebrow. "Sounds spicy!"
"Oh no, not like that," said Graeme.
"It's not that kind of play," said his mum. "It's more a bit of passionate kissing on a bed in shadows before the curtain falls."