Waitress interrupts Catherine’s violent confession
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The waitress interrupts Catherine and Joyce's conversation to clear their plates and promote the entertainment and, more specifically, Michael Jackson impersonator that is about to perform, and future Elvis impersonator, shifting the scene's tone to awkward amusement.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Relieved by the interruption but still processing Catherine’s confession. Her sarcasm masks her unease, and her engagement with the waitress is a way to regain control of the conversation and diffuse the tension.
Joyce actively engages with the waitress’s interruption, using it as an opportunity to deflect the emotional intensity of Catherine’s confession. She adopts a sarcastic tone ('What time’s Michael Jackson coming on then?') to signal her discomfort with the raw vulnerability Catherine has just displayed. Her participation in the conversation about the impersonator act is performative, serving to reset the tone and steer the interaction toward something more neutral.
- • To shift the focus away from Catherine’s violent confession and toward a lighter, more neutral topic.
- • To offer Catherine a moment to collect herself without further emotional exposure.
- • That Catherine needs space to process her emotions but also requires a distraction to avoid spiraling further.
- • That humor and sarcasm can be tools to navigate difficult conversations.
Cheerful and oblivious, focused on her duties and the restaurant’s entertainment schedule. She shows no awareness of the tension at the table, treating the interaction as purely transactional.
The waitress interrupts Catherine and Joyce’s conversation to clear their plates, completely unaware of the emotional weight of their exchange. She enthusiastically promotes the upcoming Michael Jackson impersonator act, providing overly detailed (and unconvincing) praise for the performer and past acts like Robbie Williams and Elvis. Her interruption is tone-deaf, serving as a jarring contrast to the seriousness of Catherine’s confession. She is performative, fulfilling her role as a restaurant employee while inadvertently highlighting the disconnect between the characters’ internal struggles and the external world.
- • To clear the plates efficiently and move on to the next task.
- • To promote the restaurant’s entertainment to encourage patronage and a positive dining experience.
- • That her enthusiasm for the impersonator act will be appreciated by the patrons.
- • That the restaurant’s entertainment is a highlight of the dining experience.
Tommy Lee Royce is not physically present in this event but looms over it as the subject of Catherine’s violent …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The plates from Catherine and Joyce’s meal serve as a mundane but symbolically significant prop in this event. The waitress gathers them with a clinking sound that cuts into the emotional intensity of Catherine’s confession, acting as an aural cue for the tonal shift. The plates, now empty and bearing remnants of the meal, represent the physical traces of a shared experience that contrasts sharply with the raw, unspoken tension between the two women. Their removal by the waitress is a literal clearing of the table, mirroring the attempt to ‘clear’ the emotional air—though the weight of Catherine’s confession lingers.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Angeliki Restaurant serves as a neutral yet tonally charged backdrop for this event. The space, filled with patrons and the hum of conversation, contrasts sharply with the private, visceral exchange between Catherine and Joyce. The waitress’s interruption—centered on the restaurant’s entertainment—highlights the disconnect between the characters’ internal struggles and the performative, trivial world around them. The restaurant’s atmosphere, with its lively energy and focus on entertainment, feels alien to Catherine’s emotional state, reinforcing her isolation. The clinking of plates and the waitress’s enthusiastic pitch for the Michael Jackson impersonator act create a jarring dissonance, underscoring the artificiality of the setting.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Catherine confessing her regret at not killing Tommy Lee Royce creates Joyce to joke about the Goran Dragovic murder."
"Catherine confessing her regret at not killing Tommy Lee Royce creates Joyce to joke about the Goran Dragovic murder."
"Catherine confessing her regret at not killing Tommy Lee Royce creates Joyce to joke about the Goran Dragovic murder."
Key Dialogue
"JOYCE: What time’s Michael Jackson coming on then?"
"WAITRESS: Oh, any time now. Sorry, have you been waiting for him? Thing is it takes him half an hour to get ready, with his make-up and his psyching himself up."
"JOYCE: Is he any good?"
"WAITRESS: ((she can’t lie)) You know. But we had Robbie Williams here two weeks ago and he was... all right. And then we’ve got Elvis back again week after next."