Libretto for "Il Destino del Grant Application",
by Giuseppe Linguini 

Cast (in order of vocal appearance) 

Alfredo, a professor ..................................... Baritone 

Wu Li, a post-doc ....................................... Tenor 

Kathy, another post-doc .............................. Alto 

Nicolette, Alfredo's secretary ...................... Soprano 

Adriana, Alfredo's wife ................................ Soprano 

Bubba, Alfredo's son .................................... Tenor 

Julieta, Alfredo's daughter ........................... Soprano 

Stephano, Senior Research Administrator ..... Bass 

Erminio, another professor............................ Bass

 

 Act I, Alfredo's Office:  The curtain rises showing Alfredo sitting in his office with two  post-docs, working on a manuscript which has been rejected by Nature.  In a dramatic opening aria, they lament the fact that the reviewers  found the manuscript unexciting ("I reviewers sono molto stupidi").  Nicolette, the secretary arrives with a box of NIH grant applications  for Alfredo to review. Alfredo opens it, and finding only 12 grant  applications, rejoices. He is joined by the two post-docs and the  secretary in a quartet in which they sing of the virtues of having to  review only 12 applications ("Il lighto loado"). Their happiness soon  turns to sorrow when Alfredo discovers a note indicating that he is  primary reviewer on an additional 18 applications which will arrive at a  later date ("Il grande boxo di granti"). The four lament the twist of  fate, Murphy's law, and the Peter Principle. Alfredo, realizing that he  will have no time to spend with his lab group or family for the next 6  weeks, sadly departs for home carrying the box of applications.

 

 Act II - Scene 1, Alfredo's office:  One month later, Alfredo is still hard at work on the applications,  having completed only 4, and these were the short R15 applications.  He  sings a sad aria, reflecting on the fact that the Senior Research  Administrator wants the triage list the next day ("Il listo e crappo").  Nicolette enters with an envelope from NIH. Alfredo, thinking it  contains yet another supplement, tosses it onto a pile, and tries to  find his place in the application he was reading. Just then, Wu Li  enters with some important data that needs to be published immediately,  before the competitors beat them to it. They sing a duet ("La  publicazione o il scoopo") in which Alfredo laments that he has no time  to help write the manuscript as he really must get through 26 more  applications before the meeting next week. Wu Li leaves, and Alfredo  returns to the grant application, only to be interrupted by Kathy. She  is distraught that she hasn't got a raise in the two years since she has  been with Alfredo. He promises her a large raise if his own application  is funded, explaining that he is waiting for the summary statement ("Il  sheeto pinko"). After their duet, Kathy leaves and Alfredo returns once  again to the application.

 Within a minute, he jumps out of his seat and grabs the envelope he  hastily tossed onto his desk, realizing that it is the long-awaited  summary statement ("La posta junko e il sheeto pinko"). Trembling,  Alfredo tears open the envelope and lets out a cry upon seeing the  score, which is clearly not in the fundable range. He sings a moving  aria lamenting the lack of sufficient funding for basic science ("Mio  granto e finito"). Unable to concentrate anymore, Alfredo goes home.

 

 Act II - Scene 2, Alfredo's home:  Later that night, Alfredo arrives home. His wife and children are  ecstatic that Alfredo has come home before they have gone to sleep.  However, their happiness is shortlived as they learn the reason for his  surprise homecoming. His family is not sympathetic to the fact that  only a small number of people actually get their grant applications  funded, and are upset that Alfredo's application was only considered  excellent' ("Papa e un nincompoopo"). Disheartened, Alfredo sits down  at his desk and begins to read an application. However, just as at  work, he can't read for more than a minute until his children or wife  interrupt him for something.

 This continues for a couple of hours, at which point Alfredo has nearly  finished reading an entire page of the application, but unfortunately  falls asleep before getting to the next page.

 

 Act III, A Holiday Inn in Valhalla, home of the Gods and Goddesses of  NIH:  The scene opens to reveal a large table surrounded by serious looking  men and women. Alfredo is among the mortals, who have been invited to  Valhalla to decide the fate of 137 grant applications. At the side of  the room are the Gods and Goddesses of NIH, the program officers of the  various agencies, dressed in white tunics. They are feeding from a  large tray of grapes, and drinking decaf coffee. Stephano, the Senior  Research Administrator begins the meeting with a hour-long aria about  the grant review process and the need for confidentiality ("Non asko,  non tello"). The first grant application to be reviewed is one with  Alfredo as the primary reviewer. Alfredo likes this grant application  since it describes an imaginative series of experiments that concern an  important but not well-studied biological question ("Se succeede, e il  Nobelo Prizo"). Furthermore, this application described all of the key  points in a single page; the limit of Alfredo's attention span with all  of the interruptions he gets. His enthusiasm is countered by the other  reviewer in what is probably the most famous aria of the opera ("Non  hypothesiso, non preliminary dato"). Other reviewers join in with other  comments regarding the lack of independence of the applicant, the lack  of feasibility studies, and the general observation that the area must  not be very important or else others would be working on it. Finally,  the Grants Technical Assistant rises and joins in the singing ("Givmi il  floppi disko"). Everybody in the room finally joins in except for the  Gods and Goddesses, who have moved from the tray of grapes to a large  table filled with melon balls, which they eat with toothpicks, and a man  in a Holiday Inn uniform who is restocking the toothpicks. As it is  clear that no new comments have been made for at least 45 minutes, a  vote is finally called for, and in a dramatic moment, Alfredo sings out  "1.0", while the other reviewers vote for a worse score ("Il granto e  non-competitivo"), finally arriving at a consensus of 2.0. During the  aria discussing the score, the man in a Holiday Inn uniform becomes  noticeably distressed and begins consuming vast quantities of coffee,  until he collapses just as the aria ends. One of the NIH Godesses  identifies the man as Erminio, the applicant of the grant that just went  down the tubes. Even though Erminio is fatally poisoned, he is still  able to sing a moving aria reflecting on the weaknesses of the current  grant review system ("Il reviewers e screwed-uppo"). The opera ends  with the reviewers placing Erminio's lifeless body in the boxes that  hold the discarded grant applications, and covering him with glossy  photos of his data. As the curtain is being slowly lowered, one of the  reviewers comments that it's a good thing the application wasn't given a  really bad score, or who knows what the applicant would have done.

 

Daniel Dagan PhD Bernard Katz Minerva Center Cell Biophysics POB 9697 Haifa 31096 Israel Tel: 972-4-8295266 Fax: 972-4-8533153