

(Sidney’s gift of a gun to Celeste - he’s the brutalizing stranger she’s been getting it on with - seems particularly contrived.)
#Wheres mymoney series#
Indeed, the play seems like a series of independently written tirades awkwardly strung together. The dialogue becomes increasingly shrill and overblown as the scenes grind on eloquent though they may be, the characters are mostly just ill-defined bundles of rage and desperation with no humanizing warmth. That’s a small but typical slice of Shanley’s scabrous writing here. She’s very nice.” “She’s a bag of shit and I have to hold my nose to fuck her,” comes the charming reply. Asked for his opinion of the current Mrs. He appears to be taking out his anger at his first wife on his current one. Cuckolded in his prior marriage, Sidney, too, is haunted by the past. Henry storms out in a huff and heads to the office of his mentor Sidney (David Deblinger), a divorce lawyer with a flagrantly rancid view of modern marriage. Scene two finds the haunted Natalie and her lawyer husband Henry (John Ortiz) at loggerheads over issues mundane (a joint checking account) and supernatural (the ghostly visit) seems Natalie borrowed the $2,700 she spent on her wedding gown from an ex who later died.

On the subject of the slightly handicapped Celeste’s stalled acting career: “How many parts are there for limping girls?” On Celeste’s dud b.f.: “Yes, he’s a loser, but what are you?”īut Natalie’s not as self-assured as she seems, and the scene concludes with her unnerved reaction to the arrival of a man - a ghost, we later learn - who delivers the curt query that gives the play its title. Her imperious friend Natalie (Paula Pizzi) advises her to cut bait on both and get it together. Celeste, played with fragile charm by the unflatteringly attired Yetta Gottesman, reveals that she is working out her dissatisfaction with her deadbeat boyfriend by engaging in a literally bruising sexual liaison with a stranger. Report of receivables from unclaimed money – This page, which is mainly for government agencies, includes a table of how much unclaimed money different federal agencies report.In the opening scene, a mismatched pair of girlfriends exchange their latest news. Reports of unclaimed money – This page has lists of unclaimed money in different categories. Unpaid foreign claims – If you suffered certain, specific types of loss in a foreign country, you may be able to claim money from the U.S. You pay them a "finder's fee" for helping you. If they can match a check in the list they get through FOIA to you, they try to find you and offer to try to collect the money from the agency for you. Here's how they help: They use the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to get information on checks that government agencies (federal, state, and local) issue that have not been cashed. Some companies (also called "locator services") are in the business of helping people get unclaimed money. If you get a letter saying that a company can help you if you pay them This is a legitimate site created by state officials to help people search for funds that may belong to you or your relatives. Courts: Unclaimed funds in bankruptcyĪlso look at is the website of the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators. You may search in these databases for unclaimed money that might be owed to you: If you are not sure about unclaimed money If you are missing a payment, you must go to the agency to have them tell us to issue it again. When the Treasury center that issued the payment learns that the payment can't be delivered or isn't cashed in the allotted time or is returned for another reason, we cancel the payment and return the money to the relevant agency. (For example, if you get a veteran's benefit check every month, the VA tells us to pay it and we issue the payment.) We, the Bureau of the Fiscal Service, issue payments on behalf of many federal agencies. You can find contact information for all federal agencies at We return unused funds to the agencies (For example, the IRS has a link on its website to help you find out about a refund you expected.) The agency should be able to help you figure out the current status of a payment. There is no governmentwide, centralized source for unclaimed money or other assets.

