- When Skip sees an identical twin in the street, his life changes forever. Soon his alter-ego starts to appear at his house, his office, his hang-out. His girlfriend and sister begin to think the twin is Skip, as he become less and less relevant to his own life. When the twin invades Skip's final hideout, a confrontation erupts to deal with one too many. Two Many. Beware the face in the crowd.—Anonymous
- On a sunny day in Washington DC, Skip (Nello DeBlasio, Small Fish Small Pond) is on his way to a local gallery hangout. When he sees an identical twin in the street, his life to that moment changes forever. Obsessed with his doppelganger, Skip spies from afar, trying to formulate a safe approach. Soon the alter ego starts to appear at his house, his office, his hangout. The twin always seems to arrive before Skip, appearing at every corner and even along a desolate road outside town. His girlfriend (Mary Egan, Forbidden Room) and sister (Donna Byrne, Out There) begin to identify the twin as Skip, while he becomes less and less relevant to his own life. His apprehensions are met with part derision, part concern, but little belief that Skip's fears are justified. Finally the twin lets Skip know that he too is aware of the existence of the other. Feeling disenfranchised with no place to turn, Skip rents out a storage space with no street address from an artist friend, Leo (Richard Siegman, Taste of Desperation). The last outpost. When the twin invades Skip's final hideout, a confrontation erupts to deal with the one too many. Because two existing as one, within the same time and place, are just two many. In a battle of willpower and substantiation, which personality will prevail? Two Many. Beware the face in the crowd.—Mark Byrne
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