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Topic: Christian Dinner Theater( Topic Closed) | |
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Author | Message |
n2drama
Player Joined: 4/08/08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 24 |
Topic: Christian Dinner Theater Posted: 4/08/08 at 2:37pm |
Can anyone suggest some dinner theater scripts appropriate to present at the church?
TIA, N2D |
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ty.gab
Walk-On Joined: 7/18/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 4/08/08 at 10:14pm |
mayhem in mayville. ...i have no clue who holds the rights. |
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bbpchick
Star Joined: 7/17/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 86 |
Posted: 4/08/08 at 10:22pm |
You may want to try a melodrama. They are clean, fun and great for dinner theater. People always have a lot of good clean fun and melodramas generally have easy sets and royalties aren't usually that high.
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n2drama
Player Joined: 4/08/08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 24 |
Posted: 4/08/08 at 10:57pm |
Thanks for the tips. Has anyone done any Pat Cook stuff? I want to preview "The Old Faith, Hope, and Charity" but Lillenas gets $30.00 for a preview script and I have a very small budget. I can't afford that much to just preview.
Thanks Again, n2d |
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DWolfman
Celebrity Joined: 7/07/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 134 |
Posted: 4/09/08 at 10:50am |
Thirty dollars is kinda steep. On the Lillenas webpage:
they have a section called "Sample Pages" with a "pdf" icon
on the right. If you click that icon, the entire script will pop
up, no charge. It isn't printable, but gives purchase info.
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Even a man who is pure of heart...
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Lazy Bee
Star Joined: 2/21/07 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 89 |
Posted: 4/10/08 at 5:35am |
You could also try looking at a series of short plays. There are some amongst these Christian Play Scripts (the link takes you to an overview page; clicking on a title will get you to a page where you can read the whole scripts on-line.) There are also some suitable entries on the Old Testament Plays page, notably an adaptation of Mark Twain's "The Diary of Adam and Eve", which could work well for dinner theatre, as you could split up the diary entries around the courses of the meal.
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belle
Star Joined: 9/12/06 Online Status: Offline Posts: 75 |
Posted: 4/10/08 at 10:29pm |
We've done dinner theater in our rural Methodist church for about 10 years. We've done Pat Cook's Hitching Post--great rural comedy--changed the 2 main characters to women because we have very few men actors. All my suggestions can be done with only 3-4 men and 5-8 women. We did his All's Fair this year; it's sort of a sequel to HP. Requires a lot of lighting control as there are 3 different locations that have to be lighted individually. Better for an audience with imagination as there are several plots going on at once--like a soap opera. Both are squeaky clean.
Did Maid to Order (Samuel French). Very funny. Not a murder mystery. Has a guy dressed as a women as a disguise. Football for bust.
The Butler Did it Again and Love is Murder by Tim Kelly are great. Characters are created by their similarity to famous authors, mystery or romance. Very clean. We also did Kelly's The Trouble with Summer People--the Puckle sisters are a hoot. One starts a sentence and the other finishes it. Butler refers to voodoo drums but that's the extent of the occult.
We did It's Murder in the Wings--big cast and needs a gurney, but funny.
We did Bone Chiller by Monk Ferris but wouldn't recommend it. It has a rebus that is hard to make big enough for the audience to see and some difficult props and effects. The plot is hard to follow. Also, has a large cast. Has just a touch of the occult, which may not go for some church groups.
We also did Occupation Murder, which has some audience participation. If you have a guy who can improvise and respond to the audience members chosen to participate, it will work fine.
We have developed a cast of people who really look forward to creating the play. We have new people, too, and those who drop out for various reasons, but the core keeps coming back and loving it.
We make good money and everyone feels good about the whole experience.
I hope it is an positive an experience for you as it is for us.
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Doodad
Walk-On Joined: 7/12/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 6/16/08 at 2:14pm |
You didn't mention your group's experience level. That would make a difference.
Our church has an annual dinner drama that is in its 26th year. Many scripts from Christian sources are not too challenging for experienced actors, which means we are constantly looking for clean plays that may or may not have a Christian theme. (If it doesn't have a Christian theme, it ALWAYS has a redemptive message of some sort.)
A number of comments we have had were that people were thrilled to invite unchurched friends to a friendly entertainment that was clean and provided a chance for building friendships.
We did Those Crazy Ladies in the House on the Corner by Pat Cook last fall for our church's dinner drama. It is a very funny play about three sisters who over time have moved back into the same house. They have lived together so long that they all talk at the same time and can listen at the same time.
Their doctor is drunk toward the end with some funny results. However, since this was a church production and the scene was vital to the production, we thought we were going to have to look for something else. On a whim, the director e-mailed Pat Cook and asked for permission to rewrite the last scene. Mr. Cook replied that he was raised in the church and understood the situation and told us we could change it as needed.
In our production, the doctor is suffering from sleep-deprivation, and the actor had a lot of fun seeing how long he could keep the audience laughing without it getting old.
We had many positive comments from the show and even had some entertaining times during rehearsal.
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mary051756
Lead Joined: 1/31/08 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 47 |
Posted: 6/17/08 at 12:05pm |
I have done Murder at the Banquet. By Robert LaVohn. Small cast- but lots of room for ad libs and audience inclusion.
It's a throwback to the old movie style private eyes and detectives.
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“To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.” EMERSON
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bkpick
Walk-On Joined: 8/16/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 6/23/08 at 12:25am |
We did "The Importance of Being Earnest" for a valentine banquet. We had a full house and it was a big hit. |
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