Lend Me A Tenor playwright’s latest hits Concord
The old adage “Be careful what you wish for” guides The Gods of Comedy, the latest production from Community Players of Concord. The 2019 Ken Ludwig play makes its New Hampshire debut on Feb. 14 at Concord City Auditorium. It looks at what happens when a pair of deities are beseeched from the heavens and actually arrive.
The story begins when two professors, Ralph and Daphne, find a rare manuscript while on a holiday in Greece, only to see it inadvertently destroyed when they return to their Ivy League university. This prompts a cry for on-high assistance that miraculously produces Dionysus, the god of misrule and partying, and Thalia, who’s the muse of comedy.
It’s classics weekend at the college, so the gods are sidetracked by costumed students and campus partying, while the frazzled professors try to solve the problem of the lost work, a Euripides play. Meanwhile, additional gods of varying demeanor manage to make things more complicated.
“It’s part fantasy and classic literature — there’s a lot of Shakespeare references, which I really appreciate,” Elizabeth Lent, the play’s director, said by phone recently. “There are ancient Greek references as well, but also a lot of silliness, as they get into a lot of interesting antics and situations.”
This is the Players’ fifth play by Ludwig, well-known for his 1986 Tony winner, Lend Me a Tenor. Lent has directed two of them, 2004’s Shakespeare In Hollywood and Ludwig’s 2017 revival of Murder on the Orient Express. She’s pleased to present a relatively fresh work with up to date elements.
“I really do like the fact that it’s contemporary,” Lent, who’s been with Concord Community Players since the early 1980s, said. “I’ve been directing for a very long time and have directed lots of old stuff. I was really interested in trying something new, and Ludwig appeals to me.”
The cast includes Emily Thompson playing Daphne, John Julian, Alex Hutton, Kal Hachi and Suzanne Watts as Dionysus and Thalia, along with Heather Carmichael, Dana Sackos, Griffin Stuart, Seth Bunke and, making her Players debut, Jeri Lynn Owen. Set designer is Craig Walker, costumes are by Suzanne Potoma and Gay Bean, and lighting by Steven Meier.
Lent had the play cast the night auditions were finished.
“The chemistry is so good with these folks,” she said. “They’re all very talented and dedicated. Everyone comes to every rehearsal, even the tiniest little roles. They all like each other, which is really kind of wonderful, and they’re having such a good time. It’s so joyful to watch them work.”
Among the hijinks occurring is one of the gods inhabiting two of the other characters.
“They get possessed, and these two actresses that are making the transformation are hilariously funny doing it,” Lent said. More importantly, everything ends on a happy note. “For me, it’s exciting to watch these folks just having such a blast with it.”
Lots of laughs, a cast enjoying themselves and an upbeat finale is just what’s needed at this particular moment in time, and The Gods of Comedy is poised to provide all that.
“When the gods come down, they’re given a mission; this woman, Daphne Ring, needs an adventure and a happy ending, and they deliver,” Lent said, who described the play as “a clever mashup of the best kinds of knockabout comedy across the ages” in a press release. “We’d love to see everybody in the audience. Because it’s so new, it’s very exciting for us to be performing it.”
The Gods of Comedy
When: Friday, Feb. 14, and Saturday, Feb 15, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 16, 2 p.m.
Where: Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St., Concord
Tickets: $20 ($18 under 18 and 65+) at communityplayersofconcord.org
Featured photo: L to R – Kal Hachi, Emily Thompson and Suzanne Watts. Photo by Michael Von Redlich.