The PlayFinder™

Type of Play
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Dark Comedy Farce Historical Melodrama Mystery Romantic Satire Tragedy Thriller

Zero Positive

$13.00
Qty:
Full Length, Drama
4 men, 2 women
Total Cast: 6, Flexible Set
ISBN-13: 978-0-8222-1293-5


MIN. PERFORMANCE FEE: $105 per performance.
THE STORY: As the play begins a young man, Himmer, is trying to console his father on the death of his long-estranged wife (and Himmer’s mother) whom neither has seen for many years, but the older man, Jacob, is apparently more interested in his model trains. Himmer then conceives the idea of honoring his mother’s memory by staging a verse play, The Ruins of Athens, which she had written in her youth, but, in the meantime, his friend Samantha, a compulsive lover of married men, arrives to inform him that both she and he have tested seropositive for HIV test—which means that both are harboring the HIV virus, if not actually stricken with the disease. To Himmer, once married but now a declared homosexual, this constitutes yet another instance of the futility, the purposelessness, the random cruelty of modern life, but he forges ahead nevertheless, abetted by his friend Prentice (who is recovering from the breakup of a long-standing gay relationship); an actor, Patrick (who is suicidally despairing about the status of his career); and Debbie (an eccentric young heiress with a penchant for older men who is smitten by Himmer’s poet-father). Eventually Himmer and the others do indeed perform the play, albeit at an AIDS research center to which they have retreated and where, with a customary mixture of angst and dismay, Himmer decides to substitute real poison for the hemlock called for in the final scene of his mother’s epic—thereby providing, for those who wish it, an easy means of exit from a world that seems to make little sense in the first place.
An antic and theatrically fanciful examination of modern mores, and a troubled society which, as stated by The Village Voice, “…has structured itself to lose touch with its own reality and replace values with appearances."

“…I am partial to the author’s loony treatment of serious themes.” —New York Daily News.

“…verbal fireworks…” —New York Post.