1703 Freeview
1703 Freeview
OF PERSEUS
By Will Huddleston
Performance Rights
PUBLISHED BY
CAST OF CHARACTERS
(Large, flexible cast)
Dionysus: Narrator
Zeus
Hera
Poseidon
Chorus (all actors unmasked)
Dictys
Danae
Acrisius
The Oracle
Three Villagers
Polydectes
Advisors
Perseus
Hermes
Athena
The Grey Sisters (Dino, Pephredo, Enyo)
The Naiad
Medusa (several actors combine to make the monster)
Ethiopians
The Kraken (several actors combine to make the monster)
Andromeda
SCENE 1
THE GODS
DIONYSUS:
Please let me introduce myself. I don’t wish to seem odd.
My strange appearance mystifies because I am a god.
Though not the omnipotent god a modern human seeks.
Yet once I had my day; I was adored by ancient Greeks.
Today I like to pass the time by dabbling in the arts;
And in this play myself you’ll see performing several parts.
When I play a human, here are the features that I choose.
(Mask on.)
DIONYSUS: (Cont’d.)
Will take a human for a bride,
But if Queen Hera finds it out, there is no place to hide.
“Now, don’t be jealous,” Zeus will say, and Hera will reply,
“I am not jealous of a wretch who’ll wrinkle, age, and die,
While I do beautiful remain, forever young and strong.”
What Hera says is true; you mortals never do live long.
But sometimes Hera’s jealousy will rise above her reason,
And then disasters, earthquakes, storms,
And monsters are in season.
So with this, our play begins: Poseidon’s awful storm.
And now I call the actors forth by blowing on my horn.
END SCENE 1
The Adventures of Perseus
-6-
SCENE 2
THE MORTALS
CHORUS:
The skies grow black and lightning blazes.
Once again the rage of the gods rises above all reason.
Zeus has come to earth again to take a mortal bride,
And his goddess-wife, Queen Hera,
Has discovered the infidelity.
The top of Mount Olympus, palace of the gods,
Is ablaze with anger, and black clouds,
Racing over the world like a smoky plague,
Pitch the world into darkness and despair.
CHORUS MEMBER:
What can a mortal do but hide and hope
The anger falls on someone else’s head.
CHORUS:
The winds rise to a shrieking pitch,
Trees explode from lightning strikes,
The tides rise up and waves roll in upon the land
Like giant hammers.
END OF SCENE 2
End of Freeview