0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views

1703 Freeview

Uploaded by

Marvin Dalusung
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views

1703 Freeview

Uploaded by

Marvin Dalusung
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

THE ADVENTURES

OF PERSEUS

By Will Huddleston

Performance Rights

It is an infringement of the federal copyright law to copy or


reproduce this script in any manner or to perform this play
without royalty payment. All rights are controlled by Encore
Performance Publishing, LLC. Call the publisher for
additional scripts and further licensing information. The
author’s name must appear on all programs and advertising
with the notice: “Produced by special arrangement with
Encore Performance Publishing.”

PUBLISHED BY

ENCORE PERFORMANCE PUBLISHING


www.encoreplay.com
© 1996 by Will Huddleston

Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing


https://histage.com/adventures-of-perseus
The Adventures of Perseus
-2-

STORY OF THE PLAY


In pageant, verse and fearsome argument the gods on
Olympus present themselves. They set the great Perseus
myth in motion. When the Oracle tells the human king,
Acrisius, that his grandson will kill him, the old miser locks
his daughter, Danae, up in a tower guarded by savage dogs.
Zeus comes to her and devours the dogs, and soon Perseus
is born. Acrisius locks mother and baby in a chest and sets it
afloat on the sea. The gods see the chest safely to the isle of
Seriphos where Perseus grows into a local hero. The jealous
king sends him on an impossible quest - to bring in the head
of the Gorgon, Medusa. The gods Athena and Hermes assist
Perseus with gifts that help protect him as he travels to the
four corners of the world to witness the birth of Pegasus;
save his future bride Andromeda from the Kraken; and slay
the Gorgon, Medusa. In the magical land of Hyperborea he
witnesses a comic version of a play about King Midas and
returns to vanquish the wicked king of Seriphos, rescue his
mother, and marry Andromeda. The play contains song,
dance, ritual and comedy.

Performance time about an hour.

THE ADVENTURES OF PERSEUS was commissioned in the


spring of 1982 by The California Theatre Center under the title “The
Greeks.” General Director of CTC was Gayle Cornelison. The
production included the following artists:
Writer and Director Will Huddleston
Set Design Ralph Ryan
Costume Design Mary Hall Surface
The cast included:
Perseus Anders Bolang
Dionysus and Acrisius Charles Abernathy
Hera, the Naiad, Andromeda Rachel LePell
Poseidon, Dictys Dorien Wilson
Hermes Kevin Reese
Danae, Athena Mary Gibboney
The Adventures of Perseus
-3-

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

The Midas Play


Midas
Chiron
Dionysus
Daughter of Midas
The Adventures of Perseus
-4-

SCENE 1
THE GODS

(AT RISE: With a fanfare the GODS of Mount Olympus


appear and freeze in tableau. They are masked. DIONYSUS
appears last. He overdoes his bows and begins to speak.)

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.

(DIONYSUS removes his mask.)

But when I play myself, my god-like, good-looks I will use.

(Mask on.)

My name is Dionysus, god of wine and spirits high,


And god of many things that bring a wildness to the eye.
And now the grandest god of all I must now introduce:
The god of eagles, lightning flash, and rain,
His name is Zeus.
He lives on Mount Olympus with his brother gods and me,
Among them Lord Poseidon, god of rivers and the sea.
Poseidon envies Zeus and does avoid his thunderbolt,
And likewise, Zeus flies through the air
And never goes by boat.
Another brother, Hades, is the god of all the dead.
Though you won’t see him in our play,
Much of him will be said.
And let us not forget the goddess, Hera, is her name;
Though she’s wife to Zeus, it’s said,
He fears her just the same.
Sometimes the sky-god, Zeus, (Cont’d.)
The Adventures of Perseus
-5-

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.

(DIONYSUS sounds his horn and the GODS begin to move.)

ZEUS: I, Zeus, God of the Heavens, who saved myself and


my foolish brothers from the cannibal mouth of our father;
I, who can fling lightning across the stormy skies and
drown the earth in torrents of rain, will do as I please!
HERA: I, Hera, wife to this immortal pig of a god who does
as he pleases, will not endure this shame. Your mortal
bride and child have been cast upon the sea. That is your
realm, Poseidon. I insist that you destroy them. Send
them to live in the Underworld where I won’t have to look
upon their death-frightened faces, nagging reminders of
my faithless husband and this intolerable marriage.

(ALL GODS but POSEIDON sweep angrily from the stage.)

POSEIDON: Am I, Poseidon, Lord of all the Waters of the


Earth, a slave to Zeus and Hera? No god can force me to
arbitrate this petty quarrel. The world will feel these insults
and know of my displeasure.

END SCENE 1
The Adventures of Perseus
-6-

SCENE 2
THE MORTALS

(POSEIDON becomes a statue. The actors, now an


unmasked CHORUS of ordinary mortals, come wailing
onstage to huddle at the foot of the statue. They can see a
black and terrible storm gathering at sea.)

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.

(The statue of POSEIDON begins to move and the storm


begins. Running and cart-wheeling, the CHORUS trail long
bolts of cloth that had been the capes of ZEUS and HERA.
At last the whirling hurricane subsides and POSEIDON
leaves the scene, calming the waves with a set of chimes. A
large chest has appeared among the flotsam and jetsam …
the bolts of cloth … of the storm.)

END OF SCENE 2
End of Freeview

Download your complete script from Eldridge Publishing


https://histage.com/adventures-of-perseus

Eldridge Publishing, a leading drama play publisher since


1906, offers more than a thousand full-length plays, one-act
plays, melodramas, holiday plays, religious plays, children's
theatre plays and musicals of all kinds.

For more than a hundred years, our family-owned business


has had the privilege of publishing some of the finest
playwrights, allowing their work to come alive on stages worldwide.

We look forward to being a part of your next theatrical production.

Eldridge Publishing... for the start of your theatre experience!

You might also like