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The Services of Women was performed in April of 1999 at Stages
Repertory Theatre in Houston, Texas as part of Edward Albee's
New Playwrights Series. The director was T. Scott Allen. The
stage manager and sound designer was John Smetak. K. David
Cochran did lighting design. Darryl Connor was the costume
designer and Leila Kousheshi was the props master.
| The Cast: |
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| Judith |
Barbara Dell |
| Betty |
Susan Salter |
| Louise |
Krisit
Reinertsen-Forehand |
| Susan |
Sara Chambless |
| Mark |
King Grossman |
| Angela |
Amanda Martin |
| Allison/Rose |
Kristi Sharp |
About Services of Women
THE STORY
THE SERVICES OF WOMEN is a one act comedy about
four women who, upon finding themselves single in their mid
forties must decide what to do with the rest of their lives…
and yes, their husbands all left for younger women.
They don’t get mad (much.) They don’t want
revenge and they certainly don’t want to be poor abandoned
little victims. So what’s a girl to do?
Why not start a sex club and advertise for boys
between the ages of twenty and twenty-five? How much trouble
can you get into with that?
Naturally, being women, so many things are more
important than casual sex. They can’t even do casual sex
(except maybe Louise and she’s…well never mind.) They start
to take care of the people who cross their paths. They build
a community. They have regular meetings and, of course, there
are the rules…
THE CHARACTERS
The instigator is JUDITH, a corporate lawyer,
practical yet surprisingly adventurous.
The wild child is Louise, an advertising
executive who throws herself wholeheartedly into this project.
The vulnerable one is SUSAN, a psychologist who
has to answer a lot of questions for herself.
The reluctant one is BETTY, a university
literature professor, capable of much more than she can
imagine.
All the male roles are played by one man who
mostly plays MARK THE DOORMAN. He narrates the story and
helps out when he can.
Additional women are ANGELA, a young girl with
fewer problems than she thinks and ALLISON BAXTER, a timid
woman who is stronger than she thinks. ROSE KEPLAR is an
outraged mother. The same actress plays these last two.
THE SETTING
Set requirements are few. The scene opens to four
computer stations, each reflecting the personality of its
owner in her own house. As each woman talks about her
adventures, the action is either played out on stage by the
characters involved or shown in slides or moving pictures on
the screen behind them.
BETTY, SUSAN and LOUISE enter and begin working
at their stations. MARK THE DOORMAN relates JUDITH’S bad day.
JUDITH enters, throws down her briefcase and exits. She soon
returns wearing a silk kimono and nothing else. Sitting at
her computer, she types those fateful words…
“No man is worth dying of a broken heart over.”
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