Synopsis
The Ladies of the Camellias
Published by Dramatists Play Service
7 Male 3 Female
An hilarious farce about an imagined meeting in Paris, 1897, between the famous theater divas Sarah Bernhardt and Eleonora
Duse
The two actresses, who were the biggest and most temperamental stars of their day, were scheduled to perform back-to-back productions of the play, The Lady of the Camellias by Alexandre Dumas
Duse's production will be performing in Bernhardt's theater, and the two women are in their own dressing rooms at the theater, though they have yet to meet
The members of both acting companies expect huge fireworks between the two grand dames, and do what they can to avoid being in the way
Into this tense situation comes Ivan, a young Russian anarchist who threatens to blow up everyone in the theater, especially the two divas, unless his comrades are released from prison
Bernhardt and Duse must meet and greet each other for the first time as they are taken hostage by the armed Ivan, yet remain the ultimate theater professionals
Ivan's ranting aside, the anarchist seems to know an awful lot about the theater, raising suspicions amongst the actors
Indeed, Ivan turns out to be a new breed of theater person
Someone who the actors and playwright deride as useless and as a passing fad - A Director
In a salute to the community of actors, Benoit Constant Coquelin, who is playing Cyrano De Bergerac, sneaks into the melee, and, in full costume, challenges Ivan to a duel
But a rapier is no match for a gun and bomb, so it is theatrical dialogue they all must use to try and convince Ivan to let them go
Then word arrives that the authorities will not trade the lives of even such famous actors for their prisoners
Sarah, feeling sorry for Ivan, offers to give him a letter of recommendation to a theater in a far off country and shows him how to escape through her secret passageway
As the other actors leave the stage, Bernhardt and Duse are left alone
They drop their facades and speak to each other as equals before they return to glory before the crowds