Spoiler alert: The women in "The Revolutionists" get their heads lopped off. But to hear director Shelli Place tell it, there's riotous humor to be had between the sharp delivery of their lines and the falling of the guillotine blade.
"Comedy is about contrast and what we have here is the pathos of the reign of terror next to the snappy 21st-century dialogue," said Place, co-founder of Prime Productions, which is putting on the show at Park Square Theatre. "It's a metaplay on steroids with lots of verbal gymnastics and tonal references to things like 'Hamilton,' so audiences need to buckle up."
"Revolutionists," Lauren Gunderson's play about Marie Antoinette and three other figures from the French Revolution, is finally opening Friday after a series of setbacks Prime leaders call "hiccups." The latest was the recent announcement that host theater Park Square was canceling the remainder of its season so it can restructure and save itself.
Prime is grateful to Park Square for its partnership, Place said, and "for its many big-ticket in-kind items like rent and box office support."
Prime had first planned to stage "Revolutionists" in fall 2020 when COVID-19 was raging. Add to that fiscal challenges of a sector where companies operate on paper-thin margins and cast changes.
A typical production for Prime used to cost about $65,000, but COVID protocols have added another 30% to that figure.
"It's for our safety, so it's done for the right reasons, but it's still crazy," Place said.
Still, the company perseveres because it wants to tell important stories, and also employs older actors in an industry that often nudges women of a certain age offstage.