For theater or the classroom, these are five one-act Christian plays. Yukon Gold Rush. Dawson City, Yukon Territory, 1896, from the perspective of the children dragged there by gold seeking parents. The Serf and the Knight Templar. It's 1350, the waning years of the Middle Ages. The black plague is killing off half of Europe and Robert, a serf - neither slave nor free - must choose between the wishes of the Lord of the Manor and the lives of his wife and children. Wagons West - 1846, by wagon train the Roberts family heads ...
Read More
For theater or the classroom, these are five one-act Christian plays. Yukon Gold Rush. Dawson City, Yukon Territory, 1896, from the perspective of the children dragged there by gold seeking parents. The Serf and the Knight Templar. It's 1350, the waning years of the Middle Ages. The black plague is killing off half of Europe and Robert, a serf - neither slave nor free - must choose between the wishes of the Lord of the Manor and the lives of his wife and children. Wagons West - 1846, by wagon train the Roberts family heads to Oregon. About two months out, their youngest leaves the circled wagons to pick berries and doesn't return. Heaven and the California Gold Rush: Told with a bit of whimsy, we see the '49ers from San Francisco to the strike at Sutter's Mill Let's All Hubble Together: God's universe tells so much about Him - His power, His glory, His unfathomable size, His creative genius and through the eyes of two young astronomers, we see it all. On stage, in schools and home school venues, these plays can be performed as traditional productions or in a "reader's theater" format. In either case, they should thrill audiences and help students learn.
Read Less