The first performance of The Marvelous Marriage was given on September 30th, at the Hanley Hall at Prufrock Preparatory School by the Prufrock Drama Club Players. The cast was as follows:
Count Amadeus de Chevalier........................................ Scott Matthews
Lady Madeline Bellrose.................................................... Amelia Winters
Lucas Seyler...............................................................Gustav Sebald
Persephone Peripéteia.........................................Jacqueline Scieszka
Baron Johan von Whesterstein............................................ Al Funcoot
Judge Margaret Sadoc.................................................... Jackie O'Hara
Lt. Claude d'Blague..................................................... Charles Walker
Duchess Marie Blancesque.................................................. Cierra Rue
Duchess Lucille Blancesque.......................................... Evelyn Canning
Maurice the Horse...................................................... Frank Richards
Rudjek Nazar................................................................. Alex Mandvi
Ardeth Tayi.................................................................. Aasif Usman
Ubaldo Ricchezza......................................................... Don DeSantis
Ingmar Jeger................................................................. Jude Darby
Citizens, Pirates, Spies, Guards, Soldiers, Clan Members
Fawn Marshall, Samuel Wells, Orson Rothe, Kit MacClaine, Burt Dwyer, Sarah Grotti, Joan Xavier, Bette Pizarro, Karen Boceto, Carla Vega, Margarita Franco, Jessica Beery, Carl Andrews, Trevor Jacobs, Noah Pyne, Regina Greene, Frederic Heeley, Derek Krewski, and Su Helms.
Directed by Professor Noah "Petey" Thoeson
YOU ARE READING
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events: The Marvelous Marriage
Casuale"A wedding is a funeral where you smell your own flowers." - Eddie Cantor. In The Bad Beginning, Al Funcoot's "The Marvelous Marriage" is vaguely described, since it is written for a length of three acts and is described by Mr. Snicket as "a dreadfu...