Leave it to jeeves:

An Evening with Me — Bertie Wooster — and My Man, Jeeves

COMEDY - One Act

Total Cast: 3 men

(2 actors play 1 role each, 1 actor plays 6)

The Story:

Bertie Wooster is a bit short on brain. His man, Jeeves, appears omniscient. Follow these two as they navigate clothing, horse races, and Aunt Agatha. Bertie and Jeeves spend the majority of the play helping New York artist, Bruce Corcoran, navigate a situation involving a baby, a portrait, and Corky’s filthy rich uncle, Alexander Worple. Actor 1 plays Bertie. Actor 2 plays Bruce. Actor 3 plays Jeeves, and all the rest. An adaptation from the work of British humorist, P.G. Wodehouse, this play is sure to have audiences in stitches, laughing alongside the slapstick cast as Jeeves inevitably saves the day.

Leave it to Jeeves - David Widder-Varhegyi - Playwright

[Wholly Metaphor]

The Hole of Christendom as Seen Through the Lens of Three Blind Mice

OR

DRAMA - One Act

Total Cast: 1 N/S, plus 3-7 musicians

Music-Theatre for Narrator and Chamber Ensemble

The Story:

This is not your average nursery rhyme. Through a Prologue, 3 Movements, and Epilogue, this stylized narration with incidental music and accompaniment gives names and history to the “three blind mice.” Watch and listen as folklore is built around Frank, George, and Mary, all of whom lose their tails. Playing on the nursery rhyme which originated in Anglican England in 1609, this one act music-theatre composition takes a macabre approach in exploring the themes of Faith in Family, Hope in Country, and Love of Self, and the tragic consequences associated with losing all three.