

Praying for Rain
Robert Lewis Vaughan
The time is "200 years after the Rain of 1969," and the action is a paraphrase of the Bible, commencing with the ark and the flood and ending with the sacrifice of the God-figure.
To the microcosm of people adrift on a raft come a vital youth and a girl.
Gradually they are introduced to the rituals of the community, the leader of which is a chap named Arthur.
He comes to believe that he is prescient and has miraculous powers.
Indeed, he begins to think of himself as divine.
Another man acknowledges this, becomes his priest, and establishes a ritual�absolutions, confession, audiences, sacrifice, etc. A commentator on the action, a kind of sidelines puppeteer, disabuses Arthur of his godly notions, and convinces him that he was only possessed by God, and was only his vicar.
It is he who must be sacrificed.
"Mr. Bowen's play extends the mind. Changes us a little, even while we enjoy it. And it is very enjoyable."
— New York Times
"For the first time this year there were cheers from a first-night play audience. A bit of intelligence has been brought to the Broadway stage."
— New York Daily News
"A fascinating play, constantly absorbing in its sheer theatrical virtuosity and imagination."
— New York Post
After The Rain is a play written by John Bowen and published by Samuel French .
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