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Capture the Moon (large-cast manuscript)

"Take your kids to Capture the Moon. They'll laugh, they'll learn... they'll love it!"

WAMU-FM, Washington, D.C.

  • Full Length Play
  • Comedy
  • 50 minutes

  • Target Audience: Pre-Teen (Age 11 - 13), Teen (Age 14 - 18), Children (Age 6 - 10)
  • Set Requirements: Unit Set/Multiple Settings

  • Performance Group:
  • Community Theatre, High School/Secondary
Capture the Moon, a lighthearted play for 4- to 11-year-olds, is based on the traditional Yiddish tales of Chelm, a mythical Eastern European shtetl, its people being awfully poor, very devout, thoroughly democratic, and of a uniquely innocent way of thinking and acting.

The poor village is attempting to solve a streetlighting problem by capturing the moon and harnessing moonlight. The failure of the first attempt (to capture and store the moonlight in a barrel of water) forces them to seek the help of the neighboring Christian village to climb their church steeple (almost) up to the moon. With their neighbors' cooperation, the Chelmites then must journey through the surrounding Christian countryside in search of the moon at its lowest point on the horizon. On this journey, they become aware of their 'differentness', and they are finally appreciated for it.

Capture the Moon offers, in children's terms, interesting elements of Jewish history. More than that, it is a play about a common devoutness that encourages mutual respect, respect for different ways of thinking and imagining. 

REVIEWS:

"Take your kids to Capture the Moon. They'll laugh, they'll learn... they'll love it!"

 WAMU-FM, Washington, D.C.

  • Casting: 23M or F
  • Casting Attributes: Reduced casting (Doubling Possible)

Name Price
Capture the Moon (large-cast manuscript) Script Order Now

Capture the Moon, a lighthearted play for 4- to 11-year-olds, is based on the traditional Yiddish tales of Chelm, a mythical Eastern European shtetl, its people being awfully poor, very devout, thoroughly democratic, and of a uniquely innocent way of thinking and acting. The poor village is attempting to solve a streetlighting problem by capturing the moon and harnessing moonlight. The failure of the first attempt (to capture and store the moonlight in a barrel of water) forces them to seek the help of the neighboring Christian village to climb their church steeple (almost) up to the moon. With their neighbors' cooperation, the Chelmites then must journey through the surrounding Christian countryside in search of the moon at its lowest point on the horizon. On this journey, they become aware of their differentness, and they are finally appreciated for it. Capture the Moon offers, in children's terms, interesting elements of Jewish history. More than that, it is a play about a common devoutness that encourages mutual respect, respect for different ways of thinking and imagining. Unit set. Approximate running time: 50 minutes.

$19.95