By John Chapman
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 Directed by Brad V. Olsen
 
 October 4, 5, 6, 7 
 8:00 pm Curtain
 Eccles Performing Arts Center
 
 Adults: $6.50
 Seniors/High School & Younger: $6.00
 Snow College Students: $2.00 w/Activity Card
 
 Season Ticket
 Adults: $20.50
 Seniors/High School & Younger: $19.00
 
 "Tony Scudamore, who did his wartime service with the British Army in North Africa,
                  has settled into a peacetime career with the Foreign Office. Tony displays almost
                  a bit too much British reserve for his American wife, Sally, as does his older brother,
                  Ken, on leave from his tea plantation in the tropics, and when Jack Krasner, a friend
                  from the States, arrives unexpectedly she jumps at his invitation for an evening on
                  the town in London. Tony and Ken are not won over so easily, particularly as the senior
                  Scudamores (he's also in the Foreign Office) have suggested a family dinner for the
                  evening. So the upshot is that Sally and her old beau go one way, while Tony and Ken
                  go another. Nobody stops to think much about a certain letter which arrived that morning
                  informing Tony that he has been remembered in the will of an Arab sheik whose life
                  he saved during the war. By the end of the evening the fog is too thick for Sally
                  to get home, but Tony and Ken make it, and so does Haroun El Bahn (the sheik's emissary)
                  bearing Tony's legacy--five nubile, Arab maidens. Tony's first reaction is to send
                  his "harem" back, but it seems that to refuse a dying sheik's bequest is a mortal
                  offense. Tony's father also brings up the touchy point that the British government
                  is now negotiating oil leases with the dead sheik's successor--and any dispute could
                  lead to unhappy complications. This is the situation which Sally walks into the next
                  morning, and the misunderstandings which follow are hilarious."