Lilith is the pastor of Seattle megachurch Passionate Grace. Well, okay, the church is actually a front for a drug running and rave business. A business which is going incredibly well…until the local alt-rag catches wind of “misuse of church funds” and sends a bumbling reporter to investigate. When the investigation turns to romance and the bottom falls out of the church, Lilith’s real motivations send her...
Lilith is the pastor of Seattle megachurch Passionate Grace. Well, okay, the church is actually a front for a drug running and rave business. A business which is going incredibly well…until the local alt-rag catches wind of “misuse of church funds” and sends a bumbling reporter to investigate. When the investigation turns to romance and the bottom falls out of the church, Lilith’s real motivations send her kingdom hurtling towards an explosive end. …a dog named Jesus is part drug thriller, part romcom, and part dark com(edy) that is ultimately exploring the connections between faith, home, and the destructive effects of the modern opioid crisis.
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...and a dog named Jesus
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Cheryl Bear:
23 Jan. 2021
“
An explosive and incredibly funny look into a "Church" operation as things spiral out of control! Well done. ”
Alix Sobler:
15 Oct. 2019
“
Ranging from slapstick comedy, to mystery, to rom com, ...and a dog named Jesus manages to strike a truly original tone. It's embodied by truly unique characters, whose motives and desires are often not obvious, but are somehow always believable. It paints a pictures of a Seattle that is not quite in our world, but in an adjacent reality that is somehow even more real. Its effortless inclusion of non-traditional clergy and non-binary characters is just one of the ways this play both defies expectations, and shows us the world as it really is. ”
Stephen Foglia:
9 Oct. 2019
“
...and a a dog named Jesus is a twisted, quietly radical romcom that moves breathlessly from meet-cute to explosive social critique. Samantha Cooper writes with color and wit, neither hiding the darkness nor allowing it to overshadow the fun of her genre-mixing and the vividness of her characters. A bold blast of a play with terrific roles for female, male, and non-binary actors. ”