Potato Gumbo

“You don’t quit having dreams because you get old.”

A touchingly honest and, at times, zany look at the potentially brutal challenges of aging, "Potato Gumbo" tells the poignant story of Gretchen and Thomas, her dream, an ill-gotten pair of handcuffs, a diagnosis, and the adult children who must walk the delicate line of parenting their parents.

Gretchen Nelson could create the ideal gumbo recipe utilizing...

“You don’t quit having dreams because you get old.”

A touchingly honest and, at times, zany look at the potentially brutal challenges of aging, "Potato Gumbo" tells the poignant story of Gretchen and Thomas, her dream, an ill-gotten pair of handcuffs, a diagnosis, and the adult children who must walk the delicate line of parenting their parents.

Gretchen Nelson could create the ideal gumbo recipe utilizing the unlikely ingredient of potato if she could only get from her Central Texas retirement community to the famed School of Cooking in New Orleans. Thomas Trahan, already caught by her whimsical charms and light-fingered ways, is drawn into Gretchen’s off-beat schemes. Their initial plan, a late night, impromptu road trip to the Big Easy, has been aborted with their unfortunate return back home under police escort.

As a result, more darkly serious issues begin to quickly bubble up. Is Gretchen’s “whimsy,” in fact, a looming cloud of declining mental faculties or worse? How much can one old heart endure? And when must elderly care end and control begin?

Throw in an overbearing daughter hell-bent on saving Gretchen from herself, Thomas’s well-meaning son, a couple of helpful and hilarious friends and a dictatorial manageress, and you have a recipe for a very real and gently comic serving of the daunting challenges of getting older.

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Potato Gumbo

Recommended by

  • Michael Normandy: Potato Gumbo

    A treat! With several good roles for older actors, this full-length would work well in either small or large performance spaces. The playwright has a unique ability to draw well-realized characters in funny, poignant situations that portray universal truths about love, loss and hope.

    A treat! With several good roles for older actors, this full-length would work well in either small or large performance spaces. The playwright has a unique ability to draw well-realized characters in funny, poignant situations that portray universal truths about love, loss and hope.

  • Kim E. Ruyle: Potato Gumbo

    A compassionate and humorous take on really difficult issues – the onset of dementia and the sacrifices we make for love. This play has some delicious, distinctly-drawn roles for mature actors. I liked it a lot! Lache pas la patate! Don’t give up the potato!

    A compassionate and humorous take on really difficult issues – the onset of dementia and the sacrifices we make for love. This play has some delicious, distinctly-drawn roles for mature actors. I liked it a lot! Lache pas la patate! Don’t give up the potato!

  • Bill Triplett: Potato Gumbo

    This warm-hearted tale, alternately funny and moving, quickly drew me into its fraught world of aging parents and their adult children who aren’t sure at times what’s happening with mom and dad and whether to be concerned, stoic, or flat-out terrified. Anyone who has witnessed a parent forgetting things more than usual or repeating themselves a little too often will immediately respond to this well-plotted play, which, among other things, reminds you – thankfully! – that dreams do not have to fade with age. All that, plus great roles for young, middle-aged, and older actors!

    This warm-hearted tale, alternately funny and moving, quickly drew me into its fraught world of aging parents and their adult children who aren’t sure at times what’s happening with mom and dad and whether to be concerned, stoic, or flat-out terrified. Anyone who has witnessed a parent forgetting things more than usual or repeating themselves a little too often will immediately respond to this well-plotted play, which, among other things, reminds you – thankfully! – that dreams do not have to fade with age. All that, plus great roles for young, middle-aged, and older actors!

(4 women/3 men)

Gretchen Nelsen Older woman with a propensity to acquire things that don’t actually belong to her.
Thomas Trahan An active, older widower who’s not quite ready to give in to just being old.
Barbara Winter Gretchen’s responsible adult daughter who is trying to balance the challenges of becoming a parent to her parent.
Jack Trahan Thomas’s easy-going and supportive adult son.
Jim Cappazolli Older gentleman with a cane, a slightly outrageous wardrobe and the recipe for an assortment of cocktails.
Gail Johnson Older woman. A true lady and the friend we all wish we had.
Donna Holbrook Administrator at Casa della Vecchia. A middle-aged woman who can be rather two-faced (and neither face is pretty). This role can be cast male.

Development History

Production History

  • Type Community Theater, Organization The Players Theatre Company, Year 2026
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Hemphill Community Theatre, Year 2025
  • Type Community Theater, Organization ARTFactory, Menassas, Virginia, Year 2024
  • Type Community Theater, Organization EXIT Theatre, Arcata, CA, Year 2024
  • Type Community Theater, Organization The Pearl Theatre, Year 2023
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Up North Arts, Year 2022
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Bay City Players, Year 2020
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Pasadena Little Theatre, Year 2019
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Boerne Community Theatre, Year 2017
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Brazosport Center Stages, Year 2015

Awards

  • Robert J. Pickering Award for Playwrighting Excellence
    Branch County Community Theatre
    Semi-Finalist
    2017