Bridge of Blood

Bridge of Blood

A Footstool Players poster advertises a 2003 production of Bridge of Blood.
Written by David H. Robey
Characters Elisabeth Elliot
Jim Elliot
Pete Fleming
Ed McCully
Nate Saint
Roger Youderian
Date premiered 1988
Original language English
Subject Christian missions
Martyrdom
Genre Readers' Theatre
Setting Ecuador, 1956

Bridge of Blood: Jim Elliot Takes Christ to the Aucas is a 1973 readers' theatre play based on the story of Operation Auca. It was written by David Robey, a former drama professor at Cedarville University, and produced by Lillenas Drama in 1988.

Bridge of Blood is based on Through Gates of Splendor and Shadow of the Almighty, two books written by Elisabeth Elliot. Consequently, the character of Elisabeth in the play is also the narrator. All of the characters' monologues were taken directly from their own letters, diaries and journals.

The play was originally published in the 1988 book Two for Missions, which also included For This Cause, a drama about John and Betty Stam. In December 1996, the play was republished in the book Three with a Mission, which added to the original two plays, The World Is My Parish, a drama about John Wesley. The 1996 version of the play added an introductory scene.

Synopsis

The first act of the play focuses on the background of the five missionaries, especially Jim Elliot and Nate Saint. All the men and their wives eventually move to Ecuador as missionaries, and as the act is about to close, Saint discovers the "Aucas" from his plane. This leads the men to begin making plans for Operation Auca.

The second act describes the efforts of Operation Auca itself. The men make aerial gift drops to the Aucas and learn helpful Auca phrases. The play then focuses for some time on the night of January 2, 1956, the day before the men left for Auca territory. As they are busy making preparations, Pete comforts Olive who is worried about the safety of the expedition. All the missionaries then have prayer together and sing "We Rest on Thee". The men are killed five days later by the Aucas, and the play ends with Elisabeth telling about the eventual redemption of the Auca tribe through continued missionary efforts.

Cast

The cast includes 10 members 5 men and 5 women. The main characters also double as minor characters during certain scenes, creating a virtual cast of 18.

(The 1996 publication added the "Host", an MC or the director of the play, who is not part of the cast. He or she only reads an introductory monologue after the first scene.)

Main Characters:

Minor Characters:

References

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