When Michael walks in on them, he and Rupert fight and Rupert stabs him. The plan works until Rupert, seeing Antoinette's door open, enters and kisses her. Because the king will be killed at first alarm, Rudolf must fight the guards and rescue the king before the drawbridge is lowered for Colonel Zapt's approaching army. Antoinette's messenger arrives with plans for Rudolf to swim across the moat to Antoinette's room that night. After Rupert tries to bribe Rudolf into keeping the kingdom for the two of them, Michael tries to force the king to write an abdication, but he refuses. Michael and Rupert then have the king moved to Zenda Castle, where they keep him in chains. She then gives Rudolf an earring and tells him to watch for a messenger bearing its match, and he escapes. Rudolf goes to Antoinette's room at the castle and she offers to help him if the king's men let Michael live. As part of Michael's scheme to murder Rudolf and bury him as the king, Rupert blackmails Rudolf into meeting him alone, demanding ransom money for the king's return. Rupert of Hentzau, a courtier, is seemingly in league with Michael, but is really after the king's mistress, Lady Antoinette. Colonel Zapt, determined to make the real king an honorable man, returns to the lodge and finds Josef, a loyal servant, dead and the king missing. The coronation is a success, but Rudolf unwittingly falls in love with the king's intended, Princess Flavia, who, upon finding him a reformed man, loves him for the first time. The next day, Rudolf poses as the king while the real monarch lies unconscious in the lodge cellar. The dissolute king unknowingly drinks wine that has been drugged by his villainous half-brother "Black Michael," Duke of Streslau and Lord of Zenda Castle, who wants the throne. The king then takes his cousin to his lodge, where they toast their shared ancestors. Major scenes include a coronation, a state ball, and a climatic sword fight.įirst Produced in 2001 at Rainbow Theatre, Parry Sound, ON.King Rudolf V, of the small Balkan country of Ruritania, meets his exact double, Major Rudolf Rassendyll, an English cousin of his who is on holiday, the night before his coronation. Produced on a generic, open set, The Prizoner of Zenda features an array of characters that may be played by 12 actors, with optional extras. Romantic intrigue and swashbuckling adventure take center stage as the playwrights present the first, full-scale stage version of this classic in almost a century. After a passionate exchange of vows, Flavia faces up to her obligations to her country and the restored king, and Rassendyll gallantly sacrifices his one true love for duty and honour. Matters become more complicated as Rassendyll, in royal guise, falls in love with the king's betrothed, Princess Flavia, and she with him. With the aid of stalwart Colonel Sapt and Fritz von Tarlenheim, he vanquishes the king's power-hungry half-brother Michael, and matches wits, as well as swords, with Michael's henchman, the devilishly suave Rupert of Henzau. When a seditious plot threatens the king of Ruritania, Rassendyll, who bears a striking physical resemblance to His Royal Highness, is called upon to impersonate him.ĭespite an initial reluctance to play the role, Rassendyll eventually masterminds a counterplot to save the king. The Prisoner of Zenda dramatizes the perilous and romantic adventures of Rudolf Rassendyll, an English gentleman, in the fictional kingdom of Ruritania.