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‘Savannah Sipping Society’ keeps audiences laughing

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Sunday, Dec. 17, 2017 5:35 PM
“The Savannah Sipping Society” keep the audience laughing on Saturday, its closing night.
Left to right, Peggy Tennyson as Jinx, Linella Miller-Dinlap as Marlafaye and Kim Welty as Randa in The Sunflower Theatre production of “The Savannah Sipping Society” on Saturday.
Robby Henes as Dot and Peggy Tinnyson as Jinx in the Sunflower Theatre’s production of “The Savannah Sipping Society” on Saturday.
Saturday’s closing performance of “The Savannah Sipping Society” sold out the Sunflower Theatre.
Linella Miller-Dunlap as Marlafaye in the Sunflower Theatre’s production of “The Savannah Sipping Society” on Saturday.
Kim Welty as Randa in the Sunflower Theatre’s production of “The Savannah Sipping Society” on Saturday.

The Sunflower Theatre at KSJD presented the comedy play “Savannah Sipping Society” on four nights in December.

The play is directed by Peggy Tennyson and was written by Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope and Jamie Wooten.

In the comedy, four Southern women, all trying to escape their daily routines, are drawn together during an impromptu happy hour and decide it’s time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost.

The perfectionist and workaholic Randa – played by Kim Welty – struggles to cope with a derailed career that reveals that she has no life and no idea how to get one.

Dot (Robby Henes), reeling from her husband’s demise and the loss of their plans for an idyllic retirement, faces the unsettling prospect of starting a new life alone.

Earthy and boisterous Marlafaye (Linella Miller-Dunlap), a good ol’ Texas gal, has blasted into Savannah in the wake of losing her tom-cattin’ husband to a 23-year-old dental hygienist. The strength of her desire to establish a new life is equaled only by her desire to wreak a righteous revenge on her ex-husband.

The energetic Jinx (Peggy Tennyson) offers her services as a life coach for these women.

However, blinded by her determination and efforts to get their lives on track, she overlooks the fact that she’s the one who most needs sage advice.

Over the course of six months filled with misadventures and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-age women bond and find the confidence to jump-start their lives.

Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment and realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.

The play kept audiences laughing to the very end when their final performance was to a sold-out house.

Reporter Emily Rice contributed to this article.

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