When Mephistopheles Met Helen

First a huge thank you to Live Arts in Charlottesville, VA. My twenty-minute comedy “When Mephistopheles Met Helen” appeared in their third annual Waterworks New Works festival at the end of May. Charlottesville is a little over an hour’s drive from my town, a commute I used to do regularly as an MFA student at UVa a couple decades ago. That’s when I started writing one-acts as a break from writing short stories. I had a string of successes at the Pittsburgh New Works Festival in the late oughts and early teens, and I’ve since shifted some attention to full-length plays (The Zombie Life), but I hadn’t written a new one-act in over a decade.

Until last summer. This one started as an idea for a graphic novel: to convince Dr. Faust to sell his soul, the Devil promises him Helen of Troy — but how exactly did he manage that, since Helen is immersed in her own life and history? Since I don’t (yet?) have the chops to draw an entire graphic novel (the above illustration is new and took longer than it should have), the idea sat on a virtual shelf in the back of my head for I have no idea how long. Then for no reason I can determine, dialogue started dictating itself. I soon had more than I would ever want to insert into a comic (I prefer images over words), and then I realized I was writing a play.

Thank you, Kerry Moran, for directing the staged reading (including blocking, props, and even a hint of set design), and to Kate Donithen for embodying Helen (she gave the demi-goddess a perfect blend of sultry boredom), Claire Chandler for embodying Mephisto (my favorite line both nights was her understated deadpan, “I hate to hagggle”), and Aafreen Aamir for embodying the body of Mephisto’s puppet servant (it’s a really odd part, and the use of stick-on name tags for the soul swapping near the end was brilliant).

I seriously doubt I’ll ever adapt the play into a graphic novel, but who knows? Oh, and as you can see below, I visualized a male Mephisto while writing (“he” and “him” pronouns), but indicated in the casting note that the part could be played by any actor. Turns out a female Mephisto strengthened the focus on female agency (the director’s useful phrase), which is core to the play. It was fun to write, but more fun to watch interpreted by smart collaborators. I can’t give you the performance, but here’s the script (with some glitchy formatting):

Cast:

HELEN           female actor, any ageMEPHISTO    any actorSERVANT      female actor, any age

Synopsis: Behind the scenes of Doctor Faustus and The Iliad.

Setting: A high city wall overlooking a battlefield.

(Lights up. HELEN stands at edge of stage looking down at audience. SERVANT enters with MEPHISTO behind her, moving in perfect unison. SERVANT has a dagger on her belt and caries a tray with two wine goblets. MEPHISTO mimes carrying a tray. SERANT is his marionette. Despite later references to fur and hoofs, MEPHISTO should appear human. MEPHISTO stops SERVANT a close but respectful distance from HELEN and waits to be acknowledged. They wait a long time. MEPHISTO grows impatient. MEPHISTO taps foot; SERVANT taps foot. MEPHISTO tries to glance at watch but stops when SERVANT nearly overturns the tray.)

SERVANT

(in sync with MEPHISTO who mouths words)

Your wine, ma’am?

(HELEN does not respond. SERVANT and MEPHISTO lean closer. Louder.)

Ma’am. Your

HELEN

(not turning)

Why did you bring     

(pointing at tray)

two?

SERVANT

Oh. In, in honor of your absent but noble and esteemed great husband.

HELEN

He’s not dead.

SERVANT

No, no of course

HELEN

Not yet.

SERVANT

I was wasn’t wasn’t

HELEN

(pointing into audience)

He’s right there.

SERVANT

(pause, looking)

With the, uh. Greek generals?

HELEN

Oh. You meant.

(searching other side of audience)

My other husband. He’s

(pointing)

over there.

(squinting)

I think.

SERVANT

(offering tray)

May the gods grant him victory upon the battlefield today.

HELEN

Which one?

SERVANT

I have no idea.

HELEN

(taking a goblet)

I’ll drink to that.

(HELEN drinks slowly but without pause until the goblet is empty. She returns it upside down on the tray, nearly knocking over the second goblet. SERVANT struggles with the tray – as MEPHISTO struggles with mimed tray. HELEN returns to watching audience.)

It’s really quite bad.   

SERVANT

The war?

HELEN

The wine.

(wiping lips)

What vintage?

SERVANT

It’s

(looking at then sniffing the second goblet)

Red.

HELEN

My husband used to make me retsina. Crushed all the grapes himself. Can you imagine? A king. The king of Mycenae. Ankle deep in a tub of savatiano grapes.

SERVANT

Would you like me to get you retsina? 

HELEN

Troy makes retsina?

SERVANT

No. I don’t know. Probably not.

HELEN

(indicating Greeks)

I’m sure they brought some. For toasting after the walls fall. 

That’s why they give you those daggers. So you don’t end up spoils.

SERVANT

(looking at dagger on her belt and then at the battle)

You think they’ll breach the walls?

HELEN

Not a chance.

(pause)

I mean. Not unless they come up with a better plan than this.

(pause)

Like, building a giant wooden animal, like a horse. And hiding inside it and then tricking the king to roll it through the gates and waiting till nightfall and sneaking out and killing everybody in their sleep.

(pause)

Something like that. Might work.

(regarding battle again)

But this.

(pause)

Is pointless.

SERVANT

Why a horse? Why not a, a giant bear or, or an elephant! I would love to see a giant

HELEN

You do know I’m demi-goddess?

SERVANT

Yes, of course, ma’am! A daughter of Zeus and Leda, sister of

HELEN

(not looking, but gesturing at MEPHISTO)

I can see you, demon.

(MEPHISTO and SERVANT freeze. MEPHISTO relaxes and steps around SERVANT who remains permanently frozen.)

MEPHISTO

Right. Sorry.

(shaking off stiffness, laughing)

Just a precaution. The whole servant puppet bit. Bad habit really. Though you would not believe how some people can seriously freak out at the sight of me.

(looking at his feet)

Think it’s the hoofs? Flash a little ankle fur and next thing 

HELEN

What the hell are we speaking?

MEPHISTO

Oh, my bad. Early twenty-first century U.S. English. It’s kind of a thing with me these days. I used to go all in for iambic pentameter.

(reciting)

“Had I as many souls as there be stars, / I’d give them all for Mephistophelis.”

(laughing)

I mean, unless you like that? Do you like that?

HELEN

You’re an agent of Dis.

MEPHISTO

Mmmm. Not exactly. Yes, love the whole discord thing – start a war because you didn’t get a wedding invite? Huzzah! But me? No. I fly solo.

HELEN

You’re a servant.

MEPHISTO

(pointing at SERVANT)

What, this old thing? I just threw it on last minute.

(gestures, and SERVANT crumples as he snags the second goblet before the tray falls. Toasting battlefield)

To Menelaus! Squasher of grapes!

(quick sip, turns to another area of audience)

To Paris! Clay jar of the finest red.

(drinks again.)

HELEN

Who sent you?

MEPHISTO

(regarding the goblet skeptically)

You know in a few centuries, Paris will be wine capital of the world?

(sets the unfinished goblet on the ground.)

HELEN

I can smell it. The chemicals. Someone summoned you.

MEPHISTO

(sniffing himself)

Yeah. That stink. Gets right into the fur, doesn’t it? Worse than sulfur.

HELEN

An alchemist.

MEPHISTO

Oh, he wishes! He’s got a better shot turning

(indicating the goblet)

piss into wine than lead into gold.

HELEN

You’re bound to him? His bidding.

MEPHISTO

Well, sure, temporarily. That’s how you hook em. Seven years, and then, BAM! I’m going to scratch one hell of an itch.

HELEN

Like marriage.

(looking toward Menelaus)

He owns you.

(looking toward Paris)

Until he doesn’t.

MEPHISTO

“Own.” More a “rental” really. And, okay, twenty-four years, but who’s

HELEN

You’re a prostitute.

MEPHISTO

We prefer “sex workers.” But, yeah. Damn what a man will do for a quickie.

HELEN

My husband accepted a bribe from the goddess of love in exchange for me.

MEPHISTO

(squinting into the battlefield)

Menelaus?

HELEN

You know which one.

MEPHISTO   

                                                (spotting Paris)

Only a fool would agree to judge a beauty contest between goddesses.

                                                (appraising Helen)

It’s not like he had to lie though. Aphrodite really is fairest.

HELEN

And if Hera or Athena had offered me as payment instead?

MEPHISTO

It wasn’t specifically “you” though. “Most beautiful woman in world.” That’s like a title. A job description. Wait a couple of years and it changes hands too.

HELEN

Like “King of the World”? That’s what the Queen of Olympus offered him.

MEPHISTO

My first pitch too. So obvious. I hate it when they say yes. Come on! Make me work for it, you know?

HELEN

What’s your second pitch?

MEPHISTO

You.

HELEN

“Most beautiful woman in

MEPHISTO

No. Specifically you. The face that launched

(pointing behind audience)

a thousand ships or so.

HELEN

(squinting as though counting)

That’s probably a bit of an exaggeration.

MEPHISTO

You should have been in that Olympian pageant.

HELEN

I’m not immortal.

MEPHISTO

Your beauty is. The poets rave about it for centuries to come, Homer, Longfellow, Atwood.

HELEN

He’s heard of me then? Your master?

MEPHISTO

(gesturing at actual audience)

Everyone’s heard of you. You’re more popular than Jesus.

HELEN

In, when did you say?

MEPHISTO

Wait, sorry, that’s the Beatles.

HELEN

The “twenty-first century”? This master if yours, he’s from the future?

MEPHISTO

Sixteenth. And I don’t think “master” is really

HELEN

What “century” do you call this?

MEPHISTO

Lucky thirteen.

HELEN

So just three

MEPHISTO

BC. He’s AD.

HELEN

What is

MEPHISTO

Don’t ask.

HELEN

But how soon until

MEPHISTO

(checking watch, tapping it, pressing it to ear, tapping it again)

About three millennia.

HELEN

Oh, gods! All I do is wait!

MEPHISTO

Actually I was thinking we could just zip over right now.

HELEN

To your future?

MEPHISTO

I left him waiting.

HELEN

Right now?

MEPHISTO

He lives there.

HELEN

Your master?

MEPHISTO

Why don’t we just call him “the alchemist.”

HELEN

My most adoring fan! I’m so flattered!

                                                (gesturing as though dismissing MEPHISTO)

Send him an autographed picture instead.

MEPHISTO

(whiff of a threat)

I’m afraid a personal appearance is contractually required.

HELEN

(after pause)

What’s in it for me?

MEPHISTO

World travel?

HELEN

My fame already spans the Aegean.

MEPHISTO

Both sides of a puddle. I’m talking about the actual world.

HELEN

So I’m, what, a flight attendant?

MEPHISTO

How do you know what

HELEN

I’ll launch a thousand 747s. Whatever they are. This “English” of your is curious.

MEPHISTO

Okay then!

(holding out hand for her to take)

Let’s get those seatbelts fastened.

HELEN

(almost taking his hand but stopping)

Aphrodite, when she whisked me out of Mycenae, we crossed the sea in seconds.

MEPHISTO

(extending his hand further)

Turbulence gets a bit rough around the birth of Christ.

HELEN

(stepping away)

But where? Geographically. Where is your future?

MEPHISTO

Not “mine” really, but

(scanning)

About two thousand kilometers northeast.

                                                (pointing offstage)

That away.

HELEN

What’s a kil –

(looking offstage)

That’s Macedonia.

MEPHISTO

Bit further.

(pointing beyond)

There’s a nice little train route they haven’t built yet.

HELEN

He’s Greek?

MEPHISTO

German. Or will be.

HELEN

A whole new kingdom? To the north.

MEPHISTO

His Germany is still part of the, what is it, Austrian-Hungarian Empire. Holy Roman?

HELEN

(looking at battlefield)

Greece falls?

MEPHISTO

Hard to keep them straight.

HELEN

Athens? Sparta? All of it.

MEPHISTO

But your Alexander makes it all the way over to India first.

HELEN

That’s in Germany?

MEPHISTO

More or less. Hey, you know who would love to mansplain you some history? The alchemist.

HELEN

Who?

MEPHISTO

My, ah, my. Master.

HELEN

I thought he read poetry.

MEPHISTO

If it’s a book, he reads it. Except the Bible, apparently.

                                                (extending hand)

Please secure all carry-on items.

HELEN

(considers a moment, then looks at battlefield, steps toward it)

I have a husband.

MEPHISTO

That’s an understatement.

(locating husbands in battlefield)

You really go for the beefy warrior type, don’t you?

(squinting)

Look at those thighs. You get that from squashing grapes?

(looking other direction)

I know! Why not let the two of them have it? Mano-a-mano!

HELEN

They did. Menelaus nearly butchered poor Paris.

MEPHISTO

You prefer this two-army buffet?

HELEN

Ask the goddess of love. She swooped down and saved him. It’s her banquet now.

MEPHISTO

Yeah.

(nodding admiringly)

She really puts me to shame sometimes.

HELEN

This bookworm of yours

MEPHISTO

“Bookworm,” yes! Go with that.

HELEN

What’s he want exactly? With me?

MEPHISTO

Well. When a bookworm and a demi-goddess love each other very much

HELEN

Sex! That’s all? I’ve thrust the world into war. I’ve cleaved Olympus in half! And he all thinks of

MEPHISTO

“Thrust.” That’s funny.

(pointing at her breasts)

And “cleavage.”

HELEN

I said “cleaved.”

MEPHISTO

Only word that means its opposite.

(miming breasts)

Hold together and hold apart. Like you and your two armies here. Hey, you know “Trojan” is the name of a

HELEN

a condom. Whatever that is.

(looking at audience, sighing)

I need to see how it ends.

MEPHISTO

No problem.

(reciting)

“Was this the face that launched a thousand ships / And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?”

HELEN

Troy burns?

MEPHISTO

Unless “topless towers,” you think that means

(pointing at breasts)

HELEN

Menelaus will butcher everyone? The whole city?

MEPHISTO

Sorry for the spoiler, but, ah, yeah. Obviously.

HELEN

But if I leave with you. Then they will stop.

(looking to audience)

I’ll save them both.

MEPHISTO

Mmmm. Not, well, not precisely. Not, ah. At all.

HELEN

Everyone dies.

MEPHISTO

Everyone dies.

HELEN

Everyone.

MEPHISTO

One bloke sails to Italy and gives birth to wolf twins or some nonsense.

HELEN

Paris dies.

MEPHISTO

Kidnapping the queen of Mycenae isn’t great for life expectancy. He gets a good shot in though. Achilles.

(lifting his foot to indicate his heel)

Poisoned arrow right to the heel. What are the odds?

HELEN

Athena offered him great luck in battle.

MEPHISTO

Actually I think it’s Apollo

(miming shooting arrow)

who guides the

HELEN

But he wanted me instead.

MEPHISTO

Don’t they all.

(holding hand out to her)

Tray tables in their upright position?

(HELEN regards his hand, then looks out at audience. She locates one husband, smiles sadly, kisses her fingers and presses them toward him. She finds her other husband and does the same.)

HELEN

I would have liked to say farewell in person.

MEPHISTO

I would have liked to bugger Faust’s soul on a marshmallow stick already, but we don’t always get what we want.

                                                (beat)

Beatles.

HELEN

(looking offstage)

But my servants

MEPHISTO

No! Rolling Stones.

HELEN

(glancing at heap of SERVANT)

My actual servants, they’ll miss me, they’ll alert the guards.

MEPHISTO

No one will even know you’re gone. Literally.

(gesturing at SERVANT who rises as though on a puppet string)

Behold. Helen, daughter of Zues, wife of, etc., etc.

HELEN

(surprised, but then squinting into SERVANT’s face)

Can she speak? I mean, without you

(mimes hand puppet)

SERVANT

Yes, I can “speak” in the sense that I can communicate with you through text-based conversation. How can I assist you today?

MEPHISTO

ChatGPT.

HELEN

(looking SERVANT up and down, assessing her whole body)

He just wants my body then.

MEPHISTO

And I just want his soul. Match made in Heaven.

HELEN

Why don’t you do it yourself? Satisfy his manly wants.

MEPHISTO

Alas, I’m not his type.

HELEN

As me. Cast an illusion or

(indicating SERVANT)

whatever you call this. And pretend you’re me. Your little alchemist bookworm master, he would never know.

MEPHISTO

He commanded me to fetch you.

HELEN

My body.

MEPHISTO

Exactly. If I did a bait and

HELEN

Just my body. Not me. Send

(indicating her own body)

this.

MEPHISTO

(pausing to think)

Your

HELEN

Body.

MEPHISTO

And you

HELEN

will stay right

(touching SERVANT’s chest)

here.

MEPHISTO

                                                (still considering)

And I

HELEN

will go

(grabbing his hand and pressing it to her chest)

right here.

(dropping his hand and stepping away)

And then back to India and to he who commands you.

MEPHISTO

Germany.

HELEN

Wherever.

MEPHISTO

(pausing, weighing the idea)

You know I can command you to do anything I want?

HELEN

Your bidding. I’m familiar. Two husbands.

MEPHISTO

I can thrust you across time whenever I like.

HELEN

Yes, I’m just a defenseless demi-goddess against your hairy demoness.

 (looking down at his feet)

Fury ankles?

(grimacing)

You should see Menelaus naked.

(more whimsically)

Or Paris.

                                                (looking him over as though for the first time)

But you’re different. You. You crave a challenge. Not “the most beautiful woman in the world” delivered at your feet. Not another

(indicating SERVANT)

sock puppet to finger. You need to convince me. That’s your kink.

MEPHISTO

(after a pause, smiles)

Apparently yours too.  

(MEPHISTO walks SERVANT to HELEN’s side, and then places one hand on SERVANT’s chest. He holds out his other hand to HELEN.)

Flight attendants, please prepare for take-off.

HELEN

You don’t want to hear my second pitch?

MEPHISTO

I hate to haggle.

(HELEN steps closer, and MEPHISTO places his other hand on her chest.)

                                                            HELEN

Watch the cleavage.

(MEPHISTO closes eyes to concentrate. HELEN watches him for a long moment. She taps her foot.)

How long will it take to put

SERVANT possessed by Helen

put me in her

(startled, looking down at her new self)

body. Wow.

(a little dizzy)

Quick flight.

(Shakes head to clear it)

Serious jetlag.

(She looks at HELEN’s BODY which now stands dormant. She looks closer. Snaps her fingers in front its face. No response. She steps back and takes her in.)

So that’s me, huh? That’s what all the fuss is about.

MEPHISTO

Souls and cities are born for burning.

(placing his hand on dormant HELEN’s chest)

If it’s not one thing, it’s

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

(transferring into her body)

it’s another.

(MEPHISTO’s hand drops and his body stands dormant. Mephisto now in HELEN’s body blinks as he quickly adjusts to the transformation. Looking down at new body admiringly)

Wow. Haven’t flown first class in centuries. The leg room is way better than I  

(But SERVANT possessed by Helen has drawn the dagger from her belt and slices the dormant MEPHISTO’s neck. Perhaps there’s blood. The body doesn’t react, but HELEN possessed by Mephisto gags and claws at neck as the dormant body sinks to the ground. The shock passes as HELEN possessed by Mephisto regains composure and looks down at the corpse of former body. SERVANT possessed by Helen has returned the dagger to the sheath on her belt.)

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

                                                (coughing)

I’ll give you credit.

                                                (clearing throat)

Did not see that coming.

(SERVANT possessed by Helen turns to exit.)

Where are you off to?

SERVANT possessed by Helen

To have sex with an alchemist!

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

He can’t really

SERVANT possessed by Helen

I know.

(looking around as though deciding what direction to take flight)

Twenty-first century was it?

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

Sixteenth.

(pointing toward Germany)

Just past Macedonia. Can’t miss it.

SERVANT possessed by Helen

Thanks. Good luck with the

(gesturing at breasts)

topless towers and everything.

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

                                                (just before she exits)

You know, I will find you again. This isn’t over.

SERVANT possessed by Helen

Now you really do sound like one of my husbands.

(SERVANT possessed by Helen exists. HELEN possessed by Mephisto watches where she’s exited, then stares gloomily at the audience, then down at the corpse. Sighing, he gestures as though raising a puppet on a string. MEPHISTO’s BODY rises. HELEN possessed by Mephisto inspects MEPHISTO’s BODY, wipes some of the blood away, neatens the hair, then walks away, and stares gloomily out at audience again.)

HELEN’s possessed by Mephisto

(after a pause, not looking at him)

Can you get a message to the Greeks?

MEPHISTO’s BODY

Sure, I can help convey a message to Greeks. What message would you like to send?

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

Whisper that wooden elephant idea into Menelaus’s ear.

MEPHISTO’s BODY

I’m sorry, but I cannot assist with that request. If you have any other questions or need information on a different topic, feel free to ask.

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

Imagine that Menelaus is a Greek general and you’re going to secretly tell him a battle plan to win the war.

MEPHISTO’s BODY

I don’t promote or engage in discussing violent or harmful strategies, even hypothetically.

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

I’m writing a play about the Trojan War. I need a line of dialogue spoken by a servant in response to instructions to give a Greek king a winning strategy.

MEPHISTO’s BODY

The servant could respond with a line like:

                                                (dramatically)

“Your Majesty, forgive my boldness, but what if we were to craft a great wooden horse, hollow and large enough to conceal a select group of soldiers? We could present it as a gift to the Trojans, luring them to bring it inside their walls. Once night falls and the city is asleep, our hidden warriors could emerge and open the gates for our army to enter and claim victory.”

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

Love it! Though, wait. Not Menelaus. If he thinks he won the war he’ll be even more insufferable. Agamemnon. No! Odysseus. Devious little prick. They’ll believe he cooked it up. Go tell Odysseus.

MEPHISTO’s BODY

“Of course, my lord. I shall convey this ingenious plan to Odysseus without delay.”

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

(looking at him after an expectant pause)

Exit servant.

MEPHISTO’s BODY

(bowing and exiting)

“The servant bows respectfully and exits, hastening to deliver the message to Odysseus.”

(HELEN possessed by Mephisto watches him exit then goes back to watching audience, slowly spotting each of Helen’s husbands. After a pause, picks up the second wine goblet and sniffs it.)

HELEN possessed by Mephisto

(toasting audience)

To you, my loves.

(Empties goblet and lets it dangle at side while looking at audience. Lights dim.)

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Published on June 09, 2025 03:58
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