Well, my recollection of the Bible must be sketchy. In this play, Jonah was a cowboy from the Old West. He communicated with God via telegraph. That was some key on the telegraph, because it could somehow use fewer taps to send Morse Code with dots only, at a normal speaking rate. Also, Jonah was an Old Testament story, but somehow he was there for the crucifixion, which was a New Testament story. Jonah ran away in a stagecoach, with the marshal, a schoolteacher, and 2 girls, causing a sandstorm. Did I forget that Jonah was dropped into a well, where he stayed for 3 days and 3 nights. Oh, and he had brothers, the 3 Amigos. His main squeeze was the telegrapher. And the washing maids of Nineveh cleaned all the city's dirty laundry, but had no baskets or clothes--just marshmallows that they were always eating. After the sandstorm, the villagers were so happy they ate 6-inch spiral lollipops.
The play was humorous. I couldn't see everything because I was a few rows back, flat seasting, and some things were done on the floor, rather than the stage. My kids did well. Actually, my only real complaints were the things being too low for most of the audience to see and some audio issues.