Starstruck (play)

The United Federation of Female Freedom Fighters have sent Captain Galatia 9 and her compatriots to ensure the safety of Glorianna, a charismatic leader who may tip the balance toward a just society.

Elaine Lee earned a nomination in 1980 for the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series on NBC's soap opera The Doctors.

With her sister, Susan Norfleet Lee, she co-wrote two plays that they produced and starred in with their company: "Brief Cases" and "The Contamination of the Kokomo Lounge".

Kaluta, with additional Costume and Prop Construction by Charles Vess; Music and Sound Effects by Dwight Dixon; and Lights by Mark Di Quinzio.

Kaluta; Music and Sound Effects by Dwight Dixon; Lights by Adam Teichman and Earle Brokenshire; Video Segments by Bo Johnson; and Fight Choreography by Frank Lee.

A song called "Those Crazy Stars" was added for Brucilla and Dwannyun to sing; the lyrics were by Elaine Lee and music by Dwight Dixon.

Her movements to simulate the merwoman EEEEEEEEEluh's drifting in the water tank inspired Kaluta and Charles Vess to add more to the set for her to maneuver herself.

The Starstruck audioplay production was adapted by Elaine Lee; Direction and Sound Design by William Dufris; Original Music and Arrangements by Dwight Dixon; Post Production by William Dufris and Anthony S. Marino; Engineered (for The Studio) by Efra Becerra-Avilez and Steve Drown; Recorded at The Studio, Portland, Maine; Produced by The AudioComics Company in association with Portland Community Radio WMPG FM.

(from human to Siren 3 ship computer) was workshopped at the 30th Annual I-Con science fiction convention in upstate New York, featuring Poirier, Axt, and Mulligan from the original audio production.

In addition, the New York-based comedy troupe Pink Axe played the Galactic Girl Guides, along with actors cast from auditions prior to and at the 2011 I-Con convention.

Productions; the 11" × 14" works were printed in black-and-white, sealed in an envelope with a cover of the Starstruck stage play poster, and hand-numbered and autographed by Kaluta.

The Starstruck play received coverage in the magazines Starlog (#41, December 1980) [12] and Heavy Metal (#8311, November 1983),[13] both featuring interviews with Lee and Kaluta, artwork, and Smith's photos.

[14] The Charleston Gazette wrote that it was "considerably more evolved than a traditional radio drama", and that its complexity meant that "jokes fly by so fast that repeated listenings will be warranted".

[15] Club Parnassus expressed their admiration of the subject matter saying "... if there’s a stage play out there featuring the wild and ribald adventures of four female space rangers, why is this not performed as often as The Sound of Music?

"[16] Audiophile, The Charleston Gazette, Club Parnassus, The Discriminating Fangirl,[17] and Axiom's Edge[18] each made favorable comparisons of the script and players to Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.