From the complicated mind of Sarah Ruhl, who always seems to find humor in the art of dying, comes this latest comedy which delves into how one persons search for an emotional connection spirals into a journey of self awareness. The premise on its own is worthy of a chuckle. While Jean is finishing the last drop of lobster bisque at a local diner, a cell phone continuously rings at the adjacent table. Taking matters into her own hands, Jean confronts the cell phone offender, who is a bit askew in his chair. As the title of the play suggests, because the gentlemen has expired, Jean begins answering the dead man's cell phone and opportunistically becomes his liaison to the living. What unravels is a hilarious yet somewhat disturbing reflection on what people perceive and what is real. Any further plot information would end up spoiling the show, except to say that look out for a character's suicide scene worthy of Mrs. Lovett's in Sweeny Todd.