If the universe is slightly off-kilter, and you make a mistake, perhaps you can get the universe back into alignment and “do over” your error. That is the hope of Peter Mollberg when he attends his 20th high school reunion and confronts Kari Hermansen in a slow dance of accusations and lost love, mistakes and second chances.

The 100-year-old dance hall in Pine City, Minn., slated for imminent destruction, is the setting for Craig Wright’s bittersweet and lovely romance, “The Pavilion,” now lighting up the stage of the Westport Country Playhouse until Saturday.

Two decades ago, Peter and Kari were voted the Cutest Senior Couple, until Kari discovered she was pregnant and Peter chose to run away, when he should have stayed by her side. Now fast forward to their reunion, when Peter has come to make amends and beg Kari to restore the love he so callously discarded.

Michael Laurence’s Peter has been paying the price for his cowardice for a long time. Even though he is a psychologist, he can’t cure what ails him: only Kari’s forgiveness and love can. Tracy Middendorf’s Kari was “rescued” by a fellow classmate Hans after having an abortion and has been trapped in a job in a bank guarding valuables, when she has nothing of merit of her own. To her, what they once had and treasured has been irretrievably lost.

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Narrating this poetic and philosophical tale is Michael Milligan, who serves as everyone in the class in attendance at the dance, and he does an admirable job as every Carla, Denise, Lisa and Tom, Dick and Harry.

Chad Rabinovitz directs this touching memory play of pain and poignancy, love and loss, regret and repair.

For tickets ($30 to 55), call Westport Country Playhouse, 25 Powers Court, Westport, Route 1, at (203) 227-4177 or (888) 927-7529, or online at www.westportplayhouse.org. Performances are tonight and Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 4 and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. For other reviews of this and other current theatrical offerings, go to www.ctcritics.org.

Discover for yourself if the universe in general and Kari in particular can find forgiveness for Peter as you travel through time on a journey of the heart.

Olympia Dukakis conducts ‘Milk Train’

We all long for companionship and love in our lives and, how much more so, if death is imminent and we don’t want to depart this world alone. To Flora Goforth, living on a secluded mountain-top retreat on the Amalfi coast of Italy, dictating her colorful memoirs to her secretary Blackie (Maggie Lacey), the prospect of death’s arrival is a particularly devastating one.

The adventurous Goforth, splendidly created by Olympia Dukakis, is an aging society diva who, in her youth, delighted in doing shocking things like appear at a costume ball as the ravishingly unclad Lady Godiva. She has had four husbands, the first two ugly, the third who resembled an ostrich and only the fourth, a handsome stud, who was able to break the protective shell around her heart with his love and sexual intimacy. Unfortunately, he was killed speeding in a sports car she gave him as a gift.

Now the vulnerable, feisty and unique lady is facing three deadlines: her New York publisher, her London publisher and one with the Angel of Death. Until Sunday, June 15, the Hartford Stage will be mounting a dazzling version of Tennessee Williams’ “The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore,” as the tenth installment of their Tennessee Williams Marathon, a decade-long tribute to one of America’s finest playwrights.

Kevin Anderson plays the mysteriously engaging stranger Christopher Flanders who arrives on the diva’s doorstep unannounced but possibly not unwelcome. A maker of mobiles and a writer of poetry, Christopher could as easily be a con man and thief, a last possibility to offer love or a sweet soul to make her passage into the next world a little easier. The sudden arrival of Flora’s friendly enemy, the Witch of Capri (Judith Roberts), casts suspicions over Chris’s motives and provides a catalyst for the plot.

Michael Wilson directs this engaging drama with flair on a romantic set designed by Jeff Cowie.

For tickets ($23 to $64), call the Hartford Stage, 50 Church St., Hartford, at (860) 527-5151 or online at www.hartfordstage.org. Performances are Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday at 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., with matinees Sundays and selected Wednesday and Saturday at 2 p.m.

Visit Goforth’s mountain, where the scavenger crows are circling, as she boldly battles against death and takes a last fling at love.