For some, disaster brings opportunity. That’s what happened for Max McLean and his stage company, Fellowship for Performing Arts (FPA), which engages audiences through art from a Christian worldview. It is no secret that McLean has a great affinity for C.S. Lewis. He and his company have turned works by Lewis into stage plays, like “The Screwtape Letters,” “The Great Divorce,” as well as performing Lewis’s tragic love story called “Shadowlands.” In fact, the moment the country came to a screeching halt on March 15, 2020, Lewis and FPA had just finished a two-week run of “The Great Divorce” in Houston. As the weeks turned into months, McLean and his company found ways to continue creating and performing. The company performed online events, worked on scripts, and actually managed to reach a larger audience. Then opportunity knocked. McLean had had conversations with U.K. director Norman Stone, who had directed the …