The four musical scenes describe the story of a woman who poisoned her husband and married another man shortly afterwards.
A subsequent scene describes the Irish famine through the eyes of a large potato-head puppet with a bad case of dyspepsia.
The scene describes Judith and Charles interacting while Louis goes on a hunt:
A marvelous scene describes her audition for the role of corporate spokeswoman for Kmart in 1987.
Reporters allowed to tour the scene described seeing wrecked vacuum cleaners.
Possibly the most titillating (and telling) scene describes her presentation at dinner, naked and decked in cream, as a final dish.
This scene describes the horror of lynching, and the power it had over the mob of people in the deep south.
The sensual aspects are replaced with an emphasis on the spiritual aspects, and the last scene describes a world contained unto itself.
I suggest that your friend may have witnessed a scene such as she described but that it was much less serious than she supposed.
Notice, however, that the second scene described above shifts in midstream from Bahjat's point of view to the captain's.