Fifty Boxes of Earth From Theater Mu is Good In Spite of its Missteps at Park Square Theatre

Alex Galick, Mina Moua, & Che’Li Photo by Rich Ryan

Fifty Boxes of Earth by Ankita Raturi is having its world premier from Theater Mu at Park Square Theatre in St. Paul. It is a two hour play with a lot of interpretive dance that would be greatly improved with four words Ninety Minutes, Less Movement. At its heart it is a play about xenophobia and transphobia, but it loses its clarity by trying to force some sort of variation of the Dracula legend upon its narrative. The story revolves around a community garden in which three characters interact. Q has just moved to this country and brings with them 50 boxes of earth. This is a take on Dracula’s 50 boxes of his native soil that he needs to fill his coffins with. Q meets John, who manages the community garden in which Q has reserved a plot. The third character is John’s daughter Mina, who prefers to be called Harker. Q is the other, John is the bigot, and Harker is the way the world should be. John takes an instant distrust to Q, while Harker and Q bond over the planting of their garden and talk of Q’s son who will be coming to live with them after the garden is ready. The garden grows strange things and in foreign dirt, so John does everything he can to sabotage Q’s garden, even trying to destroy it.

Raturi’s script builds effective relationships between the three characters and that is its strength. The weakness as I’ve mentioned is the attempt to somehow tie this to the Dracula mythology. I know they are trying to view that through a modern lense, but nothing really matches up in any way that justifies the connection. Make it a alternate world and it still works as a modern day fairytale or myth. Director KT Shorb accompanies the narrative with five ensemble players, choreographed by Ananya Chatterjea, who dance about and seem to represent the plants of the garden, or the gardens mental health. I’m not the best with interpretive dance. Though I didn’t dislike what the ensemble did necessarily, I do think there was too much of it. The story doesn’t need any of it, but it would have been better if it merely occurred during the action of the play, but it felt at multiple times, including the opening, that it was merely adding to the runtime. Those more into dance might feel differently. Technically the show is excellent with nice set design work by Mina Kinukawa, Puppet Designs and builds by Oanh Vu & Andrew Young, very immersive sound design and musical compositions by Katharine Horowitz, and effective Lighting design by Karin Olson.

The five Ensemble players are Eliana Durnbaugh, Kiko Laureano, Mars Niemi, Alyssa Taiber, and Taylor West and while they do what they are asked very well, I think they are over utilized. Q’s plants grow very rapidly and without having either very elaborate props or frequent long blackouts, the ensemble is necessary to produce those changes on stage and that alone would have been effective. The problem is that it feels like the Director and Choreographer felt the need to justify the dancers presence and so expanded the movement into something that detracts from the story. The three leads are all very compelling as is the central plot and the themes it explores, it doesn’t benefit from a supposed Dracula connection. Che’Li plays Q who is the stand in for Dracula, if Dracula wasn’t a villain, didn’t need to avoid sunlight, didn’t drink the blood of their victims, or really do anything mean, cruel, or… wait how is Q Dracula again? Alex Galick plays John who we assume must be a stand in for Jonathan Harker in Bram Stoker’s novel, except here he’s a terrible xenophobic fact denier whose actions are unconscionable. Mina Moua plays Mina aka Harker and the relationship she and Che’Li develop in the roles is the heart of the play and it’s greatest accomplishment. Galick’s performance as John is superb, I know because I got so angry at him during the performance that I caught myself giving him the finger. When an actor makes you react that viscerally it’s usually a combination of the actors talent and the writer’s skill at character creation.

Ultimately there are more positives than negatives and I do recommend the show. I write so much about the misteps because they are what holds it from going from a good play to a very good play. The truth is, you don’t have to change anything but the characters names and no one in a million years would draw any comparison to Dracula. The fifty boxes of earth can work as it’s own device in this modern day myth, the number which comes from Stoker’s story can be changed to four, considering that is the number of boxes they actually use in the play. Do that, so you are not distracting the audience by having them try and create in their mind a correlation to the famous novel that just wont come into focus. Honestly, the story doesn’t need it. Trim 15 to 20 minutes, most of it movement unrelated to anything needed in terms of set and plot, and you have a very good, maybe even great play. As it is the greatness is there and hopefully those who read this review and attend the show will have their expectations set appropriately and will ignore any thoughts of vampires and just enjoy the story at hand and know that the dancing, while too long, doesn’t ever go on ridiculously too long.

Fifty Boxes of Earth runs through March 16th at Park Square Theatre in St. Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatermu.org/fifty-boxes

More than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, Theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our Theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity.

Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

But that’s not all! You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Misery Thrills at Lakeshore Players Theatre

I’m Stephen King’s number one fan. Although, I don’t really feel comfortable saying that after witnessing the extremes to which Annie Wilkes goes as the number one fan of writer Paul Sheldon in Misery. Misery is an adaptation by William Goldman of his screenplay adaptation of the novel by Stephen King. Misery has never been my favorite King book or film, but they are both solid works. I have to say that I think it translates very well into a play, this is my second production of Misery and I think the superior one. A play like this, when you know the story so well, comes down to not what the story is, but how they tell it. So what’s important is the performances, the direction, and the production design all of which are top notch in this production from the Lakeshore Players Theatre. For those unfamiliar with the plot there will be the added thrill of several surprising moments, for those that do know, the fun is seeing how they will accomplish certain moments and what we be left out all together. Spoiler, you don’t get to see the car crash. What is sort of amazing about this production is how into it the audience is, and how even knowing the story so well, it’s still a thrilling two hours.

The play opens with writer Paul Sheldon waking up in the home of Annie Wilkes, his self declared “number one fan”. He doesn’t know where he is or what happened to him. He learns from Annie that he had a car accident due to a snowstorm and that luckily she found him and was able to pry him out of the wreckage and get him back to her house in the woods. He has a badly dislocated shoulder and both legs were broken. Luckily for him, she’s a former nurse who was able to splint his broken legs and has a stockpile of painkillers to help him manage the pain until he can be moved to the hospital. Unfortunately, the phone lines are down because of the storm and the road to the hospital is undrivable, or so Annie says. Annie, whom at first seems to Paul like a Angel of mercy, slowly reveals herself to be more a harbinger of misery. It starts with little moments of odd behavior which become increasingly more disconcerting. Soon it becomes clear to Paul that his number one fan loves him so much, she has no intention of ever letting him go. The play becomes an exercise in suspense to see if Paul can outwit Annie and survive until help can arrive.

The three Actor cast is filled with two Twin Cities unknowns Megan Blakeley and Tim Wollman; Tom Sonnek whom audiences have seen at Lakeshore and Theatre in the Round locally. Wollman plays Buster the Sheriff who comes looking for the missing writer. It’s a very small role that is made even smaller in the play which may be adapter Goldman’s one misstep. In his screenplay, Buster has a larger role and you come to like and root for him to find Paul. Not developing that relationship between the character and the audience robs one of the big moments of much of its impact. It also leaves the actor without a lot to do other than act as a catalyst for the plot to move forward. Wollman does everything anyone could want, it’s just a thankless and underwritten role. Sonnek as Paul Sheldon does a great job of gradually showing the characters realization that his savior might actually be his damnation. We find ourselves very involved in his plight and that raises the stakes emotionally. Blakeley as Annie Wilkes, like her predecessor in the role Kathy Bates who won an Oscar for the film, steals the show. Blakeley establishes Annie as someone whose mood can turn on a dime. Sickeningly sweet and simple one minute and cruel and vindictive the next. She has some darkly comic line readings that make the audience laugh while also frightening us a little. What makes the character such an effective villain is she’s normalish most of the time but when she turns it’s unexpected and often quite brutal. Blakeley switch between the two extremes with such fluidity, that halfway through it’s hard to take anything she says without and underlying sense of dred.

Misery is also a visually effective production. I was particularly impressed with the set design which consists of three room set on a giant turntable that revolves as characters move throughout the house. It seems like an expensive set to have designed and created but it’s worth every penny from the audience’s perspective. The Scenic Designer Mark C. Koski’s work is creative an effective giving the play a dynamic visual sense akin to the surprise I felt when the train cars began to move in Murder on the Orient Express at the Guthrie a couple of years back. Also impressive was the lighting design by Tracy Joe. Early on there is a lighting cue that captured the transition of time between a character going to sleep at night and waking up in the morning better than I’ve ever seen it done. That was just one example, the entire show is expertly lit and that isn’t something I always notice. Megan K. Pence directs the show and utilizes Koski’s set to an almost cinematic effect at times. Pence builds the tension to be sure but her direction focuses more on the characters relationship and the power dynamic at play between the helpless writer and his fanatic caregiver. It’s a thriller to be sure but it’s also a fascinating character study of an obsessive fan that you wont soon forget about.

Misery runs through February 9th at the Hanifl Performing Arts Center in White Bear Lake. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.lakeshoreplayers.org/misery-season-72

Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time.

But that’s not all! Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Twin Cities Horror Festival XIII Day 8 Review: Schaulust

With this final show I have attended all of the TCHF XIII productions and yet somehow I still didn’t get a Bingo. Oh well, sometimes it just isn’t in the cards. Besides I think the prize was a toothbrush and who the hell wants that, am I right? We want candy!!! I have to say that for the first time in my TCHF attendance which began in 2019, there wasn’t a single show that I had to write a bad review about. Hey they weren’t all great, but there wasn’t a bad one in the bunch. The more amazing thing, and what shows that this years producers were real risk takers, is that Allison Vincent wasn’t in any of them. Last year that was the one ingredient that guaranteed a hit show, so for no one to have cast her in a show was a very ballsy move. You can read my reviews of everyone of the productions in this years festival which continues through 11/4/24 at The Stages of MN. For more information and to purchase tickets to the remaining shows go to https://www.tchorrorfestival.com/

Schaulust written and performed by Keith Hovis is part musical, part horror show, and all character study of an unstable mind. Hovis plays Wyatt a man who likes to watch, not in a creepy sexual way, but in a creepy everyday kind of way. He describes how it led to his break up with his boyfriend, though it wasn’t the watching part, the boyfriend was fine with that, it was something else, his need to not be needed. After the break up he finds a couple of people online who need money and agree to install a camera in their homes so he can watch them in exchange for money. Again not in a creepy sexcam way, just watch them playing video games, cutting their nails, sleeping on the couch. I’m not sure who to credit with the scenic design but it’s extremely well done. Wyatt’s home is a window into his fraying and disintegrating mental health. You can see the benefit of Schaulust playing in the Studio space, it has allowed for a fairly elaborate design, which really does inform our understanding of the narrator. It’s also one of the handful of shows that has some real horror elements, which I always think is a nice touch at the horror fest. It’s well written and acted, Hovis’ performance is all in and his songs were perfectly suited to the material. It’s one of the most polished and effective shows of the entire festival and I can say that because I saw them all!

Terrified of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself afraid and all alone in the dark when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time.

Twin Cities Horror Festival XIII Day 4 Reviews: Gh0stChaser04, The Regular, Campfire Stories

This will be my last batch of reviews until I see the final show Keith Hovis’ Schaulust on 10/30. As I prep this I’m told there is a single ticket left for the final performance of Let’s Summon a Demon at Debbie’s, it’s not to be missed so snatch it up if it’s still available. To read more about all the shows and to purchase tickets goo to https://www.tchorrorfestival.com/tchf-xiii-schedule.html Now without further ado here are my reviews for the three shows I saw on Day 4 of the festival.

Gh0stChaser04 plays like an old episode of the Twilight Zone crossed with Scooby-Doo, yet taken almost entirely seriously. It’s another in the increasingly rare shows that attempts some actual scares and creepiness and for that it is very welcome. This one has a great cast including a couple a favorite comedic performers Rita Boersma and Heather Meyer. The script by Rachel Teagle is clear and witty, particularly in the opening dialogue between the three ghost chasers. Jenny Moeller pulls off a tricky directing job, keeping it mostly grounded but also giving in to the more absurd aspects of the script, the Scooby-Doo aspects if you will. It’s hard to change tone from the realistic to the absurd and then come back to a reality established in the opening, but Moeller makes it work. The plot follows three ghost chasers in the late 1990s and simultaneously a journalist and a spiritualist from the early 1900s. How the two intersect and the surprises in store I’ll leave you to discover in wherever it is that signpost up ahead reads as the next stop.

The Regular is best explained as an episode of Cheers, which it openly acknowledges as an inspiration, gone horribly horribly wrong. Wait, let me amend that, it’s like the funniest fucking episode of Cheers getting hijacked by Kevin Spacey’s character in Seven. Josh Carson writes and directs the show and I’m not sure why he isn’t writing his own number one sitcom, or maybe that’s in the works. I thought the script was brilliant as was the staging including some great fight choreography by Annie Enneking. Filled with clever music cues that add repeated laughs throughout the show. Set in a bar an hour before closing the brilliant Sam Landman plays Charlie who sees himself as the loveable Norm character of the local bar. He banters with the bar staff, the bartender Teddy played by Claire Chenoweth, and the server Wes played by Lukas Ramsey, who humor him. Things take an odd turn though when a stranger arrives played by Jay Melchior who once left alone with Charlie informs him that he’s going to kill him when they leave the bar. Charlie doesn’t know why or what to do with this information or whether the stranger is being serious or not. The four person cast is top notch they make Carson’s jokes feel fresh and spontaneous like the best comedy. Special spotlight though on Landman and Chenoweth, they have the meatiest roles to be sure, but both have that something extra that makes it impossible not to believe their performances. This is a genre mashup of sitcom, thriller, horror, not the most naturalistic performance styles generally, and yet, for an hour they were Charlie and Teddy. This is so far, the best show the Festival.

Campfire Stories like Rev. Matt’s performances will be different every night. The line up changes but the structure is the same. Each night a group of four to five storytellers will take their turn at the microphone and tell true ghost stories. If the opening night is any indication they will run the gamut from funny, to moving, and even genuinely spooky. The show is accompanied musically by its curator and storyteller at each performance Nissa Nordland along with the multi talented Sam Landman. Here is the lineups for the remaining performances:

Monday, October 28th at 6:00 PM

Lauren Anderson

Jex Arzayus

Nissa Nordland

Shannon Twohy

*

Wednesday, October 30th at 9:00 PM

Lauren Anderson

Shanan Custer

Matthew Kessen

Heather Meyer

Nissa Nordland

*

Friday, November 1st at 7:30 PM**

Jex Arzayus

Nissa Nordland

Shannon Twohy

Derek “Duck” Washington

ASL Night

*

Saturday, November 2nd at 10:30 PM

Shanan Custer

Matthew Kessen

Heather Meyer

Nissa Nordland

Terrified of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself afraid and all alone in the dark when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time.

Twin Cities Horror Festival XIII Day Three Reviews: The Night Parade of a Hundred Demons…, Fractured Remembrances, Ghostrunners

Okay, so those paying close attention will notice that I labeled yesterday day one and today’s reviews day three. Well I wasn’t counting the Wednesday Cabaret, but I see from the TCHF posts they count that as day one, so I’m adjusting to their lead. If you want to see Let’s Summon a Demon at Debbie’s, good luck! As I prep this post the final performance lists, the tickets as almost gone. I suspect by the time I post this it will be sold out, making it a completely sold out run. Remember you can see the entire schedule and purchase tickets at this link https://www.tchorrorfestival.com/tchf-xiii.html . All Shows take place at the Crane theater in NE Minneapolis. I’ll be seeing all of the shows, so check back here for further reviews. I recommend seeing them all but if you are new to it at least plan a day or night to come and see three or four shows at once, there is such a variety of shows. When you do come they have some great mocktail additions to their concessions this year, I’ve tried the Cosmo and the Margarita so far and loved them both. Also don’t forget to purchase your merch, t-shirts, hoodies, even earrings, and dresses. That’s the pitch, now on with the reviews!

The Night Parade of a Hundred Demons for those of you familiar with Rev. Matt’s Monster Science you should know this years TCHF entry comes with a twist. Matt Kessen is joined by The Winding Sheet Outfit who act out elements of his humor filled lectures. If you’ve never seen Rev. Matt perform before you should, he’s a staple of the TCHF, the Minnesota Fringe Festival, and he performs monthly at Bryant Lake Bowl Theater. For most of us horror fans he’s like that favorite sweatshirt, it’s not your fanciest, it’s not your warmest, but it’s comforting and makes you feel warm inside. To describe the content would be pointless as each of his performances is a different topic. I will say that the addition of The Winding Sheet Outfit adds to the fun in all the right ways. For our performance the highlights was a parody song to the tune of “The Leader of the Pack” and they will be performing a different song for each program. I may try and catch another performance if I can, I enjoy these so much.

Fractured Remembrances is written and directed by Executive Director/Ticketing Director of the TCHF Duck Washington. Don’t worry his show is not the result of string pulling, it’s more than deserving of its place in the festival. Of the seven shows I’ve seen so far, this was the one with some real moments of unease and creepiness. The story of a young woman named Aster, played beautifully by Angela Fox, who undergoes a traumatic experience when she and her boyfriend disappear for five days. She is found but her boyfriend is not, but he’s not the only things missing, her memory of the five days is also gone. The show deals with her trying to recover her memories with the help of a hypnotherapist. This has a complex script, brought to life with minimal sets but with truly creepy lighting and sound design. The Make-up and special effects by Kyle Decker add an ooze factor that doesn’t go over the top like Dangerous Productions shows do, but just adds to the overall tone of dread. There are fun supporting performances from Tim Uren, Ariel Pinkerton, and Jean Wolf. This is one for horror fans!

Ghostrunners certainly has some effective and horrific moments, but at its heart, it doesn’t want to scare you, it wants to amuse. At that it succeeds admirably, the main focus is on word play. For example those words that have more than one meaning like bat, as is baseball bat or the flying rodent. Another example is words that sound alike, “I see”, being mistaken for “Icey”. If you enjoy this type of clever writing and it is clever, though like the magicians trick or Sherlock Holmes deductions, it seems simple once explained. But coming up with all of these variations and then fitting them into a story, they only make it look easy. The story centers around an accountant who, appears to have OCD and be on the spectrum, spends his spare time playing a baseball game that he invented with dice, which relies heavily on statistics and tables. This rang very true to me, I’ve a son on the spectrum and I remember the elaborate games he would create on his own when he was younger. The game he is playing is then acted out by performers who are representing what is happening in his head. Everything begins to go south when he rolls three ones, a triple snake eyes if that’s clearer. This roll takes him to a table that is hardly ever referenced and the results are murderous. It’s a great cast including, in for one of the actors who has been benched due to an injury, the Director Kevin Duong at some performances and Playwright Kyle Munshower at others.

Terrified of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself afraid and all alone in the dark when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time.

Twin Cities Horror Festival XIII Day One Reviews: The Wrench, Let’s Summon a Demon at Debbie’s, The Alchemist’s Bargain, and Doctor Clown

TCHF XIII actually launched a day early this year on Wednesday night with the sold out, one night only, Leslie Vincent Presents: A Monster and Mayhem Cabaret. I think everyone in the audience that night is of the firm belief that this is the way to open every TCHF going forward. Here’s hoping that is in the works for next year. The Festival shows of which there are 11, began on Thursday, each will have 5 performances throughout the 11 days of the festival. To see the schedule and purchase tickets to any of the shows go to https://www.tchorrorfestival.com/tchf-xiii.html . But don’t wait to long, shows have already sold out performances.

The Wrench is a play written by Andrew Erskine Wheeler Who’s Whoosh!… remains in my memory as a highlight of my very first Minnesota Fringe Festival. Here again he dives into a real life event, but this time there is a dark side. A group of actors, most of whom were present at the 1849 Astor Place Riot, have been hired for a new production of Macbeth. The story of their experience with the riot and how it left one of them with a traumatic brain injury is recounted to the young understudy who will have to go on as Lady Macbeth after the leading lady met with an accident. Interesting how often the Scottish Play and it’s curse has been coming up lately, just Sunday it was a very fun antidote in Patrick Page’s All the Devils Are Here at the Guthrie and those of us on the theater beat know of the series of accidents that have plagued Theater Latte Da’s production of Scotland, PA. Wheeler is great as Roscius Denue, who was trampled by horses during the riot and now speaks gibberish most of the time, but has perfect recall of the Shakespearean roles he played before the accident. There is also nice work from Carolyn Pool and Shanan Custer as two actresses that have aged out of the Lady Macbeth role and into the three witches.

Let’s Summon a Demon at Debbie’s is this years breakout hit, and it was so even before anyone saw it. By the time of the first performance four of its five performance slots have sold out. So if you are interested get online and get your tickets tonight, they will be sold out in the next day I’ve little doubt. Is it worthy of all the advance hype, yeah I think it is. The show opens on the home of Debbie, who lives with her menagerie of dolls whom she thinks of as her children. When her doorbell rings for the first time in 10 years and 27 days she is on her guard, but it turns out to be her old friend Cara, that she hasn’t seen in 25 years. Not since the day they and their friend Lucy tried to summon a demon in Debbie’s house during their senior year of high school. Is it scary? not really but it certainly has horrific elements. It’s really a pitch black comedy with some messed up stuff in it. Reagan Kay James is perfect as the uptight and slightly off her rocker doll loving Debbie. Julia Weiss as Cara wows us first by downing and entire bottle of wine in one drink, then with a story about catching her husband cheating on her that becomes more and more outrageous as it goes on and on, none of which can be repeated here for fear on violating some obscenity laws. Ashley Rose Wellman is Lucy whose entrance provides what is probably the plays one genuine moment of fright.

The Alchemist’s Bargain is a charming puppet show performed using blacklights, which really brought me back to my childhood, when you could get a blacklight bulb and blacklight posters at Spencers Gifts in the mall. I even had blacklight crayons that I used to color with and than look at using the blacklight. The story follows a man who seeks out a Alchemist who he hopes will be able to bring his true love back to life. The Alchemist sends the man on a quest to retrieve three ingredients that he will need in order to bring the loved one back. There is a lesson learned by the end but even if there wasn’t the journey itself is worth attending the show for. It’s a visual treat that ends with the alchemist’s trick. This is a great show for families, kids while marvel at the creativity of the medium, In fact so will their parents. I didn’t just enjoy myself, I was very much delighted by Phantom Chorus Theatre’s production. It’s a great example of the variety of styles and shows on view at the TCHF.

Doctor Clown is this years entry from Dangerous Productions. Typically the one show you can count on to be bloody and scary. Well, that is until this year, the blood is still there, but the scares have been replaced by laughs. Many of the laughs coming from the use of blood. Was I a little disappointed? yes, not because what they did wasn’t successful, it is. And it isn’t because it’s just a bunch of gross out humor, there is actually a fair amount of political and social commentary involved. No, it’s just that the one thing I’ve always found about the TCHF, and I do love the TCHF, is that very few of the shows actually even attempt to be scary. So it’s a little bit of a let down when the one company that can be relied upon to try and get the blood pumping, in more ways than one, doesn’t, at least, not in more ways than one. Of course the company should be allowed to do something different, and this clowning show if very well done. So it is a good show and my hope is that by setting your expectations accordingly you will be able to appreciate it more fully. If you have issues with blood and gore, this is not a show for you, it isn’t used to scare you but it could trigger a gag reflex or two all the same.

Terrified of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself afraid and all alone in the dark when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time.

Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors at the Center for Performing Arts

Photo by Jared Fessler

Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors the comedic play by Gordon Greenberg and Steve Rosen is like most adaptations of the classic horror novel by Bram Stoker, very loosely based on the source material. You have some of the basic plot in tact, and many of the characters names, even if they are tweaked ala Jean Van Helsing or they are given to different characters like the swap of Lucy and Mina as the fiance of Jonathan Harker. This adaptation is played for laughs and isn’t meant to be a serious and straight representation of the Dracula story. Stoker’s novel has a sexual undercurrent to it that was quite bold considering it’s Victorian era publication, that is the element that this production has its most fun with. It doesn’t shy away from the sensual aspects of the vampire myth in fact it puts it front and center and isn’t afraid to be very modern in it’s portrayals of sexual fluidity.

This is a show like The 39 Steps or the [Un]Qualified Theater’s 2023 MN Fringe production H.G. Wells’ The Invisible Man where there is a small ensemble with one actor playing the lead, here Dustin Bronson as Dracula, and the rest of the cast playing a multitude of characters. There is no pretense that this is not a stage show, in fact much of the humor comes from jokes that acknowledge this is a play being put on for our amusement. From sexy Dracula spraying is own aerosol can of fog simply to make his appearance more sensual to an actor portraying multiple characters in the same scene simply by turning around and putting a different wig on or changing hats. These are not moves meant to fool us but to elicit laughter, which it does. I love a show like this that winks at the audience and uses theater conventions to not only tell its story but also as the source of amusement. Director Joy Donley clearly understand this style of humor and masterfully stages all manner of silliness.

Bronson’s Dracula is sexy as hell but also really funny. Having most recently seen him in the Guthrie Theater’s History plays, this was a nice reminder of his considerable comedic chops which first impressed me in Jungle Theater’s Georgiana & Kitty. He further showcased his comic skills in a few impromptu moments with the audience, knowing just how to add a little something when the situation worked. The other four actors Bradley Johnson, Katie Consamus, Bethany McCade, and Corey Mills get to wow the audience with their versatility and ability to create countless distinct and highly amusing characters. Mills in particular looks to be having a blast playing two extreme’s the especially goofy Mina and the heroic and intelligent Dr. Jean Van Helsing. There is some great design elements from set pieces, props, costumes, as well as the lighting and sound design. Everything is kept simple but effective in terms of size and mobility, which it needs to be because this show moves at a very quick pace. Stage Manager Melisa Kucevic deserve praise for keeping this freight train on the rails at such high speeds.

Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors runs through November 2nd at the Center for Performing Arts in South Minneapolis. It’s a great show for everyone who enjoys the pleasures of Monster Month and great laughs. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.nocturnalgiraffetheatre.org/currentshow

Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time.