|
Interactive
Comic-Mystery at Milton: The Wedding Not to Miss |
| May 2005 |
Perhaps
the first play of its kind at Milton, You May Now Kill the Bride
drew its audience (that is, guests at the wedding) into the web
of comedy and mystery that developed over the course of the evening.
Guests at the ceremony might have picked up the foreshadowing of
trouble. If not, conversations with the just-mingled family members
while sitting at the linen-covered tables and sipping “champagne”
led to a sense of unease that erupted before long into a full-scale
debacle.
The cast and directorial team had developed an
original script with a play loosely based on the events and timeline
of a wedding. All the actors created their own characters and their
dialogue was based on extensive improvisational development of character
histories, both individual and shared. Performers stayed perfectly
in character while they interacted with the audience and other members
of the cast. Comic themes and personalities meet the dark dynamics
of jealousies, competition and revenge. The evening culminates in
a vote, taken among the guests, as to who's delivered mischief in
the form of threatening notes, thrown bricks and shocking revelations.
(Hint: The butler didn't do it.) The second 1212 production of this
academic year was inventive, dramatically demanding, and great fun
for the “guests.”

|