Scene of the Crime

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Scene of the Crime

Scene of the Crime Poster.jpg

Theater The Hideout Theatre
Directed by Troy Miller
Assistant Director(s) Jenna Howard
Music By James Blair
Cast
Crew
Run May/Jun 2015

Scene of the Crime was the May/June 2015 mainstage production at The Hideout Theatre. It was based on the works of Agatha Christie and other authors from the Golden Age of detective fiction.

Summary

Structure

Scene of the Crime was a narrative show that ran 80-90 minutes with a 10-minute intermission. Each performance had nine to ten players. The story centered on a detective and a victim, with the rest of the cast playing suspects.

At the start of each performance, the cast took the stage in the dark. The lights came up, and Troy welcomed the audience and got three suggestions from the audience: first, one of four primary places (a hotel, a train, a ship, or a country estate), which were printed on four cards from which an audience member chose at random; second, a geographical location for the place (e.g., Istanbul); and third, how the victim is murdered (e.g., knife, poison, chainsaw).

The first scene would depict the murder. To preserve the mystery, the 'victim' performer would play it out as a solo scene, with the murderer's presence implied. The story would proceed over the course of a few days of story time, alternating between interrogations, accusations, and revelations in the current day and flashbacks to suspects' interactions with the victims, all the while drawing out mystery and tension. The story ended with the detective gathering all the suspects together, describing the evidence gathered to that point, and showing how it revealed the identity of the murderer. A flashback to the initial murder -- this time, with the murderer present -- followed. Finally, the murderer received their just comeuppance.

Tech

The set featured a custom-built door upstage center. The show was scored live by James Blair, who provided classically suspenseful keyboard music. There were also ambient sound effects -- birdsong, etc. -- depending on the location. Costumes were 'timeless' -- nice, classic, elegant outfits from anywhere from the 1940s to the present. Lighting was stylized for the flashback scenes, to make them distinct.

Publicity Blurb

From the show announcement:

Scene of the Crime takes its cue from classic whodunits crafted by the likes of Agatha Christie, wherein a murder is committed at the outset of our story, and everyone is a suspect.

Media

Videos

Photos

More Information