WELCOME TO THE MURDER HOUSE!

Te Auaha - Tapere Nui, 65 Dixon Street, Te Aro, Wellington

26/05/2018 - 10/06/2018

Production Details


Written by the Indian Ink writing team

Indian Ink


JACOB RAJAN RETURNS TO THE STAGE FOR AN INDIAN INK WORLD PREMIERE 

Jacob Rajan returns to the stage in Wellington for the world premiere of Welcome to the Murder House this winter. Commissioned by the prestigious South Coast Repertory Theatre based in Orange County, this deliciously dark tragedy of comic proportions will take Te Auaha by storm, playing 26 May – 10 June.

The dawning of the electric age in 1890’s America brought about massive technological and social change creating winners and losers. A gang of death row convicts are set free for one wild night to tell the tragic story of their hero: the man who invented the electric chair. These convicts give an ironic twist to the true tale of how Thomas Edison and a dentist become entangled in this invention, in the name of progress.

Assembling the largest cast and crew in the company’s history, Welcome to the Murder House is a satirical take on the classic superhero story that reveals the consequences of pigeon-holing people into heroes or villains. Based on a true story, the play speaks of a divided world where faith is more powerful than fact and shame drives destructive behaviour. The fictional injection of real Indian scientist Chandra Bose, whose world-leading research into electricity was ahead of its time, gives an Indian Ink twist to the telling.  Presented in dynamic vaudevillian style; a variety show performance form popular in 1890s America where this story is set, Welcome to the Murder House  features comedy, puppetry, live music, song and dance to entertain and delight whilst recounting a powerful, tragic and moving tale.

The play’s stellar cast includes the return of Indian Ink’s co-founder Jacob Rajan and award-winning musician David Ward who are delighted to be returning to the New Zealand stage for the world premiere. Completing the cast is Quentin Warren, Jacque Drew, Matt Chamberlain, and Patrick Carroll who tackle a serious subject with humour and sass and portray 17 characters between them in the company’s biggest ever extravaganza. This bold new direction takes Indian Ink even further into international waters, becoming the first New Zealand company to be commissioned by an American theatre company to create an original work. Tony award-winning South Coast Repertory Theatre commissioned Welcome to the Murder House in 2014, with the Indian Ink writing team heading across the Pacific multiple times to collaborate with the US-based crew for writing and development workshops to bring the work from page to stage.

Indian Ink are expanding in more ways than one, working with an assistant director for the first time. Bala Murali Shingade steps into a leadership position after beginning his career as an intern. Welcome to the Murder House will also be Indian Ink’s first foray into the NZ Institute of Creativity’s purpose-built performance venue, Te Auaha.

2018 will be Indian Ink’s most ambitious year to date, with this celebrated world premiere and a national tour of their new play, Mrs Krishnan’s Party later in the year – stay tuned for more information.

WELCOME TO THE MURDER HOUSE
World Premiere!
Te Auaha, NZ Institute of Creativity, Wellington
Saturday 26 May – Sunday 10 June
Tickets on sale now via Ticketek


CAST:

Jacob Rajan and musician David Ward
Quentin Warren, Jacque Drew, Matt Chamberlain, and Patrick Carroll


Theatre ,


Cell Block Vaudeville

Review by Brigitte Knight 28th May 2018

Jacob Rajan returns to the stage for the world premiere of Welcome to the Murder House, a satirical black comedy spun from threads of historical fiction. Co-created with Justin Lewis, the work was commissioned by the South Coast Repertory Theatre based in Orange County. With an onstage company of eight actors and musicians, Welcome to the Murder House is the largest-scale production yet for Indian Ink.

Set in 1890s America, the play is billed as a variety show in the vaudevillian style. Brilliant original music by Justin Lewis, adeptly performed by an onstage trio of musicians, is integral to the performance and consistently present and fused within the structure of the play. Other elements of vaudeville (dance and puppetry, for example) receive more of a cursory nod than serious integration or development. [More]  

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Multi-layered, profound yet fluid and highly engaging

Review by John Smythe 28th May 2018

When a scene involving melons and murder plays out, I get a strong sense of déjà vu … Turns out it’s an actual memory of a scene from Indian Ink’s The Dentist’s Chair which premiered a decade ago.

Commissioned by the prestigious South Coast Repertory Theatre, based in Orange County, Southern California, Welcome to the Murder House brings a backstory-cum-subplot from that impressive but flawed (in my opinion) production to take the stage in its own right.*

In The Dentist’s Chair, a depressed and reclusive dentist, Albert Southwick, is haunted by the ghost of Alfred Southwick (no relation), the dentist from Buffalo, New York State, who conceived of the electric chair in 1881 and saw his invention executed, so to speak, in 1890.

In Welcome to the Murder House, Alfred’s story is told, in the popular vaudeville style of the day, by a group of prison inmates. For them, Southwick is a hero, given their shared belief that execution by electrocution will be more humane than hanging. And, as with the development of all high quality theatre, it takes a lot of trial and error to get it right.

In his programme note, co-writer/lyricist and actor Jacob Rajan says a playwright’s job is “to ensure that your story goes deep but travels light” and this play – created with co-writer/lyricist and director Justin Lewis and dramaturge/lyricist Murray Edmond – certainly achieves that. The dynamics of vaudeville keep it lively while drawing our attention to what lurks in its darker recesses.

Wonderfully judicious liberties are taken, not so much to alter the key facts as to integrate other historical elements in order to dramatically interrogate the universal themes that elevate this story from the prosaic:
– the individual’s v the state’s right to kill a person;
– a woman’s rights over her own body v a man’s sense of entitlement to it;
– ‘truth’ proven through rigorous science v irrational faith driven by emotion.  

So the ever-practical Alfred Southwick, strongly earthed by Matthew Chamberlain, is counterpointed by ‘sex radical’ Mary Flynn, brought to highly-charged life by Jacquie Drew. In claiming the right to enjoy the pleasures of sex for its own sake, she takes the initiative, relying on the efficacy of a Goodyear rubber sheath, and as an eager participant in their love life, he has to accept she has no desire for children.

While Alfred believes if a man does wrong he has to take what’s coming to him, Mary believes in prison reform and the abolition of the death penalty. It’s when he witnesses a tortuous hanging (and thank goodness we see the harness device as well as the noose, given how vividly the scene is played out) that Alfred sees the potential of this new-fangled thing called electricity to bring relief from pain and suffering in the throes of death.

Much is made of the difference between direct and alternating currents (DC v AC). In an ingeniously-conceived sequence, Indian scientist Jagadish Chandra Bose (a classic Jacob Rajan characterisation) survives the indignities of trying to gain entry to the exclusive Union Club, only to have his electronic crescograph plant movement detector demonstration sabotaged by a self-serving Harold Brown (one of many characters superbly played by Patrick Carroll) and his dog: a wonderful creation by Tim Denton, brought to life by Drew).

Quentin Warren (recently arrived from LA) plays the death row inmate who narrates where necessary and becomes the condemned William Kemmler, ever-grateful to Alfred for wanting to ease his path to oblivion. The aforementioned scene where Willy reacts lethally to the free-spirited antics of fresh produce-hawker Tilly (Drew) is vividly enacted. Even though Willy believes he “did the right thing”, he is willing to accept the consequences and Warren ensures we empathise with his desire for a quick and painless death.

The history of execution techniques is entertainingly sketched. The process by which Alfred gains the support of the Establishment generates a clever duck-shooting scene involving balloon-sculpted birds. A court scene name-checks George Westinghouse and manifests Thomas Edison. The climactic scene is harrowing and demands we each confront our values.

Between them the five actors delineate some 30 roles with great alacrity, facilitated by excellent Elizabeth Whiting-designed costumes, building on basic striped prison attire. John Verryt’s set and props designs enrich the action, as does Jane Hakaraia’s lighting design.

Given the four male inmates are designated as horse thief, moonshiner, forger and murderer, they cannot all be on death row (as suggested in an early media release). While their base-characters remain unexplored, with the audience at least, the actors have doubtless used those ideas as foundations for the roles they play.

The music, sometimes redolent of O Brother Where Art Thou, composed by David Ward and played live on stage – along with ingenious sound effects – by Ward, Eamon Edmundson-Wells and Sean Quentin-Buss, is integral to the show and adds enormous value. And the singing is sublime: solos from Jacque Drew and Quentin Warren especially, and also the ensemble singing which includes the musicians’ voices.

Multi-layered, profound yet fluid and highly engaging, Welcome to the Murder House is a worthy addition to the impressive Indian Ink lexicon.
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*South Coast Repertory Theatre presented a reading last October, with US actors. Plans for a US production have yet to be finalised. 

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