An
interview with writer Duane Nelsen about the big changes to his 2009 Festival
show Ripper as it prepares for a production this month in Chicago.
Ripper is a musical thriller set against
the backdrop of history's most notorious unsolved crime spree. Centered
around the PennyWise Music Hall where a magician amuses her audience with
deathly illusions while real murders are taking place on the streets
outside—the show explores how acts of evil impact our lives and the simple
desire to be safe in a dangerous world. The main character, the mysterious
Ripper himself, is omnipresent, yet never on stage in this big ensemble show in
which what we see is never what it seems.
Ripper had a
production at Broadway Rose Theatre in Oregon a few years ago. What did you
learn from the full production?
So much! Ripper had been through a
lot of readings, recordings, workshops and festivals, but nothing compares to a
full production. Probably the most important thing was discovering that Ripper needed to be an
ensemble show. There had always been multiple stories in the show, but one of
them involving the reporter, Chester, was always in the forefront. In
production, I saw that it made audiences think the show was about him, when it
really wasn't, and his journey didn't reflect the importance that people were
putting on him. It had the additional effect of making the other stories around
him seem either less important than they were or somehow subordinate to his,
which was also wrong. I saw that I really needed to equalize the stories
in importance and strengthen the single thematic idea that they all
hang on; this way, the real "star" of the show, the physically absent
yet ever-present Ripper, could shine.
What has changed in
the story of Ripper since
that production?
Chester, the reporter, had
always been part narrator in the show, so that was the first thing to go. The
fourth wall is still broken, but now it's broken by the victims after they're
dead, or by the "voice" of the Ripper, which now haunts many more
scenes. The opening has been completely reworked to bring equal emphasis to the
stories we're going to follow, and the last 15 minutes were completely
re-conceived in order to bring all of the stories together more effectively,
both musically and thematically. Another three songs were cut or replaced, and
at least half the book was rewritten, too. More humor was added thanks to the
expansion of several minor characters, and overall, there's both more clarity
and more complexity to all the characters. But the most important change came
as a result of the Newtown massacre. That horrifying event really hit home for
me, partly because I have two school-age children myself. Witnessing what all
those families went through and hearing the common refrain of "Why, why,
why?"—just as we did on 9/11 and too many other occasions—really brought
into sharp focus for me the horrible price innocent people pay for senseless
acts of violence. The common thread in all of those stories is that those
terrible expressions of evil are also countered by extraordinary acts of love
and kindness, and sacrifices often by the least expected person. And that's
where Ripper found
its heart. All this horrible stuff happens that shatters our faith in humanity,
and then someone comes along and restores it in ways we never thought
possible.
What other physical
changes can we expect to see?
The O'Malley Theater at Roosevelt University seats 250, so it's less than half
the size of the Broadway Rose, and it's a 3/4 thrust, so the physical show is
going to be quite different. It's really in your face, and I love that. The
fantastic set design by Michael Lasswell blurs the line between the PennyWise
Music Hall and the audience, and they will really feel part of the show. It's
built like a Transformers toy, where it appears like a unit set and then
suddenly turns into something else. It's very cool. Overall, we're taking a
very theatrical approach to many aspects of the physical production, using
tight pools of light to emphasize the isolation and darkness surrounding this
world. There's still a fair amount of magic performed on stage, but some of it
has been altered for this production--I'm not sure if they have the guillotine
yet! Another interesting change is the use of a 4-person "choir" to
sing the voice of the Ripper. It's all in 1st person, with tight harmonies, and
very creepy. The biggest physical change may be that we are doing the show
with no doublings, which means we have a cast of 29, plus an orchestra of nine!
It really points to the vital role that universities like Roosevelt can play in
developing large new works.
How did this
production come about?
The director, Ray Frewen, who happens to be an accomplished actor, had been
connected to the show since the very first recording many years ago. At the
time, I hired him to play Mr. Raktin, the proprietor of the PennyWise. In the
course of rewrites, Mr. Ratkin became Mrs. Ratkin along the way, and Ray was
out of a gig. Fortunately, he's a great director, and has been wanting to get
his hands on it for years. The stars finally lined up and here we are.
Why
should people swing by Chicago to check out the revised Ripper?
Because these incredible students are going to scare the life out of you in the
best possible way, and make you laugh, and break your heart, and make
you wish you could see this show again and again—all the reasons I go to the
theatre. There's so much more to the show now than there was at NAMT or at
Broadway Rose, and this is a great opportunity to witness the results that came
from those earlier opportunities. It's never been better. But even if you can't
make it to Chicago, you might still be able to see it. We're working on doing a
live streaming event! Keep up to date at ripperthemusical.com, facebook.com/rippershow and twitter.com/rippershow.
I took my daughter's to see it at Broadway Rose, it was really exciting to have the opportunity to see a production of a new work! We enjoyed it although we thought the pacing was a little slow at some points, mostly when it left the music hall as I remember it. Overall we liked the plot and most of the songs. I hope you are able to stream it so we can see the new production!
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