- OTHER MEDIA
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- Dark Porch Theatre was formed as a dance-and-movementbased company
in Portland, Oregon, and then moved to the Bay Area to focus on acting.
This explains the dramatic dual nature of this ambitious original script
and production, set in 1885. The first act is a solidly performed Agatha
Christieesque whodunit. Steel tycoon and occult aficionado Silas
Danforth (Stuart Bousel) invites guests (each bringing a secret agenda)
to his mansion for a spiritual and completely fake séance led by
the hilarious and bumbling Professor M (Christopher P. Kelly). Act two
turns the production's setting and style completely on its head, transporting
the characters to an in-between world that feels like a cross between Shakespeare's
A Midsummer Night's Dream and Sartre's No Exit. The fabulous costumes (designed
by Cara Samski) morph from Industrial Age finery to all-white linen and
lace as the characters are reborn into their truest forms (one becomes
Pan, another Narcissus). The second act is a musical with skilled singing
and dancing and a haunting score composed and performed live by the talented
Ryan Beebee with four other musicians. Writer and director Margery Fairchild
spices the plot with references to theosophy, murder, women's rights, and
even an actual Pandora's box. It's ambitious, perhaps too much so, but
a lovely hybrid of dream, dance, and theater.
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