Speakeasy Dollhouse

Speakeasy Dollhouse is a series of immersive plays based on Cynthia von Buhler's investigations of mysterious deaths in site-specific, historic locations. Original funding for the project was obtained via Kickstarter in 2011.[1] The plays are currently produced by Russell Farhang and Cynthia von Buhler's production company, Smoosh & Smoosh Inc. The Bloody Beginning has been running continuously in New York City since 2011. The Brothers Booth ran in 2014. Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic opens in Spring 2015.

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Play One: Speakeasy Dollhouse: The Bloody Beginning

Episode One, The Bloody Beginning, is based on von Buhler's investigation of the mysterious 1935 murder of her grandfather. The play was written and directed by von Buhler.

Synopsis

The play presents a series of vignettes which occur over the years 1925 to 1935 and were considered the playwright to be pivotal in the understanding of the climactic moment of Frank Spano's murder. The story extends beyond his death to encompass the hasty trial of Spano's confessed killer, but leaves to the audience the final conclusions about why and by whom the murders were committed.[2]

Speakeasy Dollhouse: The Bloody Beginning
Written by Cynthia Von Buhler
Date premiered October 2011 (2011-10)
Place premiered New York City
Genre Immersive Theater, Pulp Non-Fiction
Setting Bakery, speakeasy club, bedroom, coroner's office, and street scene in New York City between 1925 and 1935.
[speakeasydollhouse.com Official site]

Immersive Location

Speakeasy Dollhouse is staged in Meyer Lansky's former Lower East Side hangout. Unlike plays presented in a traditional proscenium, the site-specific set design invites the audience to walk freely throughout various rooms of the venue. Designed to mimic the dollhouse-scale sets depicted in the graphic novel, there is a speakeasy bar, private alleyway, club cum living room, bakery, coroner's office and Pre-war bedroom.[3] The audience is encouraged to dress in Roaring Twenties period attire. Upon arrival, each person receives a slip of paper assigning them a unique character to play[4] and instructions to "ignore the advice your parents gave you as children, be nosy and talk to strangers."[2] When not performing predefined scenes, the actors circulate throughout the space, ad libbing in character with everyone in attendance.

Dollhouse Sets

In 1936, as a means to better explore these cases and train investigators of sudden or violent deaths to assess visual evidence, Frances Glessner Lee created the Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death. These studies consisted of detailed, 1:12 scale dollhouse models that students could examine from every angle. Taking inspiration from the Nutshell Studies, von Buhler recreated the scenes from her grandfather's murder and the events leading up to it using her own handmade sets and dolls.[5] Utilizing evidence gathered from autopsy reports, police records, court documents, and interviews in tandem with the dolls and sets, she has pieced together a variety of probable scenarios to explain the crime.[6]

Future Publications

The play is also being used as research for a graphic novel von Buhler is writing. The limited edition book funded by Kickstarter was an introduction to the story and explains how she first heard about her grandfather's mysterious death as young girl. In a New York Times interview, von Buhler stated that the follow-up book would be a new genre, "Pulp Non-Fiction".[5]

Characters

Special Guests

Alison Wright, a starring actor in The Americans (2013 TV series), played Lena Doino at one show in 2014. The undertaker, Dominick Grimaldi, was played by Edgar Oliver from 2011-2013, a New York City playwright and poet who frequently appears on the television show Oddities. Dominick Grimaldi is currently being played by Uncle Nino, a New York City celebrity who frequently appeared on Jersey Shore, a reality TV Series. For the June 2012 production, Neil Gaiman appeared as Assistant Coroner and performed a duet of Makin' Whoopee with Amanda Palmer.[8]

Television

Von Buhler, the coroner's office diorama, and the play's secret location were central to an episode of The Discovery Channel's reality television show Oddities. The episode titled A Gurney for Grandpa focuses on the televisions show's stars Mike Zohn and Evan Michelson as they locate an antique gurney for the play to match the miniature one von Buhler used in her crime scene diorama.[9]

Film

Of Dolls and Murder, directed by Susan Marks and narrated by John Waters, is a documentary about Frances Glessner Lee's crime scene investigation dollhouse dioramas. Marks is currently working on an Of Dolls and Murder sequel about Speakeasy Dollhouse.[10]

Music

On June 4, 2012, Neil Gaiman and Amanda Palmer sang a rendition of Makin' Whoopee during a performance.[8]

Songs by Amanda Palmer, Kim Boekbinder, and the Howard Fishman Quartet were featured with permission in the Speakeasy Dollhouse project launch video used during the Kickstarter campaign.[1]

Play Two: Speakeasy Dollhouse: The Brothers Booth

The Brothers Booth is based on von Buhler's investigation of the murder of Abraham Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth. Von Buhler sets out to prove that the murder occurred due to sibling rivalry between the brothers, Edwin Booth and John Wilkes Booth. The story was written by Cynthia von Buhler with additional scenes by Mat Smart. The play was directed by Wes Grantom. The play is held in Edwin Booth's former home and club, The Players (New York City).

Synopsis

At Edwin Booth's Gramercy Park statue unveiling a tattooed man brings an uninvited guest, the John Wilkes Booth mummy. Angry ghosts appear. Did John Wilkes Booth shoot Abraham Lincoln because of the outcome of the Civil War, or was the killer tortured by an intense sibling rivalry? Brothers Edwin and John Wilkes Booth both wanted to wear their famous father Junius Brutus Booth’s thespian mantle. John Wilkes, the favorite son, was kept in school by his parents in the hopes that he’d chose a worthier professional than acting. Meanwhile, Edwin’s childhood was spent being valet to his crazed, alcoholic genius of a father. This situation trained Edwin to become a talented, hard-working star who deeply understood the nuances of Shakespeare, while the younger brother grew into an impatient, fame-seeking dreamer.

Immersive Location

The Brothers Booth is staged in Edwin Booth's former Gramercy Park mansion, The Players (New York City). Unlike plays presented in a traditional proscenium, the site-specific set design invites the audience to walk freely throughout various rooms of the venue. There is a speakeasy room, private alleyway, parlor, billiard room, seance room, stairway, bar, library, Mark Twain's gambling room, The John Singer Sargent room, VIP room, and Edwin Booth's bedroom. The audience is encouraged to dress in Roaring Twenties period attire. Upon arrival, each person receives a slip of paper assigning them a unique character to play.

Speakeasy Dollhouse: The Brothers Booth
Written by Cynthia Von Buhler with additional scenes by Mat Smart
Directed by Wes Grantom
Date premiered March 2014 (2014-03)
Place premiered New York City
Genre Immersive Theater,
Setting Speakeasy club, parlor, seance room, Sargent room, bedroom, stairwell, gambling room, tap room, library, alley, Gramercy Park, and street scene in New York City, 1919.
[speakeasydollhouse.com Official site]

Characters

Play Three: Speakeasy Dollhouse: Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic

Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic is based on von Buhler's investigation of the poisoning death of Olive Thomas, wife of Jack Pickford. Was her death was an accident, a murder or a suicide? The story was written and directed by Cynthia von Buhler. The Associate Director is Chris Fink and the Directorial Consultant is Alison Wright, a starring actor in The Americans (2013 TV series). Dance is choreographed by Delysia La Chatte. The play is held in The Liberty Theater.

Synopsis

The Glorifier of the American Girl, Florenz Ziegfeld, invites you to join his Follies for an evening of music, magic, mystery, mayhem, and spirits. Audience members pursue their interests across an expansive environment exploring the wonders and the dangers of the Golden Age of Broadway. The immersive play reimagines his 1920’s extravaganza, The Midnight Frolic, with showgirls, burlesque, aerialists, song and dance. Audience members choose their corruption at Montmartre's Cabaret du Néant while a garish garcon apprises them with tales of guillotines and deadly bacteria. The audience sleuths the luxury suite at Hotel Ritz Paris where Jack Pickford allegedly tried to save his wife, Follies’ star Olive Thomas, after she drank poison.

Olive Thomas's Ghost

Olive Thomas's ghost is said to haunt The New Amsterdam Theater which is located next door to The Liberty Theater. According to theater personnel, her ghost appears and walks through the 41st street wall. The Liberty Theater is on the other side of the wall.

Immersive Location

Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic is staged in The Liberty Theater in Times Square. Unlike plays presented in a traditional proscenium, the site-specific set design invites the audience to walk freely throughout various rooms of the venue. There is a follies theater, Montmartre alleyway, The Cabaret of Nothingness, The Ritz Hotel in Paris, Ziegfeld's office, and Alberto Vargas' art reception. The audience is encouraged to dress in Roaring Twenties period attire. Upon arrival, each person receives a slip of paper assigning them a unique character to play.

Speakeasy Dollhouse: Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic
Written by Cynthia Von Buhler
Directed by Cynthia von Buhler
Date premiered April 2015 (2015-04)
Place premiered New York City
Genre Immersive Theater,
Setting Broadway theater, Paris cabaret, Paris hotel room, office, art reception balcony, Times Square back door entrance, and an alley scene in Montmartre Paris, 1920.
[speakeasydollhouse.com Official site]

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 "Speakeasy Dollhouse". Retrieved 2012-06-17.
  2. 1 2 Attendees are asked to go to the Speakeasy blog to speculate on the reasons behind Spano’s killing, and these answers then add evidence to the next production.
  3. Elisabeth Vincentelli. "All The World's a Stage". Archived from the original on June 21, 2012. Retrieved 2012-06-17.
  4. I was given a part to play — that of a hired killer.Lori Greenberg (2012-06-11). "Recap: The "Speakeasy Dollhouse" on the Lower East Side". Retrieved 2012-07-02.
  5. 1 2 James Barron (2012-06-07). "Using a Dollhouse to Reconstruct a Murder, 77 Years Later". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-06-17.
  6. Jen Carlson (2011-09-08). "Cynthia Von Buhler Tells Us About Recreating Her Grandfather's Murder In The Bronx". Retrieved 2012-06-17.
  7. "Speakeasy Dollhouse". www.nytheatre.com. Retrieved 2016-07-23.
  8. 1 2 Neil Gaiman (2012-06-04). "Spent a wonderful evening at @CynthVonBuhler's marvellous Speakeasy Dollhouse. I was also an assistant undertaker & sang Makin' Whoopie.". Retrieved 2012-06-17.
  9. "Oddities : Science Channel". Science.discovery.com. 2010-11-10. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
  10. "Of Dolls & Murder". Ofdollsandmurder.com. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
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