The Adobe Flash Player is required to view this multimedia interactive. Get it here.
Home  >  Entertainment  >  Theater & Arts ON[stage]

'Something's Afoot' with Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre

Musical mystery spoofs the Whodunit?

Hot Topics

Emily Moroney, Lyndall Murray and Jeff Christian in 'Something's Afoot'.
Photo by Richard O Jones Emily Moroney, Lyndall Murray and Jeff Christian in 'Something's Afoot'.
By Richard O Jones, Staff Writer 2:17 PM Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre closes out its 50th anniversary season with a revival of “Something’s Afoot,” the wacky musical that takes a satirical jab at the conventional murder mystery.

To direct, the group invited back Burt McCollom, who had directed the show some 30 years ago for the Footlighters in Cincinnati and has a long history with GHCT, beginning in 1972 when he when he had a part in a mystery of another sort, “Wait Until Dark.”

“I love this show,” he said of the current production. “It spoofs all the things we dearly love about musical theater and Agatha Christie and the ‘whodunit’ style of mystery,” he said. “It is exactly what it makes fun of with a lot of plot turns and surprises. If you think you know ‘whodunit,’ ‘whodidn’t.”

Indeed, to help keep the element of surprise, the program lists the musical numbers, but doesn’t tell you who sings them.

“The whole thing has its tongue so far up its cheek it looks like another ear,” McCollom said.

The plot is straight from Christie’s “Ten Little Indians,” he said. A group of people who don’t know each other are invited to an isolated English estate by its owner, Lord Rancour, whom we never meet.

“The music is every style you want — tap dancing, big production numbers, waltzes — all character-driven musical numbers,” McCollom said. “We have a great cast and they are absolutely going for it.”

Emily Moroney of Cincinnati plays Lettie the saucy maid, who has been rumored to have had an affair with Lord Rancour.

“For Lettie, this marvelous weekend at Rancour’s Retreat is another opportunity to ‘live it up in style’ while serving Lord Rancour’s guests,” Moroney said. “While Lettie has been a maid to Lord Rancour for some time, she often gets away with doing minimal work — that is until she shows up to find Lord Rancour missing.”

Denny Thomas of Morrow plays the caretaker Flint, making his return to the stage after a five-year hiatus, last seen in the GHCT production of “Baby.”

“Flint is a fun-loving character always on the lookout for the occasional romp with the females in and around the manor,” Thomas said, “never afraid to ‘offer his assistance’ — a pinch here and a pinch there, just what could it hurt? Very few of his lines have just one simple meaning.”

Clive the butler is played by Jeff Christian of Hamilton, whose last GHCT show was “The Crucible.”

“Clive and his wife, prior to her death ‘last winter,’ have worked there for many, many years,” he said. “The play, from Clive’s perspective, is simply an evening dinner party and the house is not prepared to his standards.”

The ingĂ©nue Hope Langdon is played by Olivia Yokers of Hamilton, who made her GHCT debut at age 10 and in recent years has performed in “Once On This Island,” “Gypsy,” “The Sound of Music” and “George M.”

“Hope helps Miss Tweed solve the mystery of the unknown murderer, and falls head over heels in love with an uninvited guest, Geoffrey, who becomes the love interest in her life,” Yokers said.

Matthew Speed, originally from Detroit and now living in Cincinnati, makes his Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre debut as Dr. Grayburn.

“Dr. Grayburn is a mild-mannered, kind man,” Speed said, “most likely Lord Rancour’s doctor and fellow golfing buddy.”

Nigel Rancour, “the dissolute nephew,” is played by Les Bowen of Fairfield, back on the community theater stages after performing in a national tour with “Sesame Street Live.”

“Nigel is the black sheep nephew of Lord Rancour,” Bowen said. “He is vain and loves his looks and money.”

Lady Grace Manley-Prowe, the obligatory “grande-dame” is played by Lebanon’s Michelle MacCutcheon, a veteran of Lebanon Community Theatre and Middletown Lyric Theatre making her GHCT debut.

“Lady Grace Manley-Prowe thinks of herself as high society,” MacCutcheon said, but “she’s really broke. She has been around the block a few times and her past may present a possible motive for her to commit murder.”

Col. Gillweather, the old army man, is played by Wayne Kirsch of Milan, Ind., also making his debut on the GHCT stage after appearing in nearly 100 productions in 16 states.

“Col. Gilweather is a career man in the British army, having served in World War I and fought ‘the Fuzzy Wuzzies’ in India,” Kirsch said. “Unsure of why he was invited to the manor, he discovers a secret from his past connects him to the heir of the Rancor estate.”

Miss Tweed, the tweedy, elderly, amateur detective, is played by Lyndall Murray of Fairfield.

The mystery genre is not new to Lyndall as she was involved in GHCT’s productions of “Postmortem” and “Ten Little Indians.” Some of her other favorite roles for GHCT include the stepmother in “Cinderella,” Olga in “You Can’t Take It With You” and Julia in “Lend Me A Tenor.”

How to go

What: Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre presents “Something’s Afoot” by David Vos, James McDonald and Robert Gerlach

When: 8 p.m. April 30 through May 2; 2 p.m. May 3

Where: Parrish Auditorium, Miami University Hamilton Campus

Tickets: $15

Info: (513) 737-7529; www.ghctplay.com

We welcome your comments. Please remember this is a public forum and behave appropriately. Your comments must conform to our visitor's agreement.

The form has errors highlighted in red, please review these entries and try again!



Comments are limited to 500 characters


500 character limit

Incorrect please try again


These words come from scanned books.
Entering them helps digitize old texts.


Breaking news by e-mail

Start your day with top headlines in your inbox and get breaking news e-mail alerts at any time by subscribing to our Headlines e-mail newsletter.

See Sample | Privacy Policy

About our ads

About our ads

Copyright © 2009 Hamilton Journal-News, Hamilton, Ohio, USA.All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. About our ads. You may wish to note our other business policies.