When the best comment you can make
about a show is the set design you know you’re in trouble. This is the case with the murder mystery musical comedy, Something’s
Afoot, the last offering of the Goodspeed Opera House’s current season. When the show was first announced it
was, to quote the King of Siam, a puzzlement. When you think of a Goodspeed production you point to the inspired
direction, a classic score, and creative dance numbers. Most shows also have a storied
history. Something’s Afoot has
none of these. In fact, when it
reached Broadway in the mid-1970’s it was a huge flop. Maybe the reason for producing the
musical is nostalgia. The show
premiered at Goodspeed 40 years ago.
Creating a murder mystery musical
comedy has always been fraught with difficulties, which is why so few have been
produced in Broadway history. You
can count them on one hand—Redhead, starring Gwen Verdon and Richard Kiley in
1959; and Curtains, starring David Hyde Pierce in 2007. In addition to creating a cohesive book
and score, there is the added responsibility of developing a satisfying mystery
to keep the audience’s interest.
There is also the extra burden of stopping the action to insert a song
or big dance number, which in this genre can be achingly difficult.
Something’s Afoot is part Agatha
Christie and part the board game Clue.
All the ingredients for a
murderous time are present—a creepy mansion, washed out bridge, a Miss Marple
know-it-all type, the stoic butler, young romantic lovers, a retired English Colonel,
as well as other archetypal mystery characters. Slowly, one-by-one, they each meet an
untimely demise. As the bodies
pile up the audience is left to guess who. While the deaths are inventively staged, the plot by James
McDonald, David Vos, and Robert Gerlach is rather boring. A few flourishes pique your interest
every so often, but overall the story is flat. Even the denouement is unfulfilling. The score by the aforementioned group
plus Ed Linderman is uninspired and has more the feel of a college
production.
Director/Choreographer Vince Pesce has
the cast dashing on and off stage, posturing on the staircase, and maybe
ramping up the actors’ performances a bit too much. Audrie Neenan, as the amateur sleuth, seems revved up on
caffeine becoming almost manical in her role. The other cast
members try their best with the material provided.
In all, Something’s Afoot is
something to miss. Wait until Good
News roars in next season.
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