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'Evil Dead: The Musical' draws laughs, blood Off-Broadway

 
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(Msg. 1) Posted: Sun Nov 05, 2006 9:27 am
Post subject: 'Evil Dead: The Musical' draws laughs, blood Off-Broadway
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by Tim Molloy
Associated Press
November 5, 2006

NEW YORK - Sit in the front row of "Evil Dead: The Musical" and the set
itself seems ready to attack.

A stuffed beaver, one of the gleefully tacky decorations of the cabin stage
set, stares you down with menace. A trophy moose gazes from the wall with
appropriate hopelessness. Woods seem to creep up on you, and the stage floor
seems angled so that any splashing blood will hit you dead in the face.

Which, of course, it will.

The first rows of the show, opening off-Broadway Nov. 1 at New World Stages,
are reserved as a "Splatter Zone" where guests "can pretty much count on
getting hosed down by blood," in the words of Christopher Bond, the
musical's 29-year-old co-director.

The blood comes courtesy of chain saws and other cutting implements used to
dispel the ranks of demon-possessed bodies throughout the show.

The musical goes for laughs over gore, calculating that fans appreciate the
"Evil Dead" films for their camp as well as their grotesque qualities. No
one will leave scared, and every pail of blood is spilled in good fun.

Twenty-seven-year-old Danny Diaz, who emerged soaked from a recent show
after sitting in the splatter zone, said there was no question the musical
lived up to the movies.

"They kind of updated it a little bit, but it kept having everything that
was a part of the story," he said.

That story includes so many elements - from possessed friends to
decapitations, all delivered as deadpan black comedy - that the show's
creative team decided the only way to ramp up the story was to set it to
music with such songs as "Look Who's Evil Now," "What the (Expletive) Was
That" and "Do the Necronomicon."

"Everybody leaves here with a smile on their faces and blood on their
shirts," says George Reinblatt, who wrote the book and lyrics.

Bond was working in a video store when he first saw "Evil Dead" and sensed
it could become an heir to "The Rocky Horror Picture Show," a production on
which he had worked.

He recruited Reinblatt, a fellow graduate of Queen's University in Kingston,
Ontario, as well as another fellow graduate, Frank Cipolla, who serves as
musical supervisor.

The production has taken over the post-collegiate lives of all three -
Cipolla is 31, and Reinblatt and Bond are 29 - as they've brought the show
from Ontario to New York.

Together they combined elements of both the low-budget "Evil Dead" and the
better-budgeted (and far funnier) "Evil Dead 2." Teens visiting a cabin in
the woods, led by the sturdy jawed Ash, accidentally read a spell that
unleashes demons. The demons quickly get down to possessing everyone they
can, as well as Ash's hand.

Actor Bruce Campbell is a cult hero for his performance as Ash - a role that
requires charm, heroism, bone-dry humor and cutting off that bedeviled
appendage. But the creators have found a worthy musical replacement in Ryan
Ward. His lanky heroics anchor the show.

This being "Evil Dead," no one takes anything too seriously. In an
interview, the creators stressed that the show is one to see with your pals,
preferably after a few drinks.

In the spirit of the original "Evil Dead," the show initially pulled in
favors from friends and relied on a cast of unknowns.

The creators say the first performance, fittingly enough, was done in near
darkness on the night of the August 2003 massive blackout that swept across
Ontario and much of the northeastern United States.

The show went on in a parking lot, with headlights instead of stage lights.
What would have been a bad omen for any other show seemed like a perfect
start for "Evil Dead."

They won the blessing of the film's creators - including director Sam Raimi,
who has gone on to helm the "Spider-Man" series - by e-mailing Campbell at
his Web site.

But that hasn't stopped them from taking good-natured potshots at Raimi,
including complaints from one character about having "Spider-Man" as her
in-flight movie.

Thor Stockman, who watched from the splatter zone with a group of friends,
found that his seat brought a built-in, after-show conversation topic: how
he got so bloody.
"I was cringing and covering my eyes so much, I'm not sure which ... demon
it was," said Stockman, 50. His friends, meanwhile, argued over which
onstage demon-scalping was to blame.

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