Halloween meets Spring Awakening in this original horror rock musical. Lia feels out of place when her college roommate, Trish, makes her tag along for a cabin weekend with her old high school friends. Their fun-filled weekend becomes blood-soaked when a menacing killer starts slaughtering teens left and right. Navigating through young love, toxic relationships, and the connections that last a lifetime, Lia must face a gaslighting killer and her own anxiety while trying to save her new friends.

Info

$ 99

Per Month

Music by: Nate Hall
Book & Lyrics by: Nate Hall and Cody Lindley
Directed by: Braxton Crewell

Previews

August 15 – August 18
Thursday – Saturday @ 8:00pm, Sunday @ 3:00pm

Production Run
August 22 – September 28
Thursday – Saturday @ 8:00pm, Sunday @ 3:00pm

Run time: 2 hours, with a 10 minute intermission
Tickets: $35

SPECIAL THANKS

Manolos Werkshop, Matthew Braddock, DePauls prop shop, and the backers from Lindley and Hall’s GoFundMe: Thea Suits, JJ Smith, Mary Urban, Scott A., Christopher Donaldson, Ethan Gasbarro, Alex Poe, John Lauzon, Ann Jordan, Paul Mahaffey, Ryan Jones, Nicole Amos, Melissa Miller, Lourdes Paulino, Jessica Urban, Timothy Urban, Jessica Hall, Bill Waller, Sharilyn Robinson, Wendy Kaplan, Lauren Minning, Cameron Cooper, Ken Geraghty, Michael Hall, Chelsea Grady, Verite Pitts, Colin Hudson, Vanessa Losoreli, Theresa Grady, Stephanie Gray, Carl Herzog, Margot Mache, Alyssa Romano, Patricia Romano, Elijah Cox, Victoria Kiker, Maria Peroglino, Tracy Silverman, Austin Harleson, Ryan Kappmeyer, Clare McKeown, Christopher Hamilton, and Hannah Silverman

Cast

$ 99

Per Month
Lia Jasmine “Jaz” Robertson
Trish Madeline Ackerlund
Brent Zach Moore
Zach Grant Brown
Nicky Tori Londrigan
Diane (Trish U/S) Ann Marie Garcia
Jeff (Craig U/S) Tim Huggenberger
Brandi (Lia U/S) Jacqui Touchet
Craig (Zach U/S) Sam Martin
Dr. Painmore (8/15-8/18) Mike Jones
Dr. Painmore (8/22-8/25) Liz Falstreau
Dr. Painmore (8/29-9/1) Alex Iacobucci
Dr. Painmore (9/5-9/8) Mike Idalski
Dr. Painmore (9/12-9/15) Chase Wheaton-Werle
Dr. Painmore (9/19-9/22) Julie Peterson
Dr. Painmore (9/26-9/28) Jack Chylinski
Diane/Nicky/Brenda U/S Katy Campbell
Swing Michael Davis Arnold

Crew

$ 99

Per Month
Co-writer/Producer Cody Lindley
Co-Writer/Producer/Composer Nate Hall
Director Braxton Crewell
Costume Designer Victoria Jablonski
Choreographer Hannah Silverman
Stage Manager Carli Shapiro
Props Designer Kendra Long
Production Manager Becca Holloway
Fight/Intimacy Director Lana Whittington
Asst. Fight/Intimacy Choreographer Tristan Hall
Lighting Designer Ellie Humphrys
Scenic Designer Manuel Ortiz
Asst. Scenic Designer Hunter Cole
Technical Director/Head Carpenter Miranda Hernandez
Sound Designer Isaac Mandel
Scenic Charge Arabella Zurbano
THE BAND
Music Director Evan Cullinan
Drummer Jeremy Garzon
Bassist Stephen McClure
Guitarist Elizabeth Bagby

En-Cody-ed Notes (Playwright)

Director’s Notes

Hall and Notes (Playwright)

Cody Lindley (Me) and Nate Hall have a mutual love for spooky movies, especially the classic Slasher genre. When the air turns cold and pumpkin this and that start appearing in store (earlier and earlier every year), they both love to start putting watching scary movie marathons, both together and separate. It was during one of these movie marathons involving a cabin, a weekend getaway, and horny teenagers, that an image flew into my head.

What if in the climatic scene where the killer bursts in and starts their first massacre, the final girl and him make eye contact and everything falls into slow motion as a romantic song starts to play. He brought the idea to Nate and they both quickly settled on the same thought. Let’s explore this inherently opposite, silly idea through the medium of our other mutual love – musicals. What other genre allows for such high stakes, boundless emotion, and spectacle? The year was 2018 and we met in Nate’s bedroom apartment with a keyboard, an acoustic guitar, and skeleton of the idea.

Throughout the process, we thought about how the slasher genre has often meant something through its symbolism. While we didn’t quite strive to make everything mean something else, we did ask ourselves what we wanted this piece to say. We settled on the themes of friendship, isolation, fate, and toxic relationships. The show’s grown a lot in the last 6 years and we’re so excited to see this production go up in collaboration with The Factory Theatre! We hope you enjoy it!

How do you define “camp”? A simple question that I posed to our cast at the beginning of this process. As a society, camp has become an incredibly widespread term with references to queer culture, fashion, cult classics, and even a moniker for well-known personalities. John Waters built an iconic and disruptive empire embodying this style, making it the forefront of his storytelling, and if you have read “Notes on Camp” by Susan Sontag, then you found the influence that sparked the MET Gala’s illustrious carpet a few years back. In the end, Camp is a feeling based on one’s perception. It can range from tacky to extravagant and stick the landing all the same.

Rather than trying to fit all of the guidelines that were thrown at us, we decided to take control of our own narrative. When you think about movies like Scream, my favorite horror franchise, you begin to work with the idea of commitment. Leaning in as far as you can to the absurd, the boisterous, the painful, the heart of a story, and embracing it from the lens of the outsider. It takes a tremendous amount of courage, and will typically cause a bit of discomfort as you let yourself get lost in a world of play and unrestrained choices. Tonight, I hope that you will take a deep breath. Inhale and exhale. Letting yourself sink into our little sandbox of chaos, and find a beautiful story about relationships, supernatural mischief, and the fight to find one’s self.

Slashers as a genre have remained popular long past the 70s and 80s, and for good reason. They tap into very real and very close-to-home horrors (home invasion, being killed by someone you know, the education system), but soften the blow with camp and comedy. Some lean further in one direction or the other – a spectrum from Jason X to Halloween – but I think Scream is the perfect concoction of both. The characters are exaggerated, and even know how slashers work, but the kills are still brutal and shocking. And you love and care about Sidney Prescott the entire time amidst it all.
This tightrope is what we wanted to walk across with Stabbed in the Heart. A musical with true comedy and true gore at the same time, grounded by relationships you root for. We hope we made it to the other side!
This is also the first musical I’ve ever finished a full score for, much less arrangements, so it’s truly a dream to have people hearing it in it’s best iteration to date. A lot of musicals will avoid using music in the most tense and uncomfortable moments in the story, which I think is a huge missed opportunity. Tomorrow Belongs to Me in Cabaret is absolutely chilling, and what I remember most about Sweeney Todd are the nursery rhymes Tobias is singing to himself when he goes insane in the sewer. Mix that in with some synth and some folk rock and you’ve got Stabbed in the Heart.