Tag Archives: Dracula

“Dracula: The Concert” offers a simpler version take on the vampire rock opera

Dracula (Rob Thompson) and his brides! Photo by Stungun Photography.

Dracula (Rob Thompson) and his brides! Photo by Stungun Photography.

Since emerging from its theatrical coffin three years ago, the Little 5 Points Rockstar Orchestra’s staging of Dracula: The Rock Opera has been seen in a few monstrous forms. While the music, a hybrid of Andrew Lloyd Webber-like majesty and classic rock power, has always been an important part of the production, it hasn’t been quite the focal point that it is in this Valentine’s Day weekend’s performances at 7 Stages.

Described by members of the cast as being akin to VH1 Storytellers or a plugged-in version of MTV UnpluggedDracula: The Concert strips away some of the theatrics of previous performances for a more raw interpretation of the love-and-lust at the heart of Dracula. But these concert productions also serve as CD release parties for Dracula: The Rock Operathe double-disc set of all the music (as well as some pretty cool packaging and photos) from the previous Dracula productions.

“It’s more to illuminate the rock ‘n’ roll side of it,” says co-creator Naomi Lavender, who portrays Mina Harker. “We’ve done the first act, we’ve done the full show and because this is a CD release party we’re taking it more to a concert level. It is a really good show, but it’s also really good music. It’s just really special because Bram Stoker was such a brilliant writer and we get to bring it to 2014. All of the lyrics are pretty much verbatim from the book with only a little bit of changes to make them rhyme or things like that. But for the most part they are lyrical on their own, straight from the book.”

Rob Thompson offers a biting portrayal of Dracula in "Dracula: The Concert". Phot by Stungun Photography.In true rock ‘n’ roll fashion, there will still be some theatrics such as props and costumes from the rock opera production. Plus, there will be other insights into the making-and-progress of this ever-growing endeavor.

“With this concert version, we have some interludes with some funny stories from the production, some hopes for the future, people playing multiple roles, things like that,” says 7 Stages artistic director Heidi S. Howard. “We’re keeping it very simple because one of the things we don’t want to do is recreate what the production is because we’ll end up hurting it. We have some elements [from the original production] that we’ll have set around. Other than that, we’ve got a band, some stools and some microphones.”

“We enjoy the music, so it’s fun to get to play it and not have to act it out or be worried about all the other things,” says co-creator Rob Thompson, who stars as Dracula. “We get to just go out and be loose, sing the songs and have fun. We don’t even have the full cast, so we have some people singing other people’s parts. I sang most of these songs when I was writing them and we were doing our first rough recordings of them. So it’s fun for me to get to sing some of those parts again.”

www.7stages.org/dracula

Christian Clark is out for blood and lust in Atlanta Ballet’s “Dracula”

Christian Clark accurately portrays Dracula's monstrous sophistication. Photo by Charlie McCullers, Atlanta Ballet.

Since choreographer Michael Pink first offered his balletic treatment of Bram Stoker’s Dracula in 1997, the tale of the ultimate bloodsucker has danced its way across more ballet stages than you can shake a bat at. Through Feb. 16, the Atlanta Ballet exhumes this tale of tragedy and blood lust for the first time in five years. Though he is returning to this dark Valentine’s tradition for the fourth time, this year mark’s Christian Clark’s first time playing the terrifying title role. With Dracula having three alternating casts, Clark also plays the cowboy Quincy Morris, giving him two drastically different perspectives from one night to the next. Having played both roles during the show’s opening days last weekend, Clark talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his conflicting roles in one of literature’s most enduring love stories.

Given the obvious differences between the two characters you portray, how do you prepare for playing each role?

They are very different. The good thing about the two roles is they’re very related to one another. So when I’m not doing Dracula, it’s easy to transition into the other role because throughout the ballet Quincy Morris, alongside Dr. Van Helsing, Jonathan Harker and Arthur, is hunting him. So the story is very interwoven in that way. That change between characters is pretty seamless and not too challenging.

That’s interesting considering the drastically different mindsets of the characters, though I guess they do share the same objects of affection.

This is the fourth time I’ve done this ballet, so I’m pretty familiar with the ins and outs, the intricacies of the music and the whole thing. Had this been my first time doing this production of Dracula, it might have been a bit more challenging. But we’ve done this ballet so many times that I’m very familiar with it.

Have you played these same roles in previous years?

I didn’t do Dracula before. Last time we did it I understudied Dracula. This is the second time I’ve played Quincy, and I’ve done a slew of other characters such as the undead, the holiday couple in Whitby, one of the villagers in Transylvania.

In the years that you’ve been involved with this production, how much does it change from one year to the next?

Christian Clark delves into Draculas more predatory side. Photo by K. Kenney.

Michael Pink, the choreographer, has elaborated a bit more on the little details of each character, so there are minor changes in that way. They did just relight the ballet, so the lighting is actually quite a bit different. I feel Dave Grill’s lighting is just spectacular.

The lighting in this show definitely adds to the spectacle, especially in the scenes with Renfield is in his cell and the effect of light shining through his window.

Grill is a master when it comes to lighting and that all helps you get into character when you feel like all the elements are coming together: the lighting, the makeup, the orchestra. If all the parts aren’t fitting together, it’s a bit hard to find yourself on stage and in character.

Dracula is one of the most reinterpreted stories ever. How does this show and that character compare to other ballet roles you’ve played? Why do you think Dracula is such an enduring story?

All the elements of the story are probably why people keep wanting us to do it again. You’ve really got something for everybody. There’s the horrific side of it, and that’s terrifying in some ways. There’s action, adventure, lust, romance, passion – I just think the book and the story have all those elements that make up a truly great and visually-pleasing story to be on stage. Some other classical ballets that we do don’t have all those elements to keep people drawn in. Some girls and older women really like Swan Lake, but you might have a hard time drawing a guy’s attention into a show like that. Whereas in Dracula there really is something for everybody.

One thing I really enjoy about this production is it is one of the more accurate portrayals of the Dracula character from the book. There have been several interpretations, but he is usually portrayed as an almost gentlemanly romantic rather than a monster. How do you go about portraying this character through dance?

Christian Clark gets animalistic in his portrayal of Dracula. Photo by Charlie McCullers, Atlanta Ballet.

Exactly. A lot of the choreography that Michael Pink has done was meant to look almost like an animal. There are times that are meant to mimic a wolf, there are times that are times when our steps imitate a bat, so it’s actually pretty fun because you tap into a very primal side of yourself. I think not having inhibitions out on stage and not being worried about the technical side of each step that you’re doing, but having the source of that feeling coming from those ideas of animalism and brute strength and a lust for blood is interesting.

Dracula runs through this Saturday. What’s next for you?

I’m really excited about David Bintley‘s Carmina Burana. We’re doing Ohad Naharin‘s Minus 16 before that and I’m really excited about that one. Our resident choreographer Helen Pickett has done two pieces that we’re doing this season. One of them is called Prayer of Touch, which I did last year and am really excited to do again. Her other ballet, which I wasn’t in last time, is called Petal and it was one of my favorite things I’ve seen the company do in a long time. Hopefully this go round I might get a chance to do that one.

“Dracula: The Rock Opera” gives rock ‘n’ roll life to the undead

When the Little 5 Points Rockstar Orchestra first gathered for its low budget interpretation of Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s Jesus Christ Superstar a few years ago, it seemed like a self-indulgent undertaking by a bunch of Atlanta rockers who had little, if any, knowledge of how to properly stage a theatrical production. Sure, they had seen their share of stage theatrics, but the spontaneous energy of a live rock performance is very different from a well-rehearsed stage production, even when music is involved.

Over the years, the Orchestra became more ambitious, staging theatrical interpretations of Iron Maiden‘s The Number of the Beast and Rush‘s 2112, as well as absurdly sacreligious holiday productions such as Christmas with the Devil and the Krampus Xmas Spectacular. The group graduated from the tiny stage of the Five Spot to the legitimate theater space at 7 Stages. And in February of last year, the Orchestra staged its most impressive production yet: Haus Von Dracul, a rock opera interpretation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

Rob Thompson as Dracula (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

Haus Von Dracul, the first act of a work-in-progress, revealed a more sophisticated side to the Orchestra. With Orchestra leader Rob Thompson now working with theatre veteran Del Hamilton and the rest of the 7 Stages staff, the marriage of rock and theatre he originally envisioned was finally complete. And last weekend, the Orchestra staged the world premiere of Dracula: The Rock Opera, which builds upon Haus Von Dracul‘s foundation to bare theatrical fangs worthy of it’s namesake vampire.

Directed by Hamilton and accomplished actor Justin Welborn (The Final Destination, The Signal), Dracula is perhaps the most accurate depiction of Stoker’s novel to ever have been conceived theatrically. Rather than the dark lover Hollywood would tell us is Dracula, this production retains the demonic fashion sense established by Bela Lugosi and Gary Oldman with the monstrous demeanor of Max Shreck’s Nosferatu.

“You get Max Shreck as Nosferatu, then he starts to morph into Lugosi a little bit, then he turns into Christopher Lee,” says Shane Morton, who plays Texan Quincy Morris (and also runs attractions such as the Silver Scream SpookShow and Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse). “You see him do the whole gamut and you can tell he’s been working hard on it and studying a lot. Rob’s jump in acting has been insane. I snuck out and watched the first act and I couldn’t believe it. I know Dracula, and this is the best Dracula I’ve ever seen. I know I’m too close to the project to say anything unbiased, but I really feel that way watching his performance. And that’s all because of Justin and Del really getting on everybody and making actors out of a bunch of musicians and stuff.”

“We’re working towards a more professional atmosphere,” adds Welborn, who has been largely responsible for the Orchestra’s evolution over the past few years. “We told them we could make it bigger if we rehearsed a little bit longer, if everyone showed up on time, and this time it was very much about being as professional as we could be and not getting drunk during rehearsals. There are just certain things you do if you’re going to take something as serious and invest as much money, time and effort as we have in this. For everybody to actually come to that mutual agreement makes Del and my job so much easier because that’s what you have to do. Everybody’s performances came up – our ensemble had a chance to really gel together and work on what they were going to do, and the innkeeper woman (played by Naomi Lavender, who also plays Mina Harker and one of Dracula’s brides) didn’t look like something out of Disney, she looked like something out of a horror movie. I agree that Rob’s Dracula is one of the spookiest, weirdest, craziest that I’ve gotten to see. He’s taken his natural moves and put those natural moves into something very streamlined and knows what he’s doing the whole time. That’s the thing that takes it from out-of-control rock ‘n’ roll to a focused and true artistic performance.”

Dracula (Rob Thompson) and his brides Naomi Lavender (left), Madeline Brumby (center) and Jessika Cutts (right) (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

Though last year’s production was essentially the first act of Dracula, a lot of changes have been made between that show and the current one (running through Oct. 14). The stylized stage itself has been completely reconfigured to help the show (and blood) flow a little better, the costumes are a little more flamboyant, and some fresh blood has been added to the cast. One of the standouts of this new cast is Jeff Langston, whose Van Helsing is just as eccentric as Thompson’s Dracula. In fact, between the costumes and makeup, the two characters almost look as if they could be related. And like Thompson, Langston, whose only prior stage time was as singer for Ledfoot Messiah, is the latest example of a musician previously unfamiliar with the acting discipline.

“The directors had never met him at all until the first day or rehearsal,” says Welborn. “And he began by saying, ‘I just want you to know I’ll accept any help because I’ve never acted in any play ever in my life.’ Then he began to sing and it was like, ‘OK, we can work something out here.’ He probably worked harder and came farther than anyone else because he’s never worn a costume or gone onstage without a guitar. He told me the other day that he used to think he was born to play music, but now he thinks maybe he was born to perform.”

There’s no shortage of great performances in Dracula, and most everyone involved has to perform in both musical and theatrical capacities. But it’s the music that helps convey the drama and emotions, whether it be through seriously psychedelic scenes or funk-laden numbers with a sense of humor.

“My inspiration grew out of my love for Jesus Christ Superstar and putting this group together to do that,” says Thompson. “I pretty much hate most modern music that comes out and the ’70s are definitely my favorite, so I was thinking of Alice Cooper, Rainbow, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy. I just wanted a classic rock opera and this has turned out to be better than I imagined.”

And while the first act is dominated by the ominous sense of Jonathan Harker’s impending doom after arriving at Dracula’s castle, the second act, with it’s Gwar-like gore and lighthearted songs, really delves into the comedic value of it all.

“If you don’t give them a release valve and give them something to laugh at, they’re going to start laughing at stuff they’re not supposed to laugh at,” says Morton. “So these songs that, when I originally heard them I was like, ‘What the fuck is this?’, they have to happen because it helps the flow of everything. Between all the horror, you’ve got to give them some comic relief.”

Ledfoot Messiah’s Jeff Langston as Van Helsing (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

“I’ve never seen Dracula done without all this serious stuff,” says Welborn. “It’s almost never funny, and that’s why I don’t think I’ve ever seen one that I loved. I love the [Francis Ford] Coppola movie in it’s own way and I love Lugosi’s movie and some of the old ones, but you begin to laugh at things because it’s just kind of absurd. Every Dracula I’ve ever seen on stage, I’ve absolutely hated. The first time I heard we were going to do this, I was like, ‘Wow! OK. That’s a challenge in and of itself because it’s always so [romanticized].’ Then these guys start telling me he’s a monster and that’s it, and I began to think that gives humanity to everybody else around him.”

“The really great thing about this show is it’s not just another musical or another play or another rock show,” says Jessika Cutts, who plays Lucy Westerna and one of Dracula’s brides. “It’s got the intelligence and finesse of an opera, then it has this careless fun you have when you go to see a rock concert, mixed with all these spectacular effects.”

The Orchestra has big plans for Dracula once the coffin closes on this initial run. Welborn has already been talking to his agents and managers about possibly staging it in New York, Thompson hopes to properly record the score in a studio for a future soundtrack release and there are premonitions of taking the show on the road, or even overseas, if the opportunity arises.

“My whole life I feel like I’ve been gearing up to this,” says Morton. “I’ve been obsessed with [Dracula] since I was three years old. Jesus Christ Superstar is a great rock opera, but I think Rob has written a better rock opera and if the right people get ahold of this and it gets out, people will see that it’s really something special.”

For more information, go to www.7stages.org/dracula.