Halfway through Ghosts of the Underground's opening night, I had the strongest sense of deja vu. Not simply because I recognized about half the cast, nor because I've attended many a show at Zombie Joe's. No, my imagination summoned up a series of silent movies. Doctor Mabuse, Nosferatu, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and M. The words "A German Expressionist Musical" kept echoing inside my skull.
And that is what this show turned out to be. A German Expressionist Musical.
If you don't know what German Expressionism is, go to YouTube and do a search of the above titles. Just do it. Now.
Photo Credit: Sebastian Munoz |
Photo Credit: Sebastian Munoz |
My one complaint--if it can be called that--was how much I wished the show were even longer, more elaborate, in a larger space with a bigger audience. Several characters simply never had the opportunity to move into the foreground--like a hulking Brute (Steven Alloway) who always captured my eye, and various others making up the story's tableau (Courtney Drumm, for example). To be sure, this does make for cheerful, light fare. Ghosts of the Underground (have fun contemplating the meaning of that title) delves into the shadows of life, of perception, of our beliefs in what we truly are. All the meat that made German Expressionism so powerful a genre--a warning echo of the tumult that was to come. How entirely appropriate the story has no names, but plenty of masks. Professions but not families, not really. People die in this story so very easily--and the fact audience blends with cast in terms of space only makes that fact more eerily powerful.
Ghosts of the Underground plays at ZJU, 4850 Lankershim Blvd. (across the street from KFC, just south of the NoHo sign) North Hollywood California 91601 Friday and Saturdays at 8:30pm until February 21, 2015. Tickets are $15. Advance tickets at zombiejoes.tix.com or call 818.202.4120
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