Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors at the Menier Chocolate Factory

The UK premiere of Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors by Gordon Greenberg and Steve Rosen at the Menier Chocolate Factory. Greenberg directs, returning to the Menier having previously directed The Baker’s Wife and Barnum.

The production runs until 3 May.

Who is in the cast of Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors?

James Daly (reprising the role of Dracula), Safeena Ladha (Lucy Westfeldt), Diane Pilkington (Dr. Westfeldt), Sebastien Torkia Mina (Westfeldt, Van Helsing and others) and Charlie Stemp (Jonathan Harker).

Who is in the creative team?

Director: Gordon Greenberg; Set Design: Tijana Bjelajac; Costume Design: Tristan Raines;

Lighting Design: Ben Cracknell; Sound Design: Yvonne Gilbert

What is Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors about?

Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors gives Bram Stoker’s horror classic a comic makeover in this lightning-fast gender-bending reimagining that features a Gen Z pansexual Count Dracula in the midst of an existential crisis. With a cast of five switching costumes and roles at the drop of a hat, this 90-minute freewheeling send-up plays with sexuality and gender norms in the spirit of comedy legends Charles Ludlam, Monty Python and Mel Brooks – and celebrates goth, camp, and the magic of live theatre itself.

In the treacherous mountains of Transylvania, Jonathan Harker, a meek English estate agent, takes a harrowing journey to meet a new and mysterious client, who happens to be the most terrifying(ly narcissistic) monster the world has ever known: Count Dracula!

When the Count sets his sights on Harker’s fiancé, the brilliant young earth scientist Lucy Westfeldt, he meets his match for the first time – as well as a slew of other colorful characters including vampire hunter Jean Van Helsing, insect connoisseur Renfield and behavioral psychiatrist Wallace Westfeldt, whose British country estate doubles as a free-range mental asylum.

Are there any accessible performances scheduled?

TBC

What did I think?

★★★

It’s Rocky Horror/Young Frankenstein – just without the songs. The cast are all phenomenal but the show itself lacks originality (although I’ve never the set at the menier used in such an inventive way).

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