Dracula

As a horror fan, I was intrigued by Good Luck Macbethโ€™s announcement that the company would stage a production about a monster whoโ€”get thisโ€”drinks the blood of his victims! However, I was miffed to learn that the source material for Dalia Randolphโ€™s stage adaptation is an obscure 1897 novel about a suave aristocrat who lives in a phony-sounding Eastern European country, transposing all his Ws for Vs.

We open with a large cast of costumes and people addressing the audience over an ominous original score by Christopher Salas. In order to build some pre-bloodsucking suspense, weโ€™re told that this Mr. Dracula is bad news, and weโ€™re about to hear his tale.

Jeff Bentley stars as Jonathan Harker, some kind of overdressed realtor who goes to โ€œTransylvaniaโ€ to sell Dracula a house in London. Already, the suspension of my disbelief is labored. Donโ€™t home buyers usually meet the realtor at the property?

Like most monsters, Dracula is actually scarier when we canโ€™t see him. Tony Lorenzo gamely twirls his cape and slathers on the creepy Balkan charm, but I found his accent distracting. He actually sounded vaguely Italian to my ears, but I might have imagined this because the program says that Lorenzo hails from Italy. All in all, Iโ€™m not sure this Dracula guy has much of a future in villainy. His characterization, costume and all, feels derivative of a certain arithmetically obsessed Sesame Street character.

Harker winds up captive in his clientโ€™s castle, where a guy canโ€™t even get a decent shave without his host drooling all over him. Less objectionably, heโ€™s subject to the whims of some naughty sharp-toothed nymphs who probably deserve more stage time, or perhaps their own movie. On Cinemax.

Back in England, Harkerโ€™s fiancรฉe, Mina (a strong Meredith Martin), languishes on outdoor furniture while a trio of suitors vie for the affections of her nubile BFF Lucy (Megan Fitzpatrick). Thereโ€™s also some kind of psychic connection between Dracula and the mental patient Renfield (Brian Ault) who (1) eats bugs and (2) totally steals the show.

Lucyโ€™s somnabulatory ways and Harkerโ€™s dogged homecoming lead mostly to more talking, but eventually to the playโ€™s centerpiece, in which ye olde monster expert Van Helsing (John Blomberg) shows all the young whippersnappers what this whole โ€œvampireโ€ thing is about. The Lucy scene is the showโ€™s money shot, featuring some unsettling contortion and plenty of blood. And then more blood. If you donโ€™t like to see blood sprayed everywhere, then I donโ€™t know why youโ€™re still reading this. Also, if all vampires looked like Lucy, this bloodsucking monster concept could be a real gold mine.

Source material aside, the productionโ€™s biggest flaw is its reliance on muffled audio recordings to convey charactersโ€™ inner monologues. Maybe thereโ€™s no better way to stage these, but the fact that I was trying to figure out a workaround is not a good sign. Overall, the production is a little ramshackle and could probably stand some streamlining. The adaptationโ€”which is solid in its own right, if a bit talkyโ€”would be well served by fewer moving parts and more minimalist staging.

In a world where paranormal activity and zombies rule, there probably isnโ€™t much room for these dangerous, alluring, immortal figures to get a foot in the door of the entertainment industry. Yet theyโ€™re awfully resilient, and Iโ€™ll be damned if they donโ€™t have a certain lovable charm. If creative types like Dalia Randolph and director Scott Reeves keep chipping away, this vampire thing might just catch on.

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