Shear Madness
Shear Madness | |
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![]() Shear Madness set at the Kennedy Center | |
Written by | Paul Pörtner |
Date premiered | 1963 |
Place premiered | Theater Ulm Ulm, Germany |
Original language | German |
Official site |
Shear Madness is an interactive whodunit play, and one of the longest-running nonmusical plays in the world.[1] The Boston production ran from 1980 to 2020 at the Charles Playhouse Stage II.[2] A second production began in 1987 at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and is currently running.
Shear Madness is based on the German-language play Scherenschnitt which was written by Paul Pörtner (1925–1984) and first performed at the Theater Ulm in Ulm, Germany in 1963.
Plot
[edit]The play is set in a unisex hair salon in the city where it is played. The landlady, Isabel Czerny, who lives above the shop is murdered and the audience gets involved in the action by questioning the actors and attempting to solve the crime. The characters include a flamboyant hairdresser and their flirty yet ditzy assistant, along with a prim and proper uptight older lady, and an older man who is a "used antique dealer". Much of the dialogue is improvised by the actors, and the humor tends to revolve around topical references to current events.
The ending of the play is different every night as audience members hear clues, question the characters, and then vote on who they think is guilty. Whoever the audience votes to be the murderer, that person improvises dialogue along with the rest of the cast to reveal themselves.[3]
Current productions
[edit]In August 1987, a production of Shear Madness opened at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts's Theater Lab in Washington D.C., and continues as of 2025.[4]
A production began in Lodz, Poland in 1999.[5] In 2006, productions of Shear Madness began at the Bagatela Theatre in Kraków, Poland. In 2024, the Bagatela celebrated 1,000 performances of the play at the theater.[6]
A French adaptation by director Sébastien Azzopardi, written by Azzopardi and Sacha Danino, opened in Paris at the Théâtre des Mathurins in 2011 and has had over 3,500 performances.[7]
Past productions
[edit]North America
[edit]Shear Madness opened in Boston at the Charles Playhouse Stage II in January 1980 and closed in March 2020, shortly after celebrating its 40th anniversary.[8] The show closed on March 15, 2020 citing potential loses from te then emerging COVID-19 pandemic.[2]
The Boston production was described as the longest running non-musical play in the United States[9] and the second-longest-running non-musical play in the world, after Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap which has been performed in London since 1952.[10] However a few other non-musical plays have run for longer: Eugène Ionesco's The Bald Soprano in Paris since 1957 and Israel Horovitz's Line in New York City (1974–2018).
A production opened in November 2015 at the New World Stages Off-Broadway theater in New York City running there until July 2016.[11] It then reopened later that month at the Davenport Theater, running until April 2017.
A Spanish adaptation by director Rina Rajlevsky, written by Alberto Lomnitz and Ricardo Esquerra, opened in 2017 in Mexico City at the Fernando Soler Theatre.[12]
Europe
[edit]A Catalan adaptation by director Pere Planella, written by Guillem-Jordi Graells, opened in 1987 in Barcelona.[13]
A Spanish translation by Nacho Artime premiered in April 1989 in Madrid at the Teatro Figaro.[14] It was restaged there in the 1990s, 2000s, and twice in the 2010s.[15]
A Turkish adaptation by director Nedim Saban opened in Istanbul in 1998 and ran for over 500 performances. In 2003, Saban adapted the play for the second time, introducing SMS messages and online chat as means of audience interaction.[16]
References
[edit]- ^ STAGE REVIEW: Shear Madness - Consistently Different, The Tech
- ^ a b Shear Madness to Close after 40 years. Boston Globe, March 12, 2020.
- ^ "About Shear Madness". shearmadness.com. Retrieved 9 March 2024.
- ^ "Shear Madness | The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts". The Kennedy Center. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ "Szalone nożyczki | Teatr Kwadrat im. Edwarda Dziewońskiego w Warszawie". teatrkwadrat.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ "Polish theatre marks one thousand performances of American hit comedy Shear Madness - English Section". www.polskieradio.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ "Dernier coup de ciseaux". Théâtre des Mathurins (in French). Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ Bass, Emily (27 December 2019). "Four Decades of Madness". bostonguide.com. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
- ^ "Record-Breaking Play Shear Madness Readies For New York, and We Have the First Pics!". Playbill.com. 2015-10-14.
- ^ Collins-Hughes, Laura (2015-11-12). "Review: 'Shear Madness,' Where Getting a Haircut Is Murder". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ "Shear Madness Reopens at a New Off-Broadway Theatre Today". Playbill. Archived from the original on 2024-11-12. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ Franco, Estela Leñero (February 9, 2018). ""La estética del crimen"".
- ^ de Frutos, María Francisca Vilches (1988). "La temporada teatral española 1986-1987". Anales de la Literatura Española Contemporánea. 13 (3): 331–369. ISSN 0272-1635. JSTOR 27741858.
- ^ "Por los Pelos P. Pörtner. Reseña 1989". www.madridteatro.net. Retrieved 2019-08-03.
- ^ Madridiario. "Por los pelos: asesinato entre secadores". Madridiario (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- ^ "Radikal-çevrimiçi / Kültür/Sanat / En son teknolojiyle tiyatro". www.radikal.com.tr. Archived from the original on 4 April 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2022.