And our audience-tested scenarios include a high school or college reunion, a 20’s Speakeasy, a Country Western Honk Tonk, a hilarious Italian Wedding, and even an Irish Wake. We have performed in unique spaces, like a boat, a train, and a multi-room mansion. The audience is invited to join in the fun, and even take the part of a character if they desire. Finally, you sift through the tangled web of clues and see if you can unmask the killer.Īll Private Eyes shows are interactive musical comedies with live music. The suspense is unbearable, and so are some of the jokes. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users.
The action is fast and furious and the jokes fly non-stop. Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Alpena PrivateEyes 191605 Black Standard Window Film Complete Kit (5 VLT) at. and who is that mysterious woman talking to?!!! Just when you think you’ve found out who the characters are and how they relate to each other, someone you’ve just met.dies!! A detective (sometimes a defective detective) leads the investigation, but the audience determines who the killer is.ĭuring dinner, all the suspicious characters mingle about, joining you at your table. was a curious confession of jealousy overheard?. Suspicious characters mingling at your cocktail reception?. Our unique blend of music, comedy and interactive “whodunnit” murder mysteries the audience solves, have won rave reviews from audiences and sponsors throughout the Finger Lakes.
Booklist, and Kirkus, all of which have featured starred reviews. Private Eyes Unlimited has delivered dozens of great performances for non-profit groups, restaurants, and corporateevents. Berkeley bookseller Nikki Griffin is also a badass private eye who uses her fighting. Perhaps this is as Steven Dietz planned it.IMAGINE! A Shot in the dark! A scream rips through the night! A detective arrives and you are in the middle of a crime scene! But you also find yourself in the middle of excitement, suspense, passion, revenge, and a lot of music and laughter! Unfortunately as the evening moves on, the viewer begins to feel a bit numbed by the ongoing and repetitive turns of events and … dare I say it … deceptions. The first act flies by as the audience, lulled by the novelty of the plot twists, adjusts back and forth between the alternate realities. This theatrical turducken is saved by some very snappy and witty dialogue ably delivered by the excellent cast. The diminutive Dragon Productions again delivers a production with a big punch. Played with pompous perfection, he delights us when we see Adrian taken down several notches by the end of the second act. And, most importantly, Gagen’s impeccable timing and delivery made his stand-out Adrian a force to contend with. Sara Luna’s Cory, the waitress/private eye/abandoned wife and Vic Prosak the deceitful psychiatrist brought well needed comedic lightness to the evening. Fred Pitts is moving as his cool nuanced Matthew stoically transforms himself in the play and the play within a play from trusting husband to rejected partner. Kelly Rineheart is excellent as the lust-struck wife Lisa whose affair with the director Adrian feeds into her alternate role as a cheating spouse. The evening goes on in this fashion with the plot jumping back and forth between fantasy and reality in this play within a play while Lisa, Matthew and Adrian experience the destructive nature of love affairs and the ultimate numbing effect of ongoing deception. As the two seem ready to succumb to their mutual attraction, the audience is rudely pulled elsewhere by the booming voice of Adrian (Martin Gagen), an off-stage director who jolts the audience into realizing that everything that went before was just a rehearsal in a play. All seems futile until later when they meet again in the restaurant where Lisa works. The first act of Steven Dietz’s Private Eyes sucks the audience in when an aspiring actress Lisa (Kelly Rineheart) auditions unsuccessfully with Matthew (Fred Pitts) an overbearing and dismissive director.
Guest post by Pat ReardoIn this complicated story of love, lust, loss and lies nothing is what it seems and everything is subject to question.