ͬɫ

News

IC’s ‘Bridegroom’ a marriage of skills

4.19.2018

ͬɫ's production of “The Robber Bridegroom” opens Friday. Show are 7:30 p.m.-10 p.m. on April 20 and April 26 -28, and at 2 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. on April 29 at ͬɫ’s Sibert Theatre inside McGaw Fine Arts Center on campus.

By Angela Bauer, abauer@myjournalcourier.com, for the  

“The Robber Bridegroom” isn’t exactly the tale of a perfect marriage.

Behind the scenes, though, director and IC theater assistant professor Aasne Daniels found a solid relationship in working with Becky Kemp and Elizabeth Cheney, to whom she ceded vocal and choreographic control of the musical, which will be staged Friday and next weekend at ͬɫ.

“There’s always collaboration” with the crew on a play, Daniels said. “But it’s very strange as a director to give over three-fourths of my rehearsal time to the vocal director and choreography director. … It’s fun, but it’s very strange.”

Still, the collaboration worked for Daniels, who has done a lot of “musical stuff” but doesn’t have a background in music theory or a degree in music, she said.

It’s also a collaboration of students from IC’s music and theater departments, some of whom had never acted before, she said.

“I think it sounds great, looks great,” she said. “Everybody’s giving it their all.”

The musical is based on the Eudora Welty short story of the same name, which in turn was based on a Grimm’s fairy tale. It tells the story of Jamie Lockhart, a man who prides himself on being a “gentleman robber, stealing with style as he charms folks out of their treasure”. Sometimes, though, he’s “the Bandit of the Woods” and takes whatever he wants by whatever means necessary.

He meets his match in Rosamund, a “spunky damsel in distress,” complete with evil stepmother.

“I stumbled on it,” Daniels said of how she chose it to be IC’s musical. “I was cruising YouTube one night last year, knowing I had to pick a musical … I thought it was really charming and funny, with some dark moments. Then (YouTube) took it down. I told everybody at IC about it, told them they could find it on YouTube, then they couldn’t.”

They ended up taking Daniels’ word for it when she told them it was the musical to do.

They also trusted her thoughts on the play’s dances, even the choreographer.

“It’s written as a square dance-traditional American folk dance-heavy show,” Daniels said. “But I wanted to see if we could shake that up a bit. Using the students as inspiration, we devised a lot of the choreography so it feels very contemporary.”

She’s not quite sure what to call the dance she and choreographer Cheney ended up with, but it’s what she was seeking, she said.

“It’s meta-theatrical, maybe,” she said, trying to find a term for it. “It goes beyond realism into some sort of expressionism. But it works, it enhances the story.”

“The Robber Bridegroom” will be staged at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 20 and April 26-28 and at 2 p.m. on April 29 at ͬɫ’s Sibert Theatre inside McGaw Fine Arts Center on campus. Tickets, which are $10 for adults and $5 for students, are available at the door, by calling 217-245-3471 or online at .

Starting at 6:30 p.m. Friday, students in IC’s music department will perform in a pre-show cabaret in the Sibert Theatre lobby. IC music instructor Nichol DelGiorno will accompany the students on piano as they perform songs from musical theater. The performance is “casual” and guests are welcome to arrive at any time, DelGiorno said.

ͬɫ ͬɫ

Founded in 1829, ͬɫ is a residential liberal arts college fostering academic excellence rooted in opportunities for experiential learning while preparing students for lifelong success. The college is located in Jacksonville, ͬɫ. With an enrollment of more than 1,000 students, the college offers over 50 undergraduate programs. In 1932, the society of Phi Beta Kappa established a chapter at ͬɫ, and it remains one of only 11 in the state.

ͬɫ is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association.

Visit www.ic.edu for more information.

Media Contact Information
Emily Titsworth '19, Writer
Office of Marketing and Communication
217.245.3219 | emily.titsworth@ic.edu