At the curtain call of the Alabama Shakespeare Festival's production of Ken Ludwig's BASKERVILLE: a Sherlock Holmes Mystery, the backstage crew and dressers are brought out for a well-deserved ovation. They had been working silently and out-of-sight for the past two hours, flawlessly manipulating scenic elements, props, and innumerable split-second costume changes for the five-member acting ensemble who portray more than 40 characters.
Director Laura Kepley deftly manages this madcap farcical interpretation of one of Arthur Conan Doyle's most famous escapades of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. -- Though true to Doyle's original, audiences are challenged to keep up with the main plot, sub-plots, red herrings, witty dialogue, exaggerated dialects, and broadly comical delineations of characters that drive the action at a rapid pace.
Paige Hathaway's flexible, multi-leveled and evocative set, Rob Denton's sophisticated lighting, Jane Shaw's confident sound design, Kelly Colburn's stunningly effective projections, and Lex Liang's period character-driven and often humorous costumes offer a collaboration that supports the actors and the script.
The impressive acting ensemble -- Grant Chapman [Holmes], Todd Cerveris [Watson], with Michael Doherty, Justin Blanchard, and Madeleine Lambert as "everyone else" -- are so finely disciplined and specific in their choices of posture and dialect that make each character distinct, that we forget there are only five of them.
And they have to tell the convoluted story of a family curse and deaths attributed to a "hellhound" on the moors near the Baskerville estate, the latest of which conscripts Holmes to solve and to prevent the death of the latest family member to inherit the title and the land.
It's all a great deal of fun for audiences to try to solve the mystery along with Holmes, but entertainment is the key to Ludwig's take on the tale. And we get it big-time here. Many twists and turns, many revelations, and even more laughs as we become complicit in the story and its outcome.
Come to ASF for the story, come for the costumes, and the set, and the projections, come for the laughs. Admire the talents of the acting ensemble. And have a good evening out.