Kirsten DeLohr Helland and Janet Krupin in Afterwords (Sam Freeman) |
The second weekend in August has become an annual summer
ritual in Issaquah, Washington. Village Theatre produces the Festival of New
Musicals. This weekend was the 17th such festival. After a rigorous process of
winnowing down hundreds of submissions from all over, even a few other
countries, they bring together writers of new musicals and top singing/acting
talent from the region (and sometimes New York and Los Angeles among others)
for what are termed “29 hour workshops.” They provide directors and music
directors and it all culminates in a three-day celebration of musical creation.
This year, there was a musical about Nikola Tesla, one about
a little-known burial island in New York City (Hart Island), a developing fantasy
musical to be staged by Book-It Repertory Theatre this winter (Howl’s Moving Castle) and a zombie
musical.
I was able to interview the women behind a new musical
called Afterwords, focusing on a
young woman’s quest to uncover more about a suddenly-killed mentor’s secret love
life. When she inherits his journals, she then discovers the woman has also
suddenly died, and is driven to connect with the woman’s two daughters. The
musical has many themes about family and connection and legacy.