Putting the Suspense Back in Murder Mysteries
Review of Jet City Improv's Emerald City Slasher
Written by TeenTix Newsroom Writer ABBY BERNSTEIN and edited by Teen Editorial Staff Member KAYLEE YU
As the daughter of a murder mystery fanatic, I’ve grown up learning how to guess the killer. Inevitably, some piece of dialogue or strategically placed object gives the culprit away. After all, the author always knows who their villain is, even as they try to hide it from us. Suppose, though, that there is a mystery story in which the author does not know the killer. Neither does the director or lights crew or cast. Not even the killer knows who they are until the story has begun.
Such is the case with Emerald City Slasher. This Jet City Improv production in the intimate West of Lenin theater transports audiences to the very familiar, coffee-addicted, and perpetually rainy Emerald City. The improvised murder mystery follows eight friends who are struck by tragedy once one of them falls victim to a gruesome murder. As friends are picked off one by one, they race to find the culprit before they themselves are slashed. In the first scene of the show, actors pick up cards. These cards describe characters created by audience members just moments before. The card also tells them whether they are a survivor, a victim, or… the Emerald City Slasher! No one in the cast nor crew knows anyone’s true identities until the final scene where the slasher is uncovered. My cast included characters such as Danielle, a timid zoo keeper with a fascination for mysticism; Bobby, a failed beer brewer who loves a good laugh; and John, a gruff man opposed to change, working as a window wiper at the Amazon Spheres. The improv nature of the show gives a unique authenticity to the mystery, but unfortunately makes for an unsteady first act.The cast of Emerald City Slasher at Jet City Improv. Photo by Stephen Anunson.




















