Dracula: the Musical

Dracula: the Musical is a 2010 Swedish musical based on the 1897 novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. It was originally a theatre production meant for ten performances but due to the massive popularity extra performances were added and the musical was turned into a film, given a limited release on DVD. The film was put together by editing several performances of the musical and a filming session for closeups. The musical was written by Lisa Linder and directed by Martin Geijer. Music was composed by Christer Johansson and Jacob Mülrad.

The musical had a premise very similar to Bram Stoker's Dracula but had many subplots and themes unique to itself. The musical also followed the book closely, the most notable detail being the inclusion of Lucy Westenra's mother, a character absent from most adaptations.

Act 1

In 1446 Vlad Dracul is a young warrior who has sworn loyalty to the cross and is out to defend his homeland of Transylvania from the invading Turks. He fights the Turks for several days and wins but his beloved wife is misinformed of his death and she commits suicide.

The story shifts to 1970s England. A young reporter arrives at a retirement home. At the home he finds an elderly and blind Mina Harker. She is reluctant to talk to the reporter until he reveals that he is the grandnephew of Abraham van Helsing and that his name is Erik. Erik tells Old Mina that van Helsing was put in an asylum and that one time when he met him as a child he ranted something about a mission in Transylvania involving Mina and her late husband. Old Mina agrees to tell him everything.

In the year 1897 solicitor Jonathan Harker, the fiancée of Mina, has arrived in Transylvania to give legal support to a Count Dracula for a real estate transaction overseen by Harker's employer. Jonathan arrives at the castle and is greeted by Count Dracula himself. Jonathan mentions his fiancée Mina and shows Dracula a picture of her that he keeps in a necklace. Dracula is stunned by the picture. Old Mina tells Erik about her friend Lucy Westenra and her three suitors: Arthur Holmwood, Quincey Morris and John Seward.

Lucy accepts her fate and tells Arthur that she will marry him in an humorous scene. Arthur is never told that Mrs. Westenra more or less forced Lucy to marry him and he thinks throughout the play that Lucy loved him. Mina sees a storm coming on the ocean.

Mina goes to Budapest and meets Jonathan, who is still recovering from the ordeal at the castle. He tells her about what he saw in the castle and Mina realises that the man she met was Dracula. Thinking Dracula is out for her, she marries Jonathan to make herself untouchable, despite being more interested in Dracula at the moment (Wedding in the Abbey). The first act ends with Dracula screaming in agony; Mina is in fact his wife reborn.

Act 2

In Amsterdam Abraham van Helsing holds a lecture about blood and diseases (Our Civilisation). Not knowing how to treat Lucy, John sends after his old mentor van Helsing to help him treat Lucy. Van Helsing has John doing a blood transfusion, which revives the unconscious Lucy. Van Helsing fills her room with garlic and tells John to guard outside her room. John does so, but unknown to van Helsing he is addicted to hospital drugs and John soon falls asleep due to the drugs. Soon Dracula enters the house through a window and feeds on Lucy.

At the wake van Helsing tells the others about his theory that Lucy has bitten by a vampire, Dracula. John dismisses this idea saying that there is one proof in modern science for vampires, to which van Helsing replies with a rock song (The Man Who Once Was) and fully convinces them that vampires are real. He tells them that Lucy is now a vampire and they must drive a stake through her heart and cut off her head to set her soul free.

Meanwhile, Dracula visits Mina after being invited to the building by Renfield. Dracula makes Mina remember her past life as his wife, and Mina realises that he killed Lucy but in despair confesses her love for him (The Princess and The River). Meanwhile, the men finds Renfield dying and realises that Dracula is in the building. Dracula has Mina drink his blood (The Princess and The River continued). The men rushes in and van Helsing drives Dracula back with his cross. Quincey tries to shoot Dracula, which distracts van Helsing and allows Dracula to escape.

The final song number ("The Final Battle") begins and the men challenge Dracula, who dares them to battle him. The song continues and it is shown that Dracula told Mina that if she killed him she would turn into a vampire and he would live within her because she had tasted his blood, but if Jonathan kills him they will never be together again. Mina finishes off Dracula.

Cast

  • Axel Rydén as Count Dracula
  • Ana Stanisic as Mina Murray / Dracula's wife
  • Raul Hamilton as Jonathan Harker
  • Love Bonnier as Abraham van Helsing / Priest / Gypsy
  • Joakim Nyman as Roald Malcolm Renfield / Gun-Gypsy
  • Alicia Rempler as Lucy Westenra
  • Tim Rosell as Quincey Morris / der van Kneetch
  • Christopher van Dijk as John Seward / Coach Driver
  • Dennis Kylén as Arthur Holmwood
  • Mathilda Skonare Karlsson as Mrs. Westenra
  • Matilda Kittel as Old Mina Murray
  • Jesper Sjögren Karlsson as The Reporter - Erik van Helsing / The Gypsy Chieftain
  • Anna Volby, Hedvig Nordstedt and Malin Lindqvist as Brides of Dracula
  • Märta Strokirk as The Girl
  • Malin Eriksson as The Hostess
  • Petra Pichler as The Mother / Gypsy Woman

Songs

gollark: That reminds me somehow, better work on potatOS privacy policy handling.
gollark: `format!("{} is cool", "Rust")`
gollark: Not that you do actually end up concating much.
gollark: No, it mixes concatenation and addition too.
gollark: I agree. We should rewrite all code in Haskell, as it fixes this, or Urn, or Amulet.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.