I'd have to agree that "Cats" is also pretty scary. It's scary that it ran for so long.
"I've lost everything! Luis, Marty, my baby with Chris, Chris himself, James. All I ever wanted was love." --Sheridan Crane "Passions"
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"Housework is like bad sex. Every time I do it, I swear I'll never do it again til the next time company comes."--"Lulu"
from "Can't Stop The Music"
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"When the right doors didn't open for him, he went through the wrong ones" - "Sweet Bird of Youth"
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"Passions" is uncancelled! See NBC.com for more info.
Butters, go buy World of Warcraft, install it on your computer, and join the online sensation before we all murder you.
--Cartman: South Park
ATTENTION FANS: I will be played by James Barbour in the upcoming musical, "BroadwayWorld: The Musical."
You can say "Macbeth" on a message board. It's not a theatre.
The original pre-Broadway production of Jekyll and Hyde had some genuinely creepy and startling moments. My favorite was when Hyde appears in Lucy's room just before he kills her. It was pitch black with flashes of lightning and in one of the flashes, he was just suddenly there by her bed. There were audible gasps and this wonder murmur of tension rippling through the audience. It was chilling.
Also, not actually scary, but very creepy was the effect of the crowd in An Inspector Calls, especially in the final tableau.
"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian
Show that I saw live: 2002 tour of Cabaret. The creepiest moments for me were "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" (which I still skip on the CD) and the finale. When the Emcee took off his coat at the end, it was like getting punched in the stomach. You could've heard a pin drop in that theatre.
Show(s) that I saw recordings of: Any version of Sweeney Todd. Especially at the end, when Toby comes across Sweeney cradling the Beggar Woman's body. In my mind, Neil Patrick Harris and Ken Jennings were the creepiest, but Mano was nothing to sneeze at. Plus the whole "buckets of blood" thing in the revival had a tendancy to make my skin crawl. "City on Fire" gets notable mention from the Hal Prince staging, mainly because his effective use of lighting and the factory whistle.
"You're the worst thing to happen to musical theatre since Andrew Lloyd Webber!" --Family Guy
"Shut up! It's been 29 years!!!" --the incomparable Patti LuPone in her MUCH DESERVED Tony acceptance speech for Gypsy.
Kitzy's Avatar du Jour: Kitzy as Little Red Ridinghood in her college's production of "Into the Woods"
"The Pillowman" seriously freaked me out. Both in the sense that the subject material was rather disturbing, but there were also two instances where the audience actually jumped from their seats. Gosh, I wish I could go back and see that play a second time. I really enjoyed it.
Cabaret's terrifying. When I was in rehearsal for the show, the whole cast went to a local college to see a production of it, just to get ideas. We all knew how it was going to end, we even had blocked it by this point...but it still sent chills up and down my spine. From then on, appearing in the finale (and leading "Tomorrow Belongs to Me," for that matter!) always creeped me out.
I'll also add THE WOMAN IN WHITE, as it made me so dizzy I was ready to throw up by the end of Act I.
"Winning a Tony this year is like winning Best Attendance in third grade: no one will care but the winner and their mom."
-Kad
"I have also met him in person, and I find him to be quite funny actually. Arrogant and often misinformed, but still funny."
-bjh2114 (on Michael Riedel)
When a member of the Blue Man Group climbs up to the balcony, straddles your seat like the Colossus of Rhodes, and proceeds to freak dance, you know you're watching the scariest piece of theatre on earth.
"If there is going to be a restoration fee, there should also be a Renaissance fee, a Middle Ages fee and a Dark Ages fee. Someone must have men in the back room making up names, euphemisms for profit."
(Emanuel Azenberg)
Sweeney Todd the play (not the musical). I saw it in this little blackbox theatre and it was so dark, bloody, realistic and downright gruesome. It was fantastic!
Wait Until Dark is about a blind woman who is being hunted by narcotics dealers because she accidentally intercepts a doll filled with heroin. It was made into a movie starring Audrey Hepburn and Alan Arkin in 1967 and garnered Miss Audrey her fifth and final Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
"You're the worst thing to happen to musical theatre since Andrew Lloyd Webber!" --Family Guy
"Shut up! It's been 29 years!!!" --the incomparable Patti LuPone in her MUCH DESERVED Tony acceptance speech for Gypsy.
Kitzy's Avatar du Jour: Kitzy as Little Red Ridinghood in her college's production of "Into the Woods"
Woman in Black! It's a play, but it is so scary. I sat front row and the fog machine was right in front of us. The acting was amazing. It's a great play.
2008 European Tour
London: Les Mis, Lion King, Sound of Music, Joseph, Hairspray, Billy Elliot
France: Le Roi Lion, Cabaret
Germany: Der Konig der Lowen
Holland: Tarzan & Les Mis
This isn't a show per se, but I saw four scenes from a grand guignol workshop. Not was only downright creepy, but it was really scary- even thought I was four feet away from the actors!
I'm amazed that more people haven't seen WOMAN IN BLACK! It's London's longest running play (or it used to be, not sure if that's changed) and is the scariest experience I have ever had in my life! I know there have been plenty of regional and community productions in the US, but I was able to see the London production in 2001 and I was almost in tears by the end. And I've always been one who could handle scary movies/haunted houses/etc- but this show almost had me running to the lobby.
"The last train out of any station will not be full of nice guys." - Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
"I wash my face, then drink beer, then I weep.
Say a prayer and induce insincere self-abuse,
till I'm fast asleep"- In Trousers