The Guthrie Theater has "A Christmas Carol," and Penumbra has "Black Nativity" — shows that return every year and have become beloved family traditions. Is History Theatre joining that roster with "Glensheen"?
Since its premiere in 2015, the Chan Poling-Jeffrey Hatcher musical comedy has proved immensely popular, selling out runs at the St. Paul playhouse. The show, about a bungled burglary that led to a double murder at the Glensheen mansion in Duluth, is based in part on news stories by Minneapolis Tribune reporters Joe Kimball and Peg Meier.
On June 27, 1977, there was a break-in at the 39-room Jacobean mansion of the 83-year-old Duluth mining heiress Elisabeth Congdon.
The intruder first encountered her night nurse, Velma Pietila, and killed her with a brass candlestick. Congdon, in her bed, became the next victim. She was smothered with a satin pillowcase.
Her adopted daughter Marjorie Caldwell and son-in-law Roger Caldwell were both charged in the killings. Roger was convicted in 1978 but Marjorie was acquitted the following year. He would later commit suicide, but maintained his innocence in a note.
"The old mansion, the crashing waves — it has all the elements of a great Agatha Christie mystery," Hatcher said. "Or it's like an episode of 'Colombo' rewritten by the guys who did 'Fargo.' "
"Glensheen" opens Saturday for its seventh run. The fascination with the notorious case has not waned. We talked to the actors and creative team about why the musical has struck such a nerve.
The shock of it: "The case was literally ripped from the headlines and the trial was the trial of the century in Minnesota," said director Ron Peluso. "Elisabeth was Duluth royalty and one of the richest people in Minnesota. She lived in this great mansion. Everybody was curious about her and her life." Then to have her die like that was confounding to many.