“Glensheen” superfan Mark Taylor cannot get enough of the murder musical.
He has seen every staging of the Chan Poling-Jeffrey Hatcher show since its 2015 premiere at St. Paul’s History Theatre, where audience demand has made it an annual tradition and the most durable Minnesota-minted musical.
Taylor, 43, has cheered at cabaret and singalong versions, and even traveled to Duluth for a performance of “Glensheen” in the city where the crimes that inspired the musical — the June 27, 1977, double murders of taconite mining heiress Elisabeth Congdon and her nurse, Velma Pietila — first drew breathless attention.
But the St. Paul resident’s dream venue for the show would be the imposing Jacobean mansion where the events occurred.
“A production of ‘Glensheen’ at Glensheen — that would be the ultimate,” said Taylor, a self-described repeat offender who has had T-shirts made quoting a line from the show. “I realize that the [University of Minnesota, owners of mansion] may not go for that but, ooh, that would be quite the thrill.”
For the moment, Taylor will have to settle for seeing what he described as the world’s best musical in St. Paul, where it opens Saturday.
“Glensheen” succeeds partly because it tells the story in a way that does not dishonor the dead, said retired Star Tribune reporter Joe Kimball, who had just started at the Minneapolis Tribune when he broke the story of what was initially thought to be a botched burglary.
“It was almost an Agatha Christie type of thing with murder, millions and mansion,” said Kimball, author of “Secrets of the Congdon Mansion: The Unofficial Guide to Glensheen and the Congdon Murders.” “From the beginning, the family members said, Marjorie did this. She was living in Colorado at the time and sent her husband to do it.”