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Sierra Rep staging Mark Twain comedy at Fallon House Theatre
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COLUMBIA — Small-town antics, homespun humor and foot-stompin’ fiddlin’ come to Sierra Repertory Theatre’s Fallon House Theatre in Columbia State Park Sept. 26 to Oct. 26 with Mark Twain’s “A Murder, a Mystery and a Marriage.”

Set in Deerlick, Missouri, the musical fits Columbia’s historic feeling and should delight audiences seeking a taste of the wit of legendary humorist Mark Twain.

Twain wrote the original short story for the Atlantic Monthly in 1876 as part of a proposed competition among 12 prominent writers. The idea was to give a skeleton plot involving a mysterious stranger and a murder to the authors (Henry James was among them) and publish each author’s version. The scheme never flew, and the story languished. It resurfaced once in 1945, then again in 2001. A musical version, by Aaron Posner, co-founder and resident director of Philadelphia’s Arden Theater Company, came shortly after. Posner invited well-known composer James Sugg to write the bluegrass, gospel and gypsy jazz songs.While the play as written calls for a band, director Dennis Jones prefers instead to have actors play instruments, integrating the music into the story. Fiddles, guitars and a piano will combine to give the play a lively feel. Jones also designed the set, a townscape of Deerlick. It has a rustic quality, and the stage will feel a bit like a dance hall of the 1800s.

The story is a tall tale spun by a narrator, Clem, presumably named for Samuel Clemens. Played by actor and singer/songwriter Chris¬¬ Van Cleave, Clem is a folksy, guitar-playing presence. Other characters include Sally, mother of Mary Gray, played by MJ Jurgensen, best known to Sonora audiences for playing the role of Vi Petty in SRT’s Buddy, the Buddy Holly Story and Effy Krayneck The Spitfire Grill. The town beauty, Mary is set to marry her true love, Hugh Gregory, but her evil uncle (played by SRT favorite Ty Smith), David Gray, threatens to drop Mary from his will if she does. There’s a murder, of course, and a dastardly stranger, new to town. Each plays an instrument, and boisterous melodies abound. There’s “Curse of John Gray,” “Who Woulda Thought It” and “Dark Comes a Risin’,” among others.

Sierra Rep’s production also has a local tie to give it extra life. Mark Twain spent the winter of 1865 holed up in a cabin at Jackass Hill, just miles from Columbia. It was there, the legend goes, that a miner first told him a story that inspired the first of his many masterpieces – The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.