Blues Fable, Thunder, Will Knock on Off-Bway Door Beginning May 12 | Playbill

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News Blues Fable, Thunder, Will Knock on Off-Bway Door Beginning May 12 Thunder Knocking on the Door, the blues fable about the Devil and a guitar-licks competition, has been rumbling in regional theatres for several years, but it will finally boom in New York City when producer Mitchell Maxwell puts it into Off-Broadway's Minetta Lane Theatre May 12.
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Marva Hicks and Peter Jay Fernandez in the 1998 regional incarnation of Thunder Knocking on the Door. Photo by Photo by Craig Schwartz

Thunder Knocking on the Door, the blues fable about the Devil and a guitar-licks competition, has been rumbling in regional theatres for several years, but it will finally boom in New York City when producer Mitchell Maxwell puts it into Off-Broadway's Minetta Lane Theatre May 12.

Maxwell helped shepherd the musical by composer Keb Mo and playwright Keith Glover in a number of nonprofit venues, including Arena Stage, GeVa and the Great Lakes Theatre Festival, and had hoped to find a Broadway house for the unique original work, which does not draw on previous source material.

"We did it in those five venues to use the road to make the show as good as possible," Maxwell told Playbill On-Line.

Maxwell's previous hope was Broadway but no theatres were available. Eager for a New York run, he chose the intimate Minetta Lane.

Fuddy Meers announced on March 30 it will close there April 16. Official Minetta opening for Thunder Knocking on the Door, subtitled a "bluesical" in regional runs, is June 11. Veterans of the Arena Stage cast, Terry Burrell, Marva Hicks, Kevyn Morrow, Doug Eskew and Peter Jay Fernandez, are expected to return for the Off-Broadway premiere.

Glover's play takes place in 1966 and concerns the family of a great but undiscovered bluesman who dies from black lung disease. With his family in financial and emotional need, in steps Marvell Thunder, a guitar-wielding stranger who may be their salvation -- or ruination.

Why drew Maxwell to the piece?

"I think the music is absolutely sensational...it's unlike any Broadway score but it's truly a Broadway[-style] score full of great [character] songs. The essence of the story and the message is quite exciting."

Thunder takes place at "the crossroads of here and there," where a "shape shifter" challenges a songstress to a magical duel on the delta blues guitar.

Victoria Maxwell, Mark Balsam and Ted Tulchin are Thunder's producing partners.

Maxwell previously told Playbill On-Line a hoped-for Broadway run of the show was capitalized at $3 million.

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Playwright-director Glover discovered theatre when his mother took him to see For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When The Rainbow Is Enuf. An athletic high school student, Glover wrote a play about football in 1981 that came to the attention of New York's Young Playwrights Festival, where he was especially encouraged by mentor Ruth Goetz (The Heiress).

Thunder was commissioned by the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, where it was first produced in 1996. It went on to receive productions at the Arena Stage and the Cincinnati Playhouse, winning the 1997 Osborn Award for Best Play from the American Theatre Critics Association.

Glover has written several plays, including Dancing on the Moonlight and Coming of the Hurricane. Keb' Mo' (Kevin Moore) received a Grammy in 1997 for his contemporary blues album "Just Like You."

-- By Kenneth Jones
and David Lefkowitz

 
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