The Unfortunates

The Unfortunates

  • March 27 - November 2, 2013
  • Created by Jon Beavers, Ramiz Monsef, Ian Merrigan, and Casey Hurt; additional material by Kristoffer Diaz
  • Directed by Shana Cooper
  • World Premiere
Overview
Artists
Video
Reviews
Run Time:1 hour and 29 minutes; no intermission

Don’t lose the song

A musical pilgrimage through uniquely American genres delivers five prisoners to salvation — or at least keeps the terror at bay. Facing an uncertain end, they bring to life the story of Big Joe, a tough bartender who risks everything to save the armless courtesan Rae from a deadly plague. Combining the heat of a gospel revival with the sweet sorrow of the blues, "The Unfortunates" convinces us that any great challenge can be faced with dignity, grace, and compassion.

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The Story

(To view a song list from the production see Related Resources to the right)

As prisoners of war languish behind bars, they sing “The St. James Infirmary Blues” to steel themselves for death. Guards periodically come in and drag prisoners away. With only two left, reality slips away as they get sucked into the story of the song:

Big Joe was the boxman for craps games with giant fists who oversaw King Jesse’s barroom/brothel/gambling-house until Jesse died of the plague. Jesse had been a powerful, immoral racketeer who used his own daughter—the beautiful, armless Rae—as collateral on bets. There was no risk of Jesse losing because Joe (who was and is in love with Rae) would pound his huge fists to ensure a favorable roll of the dice.

Once, Joe forgot to pound and lost, and Rae had to give herself to the gambler Stack-O-Lee. It was the beginning of her life as a prostitute. After Jesse’s death, Joe takes over the bar and gets rid of the gambling and prostitution—freeing Rae.

But Joe cannot protect Rae from contracting a plague that has reached pandemic proportions. The Doctor at St. James (followed by his cronies, the ever-hungry scavenger Rooks) purportedly has a cure, but it is expensive.

Joe resorts to playing craps to win the Doctor’s fee, but before he can pay, Rae offers her body to the Doctor in exchange for the medicine. Joe finds Rae dead on the operating table. He hunts down the fleeing Doctor, who admits that there is no cure and it was all a scam.

As Big Joe buries his love, the world of the song fades out and the jail cell reappears. Having gained courage from the story of “St. James Infirmary,” the remaining prisoner defiantly faces the guards who have come to execute him.


e-Luminations: The Unfortunates
This edited version is reprinted from OSF’s 2013 Illuminations, a 64-page guide to the season’s plays. For more information, or to buy the full Illuminations, click here. Members at the Patron level and above and teachers who bring a school groups to OSF receive a free copy of Illuminations.

“I heard my Baby Groan”

The 1918 Influenza Pandemic infected approximately 500 million people (a third of the world’s population) and killed 50 million, making it the worst epidemic in recorded history.

The first cases appeared on a military base in the American Midwest in March. World War I helped the virus travel the globe rapidly. Ordinarily, the flu is most dangerous for the very young and the very old, but, for unknown reasons, this strand was particularly deadly for people between 20 and 40 years old. During World War I, the U.S. military lost more soldiers to illness than to fighting.

Like other flu strains, the Spanish flu (as it was called due to early appearances in Spain) was extremely communicable and spread when a person coughed, sneezed or even talked. Initial symptoms were typical: aches and pains, sore throat, unproductive cough and, most common, a high fever. But the onset of these symptoms was swift and severe. People left home feeling fine only to be incapacitated in the street. It progressed quickly into advanced pneumonia, and patients suffocated as their lungs filled, sometimes within mere hours of infection.
Panic spread and daily life radically changed. Schools and businesses emptied. Telephone and mail services were interrupted and trash went uncollected. Undertakers ran out of coffins. As hospitals filled up, emergency clinics were set up in municipal buildings. Doctors and nurses often contracted the virus themselves. Their replacements were, at best, underqualified medical students.

To reduce transmission, communities restricted contact. Public institutions were closed and public gatherings were banned. In many places, the sick were quarantined either at home or in influenza wards of hospitals until their symptoms subsided. Many were never seen alive again.

There was no cure, and vaccines that were developed were ineffective. Treatments ranged from bed-rest and fresh air to aspirin and whiskey (causing a run on alcohol). Advertisements promoted wonder cures and folk healers offered magical protections. Ultimately, however, either the immune system was strong enough to fight, or it wasn’t. By summer 1919, everyone who had been infected had either died or developed immunity.


Creators

Playwright
Jon Beavers
Playwright
Casey Hurt
Playwright
Ian Merrigan*
Playwright
Ramiz Monsef*
Additional Material
Kristoffer  Diaz

Creative Team

Director
Shana Cooper
Music Director
Casey Hurt
Choreographer
Scenic Designer
Sibyl Wickersheimer
Costume Designer
Katherine O'Neill
Lighting Designer
Jiyoun Chang
Sound Designer
Courtney Ferguson
Associate Director
Paul James Prendergast
Add'l Arrgmnts/Sound Design
Paul James Prendergast
Phil Killian Directing Fellow
Dramaturg
Dr. Lue Morgan Douthit
Associate Dramaturg
Seth Gilbert
Voice & Text Director
David Carey
Fight Director
U. Jonathan Toppo*
Stage Manager
Heath Belden*

Cast

Rae
Kjerstine Rose Anderson*
King/King Jesse/King Rook
Jon Beavers*
Coughlin/Rook
Rodney Gardiner
Sarge
Casey Hurt
Koko
Cristofer Jean*
Joe/Big Joe
Ian Merrigan*
Enemy/Stack/Doctor
Ramiz Monsef*
CJ/Rook
Barret O'Brien*
Handsome Carl
Isabell Monk O'Connor*
Madame
Mildred Ruiz-Sapp*
Roxy Boom Boom
Christina Acosta Robinson*
Preach/Preacher
Ken Robinson*

Musicians

Drums
Mike Fitch
Bandleader/Guitar
Casey Hurt
Keyboards/Guitar/Vocals
Bass/Vocals
Joseph Porto
* Member of Actors' Equity Association (AEA)
**AEA Professional Theatre Intern
  • unfortunates image

    Trailer: The Unfortunates

    Check out this amazing theatrical production!

  • Merrigan and Hurt image

    "Down and Out"

    Ian Merrigan and Casey Hurt sing "Down and Out," one of the amazing songs in the shows.

  • Unf band image

    Snapshot: Join the Band

    Musicians Joe Porto and Jesse Baldwin talk about their journey from the production areas to working with the band in the show.

  • Alice Risser

    Snapshot: Creating an Illusion

    Stitcher Alice Risser demonstrates how creating costumes can take imagination and ingenuity!

  • Rendering of the Rook

    Snapshot: Rendering the Rook

    How to make a rook...Costume Design Assistant Sarah DeLong explains.

  • Unfortunates in workshop

    Music Workshop: Part One

    In January, actors gathered to workshop some of the music in The Unfortunates

  • Unfortunates in workshop

    Music Workshop: Part Two

    Back in January, actors gathered to workshop some of the music for The Unfortunates. In this segment, they change up the pace.

  • Sharing the Experience

    In this portion of the interview, the artists discuss what they hope audiences will experience in the theatre.

  • The Genesis of the Project

    Recorded in July 2012, this interview with Shana Cooper, Jon Beavers, Ramiz Monsef and Casey Hurt reveals a bit about how this new work began.

  • The Story Behind the Play

    The artists talk about the iconic American images that inspired this story of heartbreak, hope and love.

  • Daily Tidings logo

    A rousing success

    "...a triumph. There is no other way to describe it."
    Click the logo to read the complete review.

  • Mail Tribune logo

    A remarkable achievement...

    "...a glorious, bluesy, mythical, downtrodden, uplifting paean to the power of music to stir the soul."
    Click the logo to read the complete review.