Posts Tagged ‘Jim Daab’

It was 17 years ago today…

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Laura and I were talking today and realized that 17 years ago tonight, Friday October 15, 1993, we opened our first show in Richmond.  Those days we performed at the Holiday Inn Koger Center, right off of Midlothian Turnpike.  Roy Proctor, the theater critic for the Richmond Times Dispatch had written two very nice articles about this crazy couple from Minneapolis, Jim Daab and his wife, Laura Daab, who moved to Richmond to open a mystery dinner theater. The exposure helped get the word out and we opened our first show, “Let’s Kill the Boss!” to sold out houses.

Our first cast was great!  Frank Minor, Flora DeCastri, Terry Lee Adams, Eric O’Brien, Mark Wells, and, of course, Ronald Blankenship. What a bunch of troopers.  They took our wacky form of theater and ran with it.  We considered casting a young actor named Harry Kollatz, Jr, but he decided to take himself out of consideration because he’d just been offered a new job at Richmond Magazine. Our actors have become like family, and as in any family, we have sadly lost members over the years.  Paige Keinel, Carlton Candler, and Mary Sue Carroll, all left us too soon, and are missed terribly.

There were several other theaters in Richmond that formed in 1993, including The Firehouse Theater Project (there’s Harry again) and The Triangle Players.   We were fortunate enough to hook up with these companies, and others such as The Barksdale and Theatre IV, to help form the Richmond Alliance of Professional Theaters (RAPT).  It helped us integrate into the local theater community, and form friendships that are still strong 17 years later.

Sometime around 1995, I came home one day and Laura said, “We had a woman call and asked if we could do a medieval show, and I told them you’d write one.”  So since that time I’ve been writing our shows.  I have about 30 shows in my catalogue, and have been licensing the performance rights to groups all over the country.  You can currently see “Frankly Scarlet, You’re Dead” at the Great Smoky Mountain Mystery Dinner Show, and “Marriage Can Be Murder!” at the Savannah Murder Mystery Dinner Theater, in Savannah Georgia.

In 1998 we expanded to Williamsburg in what is now the Clarion Inn and Suites. 1999 found us opening at the DoubleTree in Virginia Beach, and six years down the road, we opened a location in Northern Virginia, finally settling into the Sheraton Crystal City.

Laura often points out that running a business is sort of like raising a child.  Like a child, we’re amazed at how it’s changed, and grown. And despite the grey hairs it has caused, we still love it.

Jim Daab

Great MDP-DC soup review & recipe

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Dixie Ryan, a food columnist for The Examiner out of Independence, MO recently wrote a very nice review about our soup after attending our show in Arlington.  The soup is part of a four course dinner that is served at your table during our murder mysteries.

Here’s the excerpt:

“Last week I promised you a recipe for the absolutely awesome soup we had at the Sheraton Hotel in Arlington, Va. I received the following information from the people there.

Jim D[aab], from the Mystery Dinner Playhouse at The Sheraton in Arlington, Va., sent a note explaining that the chef, who was from Europe, had returned to his position in his native country. He also says that he never uses amounts, just adds ingredients to taste. I think if you want to prepare a smaller recipe just try one of each vegetable and add the other ingredients according to taste.”

She also included the recipe in her column:

Mystery Dinner Playhouse – DC/Arlington vegetable soup recipe
Diced tomato
Diced onion
Diced celery
Diced zucchini
Diced yellow squash
Chopped fresh cilantro
Diced Spanish onion
Chopped fresh parsley
V8 juice
Vegetable base
Cumin
Salt
Pepper
Diced green pepper
Diced carrots
Water

Let us know if you want a recipe from any of our shows’ menus and we’ll do our best to oblige, although don’t be surprised if our chefs want to keep their culinary creations a mystery:)

Killer Scripts gets some press

Friday, October 8th, 2010

It’s funny how some business ideas come out of  the old saying “Necessity is the mother of invention” – Killer Scripts, a division of Mystery Dinner Playhouse, and penned by Jim, sells the rights to our murder mystery scripts. Our customers are other murder mystery theaters, much like our own, who produce dinner shows to the public on a regular basis.  We also sell a lot of script rights to schools, churches and non-profit groups who perform shows for fund raising efforts.

Here’s the back story: When we first opened our doors 18 seasons ago, we used scripts from an LA comedy writer, Phil Lebowitz.  He has a catalog of some very funny shows including “Lights, Camera, Murder!” and “Prom ‘63.”  Jim had performed in them earlier when he worked as an actor/manager for Mystery Cafe in Minneapolis, and they were big hits there. About a year and a half into our venture, I took a call from a realtors association in Hampton Roads that wanted to book a private show with us, and wanted it based on a Medieval theme.  I told them we could do it, and then told Jim he had to write a Medieval murder mystery.  I know, it sounds kind of crazy, but we had a couple of months to put it together and Jim had written (songs and stories) before and I knew he could do it, and I didn’t want to turn down the business.  I saw the situation as an opportunity to expand our product, not as a problem.

“Who Killed The King?” Jim’s first murder mystery script, was the result of booking that realtor group.  It was a great show.  The group loved it and we’ve produced that show several times at all four of our locations over the past 17 years to much success. Since then, Jim has written all of our scripts, which include 29 dinner show scripts, one specialty script for the Virginia Tourism Corporation, and 5 children’s mystery shows.

It wasn’t until about three years later that I realized we had accumulated a catalog of shows that other people might want to produce.  We had a built-in business of merchandise we made and used that could be shared and distributed to others for a fee – the “Eureka!” moment.  Since then, we have sold scripts to people all over the US and some in Europe, generating another income stream with very little overhead and lots of goodwill and PR for our business.

We’d like to share some recent press from the Savannah Morning News about the Savannah Community Theatre’s production of Jim’s show, “Marriage Can Be Murder!”

“It’s fun and it’s fast-paced,” said Tom Coleman, director of Savannah Community Theatre. “Plus, the food at The Pirates’ House is really delicious. People seem to really enjoy the silly fun of it all.”  The show is staged at the Pirates’ House, considered by locals as one of the most haunted sites in the city.  If your looking to take a trip to Savannah, and want to take in one of our shows, please check it out!

Laura Daab

MDP owner, Jim Daab runs open mic

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Fans of Mystery Dinner Playhouse, may want to check out the Tuesday open mic at Poe’s Pub, in Richmond.  It’s hosted by MDP co-owner and writer, Jim Daab.  It’s always a fun evening:

Every Tuesday 9:00 pm

Sign-up 8:30 pm

Music at 9:00 pm.

Poe’s Pub

2709 East Main Street

Richmond, VA 23223