On Friday, May 5, at around 7 p.m., cast A of the “Chicago” production walked on stage behind the curtain, and senior Lilly Sasse, who played the Master of Ceremonies, appeared in front of the crowd:
“Welcome ladies, gentlemen and other fancy folk,” she said. “You are about to see a story of murder, greed, corruption, violence, exploitation, adultery and treachery. Perfect for a high school show. Thank you.” Then a trumpet wailed, and the curtains opened, revealing a stage full of dancers posed and ready to begin their first number: “All That Jazz.”
“‘Chicago’ is a show I’ve always wanted to do,” says co-director and dance coordinator Jessica Murray. “I needed to do it in a community that was open to it because it’s an edgier show, and not a lot of high schools can do it. It was risky in that way,”
The play, originally written in 1975, is set in prohibition-era Chicago and follows the trial process of Roxie Hart, who murders the man she is having an affair with. When she is sent to prison and placed on death row, a local lawyer named Billy Flynn takes her case and helps throw Roxie into public stardom for her cold-blooded murder.
The risqué content and the heavy involvement of Grant’s dance program, led by Murray, has set “Chicago” apart from previous musicals and plays produced at Grant.
“The Grant dance department had really grown in the past couple years under Ms. Murray, and … it was very prominently featured, as well as the choir program,” says Grant senior Henry Belliveau, who played Billy Flynn in cast A. “I think vocally, and dance-wise, the show was stronger than any other show that I’ve seen.”
“Chicago” was the last production in the Grant auditorium before the redesign of the school, so the students were determined to end the show on a strong note. “The Grant auditorium is such a special place with such a unique energy, and I felt like I owed it to the theater department to put on the best show yet,” says Sasse. “Everyone found this new level of motivation to go out with a bang and leave a lasting legacy in that special space.” ◆