Poging GOUD - Vrij
All In The Execution
New Zealand Listener
|June 2 - 8 2018
The Indian Ink Theatre Company has gained American backing for a new play about the inventor of the electric chair.
In the windowless rehearsal space at the Westpoint Performing Arts Centre, in Western Springs, Auckland, an actor is enduring a variety of mock executions at the hands of his fellow cast members.
Dressed in grey-and-white-striped prison garb, they cheerfully practise their guillotining, garrotting and hanging, all the while belting out the sardonic lyrics of a band’s offbeat, jazzy songs. The Indian Ink Theatre Company is hard at work honing their latest show Welcome to the Murder House and it’s gruesome, dark, transgressive fun.
The actor being subjected to these methods of capital punishment is playing American dentist Alfred Southwick, the man who invented the electric chair.
In the storyline, it is 1895. Five years have passed since William Kemmler, who had murdered his de facto wife Matilda Ziegler with a hatchet, became the first person to be executed by electrocution. Five death-row prisoners are given a night to celebrate with their own play, telling Kemmler’s story.

The work has been commissioned by the prestigious South Coast Repertory, a professional company in Orange County, south-east of Los Angeles. It is premiering in Wellington’s newly opened Te Auaha New Zealand Institute of Creativity.
It is not the first time Indian Ink’s co-founders, writer Jacob Rajan and director Justin Lewis, have approached this grisly subject matter. The Dentist’s Chair in 2008 told the story of a dentist haunted by the ghost of Kemmler, but the pair felt some aspects missed the mark. The focus now is on Southwick, and Rajan says the convicts regard the inventive dentist as their hero.
Dit verhaal komt uit de June 2 - 8 2018-editie van New Zealand Listener.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN New Zealand Listener
New Zealand Listener
Policies for the homeless
Can Opportunity provide a real alternative for voters who feel abandoned by National and uninspired by Labour?
4 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
No refuge
War crimes explored in deft blend of fact & fiction.
2 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Bittersweet
The Great British Bake Off inaugual winner Edd Kimber's latest is a love letter to chocolate.
5 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Attention needed
With a rise in diagnoses has come an increase in overdoses of the meds prescribed for ADHD - both accidental and deliberate.
4 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
LAZARUS TAXON TAONGA
Thought to have been long gone by the early-20th century, takahē were discovered in 1948 to be no dead manu.
1 min
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Peak reds (& whites)
Te Mata's horizons have been expanding for more than a century.
2 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Going her own way
Million-selling author Deborah Challinor has won a gong for services to literature and historical research, but some things are best not revealed.
8 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Gold mind
Stress helps to energise us, but too much of it can dash our sporting dreams.
3 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Eye of the tiger
When Greg's mother died in October last year, he returned to Lush Places with a bag of what would once have been treasures: pile upon pile of embroidered stinky stuff. Doilies. Table runners. Napkins. Table cloths intended for afternoon tea parties. Stuff nobody uses any more.
2 mins
March 7-13, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Podium performance
The moment the film caught something special in a French recording studio.
2 mins
March 7-13, 2026
Translate
Change font size
