LizAnne Keigley, Richard Large and Eric Harris in “The Chimes” at Mountain View Mausoleum and Cemetery during the 2010 Wicked Lit. Photo by Daniel Kitayama.
Theater troupe’s production at the cemetery and mausoleum remains the place to go for a good scare
by Timothy Rutt
Wicked Lit returns to Altadena this Halloween season with two three-play performances about things horrific, uncanny, or just plain scary. The short plays will be presented in probably the best place in town to do it: Mountain View Cemetery and Mausoleum.
But the venue creates a major challenge: how do you turn a graveyard into a theater?
According to Jeff G. Rack, it’s difficult, but the location is worth it to create the Wicked Lit experience.
Rack, along with Jonathan Josephson and Paul Millet, are the three playwrights/producers/directors responsible for Wicked Lit. Rack also wears the hat of set designer, and he’s the one who figures out how to create a theatrical experience in a place where the dead rest.
Wicked Lit held its first Halloween performance in 2009, at the reputedly-haunted Greystone Mansion in Los Angeles. “It was a great space, and we were looking at doing other shows there,” Rack said, “but they were doing reconstruction and remodeling so it wasn’t available to us last year.”
The plots thicken
One of Wicked Lit’s actor fans had performed in a show at Mountain View, a “walk through time” event sponsored by the Pasadena Museum of History where actors portrayed historical characters buried in the cemetery. Through that connection, they met Jay Brown, one of the owners of the cemetery.
“it was a nice match — I mean, Jay was really excited about what we were doing,” Rack said. “Jay’s feeling and our feeling too is that he wanted to have people come to the space when they weren’t in mourning and grieving, because it’s a really beautiful mausoleum. I mean, the architecture and the history that’s there and in the cemetery, it’s something that he wanted people to see in a different way.
“Anyway it was a great match between us … it’s been a really nice partnership.”
Brian David Pope and William Joseph Hill in The Cask of Amontillado, 2010. Photo by Daniel Kitayama.
The Wicked Lit performances aren’t usually the kind where you take a seat and watch a play: the audience frequently gets up and walks to different locations for a total immersive experience. The space also dictates the writing of the plays.


LizAnne Keigley, Richard Large and Eric Harris in “The Chimes” at Mountain View Mausoleum and Cemetery during the 2010 Wicked Lit. Photo by Daniel Kitayama.
Theater troupe’s production at the cemetery and mausoleum remains the place to go for a good scare
by Timothy Rutt
Wicked Lit returns to Altadena this Halloween season with two three-play performances about things horrific, uncanny, or just plain scary. The short plays will be presented in probably the best place in town to do it: Mountain View Cemetery and Mausoleum.
But the venue creates a major challenge: how do you turn a graveyard into a theater?
According to Jeff G. Rack, it’s difficult, but the location is worth it to create the Wicked Lit experience.
Rack, along with Jonathan Josephson and Paul Millet, are the three playwrights/producers/directors responsible for Wicked Lit. Rack also wears the hat of set designer, and he’s the one who figures out how to create a theatrical experience in a place where the dead rest.
Wicked Lit held its first Halloween performance in 2009, at the reputedly-haunted Greystone Mansion in Los Angeles. “It was a great space, and we were looking at doing other shows there,” Rack said, “but they were doing reconstruction and remodeling so it wasn’t available to us last year.”
The plots thicken
One of Wicked Lit’s actor fans had performed in a show at Mountain View, a “walk through time” event sponsored by the Pasadena Museum of History where actors portrayed historical characters buried in the cemetery. Through that connection, they met Jay Brown, one of the owners of the cemetery.
“Anyway it was a great match between us … it’s been a really nice partnership.”
Brian David Pope and William Joseph Hill in The Cask of Amontillado, 2010. Photo by Daniel Kitayama.
The Wicked Lit performances aren’t usually the kind where you take a seat and watch a play: the audience frequently gets up and walks to different locations for a total immersive experience. The space also dictates the writing of the plays.