Hi everyone
Back in January (on my birthday actually), I managed to check out an immersive theatre-meets escape room experience by the name of Monroe & Associates.
Spoiler alert - I enjoyed this experience so much that I went back a couple of weeks later to watch my wife try her hand at Monroe & Associates (and I also recommended it to many other people who also attended and were blown away by the experience).
Monroe & Associates had about a 3 or 4 week run during the Sydney Festival in January 2018. It was run at Carriageworks in Eveleigh along with a number of other artistic productions.
Monroe & Associates was created by Tim Watts, a performer, director, puppeteer, improvisor and animator based in Perth. Tim's shows have won various awards and are currently touring all over the world.
I was lucky enough to have Tim as my game master/actor on the day - it was fantastic having the creator run my experience. When my wife had her experience, another fantastic actor named Arielle Gray was her game master/actor.
According to The Last Great Hunt's website, the backstory of Monroe & Associates (M&A) is as follows:
A theatrical role-playing game for one.
You've woken up in Sunset City Hospital. You have no memory of who you
are or how you got there. All you have is a black hat, a key to a caravan, and
a name: Frankie Monroe - Private Detective. Over the next hour you must
unscramble the past by solving puzzles, making phone calls and investigating an
office full of secrets. But with every step you take you sink deeper into your
own dastardly fiction.
M&A was 72nd room in Australia and our 59th room in Sydney.
Here's why I liked M&A so much:
- from a design perspective, the set up is
incredibly well considered. Monroe & Associates is run out of a
caravan. You start the experience with a briefing outside of the
van, where you are handed your hat and key and the rest is up to
you. What they have created inside an old caravan is so clever (and
it is of course portable);
- the room isn't a true escape room. There
are escape room aspects such as hunt and seek fun and unlocking locked
items, but it is much more about the interactive "choose your own
adventure" storyline. The main mechanic used throughout the
experience is a telephone. You can pick up the phone and the
operator will connect you with anyone in the world - you really are
limited only by your imagination;
- the story is incredibly
well-written. There are a number of aspects that you can investigate
and you really do control the experience. I have spoken with 5
people who have all tried M&A and all 6 of us had very different
stories and endings;
- going into this experience, I was nervous for
two main reasons. The first was that it was all on me - I wasn't
with my usual team, so if I got stuck on puzzles or situations I would
have no help at all. The second reason was that I am not an actor
and the possibility of having to act freaked me out a little. I was wrong
on both counts. The game master will absolutely help you get through
the experience and on the acting front, you can do as little or as much as
you like;
- I really enjoyed this room from the second it
began, but when I started to get into the role of Frankie Monroe, the
level of fun ratcheted up so quickly. There were a couple of
sections where Tim had me laughing so hard I couldn't speak. He plays
so many different characters in this experience and he is an expert at
voices (so much so that at the end of the experience, I asked him where
the other cast members were and he said it was all him). His
character (Sister Jansis) from the orphanage was my favourite!
- as usual I won't be giving any spoilers, but I
think I can talk about a couple of aspects of my experience without
ruining the storyline. The best aspect of this experience for me was
that Tim is an improv actor and could therefore completely adapt the story
to me. In one particular "scene" of the story, a person on
the phone asked me if I would give a donation to her cause. I
begrudgingly agreed but I gave her a fake name (I told her I was
"John Smythe" rather than Frankie Monroe). Later in a
completely different scene, I telephoned a hospital and wouldn't you know
it, John Smythe was working on reception at the hospital that particular
day and he took my call. I then played around with this character a
few more times during the experience. To me, this was the clearest
example of how live actors can add immersion to an experience. It
was very clever and hands down the most immersive element I have been part
of in an escape room (or an escape-room like experience such as this); and
- going back and watching my wife play the role
of Frankie Monroe was so much fun. I watched her via a number of
video feeds and I managed to chat with Arielle throughout. It was
fascinating seeing how different her storyline was from mine and how she
approached challenges. Her ending had me in fits of laughter ;-)
I had
previously tried one other immersive experience with actors at Jetpack
Theatre's Art Heist (as well as a handful of escape rooms that contained live
actor elements). You can see my review of Art Heist here. I really
enjoyed Art Heist, but I think Monroe & Associates was more
layered.
It is hands down the most immersive experience I have tried and I enjoyed every minute of it.
After my experience I
got to chatting with Tim about how much I enjoyed the experience and I asked
whether he planned to come back to Sydney with any other similar shows.
He said that his company, The Last Great Hunt, has put on some other similar
immersive experiences. So fingers crossed they will be back in town again
soon.
Where:
Carriageworks, 245 Wilson St,
Eveleigh NSW
Duration:
60 -90 minutes
Themes:
1 theme (pop-up)
Cost:
$89 per player (single player experience)
Overall Summary: Superbly written, next level immersive experience
No comments:
Post a Comment