The Stanford Daily www.stanforddaily.com, January 7, 2005
by Katherine Li
If you have ever thought of taking your date to dinner and then the
theatre (for those are you who are ultra-classy), rest assured that there is now
an even more chic option that combines both: Mystery dining that involves a
murder.
As I was ushered into a room at the Benjamin Franklin Hotel in San Mateo, I
knew at once that this would not be a typical dinner. Instead of the soft
candlelight and large black stage I was expecting, there were several large
round tables stationed themselves throughout the brightly lit room. I found
myself seated at a circular table with seven women, all old enough to be my mom,
and one misplaced youngster whose boyish looks made him look five instead of 13.
Immediately, a man with a tall chef’s hat and white apron came cheerfully
bounding up to the table and introduced himself as “Chef Fredo.” He would be
taking care of the food during our last night aboard our fictitious cruise ship,
the S.S. Amore. I eyed him suspiciously. Was he the real chef? Was he going to
bring our food? Could I ask him if the salad to be served contained nuts? For a
moment, reality and fantasy confounded themselves within my reason and I was
quite sure I was a passenger having dinner on a cruise.
The performance began... [read full article]as the seven-person cast began to boom out scripted
lines. Throughout the night, the actors encouraged the diners to tell a joke,
sing or, as the boy from our table did, disjoin his elbow, winning an award I
might add. Between audience members’ raunchy jokes and song performances, drama
unfolded and entrees were served.
The three-course meal from Mediterranean Astaria Restaurant in downtown San
Mateo began with a leafy salad, sparse in ingredients, dressed in tangy citrus
vinaigrette and crumbled Gorgonzola. Waiters in black drifted seamlessly in and
out of the room replenishing water and bread. It was followed by a deliciously
tender and juicy braised chicken cacciatore bathed in tomato and white wine
sauce. With a mere touch of the fork, the chicken meat fell off the bone. While
the mystery came to a climax as one of the cruise ship members was found dead,
the food ended on a low note as the dessert was served. The tiramisu lacked
moisture and seemed to me like a cover-up to serve cake.
At the end of the night, each table of eight received a sheet of clues and
questions to be turned in for a possible prize at the end. I had brought paper
and pen intending to jot down notes for the article, but ended up using them
doing detective work a la Sherlock Holmes with many others. The night ended
perfectly as our table won the coveted prize — brunches at restaurant Astoria in
downtown San Mateo.
Despite its superiority over the delicacies offered by Stanford dining, I
would rate the food second to the interactive performance, which kept my
attention and provided many laughs throughout the night. The founder of Gibson
House Mystery Performers is John Gibson, who began the troupe seven years ago.
He is a talented actor himself and assures me that interactive theater is “a
whole lot harder” than stage acting — “Here, we must hold our talent and be able
to remove the fourth wall that stage actors build.” Under his direction, his
mystery dinners have grown in popularity the Bay Area, taking over four
different locations.
Mystery dinner theater patrons consist of mostly middle-aged and elderly
couples. At other locations, table size range from two to eight persons per
table. For the $65 surcharge that includes food, performance, tip and tax, John
Gibson’s mystery performance dinners are well worth a visit.
One warning, though — if you are truly considering trying out a mystery
dinner to impress your date by taking her / him to one of these, you should
think twice. Much time is spent interacting with the actors, and he / she might
just go home with one of them, not you. Also, the whole dinner lasts for about
three hours, with the dessert being served at 9:30 p.m., which apparently tired
out my neighbor as she snored through the actor introductions and award
ceremony. I was just happy that our table won the grand prize.
If you really, really liked playing Clue as a kid and want to relive it
through mystery dinner theater, you’ll want to check out the Gibson House
Mystery Performers site at http://www.gibsonhouse.com. |