STAGE REVIEW : Revised ‘Inquest’ Tells Familiar Story
- Share via
Loosely based--some would say irresponsibly so--on the life and lurid L.A. motel murder of the late superstar vocalist Sam Cooke, “Inquest” is a potpourri of ingredients that defy logic at the Ebony Showcase.
Part lounge act, part foul-mouthed courtroom histrionics, part comedy, part buffoonery, the production was originally staged in a bloated version in an adjunct theater at the Ebony last December under the title “Attraction Fatal.”
Writer/director Jerry Jones, in this reincarnation, has added a well known name (La Wanda Page of “Sanford and Son” fame) to the 18-member cast and wisely axed scenes and musical numbers to a workable length.
It’s an improved show, but still outrageous, sleazy and, at infrequent moments, bizarrely funny, thanks largely to newcomer Page. She earns the biggest laughs as the trash-mouthed motel manager who claims self-defense in gunning down the skirt-chasing Cooke character (fictionalized as Kenny Drew by robust singer Harold Burr). Vay Gainer’s voluptuous hooker, seen luring the Cooke character to his fate, is a riotous match for Page at the loony inquest.
This is a show for the indiscriminate. Imagine 20 years from now when somebody turns Marvin Gaye’s death into a musical.
At 4720 Washington Blvd., Fridays and Saturdays, 8 p.m., Sundays, 7:30 p.m., indefinitely. $22.50. (213) 857-0974.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.