Agatha Christie Ends The Milwaukee Rep’s Season, And Then There Were None

Sadly we have reached the end of the 2025/26 theater season in Milwaukee with the Milwaukee Rep’s And Then There Were None. But this is a perfect example of last but not least as director Laura Braza continues her roll of engaging productions by bringing together another star studded cast of local favorites and new faces in a dramatic and very effective production of this Agatha Christie classic.

The cast of And Then There Were None. Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

And this is classic Christie but with some new wrinkles. Ten individuals are invited to a remote luxury home on an island off the coast of England. Three are employees of the host/hostess, a butler, housekeeper, and secretary. I will try to provide a decent backstory here without giving too much away. It turns out all three employees have been hired very recently by post, through an agency, and have never met their employers. And the guests have all been invited by letter from someone with some pretty bad handwriting so they aren’t sure who the host/hostess is or even if they know the person. But they come anyway. Such are the problems of the English idle rich in the early 20th Century. But we have a very very diverse group of complete strangers.

And then the shenanigans begin. Anonymous accusations, side stories, back stories, and questionable aliases until it gets serious and the guests start to die unexpectedly and inexplicably. But here’s where we stray from the typical Christie. There is no Miss Marple or Hercule Poirot to take charge and discover the miscreant. Instead the characters suspect each other and then form alliances and strategies to protect themselves. Despite there being a former cop, two former military men, and a retired judge in attendance, no one seems capable of doing anything effectively. So you will be left up to your own devices to determine the villain(s). But don’t worry, ALL will be revealed in the last act quite clearly and cleverly, if maybe not quite the way one might expect.

L to R: Armando Gutierrez, Mark Corkins, Steven Koehler, James Carrington. Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

I am not going to do any deep dives into the characters to avoid giving too much away. OTOH, this is a famous book and movie, so maybe you know it already but…going into this without any knowledge of the plot and characters, I really had a great time!

And let’s start with our local favorites. I have enjoyed James Carrington any number of times in the big stage kids musicals at First Stage. A great voice and presence, Carrington manages to shrink that presence a bit as Dr. Armstrong, melting into a ball of nerves as the deaths pile up. Matt Daniels plays Rogers, the butler. Daniels has played Scrooge for a number of years in the Rep’s Christmas Carol. As Rogers, Daniels tries to bring forth a haughty Jeeves persona but can’t pull it off under the circumstances. Mark Corkins leads in with a formal and officious General MacKenzie, with maybe a bit cranky thrown in (and maybe a bit of irony as well). Surprisingly instead of being a take charge guy, Corkins’ general just fades into accepting whatever fate Christie has to offer. And the Rep’s recent Ghost of Christmas Present makes a short appearance as Todd Denning makes the most of a small part as the working seaman Fred Narracott, the ferryman who brings everyone to the island. Steven Koehler stomps about the stage, pontificates, demands answers and abeyance as called for, and thumps his cane to gain attention as needed, in the role of Judge Lawrence Wargrave. A far cry from Koehler’s iconic role as Lloyd in Guys On Ice.

L to R: Jessica Angleskhan, Steven Koehler, Max Pink. Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

Others who have been with the Rep before: Max Pink plays Anthony Marston, a footloose and rather irresponsible young man who is the first victim . And Marcella Kearns, plays the butler’s wife, Mrs. Rogers, as a put upon, completely flustered, and highly strung housekeeper who is certainly stressing out in the chaos on the island. And coming from the Million Dollar Quartet where he played Carl Perkins, Armando Gutierrez plays William Biore, a former cop, who’s nose for crime doesn’t bode well for Biore or anyone else here. And Sarah Suzuki plays Vera Claythorne, the young woman hired to be the hostess’ secretary. Suzuki cleanly presents a solid secretary, keeping her cool, and clearly trying to make the most of a bad situation. But she also has feelings for another guest and is manipulated into an act of violence and eventually martyrdom. She was clearly an audience favorite on opening night.

L to R: Steven Koehler and Sarah Suzuki. Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

And those making their debut at the Rep. Jordan Sobel is Philip Lombard. Sobel’s Lombard is something of a slippery fellow whose story doesn’t always line up, Emily Brent is a bit prickly and conservative and cold toward her fellow ‘guests’. Jessica Angelskahn knows her through and through. I would be surprised if we don’t see both of these actors on Milwaukee Rep stages in the coming seasons.

Michelle Lilly has put together an intriguing set of multiple levels that cause there to be extra suspense in the action as actors move up, down, in, and out of the set. There is also a magnificent ocean view beyond the room where the action is centered…AND…there are some wonderful art deco motifs around the room (don’t let them distract you, LOL).

L to R: Marcella Kearns and Todd Denning. Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

Be forewarned: And Then There Were None runs two hours and fifty minutes including a 20 minute intermission. However, the pacing and tempo of director Braza’s presentation here will keep you enthralled, and you will find yourself surprised when ‘it’s over already?’.

One extra aside: once having seen the play and knowing how it all ends, it might be fun to return and try to connect the dots we missed that first time around as it all transpires.

Ticket Information!

Extra credit reading: The Program

Sarah Suzuki. Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

PSA: The Constructivists Announce Their 2026/27 Season

THE CONSTRUCTIVISTS ANNOUNCE SEASON NINE

Milwaukee’s visceral contemporary theatre company will return next season with three productions, including a Milwaukee Premiere, a World Premiere, and their beloved annual holiday tradition. Along with the next chapter of their celebrated play development series.

MILWAUKEE, WI — May 26, 2026 — The Constructivists are excited to announce their next season of programming. Season Nine spans two venues, featuring an immersive cult comedy co-presented with Cap n’ Glasses Studios, the fourth installment of their signature holiday event, a world premiere dark comedy created through the company’s own play development process, and the continued growth of their Under Construction Play Development Series.

“Season Nine is one built by this community,” said Artistic Director Jaimelyn Gray. “These are stories told by Milwaukee artists, developed with Milwaukee artists, and made for Milwaukee audiences. We’re proud of and amped for every single one of them.”

The Season includes the Milwaukee Premiere, and 15th Anniversary Production of 5 LESBIANS EATING A QUICHE, by Evan Linder and Andrew Hobgood, a co-production with Cap n’ Glasses Studios, A VERY DEADLY CONSTRUCTIVISTS HOLIDAY (WITH MUSIC!) 2026, and the World Premiere of THE GREAT CLEANSE, by Amber Regan. All tickets are $20 plus fees, with discounts available for artists, students, seniors, and military. The Under Construction reading is always FREE. No one is turned away for lack of funds — patrons in need of assistance are encouraged to contact boxoffice@theconstructivists.org.

5 LESBIANS EATING A QUICHE
By Evan Linder and Andrew Hobgood
With contributions by Sarah Gitenstein, Mary Hollis Inboden, Meg Johns, Thea Lux, Beth Stelling, and Maari Suorsa
Directed by Joe Lino
Featuring Kellie Wambold, Emily Harris, Anya Palmer, Aly Rader, and Bree Kazinski
October 8-24, 2026  |  Pink’s Accessible Theater Home (PATH), 1104 Historic W. Mitchell St., Milwaukee
Thursdays–Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 4pm
 
It’s 1956, and the Susan B. Anthony Society for the Sisters of Gertrude Stein is gathered for their annual quiche breakfast. Then the atomic sirens sound. Winner of the 2012 NYC International Fringe Festival for Best Overall Production, 5 LESBIANS EATING A QUICHE is an immersive, audience-participatory comedy about identity, community, and what it means to finally stop pretending — set against the backdrop of Cold War paranoia and a very good egg dish.

Co-presented with Cap n’ Glasses Studios, the production will be helmed by close company friend Joe Lino in his directing debut.

A VERY DEADLY CONSTRUCTIVISTS HOLIDAY (WITH MUSIC!) — FOURTH ANNUAL
By Patrick Schmitz with Various Artists
Directed by Jaimelyn Gray
December 2026  |  Studio Theater, Broadway Theatre Center, 158 N. Broadway, Milwaukee
Thursdays–Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 4pm

Your alternative holiday programming tradition, now in its fourth year! Four years. Somehow still going. A VERY DEADLY CONSTRUCTIVISTS HOLIDAY (WITH MUSIC!) returns this December with freshly ruined holiday songs, theatrical mayhem, and a body count that just keeps climbing. It’s a variety show! It’s a murder mystery! It’s a cry for help wrapped in tinsel! Whatever it is – it’s coming back. Arrive dressed for the holidays. Leave changed forever. Directed yet again by Artistic Director Jaimelyn Gray.

THE GREAT CLEANSE
A World Premiere by Amber Regan
Developed with Liz Ehrler, Kellie Wambold, Nicole McCarty, Emily Harris, Libby LaDue, and Kendra Krouth
Directed by Rebekah Farr
Spring 2027  |  Studio Theater, Broadway Theatre Center, 158 N. Broadway, Milwaukee
Thursdays–Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 4pm

Six women. Sixty elementary schoolers. One cave field trip that was supposed to be perfectly manageable. When the world outside undergoes a sudden and total transformation, the group finds themselves with nowhere to go, no distractions left, and only each other — and sixty very energetic children — to reckon with. The Great Cleanse is a dark comedy about reinvention, identity, and what remains when women are finally forced to focus on themselves.

THE GREAT CLEANSE was developed through the Constructivists’ UNDER CONSTRUCTION PLAY DEVELOPMENT SERIES, which premiered a reading of the script earlier this year. Directed by Company Member Rebekah Farr.

UNDER CONSTRUCTION PLAY DEVELOPMENT SERIES — ONGOING

Now in its eighth year, the Constructivists’ Under Construction Play Development Series pairs playwrights with directors and actors for a development process culminating in a live audience reading. Past participants include works that have gone on to full production — including THE GREAT CLEANSE, which makes its World Premiere as part of Season Nine. Playwrights interested in submitting are encouraged to send 20 pages to Literary Manager Nate Press at submissions@theconstructivists.org.

About The Constructivists
The Constructivists are a 501(c)3 nonprofit theatre company based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Now entering their ninth season, the company is committed to visceral, contemporary theatre that challenges its audiences and reflects the full complexity of human experience. Passionate theatre is the necessary catalyst for change.
 
theconstructivists.org  |  (414) 858-6874  |  info@theconstructivists.org
Facebook: facebook.com/theconstructiviststhtr  |  Instagram: @theconstructivists
 

PSA: Milwaukee Chamber Theatre Announces Their 2026/2027 Season.

Yes, I know that I am late again. That seems to be my theme this spring! But read on and remind yourself to schedule your visits. Or, if you haven’t seen this yet, imagine what next year’s theater season is going to be like.

We’re thrilled to share MCT’s 2026-2027 season: five exceptional productions centering the excellence of Milwaukee and Wisconsin’s artists in stories that will open your heart, expand your thoughts, and leave you feeling more connected to your community.

MAYBE WE’LL FLY
A New Play with Music Inspired by the Life of Mary Nohl
By Marie Kohler
Music by Josh Schmidt


September 18 – October 11, 2026
BTC Studio Theatre

From renowned Milwaukee artists award-winning playwright Marie Kohler (BOSWELL, MIDNIGHT AND MOLL FLANDERS), and Tony-nominated composer Josh Schmidt (The End, THE ADDING MACHINE, THE MINISTER’S WIFE), comes this wildly theatrical and richly poetic world premiere play with music exploring the life and work of legendary Wisconsin outsider artist Mary Nohl. Propelled by an evocative score for solo cello as well as a contemporary approach to movement from award-winning director Elizabeth Margolius, MAYBE WE’LL FLY will captivate and inspire as it celebrates outsiders everywhere.

A GIFT OF THE MAGI
A Musical Inspired by the Short Story by O. Henry
Music by Josh Schmidt
Lyrics by James DeVita & Josh Schmidt
Book by James DeVita


November 13 – December 6, 2026
BTC Studio Theatre

Hailed as “a Christmas delight” (The Isthmus), James DeVita and Josh Schimdt’s original musical based on O. Henry’s classic tale of love and generosity rings in the holidays in its Milwaukee debut. Newlyweds Della and Jim—accompanied by a beautiful live violin and cello score—search turn-of-the-20th-Century New York with full hearts and empty pockets for the perfect gift for one another.

SONGS WITHOUT WORDS
(Or, The Mendelssohn Play)
by Jennifer Vosters
A Locally-Grown New Play 

January 22 – February 7, 2027
BTC Studio Theatre

Musical genius siblings Fanny and Felix Mendelssohn were each other’s chief supporters, deepest inspirations, and best friends—but a rigid world immortalized only one in the canon. Featuring a tour de force solo performance from Jennifer Vosters (A DOLL’S HOUSE) and presented for the first time with live music in this full-length world premiere, SONGS WITHOUT WORDS wrestles enduring questions of gender and genius, family and fame, and siblinghood and the power of art.​

SKELETON CREW
by Dominique Morisseau

2022 Tony Award Nomination for Best Play 

March 19 – April 4, 2027
BTC Studio Theatre

One of Detroit’s last auto stamping plants stands on shaky ground, and a close-knit crew of four factory workers must face a future without the steadiest employment they’ve ever known. Milwaukee’s own Dimonte Henning—Director of MCT smash hits THE MOUNTAINTOP and CLYDE’S—brings to life this poetic, powerful, and profoundly American play described by The Financial Times as “not so much state-of-the-nation as state-of-the-world.”

LIBERATION
by Bess Wohl

2026 Pulitzer Prize Winner

May 7 – May 23, 2027
BTC Cabot Theatre

1970. Ohio. Six women determined to shake up their lives and change the world form a consciousness-raising group in a community center gym. Fifty years later, one of their daughters tries to understand where things fell apart. Fresh from a celebrated 2025 Broadway run, this provocative, funny, refreshingly irreverent, and intensely relevant powerhouse of a production poses vital questions about what we inherit, what we forget, and what we’re still fighting to understand.​

This production includes nudity. 

SKELETON CREW and LIBERATION are presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc.

Ticket and Subscription Information is Available Here