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Tuesday, 31 March 2026 13:53

The Three Musketeers Deliver a Swashbuckling Smash at The Edge Featured

(L to R) Xavier Lagunas, Jack Sharkey and Boomer Lusink in THE THREE MUSKETEERS from Idle Muse Theatre, now playing through April 25 at The Edge Off-Broadway. (L to R) Xavier Lagunas, Jack Sharkey and Boomer Lusink in THE THREE MUSKETEERS from Idle Muse Theatre, now playing through April 25 at The Edge Off-Broadway. Photography by Steven Townshend, Distant Era.

ALL FOR ONE AND ONE FOR ALL!

Or is it one for all and all for one? No matter: either way it’s a rallying cry during a time of severe political unrest in France, where persistent insurrections incited erratic leadership, oscillating between Royalists and Republicans. The Republicans were the liberals, the political ‘left’ [times change, yeah?], fighting to establish democracy under the motto “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” (not so different from Diversity, Equality, Inclusion). Royalists supported the monarchy wherein kings ruled by divine right and sent the peasant classes to die in wars over personal royal disputes. Playwright Robert Kauzlaric acknowledges the significant homogeneity with 2029. This production of The Three Musketeers is presented by Idle Muse Theatre Company.

Musketeer-wannabe D’Artagnan (Troy Schaeflein), joins the ‘three inseparables’, Athos (Jack Sharkey), Porthos (Boomer Lusink), and Aramis (Xavier Lagunas). Together they challenge the treacherous Cardinal (Eric Duhon) and his retinue of religious rogues: Richelieu (Joel Thompson), Treville (Erik Schnitger), Bonacieux/Jane Felton (Vanessa Copeland), Laporte (Brendan Hutt), Sam Neel (Combat Ensemble), and Buckingham/ Louis XIII, the latter of whom Benjamin Jouras portrayed as deliciously campy!

Director Evan Jackson was assisted by Libby Beyreis, whose experience in Babes with Blades gave her plenty of brio to double as Violence Designer – and isn’t that a terrific title? Most productions I’ve seen have a violence director, but Beyreis designs the violence. Also in the Creative team were Dramaturg Emma S. Rund and Stage Manager Lindsey Chidester.

Jennifer Mohr (another Babe!) was outstanding as Milady de Winter, intertwining lasciviousness with malevolence. Jamie Redwood made an endearing Constance, and Caty Gordon was Queen Anne. I wish the Queen had a bit more insolence toward the King; risky business! Too bad there weren’t any NO KINGS encourager her.

BTW, at the NO KINGS rally Monday I loved the poster Kings NO / Queens YES!   

Laura J. Wiley (lighting designer) and L.J. Luthringer (sound designer and composer) lived up to their reputation(s) for begetting the appropriate spiritus mundi, while Vicki Jablonski (costume designer), Breezy Snyder (scenic painter), and props directors Becky Warner and Tristan Brandon meshed beautifully.

This was a large production, with a cast of 14 (not counting understudies), and at least 22 on the Creative Team. I really do appreciate the creative work backstage, truly I do!

I was truly impressed by the fight scenes; at times a dozen or so scrappers were creating, in that teensy-weensy space, a massive kerfuffle: one false move could cause real trauma. What fabulous choreography! Massive kudos to Violence Designers Libby Beyreis and Brendan Hutt, fight coach Elizabeth Macdougald, and the entire cast… There were but one or two who never took up a weapon.

All four Musketeers valiantly swashed every buckle in sight. All four were also exceedingly fanciable: if you like hunky guys, it’s worth the price of admission just to see them. Which is not to say the rest of the cast was unsightly! Particularly beguiling (to me, anyway) were Joel Thompson (Rochefort) and Benjamin Jouras (as Buckingham; as the King not so much). And Jamie Redwood (Constance), Caty Gordon (Queen Anne) and Jennifer Mohr (Milady) were fully as fetching as they were formidable.

In every review I’ve written I go on and on about Chicago’s wealth of thespian talent so I’m not going to reboot the spiel here; you can check out any of my previous reviews if you’d like to see it. What I will reiterate again [sic] is a fervent plea to seek out these little black box theaters. I won’t go out on a limb and say the acting is finer than in the biggies downtown, but the smaller theaters’ signature appeal of is this: in the enclosed space, cheek-by-jowl with the action onstage, one becomes absorbed in the mise-en-scene, almost participating in the performance. How thrilling!

THE THREE MUSKETEERS plays at The Edge-Off Broadway through April 25.

VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!

This review is proudly shared with our friends at www.TheatreInChicago.com

Last modified on Sunday, 12 April 2026 12:42