Tag: Mystery Weekend

  • An ‘Un-Conventional’ Mystery

    An ‘Un-Conventional’ Mystery

    BY KATE POSS
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    February 22, 2017

    It’s a lot of fun to have coffee with Loretta Martin, the writer behind the mysteries of Langley’s Mystery Weekend. Who wouldn’t enjoy it? Writing mysteries for Langley’s Mystery Weekend each year, and seeing them brought to life by improv actors, makes her happy.

    Dare to solve the murder with other amateur detectives Feb. 25 and 26 for Langley’s 33rd annual “Mystery Weekend: An ‘Un-Conventional’ Murder.” There are 34 characters this year, some of them posing as science fiction conventioneers — “members” of the International Society of Science Fiction Arts and Technology or ISSFAT. These characters are behind-the-scenes folks who operate the cameras, act as engineers, do makeup, and design costumes in the sci-fi world.

    “I have worked behind the camera,” says Martin, who has a background in creating and producing local television shows.

    In character as a police officer, Loretta Martin calls in a clue for Mystery Weekend (Photo by David Welton)

    The sci-fi convention arrives nearly two months after a “sighting” of a Sasquatch in the Saratoga Woods on New Year’s Day, so the story goes. The tween who “saw” the local Bigfoot reports it on Facebook, and the story goes viral, drawing hunters and protectors of the hairy mystery-beast. The weekend’s remaining actors are those who are either Bigfoot Friends, those who wish to see the Sasquatch stuffed as a trophy, and the regular cast of characters including: I.B. Fuzz, her cousin Hagetha Kisstea, Gussie and Gus Gruesome, and the 49ers, a zany band of codgers always looking to make a quick buck — this year on “Sasquatch Sausage” and root beer made of Sasquatch scat for an “earthy” taste. A hairy gorilla-type creature is found dead behind the Saratoga Inn, and this is where the sleuthing begins.

    Annie Horton, who has performed in most of the Mystery Weekends, plays the character of Shari Fissure this year, the widow of the murdered character. As an homage to Carrie Fisher, who died Dec. 27, Horton’s character models Fisher’s Princess Leia of “Star Wars.” Shari Fissure, though, wears a hairdo of actual cinnamon buns on the sides of her head.

    “I predict the phrase of the weekend will be, ‘Love your buns,’” Horton says.

    Some of this year’s actors in Mystery Weekend featuring Sasquatch friends and enemies, science fiction conventioneers, and other characters. (Photo by Sharon Lundahl)

    While many of the actors return again and again, there are new faces adding to Mystery Weekend this year.

    Lilly van Gerbig, co-owner of Langley’s Fair Trade Outfitters, along with her husband Barry, is acting for the first time.

    “I’m playing Lilly Landtree, an animal lover and a good friend to Bigfoot Friends,” van Gerbig said. “Our store is a sanctuary for Bigfoot Friends. I’m a little eccentric and I wear charms and necklaces. I am a staunch protector of Bigfoot. I think it’s really fun. I’m excited to do it.”

    Van Gerbig said, while she’s “not theatrical,” she does enjoy interacting with customers in her store. Last year Fair Trade Outfitters provided a clue in solving “Much Ado About Murder: A Hare-Raising Tale.”

    The 49ers Men’s Club have a get-rich scheme this year, including selling Sasquatch sausage and Sasquatch rootbeer, known for its secret ingredient (Photo by Sharon Lundahl)

    The way Mystery Weekend works is that local businesses pay a small fee to the Langley Chamber to offer a clue. Visitors buy a $10 ticket from the chamber, which includes a map and locations of all the available clues, along with a copy of the “Langley Gazette.” Sleuths visit the businesses, collect clues, and guess who the culprit was at a 5 p.m. gathering Sunday afternoon at the Langley Middle School.

    “Josh (Hauser of Moonraker Books) said I should be a character, this year,” van Gerbig says. “I love being with my customers, so I thought, what can you lose? It was fun last year, just seeing the excitement and meeting people who have done this for years. It is amazing to me. They’re bringing their children and grandchildren. No one knows who the murderer is. Everyone is a suspect. You have to play like you might be one or should be one. I think Loretta is a genius. I love her.”

    Even the actors who play the characters don’t know who the murderer is until it’s revealed on Sunday evening. It’s the only part that’s scripted.

    Annie Horton has performed in nearly every Mystery Weekend over the past 33 years. (Photo by Sharon Lundahl)

    “We tell people that, when interviewing the suspects, they shouldn’t believe everyone, because one is the murderer and has (every) reason to lie,” says Martin. “The mystery is solved by getting clues, interacting with the suspects, and reading the story in “The Langley Gazette.”

    Josh Hauser, owner of the Moonraker bookstore in Langley, has been a character in every mystery weekend but one. This year, she is cast as a bookstore owner. She recalled one of her favorite roles from days gone by.

    “It was my best costume year. I had set up a business of ill repute upstairs,” Hauser says. “I found a red taffeta strapless evening gown. I’ve committed the murder twice. One day (during a previous Mystery Weekend), I was across the street and there were people walking by with signs to save our slugs. Someone thought it was a real small-town protest.”

    “Officer” Loretta Martin”says suspects are “arrested” by Langley police on Langley Mystery Weekend (Photo by David Welton)

    The first mystery Martin wrote was 18 years ago, when she worked as director for the Langley Chamber.

    “It was an homage to the Titanic, and we called ours ‘The Wreck of the Calista,’ based on a boat that wrecked, here” Martin says. She described a jewel she loved at Wayward Sons, then, and used it as a device to help steer the story. “It was a $3,000 brooch, that had a large blue opal with rose gold vines and peridot and pink topaz. It would have looked good on a big girl like me. I had a long-time Langley resident play the part of an opera singer who wore the pin and is murdered by a spear-gun. The actor had to be off island that weekend, so I suggested we use the photo we already had of her as the photo of the “victim” opera singer in the mystery. We both thought that would be fine. I used her photo in the obituary, with the (Mystery Weekend) headline: “Opera Singer Murdered.” I got a call from her mother asking, ‘What happened to my daughter?’ The ‘Mystery’ newspaper is usally inserted in the real newspaper, and her mom started getting calls asking what happened to her daughter.”

    Since then, Martin said the victims have always been fictitious and not part of the cast.

    Barbara MacCallum, a Langley bed and breakfast owner, used to work with Martin at the chamber during the “Heads in Beds” campaign to entice visitors to the island during the winter. She recalls previous Mystery Weekends in which the Mosquito Fleet transported sleuths from Seattle to the Langley marina (and guests were told who the murderer was on the way home), bed and breakfast baking contests, cookbooks; all ways to bring out-of-towners to the island during the dark days of February. “Loretta’s imagination is phenomenal,” MacCallum says. “She comes up with clues, creates the characters, and the solution.”

    Martin moved to Whidbey Island, a place she had visited since she was a child, to heal from complications due to a back surgery nearly 20 years ago.

    “When I was diagnosed (and had to take months of antibiotic treatment as a result), I was so weak,” Martin recalls. “My mom and dad said I should move to their house on Mutiny Bay. I feel there’s a healing energy on Whidbey Island. I’ve always felt it. When we moved here, my husband Dewey landed a job in his field (construction). I worked at Whidbey General Hospital and wrote “The Pulse,” the hospital’s magazine. Then I landed the job at the chamber. The connections I’ve made are so important. Just keeping in touch means so much to me. It’s all about networking, especially with women. It’s why I support the Soroptimists.”

    Regarding creating stories for Mystery Weekend, Martin says, “When I’m writing, it’s my favorite time of the year. The most fun thing is that it is not a linear (or scripted) story, but one that is done in improv by the actors. They bring the story to life in new ways I couldn’t imagine. When I see them in costume, (it’s like) J.K. Rowling might feel when she sees her characters come to life in a ‘Harry Potter’ movie. I’m so lucky that way.”

    Michaleen McGarry, executive director of the Langley chamber of commerce, designed this retro poster advertising this year’s Mystery Weekend Feb. 25 and 26. (Photo by David Welton)

    A couple of local businesses will carry Mystery Weekend-related merchandise. Sprinklz Ice Cream Parlor and Coffee Shop in Langley and Casey’s Crafts, on Hwy 525 near Bayview Road, now carry Sasquatch-themed items. Laurie Davenport, who owns Casey’s, said she will host a Bigfoot treasure hunt throughout the store as well.

    Sharpen your Sasquatch-sighting skills the night before Mystery Weekend at the Langley Library, which will host David George Gordon, author of “The Sasquatch Seeker’s Field Manual: Using Citizen Science to Uncover North America’s Most Elusive Creature,” on Friday, Feb. 24, at 6:30 p.m.

    Betty Freeman, visitor center representative for the Langley chamber of commerce, suggests buying tickets ahead of time. The chamber almost sold out of tickets last year and did sell out of 2016 Mystery Weekend T-shirts and sweatshirts. Order early. T-shirts are $20 and hoodies are $35. They are adorned with the vintage Sci-Fi logo seen on posters around town.

    Kate Poss worked as a library assistant at the Langley Library until last June when she retired. She worked for three summers as a chef aboard a small Alaskan tour boat from 2008 to 2010. She was a newspaper reporter in Los Angeles for many years before moving to Whidbey Island where she likes cooking for new and hold friends,’hiking, reading great fiction and writing her novel.

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  • A record number of detectives discover Whidbey for Mystery Weekend

    A record number of detectives discover Whidbey for Mystery Weekend

    PHOTO ESSAY BY DAVID WELTON AND BETTY FREEMAN
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    February 25, 2015

    A record number of sleuths participated in the 31st annual Mystery Weekend in Langley Feb. 21-22. The Chamber of Commerce sold just over 1000 tickets for the popular event, as sunny skies beckoned amateur sleuths from all over, including some from out of state and some who have attended Mystery Weekend since it began 31 years ago.

    The mystery, written by Loretta Martin, was entitled “It’s No Laughing Murder.” Twenty-six local actors were involved in the production, and 35 Langley businesses handed out numbered clues.

    Phyllis Curr Thriller was found dead by her cousin Winnie Burl on the side deck at the Dog House Tavern, which she had recently inherited from her uncle Dog Curr. Winnie Burl, and niece Josephine Curr and nephew Joe Curr, were not mentioned in the will.
    Thriller had planned to reopen the Dog House as a comedy club with ties to a reality TV show, news which was exciting to the townspeople, city officials and a number of local comedians and clowns who wanted a shot at fame.

    Coroner Gus Gruesome reported that Thriller had puncture wounds to her hand and that the contents of her purse were strewn about near her body. Missing from the purse was a check for $5000, a gift of startup money for the Comedy Club from clown Donald McConald.

    (Spoiler alert) At the “reveal” on Sunday afternoon at Langley Middle School, veteran detective I.B. Fuzz explained her deductions and pointed the finger of blame at Thriller’s jealous cousin Winnie Burl, who was then “arrested” by Langley Police and carted off to jail.

    After the reveal, a drawing was held for prizes donated by local merchants and innkeepers.

    Selfie

    Joe McDougald as Donald McConald snaps a selfie with Rachel McDougald as Claira Bella and Charlie Clapman (J. Scott Williams).

    Registration

    Volunteer Marilyn Esterly keeps up with the crowd at the Langley Chamber of Commerce office.

    Nails 2

    Annie Horton plays Joan Shivers and gets some smiles.

    Nails 1nails

    Joan Shivers shows off her bright Island Girl Nails.

    Chapman 1

    J. Scott Williams, playing the part of Charlie Clapman, stands in front of the historic Dog House Tavern with a pocket full of clues.

    Ferd

    Shayne Thomas is Ferd Degree, the “Talent Scout for the Stars” provides some clues throughout the weekend.

    Ferd Degree

    Ferd takes a moment to appreciate the view with the Boy and a Dog sculpture by local sculptor Georgia Gerber.

    FortyNininer

    Daryl B. Mortacome, aka David Holte, plays a 49er with a sense of humor.

    Hannah, Mill Creek, Rope Tricks 1

    Daryl B. Mortacome, played by David Holte, and Fred O’Neal (left) get the visitors involved. You never know when you’re going to need a good knot on Mystery Weekend!

    Hannah, Mill Creek< Rope tricks 2

    Hannah Davis of Mill Creek learns some rope tying tricks from David, err, Daryl.

    Clowns 2

    The clowns share their story.

    Monkeys

    Frank Lloyd Site, Tim Simon with his colorful puppet, discusses the local monkey business with the clown Rusty Simpson, played by Riley Pomeroy.

    Mona's

    Frank and Daryl relax.

    Chapman 3

    Vistors and locals line up for clues at the Dog House Tavern.

    Chapman 2

    WC Shields 1

    W.C. Shields with his white gloves is played by Wayne Furber.

    WC Shields 2
    Entertainer meets sleuth.

    WC Shields 3

    All smiles and no raincoats for Mystery Weekend 2015.

    Coroner 1

    Coroner Gus Gruesome, played by George Gutohrlein, reads the coroners results to the curious crowd.

    Snohomish 4

    Ben Stafford, Kirt Herrman with the pith helmet, Baylor Blair, and Leif Jorgensen came from Snohomish dressed and ready to solve the mystery.

    Coroners report 2

    Attendees soaked up the February sunshine and the clues as they get closer to solving the crime.

    (Photo by Betty Freeman)
    (Photo by Betty Freeman)

    The Langley Police cart Winnie Burl (Trevor Arnold), who killed her cousin, off to jail.

    Find out more about what goes on during Mystery Weekend by reading this Feature from last week by Betty Freeman.

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  • Who done it? ‘It’s No Laughing Murder’

    Who done it? ‘It’s No Laughing Murder’

     

    BY BETTY FREEMAN3rd POSTER.pub
    PHOTOS BY SHARON LUNDAHL
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributors
    February 18, 2015

    Just like clockwork, every February there’s a murder in Langley.

    Townspeople, merchants and amateur sleuths welcome the event like a sunny day in winter. Why? Because it’s Mystery Weekend!

    The 2015 murder is already carefully planned for the weekend of Feb. 21-22 by experienced Mystery Weekend writer Loretta Martin. The plot and characters change every year, but the setting is always Langley.

    Martin emails the cast members in the fall to determine who will be returning. Then she pens the storyline and fleshes out the characters with descriptions so the actors know who they are and how they should behave.

    “The group of actors are like a little repertory company,” said Martin. “In January, they find out who they are this time, and they throw themselves into their parts and into assembling their costumes. Some of them have been part of Mystery Weekend for 31 years!”

    This year, Martin explained, “It’s No Laughing Murder,” and the victim is Phyllis Curr Thriller, whose cold, dead body is found on the side deck of the Dog House Tavern on the morning of Friday, Feb. 20.

    Martin described Thriller as “caustic, competitive, bossy, entitled and opinionated.” Thriller left Whidbey Island after high school and traveled to LA, where she married multimillionaire stunt coordinator Max Thriller. Until she inherited the Dog House from her uncle “Dog” Curr, Thriller hadn’t been seen in Langley in 50 years.

    A stand-up comedian herself, Thriller planned to open a comedy club in the historic tavern and promised to pair it with a reality TV show based in Langley. Merchants and town leaders were overjoyed at the news.

    “The comedy club would put Langley on the map, especially with a reality TV show attached,” said Martin.

    Judges for the Comedy Club TV show include clockwise from left: W.C. Shields (Wayne Furber), Simon Degree (John Ball), Polly Anna Sucrose (Josh Hauser) and Ferd Degree (Shane Thomas)
    Judges for the Comedy Club TV show include clockwise from left: W.C. Shields (Wayne Furber), Simon Degree (John Ball), Polly Anna Sucrose (Josh Hauser) and Ferd Degree (Shane Thomas)

    Meanwhile Thriller’s cousin, Winnie Burl, is bewildered that her beloved Uncle Dog left all his money to Phyllis and left Winnie only his home, furnishings, and storage locker. Dog didn’t even mention his grandnephew Joe or grandniece Josephine in his will. But Winnie is an optimist, and when she learned of the plans for a comedy club she was enthusiastic.

    Some folks around town still had questions about the inheritance but now that the estate is closed everyone in town was following Winnie’s example and backing Phyllis (at least on the surface).

    Of course Phyllis was not the most likable person but, with the future of the town and so many other people in her hands, who would want to see her dead?

    That’s the question that amateur sleuths will have to answer during Mystery Weekend.

    Joanna and Jerry Lechner, owners of Eagles Nest Inn, have been participating as cast members for several years. This year they play Millie Zomlin and Rob Trueheart.

    Milly Zomlin aka Joanna Lechner
    Milly Zomlin aka Joanna Lechner

    “It’s a challenge to try to figure out how to play the character,” said Joanne Lechner. “Not to mention the challenge of finding the right costume.”

    Lechner and other cast members haunt local thrift stores to find costumes to help them get in character.

    Jerry Lechner said, “We’re all closet comedians. Mystery Weekend is a chance to play and say anything you like.”

    John Ball plays Simon Degree this year, complete with a Snidely Whiplash mustache and black cape. His young friend, eight-year-old Shane Thomas, plays a mini version of Simon, “Ferd Degree.”

    Others play a variety of clowns, comics, townspeople and authorities, and all are viable suspects.

    Some characters have been known to accept bribes, and all of them can be counted on to lie and try to confuse the amateur sleuths who question them relentlessly throughout the weekend.

    None of the characters know if they will be fingered as the murderer until everybody learns the truth at the Mystery Weekend finale Sunday afternoon.

    Last year, actor J. Scott Williams of Bellingham, who played birdwatcher Rufus Hawks, was named as the killer and carted off to jail by Langley police.

    In spite of his humiliating “arrest,” Williams looks forward to Mystery Weekend each year. He got involved because his parents gave him a weekend stay at the Inn at Langley and it happened to fall on Mystery Weekend 2002.

    “I saw all these people in costume all over town and I was hooked,” said Williams. He played Mystery Weekend for several years, then signed on as an actor. This year he plays washed-up comedian Charlie Clapman.

    Rob Trueheart aka Jerry Lechner
    Rob Trueheart aka Jerry Lechner

    Here’s how Mystery Weekend works. Sleuths come to Langley and line up outside the Visitor and Information Center on Anthes Street starting at 10 a.m. Saturday morning. There they buy a clue map for $10 (or $8 for seniors, youth and military) and are given a copy of the Langley Gazette with details of the murder.

    From there, detectives fan out all over town, visiting the crime scene, picking up clues from participating merchants and interacting with the suspects, who will be in costume and whose photographs will be displayed in the windows of the Dog House.

    When you think you know “who done it,” enter your solution on the official contest entry form and bring it back to Mystery Weekend headquarters at the Langley Visitor and Information Center at 208 Anthes Street. Correct solutions will be placed in a drawing for grand prizes, provided by local innkeepers and merchants. Incorrect solutions are still eligible for other prizes.

    The prize drawing will take place after the solution is announced at Langley Middle School auditorium at 5:15 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 22. If prize winners are not present, they will be notified after the finale.

    Be prepared for crowds of people in Langley that weekend, as well as a cast of crazy characters and general mayhem.

    “I refer to Mystery Weekend as a creativity riot,” said Williams “I smile perpetually when I think of the funny, clever situations Loretta Martin invents every year.”

    Image at top: Clown School staff Claira Bella (Rachel McDougald), Donald McConald (Joe McDougald), mime teacher Charlie Clapman (J. Scott Williams) and in front, student Rusty Simpson (Riley Pomeroy).  Portion of Mystery Weekend Poster is courtesy of Langley Chamber of Commerce

    Betty Freeman likes writing about creative people and events, and really enjoys a good mystery.

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