We are giving away a pair of tickets to Mary Shelley’s FRANKENSTEIN @ Experience Theater Project on September 26-November 2. To win, comment below on this post why you’d like to attend. Winner will be drawn and emailed September 26.
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From our sponsors:
September 26 – November 2, 2025
Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays @ 7:30pm
Sundays @ 1pm
$5-60 | All Ages
Purchase Tickets: experiencetheatreproject.org
Location: 18850 SW Alexander Street, Aloha, OR 97006
Prepare to witness Frankenstein like you’ve never seen it before. This is not a show you simply sit and watch. In this immersive promenade production of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, the story explodes into life all around you—inside the walls of our venue, outside under the open air, and winding through every hidden corner between.
What to Expect: A promenade performance
- There are no fixed seats. Audiences move with the characters through the spaces in the venue — indoor rooms, corridors, lofts, outdoor alcoves — as the narrative unfolds live around you.
- Close-up, visceral theatre
- As this is an immersive performance, actors perform just inches away from the audience. You may see the crackle of fire on Victor’s face, hear the heartbeat of the Creature, and feel your pulse in moments of dread. The barrier between audience and action dissolves. To add to the intimacy of the moments, only 30 tickets will be sold per show.
- Inside and outside
- This production breaks down conventional walls. Scenes spill out into an outside performing area, rain or shine. Expect sudden shifts of light, shifting atmospheres, and the thrill of unpredictability as you follow the characters from room to yard and back again.
Why This Frankenstein is Different
This is a Frankenstein that refuses to stay in one place—much like its creation. It captures the moral, emotional, and scientific anxieties of Mary Shelley’s world in a way that is physical and immediate. As you move through spaces, light and shadow will chase you; the Creature’s anguish will echo through chambers. The adaptation stays true to Mary Shelley’s novel, while paying homage to the 1931 Karloff film by presenting much of the show in glorious black and white.
You don’t just watch the Creature awaken—you are there in the flash of that first spark. You don’t just hear Frankenstein’s regrets—you breathe them in.