Murder MysterY DINNER PARTY To DIE FOR:

SATURDAY, November 16, 2024

The Murder at Wit’s End

Read about our legendary Murder Mysteries in Broadway world, AARP, The Boston Globe & the Bennington Banner

You are cordially invited to a 1920’s Dinner Party to DIE For!

Music, mayhem and murder is always on the menu...

Join the interactive fun and follow the cast of colorful suspects as you sing, dine and sleuth to solve The Murder at Wit’s End.

Perched on the crest of a hill, the historic Wilburton mansion is the perfect setting for an Agatha Christie style mystery and a real life game of Clue.

Guests are encouraged to dress in festive flapper, vintage Hollywood, Marx Bros or vintage Vermonter attire as they will join in the action through the rooms of the Wilburton mansion.

Prizes will be awarded for best sleuthing and most creative costume.  

A professional photographer will take complimentary photos of all guests.

Three course dinner and mystery experience tickets are $75 plus tax, service, and bar.

SYNPOSIS:

“The Murder at Wit’s End”  is an original immersive musical mystery inspired by the true Vermont story of the literary celebrities who summered at Neshobe Island in Lake Bomoseen in the 1920s and 1930’s, when America’s most famous drama critic, radio host and literary influencer, Alexander Woollcott ran his exclusive club on the island.

Guests are invited to join Woolcott’s famous friends -Harpo Marx, Irving Berlin, Dorothy Parker and other witty members of the Algonquin Round Table- as members of the club for the coming season.  A rave review from Woollcott could make any book a bestseller, any play a hit, so Broadway producers, authors and stars are competing for favor in battles of wits, songs, and parlor games.  Prospective members will have to play Woollcott’s favorite game of croquet (he cheats) and solve The Murder Game. 

Some are vying to win. Others are dying to get in.. 

The cast includes local talent: Letitia Scordino, Tina Fores-Hitt and Joe Mozer as Harpo Marx. Broadway Producer Ben Feldman stars as Alexander Woolcott and Grammy-award winner Brian Drutman will musical direct and play Irving Berlin.  “I’m delighted to be back as part of The Wilburton’s now classic interactive murder mysteries,” said Drutman. “This year, I’ll be portraying songwriting legend Irving Berlin, one of my longtime heroes. Berlin purportedly wrote over 1000 songs. – we have a large catalog to choose from for our show.”  

The Murder at Wit’s End is written and produced by Tajlei Levis, who creates original mystery events each year, inspired by Wilburton and local Vermont history.  “These glamorous theatrical events add some sparkle to stick season,” says Levis. Wilburton mystery weekends began 30 years ago when innkeeper Georgette Wasserstein Levis wrote a murder mystery homage, The Brothers Rosenblood, to her sister, Wendy Wasserstein’s Broadway hit, The Sisters Rosensweig. 

Perched on the crest of a hill, the historic Wilburton mansion is the perfect setting for an Agatha Christiestyle whodunnit.

Will this swanky soiree include getting away – with murder? 

Would you want to belong to a club which will take you as a member? 

For the answers to these and other questions, join the fun at The Wilburton and try to solve The Murder at Wit’s End.

Weekend Lodging package available.

Call for reservations 802-362-2500 ext 2 or.visit WILBURTON.com

Wilburton mystery weekends are a 20-year tradition that began when innkeeper Georgette Wasserstein Levis turned her sister, Wendy Wasserstein’s Broadway hit, The Sisters Rosensweig into The Brothers Rosenblood.  Since 2013, Tajlei Levis, known for writing vintage literary musicals, like Edith Wharton’s Glimpses of the Moon, has created new mystery events each year, inspired by Wilburton and local Vermont history.   The Case of the Bridesmaid’s Revenge is her 10th anniversary mystery musical! Each one is based on a chapter in Vermont and Wilburton history.

THE CASE OF THE MISSING MUMMY

The mystery  begins as the eccentric Manchester collector Doc tries to complete his collection of curiosities at his museum of mythology. Doc commissions cowboy archeologist Arlington Jones  to find an authentic mummy from Egypt. Arlington’s expertise is expensive, so Doc appeals to  the Vermont Explorers Club to underwrite the expedition in return for a share in the spoils. “Let’s be like Lord Elgin or Napoleon, and bring the treasure home in our luggage.”  The dig foreman Cat and his local cousins stake out a promising site in the Valley of Kings. Meanwhile, Broadway musical sensation Mimi, recently retired from the Ziegfeld follies, is planning her film debut in a musical extravaganza Cleopatra, Queen of the Nile - a love story. To save money on scenery, her producer will film on location in Egypt. When Mimi and her entourage discover they have been assigned the same spot as Doc’s dig, the dirt starts flying. Local missionary priest Egitzio and his partner, Italian nun Febrizia, have an endless supply of authentic antiquities to sell at a very special price. Everyone is dying to get in on the action. 

THE mystery at ‘the Orchards’

Mystery at the Orchards, Fall 2019

Last year’s saga, THE MYSTERY AT THE ORCHARDS, written by Tajlei Levis, was inspired by a true story of the glamorous Southern Vermont society set in the Gilded Age Southern Vermont Society set in 1920.

Industrialist Edward Everett, the Bottle Baron on Bennington, had previously invited friends and colleagues to celebrate the completion of his grand Southern Vermont mansion, The Orchards, and his 25th anniversary of marriage to his beloved wife Amy King Edwards. The invitations went out months ago- and all the society set is eager to attend.

However his house is not finished, (so the party will be at his friend James Wilbur’s mansion), the bottle business is struggling and his lovely wife is no longer in the picture. Who is to blame for these mysterious circumstances?

Was it the portrait painter or the pomologist?  The harried housekeeper or the butler? The ambitious nurse? The jealous members of the garden club?

Attend a Gilded Age soiree and try to solve The Mystery of the Orchards.

Dress: Edwardian elegance or flapper flair. 

Read all about last year’s mystery: The Dangerous Divorcee in The Bennington Banner:

Mark your calendar now: Mystery weekends are in November and April.

Murder Mystery Spring 2019-min.jpg

The Dangerous Divorcee

Last year’s saga (2018) was THE DANGEROUS DIVORCEE, written by Tajlei Levis, is inspired by Hollywood’s Golden Age movie musicals of the 1930’s made by RKO Pictures. RKO Pictures produced many of our favorite Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals, with songs by Cole Porter, Rodgers & Hart, Irving Berlin. RKO owned the Wilburton – and used it as an executive and celebrity retreat - until they sold it to the Levis family in 1987.

Return to the era of Hollywood glamour, in an immersive historical mystery whodunnit with professional actors and audience participation. Guests are invited to dress in 1930s finery, have a screen test, join the cast and crew of the film Dottie is producing. A photographer will be on hand to capture their style. Guests and characters dine together and join forces to solve the mystery.

Lovely Louise is tired of tea parties and golf. Seeking an escape from Vermont, she has been corresponding with a flamboyant European count. She yearns for a life of adventure and wants to take flying lessons. Her family wants her to marry a proper young banker in the social register, and sends her bossy friend Bernice (captain of the Barnard wrestling team) to make sure Louise shows up for the wedding.

Uncle Stewart is a captain of industry. Aunt Gogo is in show business, and has some experience at extravaganzas. Gogo has arranged for a photographer and a publicist, but the bridal party has its own secrets and jealousies. The champagne is being smuggled across Lake Champlain. But are those mysterious guests bootleggers or pirates?! And the groom is missing. Some people would do anything to stop a wedding…

Will this swanky soiree include getting away – with murder?

For the answers to these and other questions, join us at The Wilburton for a dinner party to die for, and try to solve The Case of the Bridesmaid’s Revenge.