It would be easy to exploit Elmer’s story, to play it entirely for laughs. “Dead Outlaw” has lots of those, as well as a healthy sense of absurdity. But if it forgot Elmer’s humanity — and it never does — it would lose its soul.
Critics' Reviews
'Dead Outlaw’ Review: Not Much of a Bandit, but What a Corpse
The Old-Weird-America Pleasures of Dead Outlaw
<span style='color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: "Miller Text", Georgia, serif; font-size: 18px;'>What Moses, Yazbek and Della Penna, and Cromer are doing is both unearthing stories that have been, for one reason or another, buried in dust an...
A blockbuster cast of eight and a powerhouse five-piece band deliver it with full-blown mastery and full-out commitment, with not a single weak link among them, as they transition fluidly from scene to scene, character to character, gallows humor to ...
'Dead Outlaw' review — new musical tells a larger-than-life-and-death true story
Despite the hook, Dead Outlaw can’t sustain itself for long. Promising subplots fizzle out within minutes. The dramatic effect of lighting tricks from designer Heather Gilbert dampens with constant use. Durand’s mummy poses become distracting as ...
DEAD OUTLAW: RAUCOUSLY MACABRE MUSICAL HITS THE RIP-ROARIN’ BULLS-EYE
Dead Outlaw is one of those unthinkably unwieldy-sounding ideas that turns out—in the right hands—to make a rip-roarin’ bullseye of a new-style musical. A wider stage space, and a larger house where the excellent band can be modulated, will mak...
‘Dead Outlaw’ Finds Humor While Tracing a Most Unusual, Morose Story
Yet however moved you may be by the social commentary or softer moments contained in “Dead Outlaw,” the show’s boisterous, irrepressible irreverence toward that bleakest of subjects is its main selling point. In a catchy romp titled simply “D...
Videos