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Oliver Long of Edwardsburg plays Seymour

Oliver Long of Edwardsburg plays Seymour

Aliya Leavitt of Paw Paw portrays

Aliya Leavitt of Paw Paw portrays Audrey

Lee’Yah Durr of Dowagiac is excited to be appearing in her first musical

Dowagiac’s Lee’Yah Durr is excited to be appearing in her first musical

Everyone wants a piece of Seymour

Everyone wants a piece of Seymour

Kirstin Carlson

Kirsten Carlson

Kenton Smith voices the carnivorous plant, Audrey II

Trenton Smith voices the carnivorous plant, Audrey II

SMC’s ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ opens March 21

Published on February 20, 2024 - 4 p.m.

Southwestern Michigan College presents “Little Shop of Horrors” as its spring musical March 21-23 at 7:30 p.m. and at 2 p.m. March 24 in the theatre of the Dale A. Lyons Building on the Dowagiac campus. See swmich.edu/performances for ticket information.

Set in Skid Row in 1960s Los Angeles, Mushnick’s meek flower shop assistant Seymour Krelborn (Oliver Long of Edwardsburg) pines for coworker Audrey (Aliya Leavitt of Paw Paw).

Seymour discovers an unusual plant he names Audrey II (Trenton Smith voices the carnivorous puppet), which feeds exclusively on human flesh and blood. The growing plant attracts a great deal of business for the previously struggling store until Seymour finds himself at the eye of a media maelstrom.

Seymour must come up with more bodies for the increasingly bloodthirsty plant. The musical was also made into a 1986 film. SMC staged the show in 2004 and in 2012.

“I wanted to do something that would excite the community to come out, and Little Shop is a cult classic,” Director Marcus Jordan said. “It investigates the human condition. What do you do when you get what you want, and is what you want what you really need? Can you handle what you want?”

Little Shop is often described as a Greek tragedy in which its young, fallible hero seeks to improve his life by exploiting a higher power. In typical Greek fashion, the angry gods don’t just punish the hero, but extend their wrath to everyone he loves.

“It’s also a shade of Faust,” Jordan said.

Faust is the protagonist of a classic German legend based on the historical Johann Georg Faust. The erudite Faust is highly successful yet dissatisfied with his life, which leads him to make a pact with the Devil at a crossroads, exchanging his soul for unlimited knowledge and worldly pleasures.

Long majors in general science at SMC, though this isn’t his first musical-theatre rodeo.

“I might deviate a little more toward medical,” Long said. “I definitely want to do music in the future, but off to the side after I get a stable job. I was going to try out for the dentist, but I just went for Seymour. At Edwardsburg I did six shows, including Singing in the Rain, White Christmas, Into the Woods, a Star Wars parody and Clue.

Long sings in three SMC choirs — Select Voices, Concert Choir and the Men’s Ensemble.

“It’s a lot being in a college production,” Long said. “It’s pretty different from high school. More independent. You’re expected to know your stuff. I really enjoy singing this genre of music. We started Jan. 16 after Christmas break. It feels a lot longer than a month, but it’s coming along.”

Leavitt plays trombone in the Symphonic Band and Jazz Ensemble as well as choral music since her senior year. She sang in last Nov. 11’s cabaret, “To Inspire...A Musical Collage.”

“I’ve done musical theatre for a couple of years,” Leavitt said. “We didn’t move to Paw Paw until halfway through my freshman year, so I didn’t get to do the musical, then COVID hit. I did Cu