(above, L-R) music legend T. Bone Burnett provided John Mellencamp and Stephen King a huge assist in the creation of GHOST BROTHERS OF DARKLAND COUNTY, an intricate musical that starts our 25/26 season. The show involves the supernatural, sibling rivalries, blood-letting stage effects, American roots music and southern gothic drama à la Tennessee Williams — all blended into what has been described as a “ghost-story song-cycle mash-up.”
The genesis of the project was a story Mellencamp heard when he bought a vacation cabin. “The wife of the guy [said], ‘Oh, by the way — it’s haunted, but the ghosts won’t bother you, you’ll get used to it. I went, ‘OK, great.’ I don’t believe in that stuff. Then she sends me these magazines from the 1930s, like Private Detective” he said. “She sends me a couple of these crime magazines with accounts of what happened.”
He asked King to collaborate on shaping the tale into a musical, and the prolific fiction writer produced the initial draft of the book in about three weeks. Since then the show has been a fully produced musical (premiering at Atlanta’s Alliance), a 3-CD concept album featuring the likes of Elvis Costello and Roseanne Cash, a touring concert, a radio play, and back to an evolving stage show which audiences here in Tampa will see the most current version of — it’s quite a different shape than the previous versions, now 25 years in the making.

GHOST BROTHERS OF DARKLAND COUNTY is on stage Oct. 15 – Nov. 9 at the Straz Center.
Parts of this post were gathered from the AP, LA Times, and TCG reporting. Photo: Kevin Mazur.