
Season One
Our premiere season, adapting the events of Bram Stoker's Dracula.
All characters are portrayed by Evangeline Young and Peter Coleman.
Episode 1: The Happiness You Bring
Warning: This episode contains discussions and depictions of violence, body horror, imprisonment, and death, as well as menacing situations, disturbing content, and jump scares. Viewer discretion is advised.
Episode 1 of 4. May 1893. Sent by his superiors to Transylvania to help a member of the local nobility with a real estate purchase, American clerk Jonathan Harker soon finds himself brought to a foreboding castle. There, he meets the mysterious Count Dracula, and learns of his plans to come to America... as well as the darker secrets the count has been keeping for centuries. Can Jonathan find a way to escape the castle before the Dracula can set his evil plan in motion? And back home in America, is Jonathan's wife Mina ready for the darkness that is headed towards her?
Dracula: The Danse Macabre was created by Gabriel Urbina. Tonight’s episode was written and directed by Gabriel Urbina. Based on the novel by Bram Stoker. It stars Evangeline Young as Mina Harker and Peter Coleman as Jonathan Harker. It features original music by Alan Rodi and sound design by Jeffrey Nils Gardner. Tonight’s episode also features Gnossiene No. 1 by Erik Satie. This interpretation of the piece comes to us courtesy of Pixabay. Script editing by Sarah Shachat. It was recorded by Robby Schwartz at Soho Recording.
This has been a Long Story Short Production.
Episode 2: A Stranger in a Strange Land
Warning: This episode contains discussions and depictions of violence, body horror, suicide, gaslighting, imprisonment, and death, as well as menacing situations, disturbing content, and jump scares. Listener discretion is advised.
Episode 2 of 4. August 1893. Schoolteacher Mina Harker lives her life on a tightrope, balancing her duties to her work, her social life, and her extracurricular interest in the occult. Her existence - and that of her best friend, Lucy Westenra - is disturbed by the arrival of a mysterious ship on the shores of New York City. Soon, they both find themselves drawing the attention of the newly arrived Count Dracula, who wastes no time in setting his evil plans for the new world into motion. Can Mina stand up to the count's dark designs? And what will happen when the ancient vampire finds himself finally facing a worthy adversary?
Dracula: The Danse Macabre was created by Gabriel Urbina. Tonight’s episode was written and directed by Gabriel Urbina. Based on the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. It stars Evangeline Young as Mina Harker and Peter Coleman as Jonathan Harker. It features original music by Alan Rodi and sound design by Jeffrey Nils Gardner. Script editing by Sarah Shachat. It was recorded by Robby Schwartz at Soho Recording.
This has been a Long Story Short Production.
Episode 3: Experimental Purposes
Warning: The following episode contains discussions and depictions of violence, body horror, suicide, imprisonment, torture, improper medical treatment, psychological abuse, chronic physical and mental illness, premature burial, and death. It also features menacing situations, disturbing content, and jump scares. Listener discretion is advised.
Episode 3 of 4. September 1893. Now trapped inside Carfax Asylum and at the mercy of Count Dracula, Mina Harker faces danger like never before. But she is taken aback when - rather than kill her - the count offers her an opportunity to save herself... if she can beat him at his own game. Will Mina be able to withstand the horrors of Dracula's asylum? Or will the vampire succeed in his quest to corrupt her and make her the same as he is?
Dracula: The Danse Macabre was created by Gabriel Urbina. Tonight’s episode was written by Gabriel Urbina and directed by Sarah Shachat. Based on the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. It stars Evangeline Young as Mina Harker and Peter Coleman as Jonathan Harker. It features original music by Alan Rodi and sound design by Jeffrey Nils Gardner. Tonight’s episode also features Gnossiene No. 1 by Erik Satie. This interpretation of the piece comes to us courtesy of Pixabay. Script editing by Sarah Shachat. It was recorded by Robby Schwartz at Soho Recording.
This has been a Long Story Short Production.
Episode 4: The Bride of Dracula
Warning: The following episode contains discussions and depictions of violence, body horror, suicide, physical and psychological abuse, starvation, and death, including graphic depictions of harm caused by insects and burning. It also contains menacing situations, disturbing content, and jump scares. Listener discretion is advised.
Episode 4 of 4. February 1896. Robbed of the dirt boxes that sustain him, Count Dracula flees back to Europe, hoping for a chance to regroup and plan his next move. However, he soon finds Mina Harker hot on his heels. As she gives chase across Europe, their deadly game of cat and mouse reaches new heights of tension and danger. And when Mina finally catches up to him, Count Dracula finds himself in a situation he could have never prepared for...
Dracula: The Danse Macabre was created by Gabriel Urbina. Tonight’s episode was written and directed by Gabriel Urbina. Based on the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. It stars Evangeline Young as Mina Harker and Peter Coleman as Jonathan Harker. It features original music by Alan Rodi and sound design by Jeffrey Nils Gardner. Script editing by Sarah Shachat. It was recorded by Robby Schwartz at Soho Recording.
This has been a Long Story Short Production.