Folsom Prison Experience

Date

September 29, 2023
Expired!

Time

8:00 pm

Location

Belle Mehus Auditorium
201 N 6th St, Bismarck, ND

Status

Sold Out

Cost

$39.50
  • Doors: 7:00 pm
  • Audience: All Ages
  • Seating: Reserved Seats

Presale: April 20 (10am-10pm)
Password: MUSICHEALS
Onsale: April 21 @ 10am

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About

The critical and commercial reactions to Johnny Cash’s iconic 1968 live recording, At Folsom Prison, are well documented – a No. 1 smash that catapulted Cash to crossover stardom and cemented his reputation as an artist who didn’t play by the conventional rules. But the behind-the-scenes tales of that fateful day, January 13, 1968, when Cash and his entourage put on two shows for the inmates of California’s Folsom Prison remain filled with facts and folklore.

That makes Folsom Prison Experience even more fascinating. Dubbed “an immersive tribute drama,” Folsom Prison Experience is a musical that merges live concert, stage drama, and audience participation interactive theater as it recreates one of the most important days in Johnny Cash’s storied musical career. At the center of the production is Church of Cash, the award-winning Johnny Cash tribute show featuring Jay Ernest as the Man in Black. In fact, Folsom Prison Experience was written by Ernest and his friend/collaborator Tom Pickard.

Folsom Prison Experience makes its stage debut during a premiere event Nov. 2 and 3 at Le Musique Room in St. Michael, Minnesota. Audiences are encouraged to become a part of the production. They can wear their best prison inmate attire and consider themselves that same captive crowd that cheered during Cash’s 1968 concert. More Folsom Prison Experience performance dates will be announced soon.

For Ernest, working on making Folsom Prison Experience a reality is a personal and professional milestone. “I have spent years studying the history and music of Johnny Cash,” he says. “It is a great honor to bring to life that day in Folsom Prison to fans of theater and Johnny Cash alike.”

Folsom Prison Experience stars Jay Ernest as Johnny Cash and features the band members of Church of Cash playing members of Cash’s band on that immortal day: Tony Wirth on bass is Marshall Grant, “Jumpin’” Jack Mansk on electric guitar is Luther Perkins, and Jonathan TeBeest on drums is W.S. Holland. Folsom Prison Experience is directed by Stephanie Long with Pickard as technical director. Pickard and Ernest are also the producers.

Rounding out the cast of Folsom Prison Experience is Kat Perkins as June Carter, Dan Hopman as The Warden, Ryan Maddux as Emcee Hugh Cherry, and Bronson Bergeson as Glen Shirley/Carl Perkins. Also, the cast includes a dozen more actors playing the parts of prison guards and the Statler Brothers played by the Matt Kneefe, Kris Stauffer and Mike Johnson from the band Hitchville.

Writing Folsom Prison Experience was a two-month process for Ernest and Pickard. To get as inclusive and fluid a story as possible, the two writers drew from a variety of sources on the facts and folklore of that pivotal day. Cash had apparently grown tired of the usual recording process inside a studio, so his band suggested a live concert taped inside a prison. As an added dimension to the stage production, Ernest and Pickard incorporated songs from 1969’s At San Quentin, Cash’s second live-in-a-prison album, which was another commercial and critical success.

Folsom Prison Experience coupled with the recent Church of Cash album release, Flowers for June, speak volumes about the power that Johnny Cash still holds over the collective consciousness. And, consequently, both projects firmly plant Jay Ernest and Church of Cash as today’s proud champions of the Cash legacy.