The opening of âSaga: A New Nordic Musicalâ on Broadway in Jackson, Wyoming, this week brings something quite unlike anything theatregoers there have ever seen.
Billed as âthe offseason Viking musical you didnât think you needed,â this sweaty Scandinavian epic reimagines Icelandâs hardscrabble beginnings from 874 A.D.
Beautiful set pieces, handmade costumes, songs sung in Old Norse and Icelandic will help bring the enigmatical island to life as it was in the seafaring days when Viking mythology was in its infancy.
Blood feuds, sword fights, nudity? Check.
Hardships, violence, tragedy? Check.
Letâs put it this way: This is decidedly not a staging of âGuys & Dolls.â

Skol, Andrew!
The pioneering musical production breaks new ground â at least for Jackson and Wyoming â bringing all things Nordic to the landlocked Cowboy State. That includes music, food, language and a full immersion in Icelandâs rich history.
Itâs a bold undertaking, especially considering the timing. The nonprofit behind the production, Tumbleweed Creative Arts, is barely six months from securing its nonprofit status. A peek behind that curtain finds a familiar face to Jacksonites â Andrew Munz.
The 36-year-old author-playwright-actor is a rising star on the nightlife scene in Jackson with standup comedy performances morphing into a wildly successful ski town parody play series called âI Can Ski Forever.â
When the pandemic threatened to darken playhouses for live entertainment, Munz took to social media, creating his drag persona Your Girl Catherine and had homebound audiences in stitches with âReal Housewives of Jackson Hole,â a burningly spot-on satire of pinot-toting West Bank (Wilson, Teton Village) trophy wives and their First World problems.
Munz also recently released a coffee table book, âJackson Hole: A Love Letter,â on Wilson Book Gallery Press. Thatâs in addition to his 2020 book âI Can Ski Forever,â award-winning short film "The Ballad of Jackson Hole" in 2022, and numerous accolades and awards locally and statewide.
Munz has become the Taylor Sheridan of Jackson. His name attached to anything virtually guarantees its success. He sold out various shows at Center for the Arts, Mangy Moose and Pink Garter Theater â more than 20,000 tickets in all. And counting. No performer in the area has that kind box office clout.
The mission statement for Tumbleweed Creative Arts is to promote the arts; âTo give local artists the opportunity to share their talents regardless of the genre,â Munz said.
More importantly perhaps, TCA is also playing a crucial fundraising role as Munz strives to provide space to stage a play or foster creativity. Heâs reviving a dormant playhouse, a once-elegant theater that time has passed by as real estate offices and T-shirt shops crowd it out in downtown Jackson.
âI want this space to be as much a home for local artists as it is a home for people who want to support those artists,â Munz said. âWe have a lease for a year. I feel really confident in the longevity of our ultimate residency here in the long term. We need this space in Jackson.â
He said an already robust Jackson arts scene still has plenty of potential.
âWe have organizations in town that present really incredible works â Center for the Arts, Walk Festival Hall,â he said. âGrandiose and beautiful venues that are producing a lot of great work. But in this space, which has traditionally been the home for community theatre in Jackson over the years, Iâm trying to reclaim a bit of that local vibe.â
HĂ€gar The Horrible
For Munz, the production of âSagaâ is a homecoming of sorts to the theater where he first trod the boards as a burgeoning 10-year-old thespian. And to Jackson, where the darling of the valley enjoys a devoted fan base for pretty much anything theatrical he does.
Growing up gay in Wyoming was not easy for Munz. The son of Austrian immigrants left Jackson after high school to study comedy in Chicago with its famed The Second City. After that, he began an on-and-off relationship with his hometown pocked with frequent Scandinavian sojourns.
Munzâs âfinfaringâ travel has taken him abroad numerous times â 11 trips to Iceland in the past 11 years â often staying away for months at a time. He was recently accepted into a prestigious film school in Iceland, but for once Munz put his passport away and said no. He was staying home to be godfather to the rebirth of a dusty old theater.
But for all the familiar there also is the unknown. The Pink Garter Theatre was last used as a live music concert venue for the 12 years before it shut down in 2020. Will ticket buyers flock to the space once it returns to its roots as a community theater?
Better still, will there be an audience for something as weighty, foreign and niche as a Viking musical?

Big Reach
Sagaâs director, Dillon Hanna, calls the work âcomplex.â
âIf you were debuting a theater space you might try opening with something a little easier than this production,â Hanna said. âThere is some kind of magic trick in every scene of this play.
âStrictly from a technical standpoint â the amount of lighting cues, set cues â is a lot, plus music. Also, from a story standpoint, there are inside Icelandic jokes, references to Nordic folklore and nearly all the material deriving from documented historical records regarding the settlement of Iceland that we are trying to make as accurate as possible.â
Munz is a swing-for-the-fence kind of guy. He didnât want to reinvent the wheel with a Western version of âGreaseâ or regurgitate the âSki Foreverâ brand. The first out-of-the-box programming at Pink Garter would be something epic, something that would scream diversity.
âItâs ambitious, but thatâs me,â Munz said. âLook, just because something is unfamiliar doesnât mean you should avoid it. Just because itâs not âSki Forever 6â doesnât mean you shouldnât trust me with theatre and a story I would like to tell.â
Munzâs love for Iceland â a land he says âchanged my chemistryâ at first visit â is something he had to share with Wyoming. And it was important to do it right and steer clear of stereotypes.
âI really want to offer audiences the chance to come learn about this culture and not just get the standardized version of Vikings from a TV show or see a cartoon with horns on a helmet,â Munz said. âThis is a chance for people in Jackson to get out of their comfort zone where they can't just go to NY or LA or Denver to experience this. We are actually building something completely and distinctively original here.â
Sacking And Pillaging
âSagaâ will be more than just the dozen shows this fall. TCA has also planned satellite events to fully immerse Jackson into a Scandinavian folk scene.
What mead does one pair with håkarl (fermented shark)? Is Norse music more Björk or Game of Thrones soundtrack? How to accessorize beyond the LBD, a Fendi bag and requisite Gjermundbu and horns?
Munz admits he needed âa little more cloutâ to feel comfortable about presenting Iceland and its history. While in Iceland, Munz has worked for a chef and a baker, served as a whale watching guide and otherwise transformed himself into a passable local at least conversational in the language.
But âSagaâ had to be as true and entertaining as he could make it.
University of Colorado Nordic studies professor Dr. Mathias Nordvig was brought in to consult. In addition to being the productionâs dramaturge â ensuring actual ancient texts were properly interpreted by playwright Munz â the prof will host several lecture series dates in support of the play.
Ethnomusicologist Jameson Foster serves as âSagaâs" composer. The musical features seven numbers with elaborate choreography (complete with a rotating stage) and actors singing in a language they donât know how to speak. Some 80% of the music in âSagaâ is produced live onstage.
A value-add opening night gala also will include a pre-show feast. Heavy Icelandic appetizers will include kjösĂșpa (lamb soup), plökkfiskur (cod and potato stew), hrĂĄsalat (cabbage & hearts of palm salad), fiskibollur (cod croquettes) and harðfiskur (fish jerky).

Foreign Or Familiar?
Munz was surprised by how familiar Iceland felt to him at first introduction. Thereby, âSagaâ should resonate with many Wyomingites.
âIceland was not so much foreign as familiar to me,â he said. âIt was very much like Wyoming in that it has a volcanic landscape, treeless buttes. A lot like driving through central Wyoming in the spring when everything is green.
âIt has geothermic activity just like Yellowstone. Itâs sparsely populated. Many things that felt like my speed.â
Conversely, the script Munz has written for âSagaâ is filled with aspects of a pioneering spirit, a wanderlust fulfilled,and âfollow your arrowâ destiny seeking.
âFirst and foremost, âSagaâ is a celebration of storytelling, of relatable themes that are universal to mankind from family strife, grief, betrayal and revenge, to lighter comedic moments like how you deal with your coworker, to concepts of ritual and spirituality and mythology,â Munz said.
Director Hanna, who does not share Munzâs Icelandic leanings, provides the productionâs fresh third eye, making sure inside jokes go over and the play isnât bogged down in the history lesson.
âOverall, this is a story about pioneers, but the themes addressed are universal the world over,â Hanna said. âVery relatable and relevant today to a Jackson audience.â

Casting Call
Hanna, 20, had his hands full with casting the novel epic.
âThis show has never been done before. Thereâs no precedent,â Hanna said. âAny character can be anything. Every cast member up here is originating a character, which is kind of cool. Not a lot of actors get to originate roles.â
With no blueprint to follow, most of the 18 actors cast in âSagaâ had no idea what the showâs producers were looking for. Hanna had actors read several sides to âget an idea of who they are and where they flesh out the cast as a whole.â
âThe process was a really unique experience in coordinating ability and personality,â the director added. âWe just tried to figure out how to make best use of the people that showed up saying, âI don't know what this is, but I want to be a part of it.â
âHonoring that has been really fun. Itâs new territory and we are figuring the best way through it with no reference point or map.â
Casting Munz as the showâs star was the only nonnegotiable. He plays the central character IngĂłlfur Arnarson, the first permanent settler of Iceland.
âWe knew I would be playing IngĂłlfur, because Jackson has not seen me do a dramatic role before. Not on this scale,â Munz said.
Despite being voted Jacksonâs âBest Actorâ several years running, the biting satirist has usually played personalities close to home.
âWith the whole best actor thing, itâs appreciated. But I don't think people have really seen me act much,â he said. âThereâs a part of me that wants to immerse myself in a role that feels a bit more meaty,â he said.
Elise Mumford plays Saga, the cryptic seeress who guides IngĂłlfur (Munz) on his journey. IngĂłlfurâs brother Hjörleifur is played by Mason Marshall. Rose Linville is cast as Hjörleifurâs wife Helga.
Raise The Curtain
Show opened Friday and runs through Nov. 11 with performances Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays only with matinee showings on Saturdays.
Running time is 90 minutes with no intermission.
âI didnât want people to return to their electronic rectangles and go back to the real world in some way. I want you are immersed in it,â Munz said.
Recommended for audiences ages 13 and older due to strong violence and brief nudity. Getting tickets in advance is highly suggested.

Jake Nichols can be reached at jake@cowboystatedaily.com.





