
A FLOWER SHOP BECAME A THEATER. A CITY BECAME THE STORY.
In a city once marked as a national flashpoint, an immersive production of, Little Shop of Horrors offered a radical, joyful reimagining of what theater can be.
Three weeks ago in downtown Kenosha, Wisconsin, something extraordinary happened. KAPA Repertory Theatre, in its inaugural season, staged a three-night only engagement of Little Shop of Horrors — not in a traditional venue, but inside Equinox Botanical Boutique, a thriving small business celebrating 25 years in the community. The result was more than a production. It was a vision for how theater can reclaim space, uplift neighborhoods, and help rewrite a city’s story.

Five years ago, Kenosha was thrust into the national spotlight amid unrest, pain, and public reckoning. Returning now with a piece of musical theater wasn’t just unexpected. It was transformational. And people noticed. Clips, photos, and behind-the-scenes moments from the production have been shared online hundreds of thousands of times. This sparked conversation across platforms about how theater can thrive in nontraditional spaces and meaningfully engage with community.
Little Shop of Horrors was directed by University of North Carolina School of the Arts graduate Braxton Molinaro. Conceived as more than a production — it was a transformation. In a theatrical landscape energized by visionary directors like Jamie Lloyd’s Sunset Boulevard and Daniel Fish’s Oklahoma!, this immersive site-specific production brought heavyweight energy and fresh vision — not just to Kenosha, but to American theater at large.
“Theatre, when it’s working, doesn’t just reflect life,” said Molinaro. “It reorganizes our understanding of where beauty, power, and possibility can live.”
ABOUT KAPA REP
KAPA Repertory Theatre (KAPA REP) is a new initiative from the Kenosha Academy of Performing Arts in Wisconsin. It aims to unite the community through immersive, high-quality theater productions. Their inaugural season in 2025 includes “Stuart Little” at the Ralph J. Houghton Performance Center and an immersive “Little Shop of Horrors” at Equinox botanical boutique.
Photos credit: Dylan Fout: KAPA Repertory Theatre’s production of LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS.
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