Erich March
Erich March (Courtesy of e. March Productions)

When local residents and those that know the March family think of tombs, itโ€™s a given that the clansโ€™ line of funeral homes would immediately come to mind.

Now, Erich March seeks to bring another meaning to tomb โ€” one held most sacred by many โ€” in the form of a stage play that heโ€™s produced through his March Productions company.

โ€œBeing in the funeral business, I tried to imagine what it would have been like to attend Jesusโ€™ funeral, if he had had one,โ€ said March, whose family has owned and operated the March Funeral Homes in Baltimore for more than a half-century. โ€œWho would be there and why? What would be said about him publicly and whispered quietly?โ€

On April 7 and 8, March brings his gospel musical โ€œIn the Tomb: The Resurrection from the Inside Out,โ€ which features actor and Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity member Ken Alston Jr. and opera singer and Phi Beta Sigma fraternity member Robert L. Cooper.

The three-show engagement at the Harry and Jeannette Weinberg Auditorium on the campus of Mercy High School has been billed as the first stage play of its kind to give a voice to Jesusโ€™s closest followers and those who would be responsible for his death.

Written by March and directed by LaSonia King with musical director Bishop John Washington, โ€œIn the Tombโ€ takes audiences on a journey into the past to understand those closest to Jesus as they cope with his death and ultimately learn the power of Godโ€™s love, March said.

โ€œThe play is true to the Bible, in that the characters are true to their roles in the story of the death and Resurrection,โ€ he said. โ€œEach character has a story to tell and a song to sing.โ€

However, they all gather in the tomb of Jesus, thus the title. Some are there to mourn his death, but some are there to make sure heโ€™s dead, March noted.

A funeral director for 45 years, March said heโ€™s always been a writer and took creative writing in college. He wrote for and edited a community newsletter while in school, and heโ€™s written published articles in funeral industry journals and local newspapers.

โ€œThe gospel musical, โ€˜In the Tomb,โ€™ I wrote the play and most of the lyrics,โ€ he said. โ€œI collaborated with a very talented composer, by the name of Bishop John D. Washington, to create spirit-filled gospel.

โ€œIn my line of work and the emotions I encounter every day, I try to channel a lot of the human condition into my creative relief,โ€ March said. โ€œMy faith is a big influence.โ€

March noted that itโ€™s the second time the play will hit the stage in Baltimore.

โ€œI am committed to Baltimore, we have a lot of talent here, especially talented young people that need to find support and encouragement,โ€ he said.

The production is โ€œBroadway qualityโ€ and the crew will take it on tour, March said.

โ€œIn two sentences, โ€˜In the Tombโ€™ will make you cry, laugh and give God praise,โ€ he said.
โ€œIt will give you hope.โ€

For tickets and schedules for โ€œIn the Tomb,โ€ visit www.inthetomb.com.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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