A murder scene, a muse, a den of iniquity 鈥 the Chelsea Hotel was many things to all manner of musicians, writers and other creative types throughout the 鈥60s and 鈥70s.
For Leonard Cohen, the New York City landmark was a place to reconcile his voracious love life and his future career path.
How Cohen navigated the nuances of his life at the time gets the theatrical treatment starting Saturday, March 17, as the Firehall Arts Centre rolls out Chelsea Hotel: The Songs of Leonard Cohen to mark the venue鈥檚 35th anniversary.
Having debuted in 2012, the show鈥檚 run has stretched over more than 230 performances and Vancouver鈥檚 Ben Elliott has been on stage for every one of them.
鈥淟eonard Cohen is kind of like Shakespeare in a way, so there鈥檚 always new stuff to explore and discover with him,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淎nd people love him, so it never hurts to go back and do a show that you can tell is part of something really special.鈥
The show鈥檚 plotline follows a writer 鈥 not intended to be Cohen, but loosely based on him 鈥 who鈥檚 coming to grips with lost loves and lost inspiration. Elliott plays the role of a hotel bellhop and the writer鈥檚 inner mind, a place that鈥檚 inhabited by turmoil, regret and contradiction.
鈥淗e has to go through each [relationship] and discover what he loved about that person and why it ended until he can come terms to with what鈥檚 blocking him in the inside,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淚鈥檓 there to guide him, to cajole him and to punish and bully him into facing the things he doesn鈥檛 want to face.鈥
The setting itself is the stuff of legend. The bohemian, anything-goes-setting was once home to the likes of Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Mark Twain and Charles Bukowski. Nancy Spungen, girlfriend of Sid Vicious of the Sex Pistols, was found stabbed to death in the hotel in October 1978.
Cohen鈥檚 tumultuous tenure at the hotel is conveyed in the show through a blend of music, dance, poetry and theatre spanning six artists playing 17 different instruments.
And despite the seemingly depressing tone of the plot, the show apparently gets the crowd all sorts of worked up. Patrons were none too shy about making out with each other outside the theatre when it debuted in 2012.
鈥淲e go to music or poetry as a sort of balm to our heart,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淲hen I listen to Cohen, I鈥檓 nodding my head constantly thinking to myself, 鈥榊up, been there, done that.鈥 The man really understood love, both in the good and the bad.鈥
Chelsea Hotel: The Songs of Leonard Cohen runs March 17 to April 21. Tickets are $25 and available online at .