The Yard Sale Of Hell House Mind Control Theatre Apr 2026
A masterpiece of psychological folk horror and suburban paranoia. Four stars. Would lose my sense of self again.
(P.S. If you find a snow globe on your nightstand after reading this review, do not open it. Just mail it to the return address on the back of your ticket. They’re still processing returns from the 2023 season. Yes, that timeline.)
You can buy things. That’s the trap.
Halfway through, the show breaks. Intentionally? Unclear. The lights flicker and die. A voice over the PA system—flat, feminine, midwestern—says: “We are experiencing technical difficulties with our reality maintenance subsystem. Please remain seated in your original timeline.”
The Yard Sale of Hell House Mind Control Theatre Venue: The Abandoned Piggly Wiggly, Route 13, Rural Maryland Duration: 3 hours, 15 minutes (felt like a lifetime; also felt like 20 minutes) Rating: ★★★★☆ (Four out of five inverted crosses) the yard sale of hell house mind control theatre
The first room is a living room from 1987. A woman in a floral dress—face frozen in a Stepford smile, eyes twitching slightly—offers you “fresh lemonade.” The lemonade is warm and salty. She does not blink. Behind her, a VCR plays a loop of a man in a lab coat saying, “You are safe. You are loved. You will forget this number: 7. Repeat. You will forget this number.”
Hell House Mind Control Theatre —a legendary, semi-mythical performance collective that emerged from the rust belt noise scene of the late ‘90s—has spent two decades producing what they call “salvation-through-terror immersive rituals.” Their previous shows ( The Electrobaptism of Ronnie DeShawn , Your Neighbor’s Teeth Are Not Your Teeth ) were infamous for their use of actual hypnotists, flickering data-slide projectors, and actors recruited from defunct church haunted houses. A masterpiece of psychological folk horror and suburban
The last booth is labeled A man who may or may not be the actual creator of the show—gray beard, stained cardigan, eyes like two dead stars—asks you one question: “What memory are you willing to trade for peace?”