Chicago Theatre Review
The Blank Theatre’s Sweet Charity is a Ray of Brightly Colored Sunshine.

SWEET CHARITY, written, directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse for Gwen Verdon, made it’s Broadway debut in 1966, and garnered several Tonies. When watching the joyful, silly, brightly colored confection that is the Blank Theatre Company’s production at The Greenhouse Theater Center, its roots as a show conceived by a dancer are easy to see.
The story follows the adventures of Charity Hope Valentine, optimistic dance-hall hostess (or taxi-dancer) with a heart of gold, as she searches for love in New York City. Taxi dancing first appeared in taxi-dance halls in the early 20th century in the United States, in them, male patrons typically bought dance tickets for a small sum each. When a patron presented a ticket to a chosen taxi dancer, she danced with him for the length of a song and earned a commission on every dance ticket she received. Fosse based the musical on the 1957 Italian film, Nights of Cabiria – about a sex worker looking for love, but I’m guessing that was a bridge too far for 1960s era Broadway. It is heavily coded in SWEET CHARITY, however, that the jump from taxi-dancer to sex worker isn’t very far, and it’s interesting to see what has and hasn’t changed much in the 60 or so years since it debuted.

Charity herself is played with a big, bubbly smile by Teah Kiang Mirabelli. The show opens with a hopeful, energetic number, before her dirt-bag boyfriend betrays her. She takes her sorrows to work, and her friends and co-workers give her tough love, which moves into one of the most famous numbers of the show: Hey Big Spender. This is also when the production begins to shine. I suppose it should be no surprise that a show conceived by a dancer would have wonderful, expressive dance numbers, but it was a surprise at just how great this ensemble carried it off. It’s a difficult thing to find dancers who can sing, and vice versa. Director McKenzie Miller uses each player perfectly, creating a beautiful, ever-changing whirlwind of characters. Choreographer Lauryn Schmelzer must have memorized the exact width and depth of the stage, because the dancers move across it with a precision and fluidity that are captivating. The design team of Cindy Moon as costume design, Amy Gillman scenic design, Ellie Humphrys lighting design and Abby Gillette on props also do a wonderful job of creating a slightly psychedelic, cheerful environment, just shy of too much. The use of pop-signs to move the action along was not only funny, but made the show feel modern – like the show had a plot-driven comments section.

Given the 14 member cast, everyone has a ton to do, and everyone does it well. Special mention must go to Damondre Green, who plays an absolutely electric cult leader and Kelcy Taylor and India Huy, who play Charity’s besties Nickie and Helene. Eldon Warner Soriano also plays a very convincing Italian movie star and Dustin Rothbart is a lovable nerd as Oscar.
The best moments were the ensemble dance numbers. It was impossible not to smile through the silly, rhythmic, absolutely-attitude-packed pieces. They all concluded to well-deserved, wild applause. Mirabelli’s Charity is a funny, self-deprecating clown who just wants to love, and has a capacity for optimism and a bright smile that is almost superhuman, but in a life punctuated by epic dance numbers, wouldn’t you be too? You won’t find a more fun evening than one spent with The Blank Theatre Company.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
SWEET CHARITY runs May 9th – June 8th at The Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N Lincoln, Chicago, IL 60614 in Lincoln Park. Tickets range from $15-35. Additional information is available at www.blanktheatrecompany.org.
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Allowing Technology to Take Over
The Antiquities
In Jordan Harrison’s new 90-minute drama, the audience pays a visit to the past, the present and an imagined future. It’s not an easy journey. Two narrators greet the audience and tell us that we’re in a museum of artifacts. In bitesize vignettes of varying lengths. There we begin our trip through time in England in 1816. Around a campfire, we’re observing a blossoming new writer, Mary Shelley. She’s about to accept a challenge from her nighttime companions to come up with a scary ghost story to entertain the party. We’ll return to this scene again later at the end of the play to see how her story of Dr. Frankenstein, “the modern Prometheus” who brought us fire, will turn out.
Read MoreA Rossum’s Universal Robots Reboot
R.U.R.
In 1920, Czech writer, journalist, critic and playwright Karel Capek wrote a play that would become the forerunner of so many modern-day film classics, such as “Metropolis,” “Star Wars,” “2001: A Space Odyssey,” “The Terminator” and the animated movie, “Wall-E.” In imagining a future where robots become the world’s workers, Capek’s play warned of both the wonders and dangers of creating humanoid machines powered by artificial intelligence. His R.U.R., which stands for Rossum’s Universal Robots, was a dark, three-act science fiction melodrama that introduced the word “Robot” into the English language. The word was derived from “robota,” a Czech word meaning “forced labor.” Set in a dystopian future, Karel Capek was telling audiences to beware of letting science and technology get out of hand.
Read MoreRadiant!
Charlotte’s Web
Long before Harry Potter took over the bookshelves as the world’s favorite novels, author E.B. White wrote this beloved, heartwarming story about what it means to be a true friend. The 1952 classic that continues to be the favorite children’s book of all time (and has a place in the heart of every adult who’s familiar with it) is currently a family-oriented theatrical event, now playing at the Greenhouse Theater Center. With its easy-going style, its recollections of a simpler time when rope swings, the smell of newly-baled hay and the thrill of a county fair filled a child’s life, this story of the unlikely bond between a runt pig and a gray barn spider speaks to the heart. White knew how to capture the heart and warm the soul within a simple sentence or two. This translates flawlessly to the stage in a “terrific, humble, absolutely radiant” new production, presented by the Young People’s Theatre of Chicago.
Read MoreMagical and Majestic
Cats
It’s said that every cat has nine lives. Well, that must be true because Andrew Lloyd Webber’s whimsical musical from the 1980’s seems to continually get a new life. And the flamboyant feline fantasy has once again been reborn in Chicagoland. Filled with excellent singing, exceptional dancing, extraordinary feats of magic and exhilarating acrobatic and aerial work, this 1983 multi-Tony Award winner bursts onto the Paramount stage for a second time. By the way, this is the only show that Paramount has ever presented more than once. But even if theatergoers have seen CATS before, including Paramount’s exciting original presentation eleven years ago, this new production will absolutely amaze and delight audiences of all ages. It’s truly unique and far, far more spectacular than any I’ve ever seen. And, like all of Paramount’s musicals and plays, this reimagining of CATS is as professionally produced and performed as anything on Broadway.
Read MoreThe Second City keeps its promises and absolutely slaps.

Ingle, Bill Letz. Photo by: Timothy M. Schmidt.
The Second City began as a small comedy cabaret in Chicago in 1959. In the more than sixty years since, it has grown to become one of the most famous comedy venues in the country. This Too Shall Slap, is the 113th Mainstage Production by the team there, and proof that age is just a number.
A two-hour sketch comedy show, bursting with musical numbers, bits as short as a minute and extended sketches, the time absolutely flies by. The set is colorful but simple, and costumes are minimal. This gives the ensemble, with the help of light and musical cues, to grab the audiences attention and keep it for the entire run. “Comedic whiplash” is an appropriate way to describe the absolute sonic speed with which the players fly through their scenes. The thing about a sketch comedy show like this, as opposed to New York City institution SNL, is that it was developed in tandem with the performers and director, rehearsed and planned and will be performed, and still more honed into perfection for many more week. It makes for a polished, controlled experience, without any visible strings being pulled.

Timothy M. Schmidt.
The ensemble is a seamless team, each playing to their strengths. Several of the cast have unexpectedly good singing voices and each get a moment or two to shine, there were also several dance numbers that were frankly joyous. Adonis Holmes has that unique ability to stay grounded and relatable, no matter how far outside the bounds of normal behavior his characters seem to stray, for example when he loses his cool in an anger management workshop and devolves to wordless, high-pitched screaming. Jordan Stafford has the perfect gangly grace to abruptly appear in a teacher’s lounge to dance his goodbye since the school has cut all arts or become so angry he becomes Spider Man. Leila Gorstein commits to her roles, whether as a nutso meditation teacher or an unhinged bodybuilder with an intensity that is as formidable as it is hilarious. Hanna Ingle has a bouncy energy that played to great effect in a sketch sending up a Paula Dean –type character. Bill Letz often leans into the role of midwestern neighbor next door perfectly, except for when he’s a terrifying waiter with supernatural powers.
The sketches themselves run from silly to razer sharp commentary. This ensemble is not afraid to make a statement and the show manages to be bitingly political while dancing lightly over any accusation of heavy-handedness. I had the luck to be sitting between a group of middle-school boys and a group of senior citizens, and both groups spent the evening howling with laughter. That is an impressively tight line to walk, but the ensemble made it look effortless.

My favorite sketches were a musical number reminiscent of Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation – except it was about an Autocratic one. There was also a running gag begun by a well-meaning school nurse who’s only solution to illness, injury or sadness is Gatorade. The jokes and call backs are thread effortlessly through the night; there were some gags so irresistible that the audience was joining in by the end. The whole thing builds to a ridiculous climax which, appropriately, closes with a dance number. There was a spontaneous, and well deserved, standing ovation.
It helps that the staff at Second City is attentive and polite, and the place itself is run like the well-oiled machine that it is. This show is a reminder of the power and importance of the arts (comedic especially) when the world seems to have lost its mind. If you are looking for a night that is seamlessly funny, topical and cathartic, this is the show for you.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
This Too Shall Slap plays Tuesday – Thursday at 8pm, Friday – Sunday 7pm and Fridays and Saturdays 10pm. Located at 1616 N. Wells St. Chicago. Tickets start at $29 and are available at The Second City Box Office, by phone at 312-337-3992 or online at www.secondcity.com.
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Love, Loss and a Sweet Little Bulldog
Gorgeous
Jenny is a nurse who has provided home care to an older man named Bill. We’re led to believe that through the mutual concern, tenderness and trust that flowed between Bill and Jenny, a fondness, perhaps even love, evolved. But Bill has recently passed away and Jenny has understood that his house will now be hers. While sorting through a lifetime of Bill’s accumulated treasures that have been stored away in the garage, Jenny is startled by the sudden, unexpected arrival of a loud, outgoing older woman named Bernie. And that’s when the fun begins.
Read MoreYou Gotta Have Friends
Art
Serge is a very successful Parisian dermatologist who enjoys many of the finer things that life has to offer. To some people, he might be considered an intellectual snob, but to his two besties, Marc and Yvan, he’s simply their friend. Although each of the three men have a great deal in common, theirs is often a veritable love/hate relationship. The plot revolves around Serge having just purchased a large and controversial, all-white painting for an obscene price. Serge is pleased with and proud of his investment. Marc, however, is appalled by his friend’s frivolous acquisition, while Yvan tries to appease both his friends by remaining neutral. Their differences of opinion, while analyzing the nature of art, lead to heated discussions and passionate arguments. Eventually the confrontation turns outright physical. While not an olive branch, a bowl of olives is offered as a gesture of peace, and a kind of reconciliation takes place. Because, as Bette Midler sang, “You Gotta Have Friends.”
Read MoreImmersive meets the absurd in The Terror Cotta’s THE OSTRICH

Photo by Steve Townshend | Distant Era
The Terror Cottas is an experimental playwright-driven theatre group, and the historic North Mansion in Berger Park serves as an experimental theater for playwright Wendy A. Schmidt’s The Ostrich. The play is an absurdist, immersive experience that involves the Wright Brothers’ inexplicably living out of time and their collision with a small town called Ostrich, that has, perhaps unsurprisingly, a collective love of ostriches.
It opens on the front stoop of the mansion, where the mayor, Incandescence Groane, played with warmth by Shellie DiSalvo, announces that her beloved town of Ostrich, Indiana has been chosen by none other than the Wright Brothers to be the site of a new airstrip. The townspeople are all delighted at this sign of Progress, and even more delighted when the Wright Brothers themselves (Pete Wood and Donaldson Cardenas) arrive to give a speech, as if they’d just walked out of 1915 and onto the stage. Wood and Cardenas do a great turn as old-timey gentlemen. Wood is grandiose and cheerful, sporting an “evil” curled mustache, and Cardenas is a deceptively gentle mastermind. Once the announcement is made, the audience is invited into the house. The action unfolds mostly in the three main rooms of the home. The front room is appropriately covered in kitschy ostrich-themed art, as it is The Ostrich Feather, a bed and breakfast run by the mayor, while the other rooms serve as whatever the scene calls for, be it an airplane, a park, a beach or a front porch.

Photo by Steve Townshend | Distant Era
Each scene takes place in a different room – the audience is directed to each new scene by a tour guide. This makes for a new meaning to the term theater in the round, since every scene is viewed from a different angle, and the actors walk in and out, and even occasionally interact with the audience as if they are fellow townspeople. The plot is relatively straightforward, once you grasp that the Wright Brothers somehow exist as men of the early 19th century in a town that has Amazon, HBO and woman-owned businesses. The Wright Brothers have been given carte blanche by the residents of Ostrich to choose land for their airfield – a thing everyone is convinced will put sleepy, quaint little Ostrich on the map. The brothers choose a back field belonging to Chuck (Jorge Salas), the brother of Incandescence and an unflappably cheerful guy. Unfortunately for Chuck, he had plans for that field – and it holds a tree shaped like an ostrich, the town’s pride and joy.
The misfortune doesn’t stop there. This play is about the destructive power of blind faith in progress. Each town member pays an increasing cost to welcome the Wright Brothers in and in the end, all they do is lose. There are some unexpected twists and turns as the story gets darker, with one huge, hilarious departure near the middle when the townspeople put on a play about Thanksgiving that somehow becomes a gun fight between Christopher Columbus and two self-important eagles (played by the very game ensemble members Ellen Adalaide and Jonathan Crabtree). After an evening of increasing silliness and a mounting feeling of unease regarding the Brother’s motives, the ending is a little abrupt – in fact, applause in the outer room was how we knew the show had ended at all. This led to a feeling of discomfort that I suspect was the playwright’s goal all along.

Photo by Steve Townshend | Distant Era
The combination of absurdity, surrealism and walking from room to room makes for a memorable evening. Experimental theater, according to the Terror Cottas, should: challenge audiences to think about life and themselves in a different way, expand the possibilities of the medium to keep it fresh and effective, speak to audiences of their particular moment in time in a way that artistic work from the past cannot, and nurture the audience’s ability to experience their present reality aesthetically, as opposed to experiences approved for inclusion in museums or histories. Frankly, The Ostrich does just that. If you’re looking for an evening of experimental theater that doesn’t involve sitting still for a few hours, this show is a great place to start.
Somewhat Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
May 2 – 17 at the Berger Park’s North Mansion, 6205 N.Sheridan. Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:00pm. Run time is 100 minutes with no intermission. There is an Industry performance on Monday, May 12 at 7 p.m. Tickets are on sale for $5 – $10 at www.TheTerrorCottas.org
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
The Course of True Love
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Did you know that, in addition to being a prolific poet, actor and theatrical director/producer, the Elizabethan playwright William Shakespeare wrote 37 plays? And among his dramas, histories and comedies, A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM is quite possibly still the hands-down favorite today. It probably earned its high berth on the Bard’s hit parade because of all the high-spirited hijinks that fill the stage. Certainly that’s true in BrightSide Theatre’s current campy, comic production, adapted and Directed by talented guest artist, Jason Harrington. His production is filled with slapstick and silliness, buffoonery and burlesque, physical humor and pure ridiculousness. Only a production of the Bard’s A COMEDY OF ERRORS would come off with such absurd nonsense and horseplay.
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