Chicago Theatre Review
Compañia de Teatro Físico’s LOS REGALOS at the Dance Center and Physical Theater Festival Chicago.

Physical Theater Festival Chicago is curated collection of live performances from around the world, meant to inspire theatergoers and local artists to reimagine what a live theater experience can be and do across cultures, languages, and genres. Now in its 13th year, the festival was founded to introduce a more progressive, physical approach to theater-making in Chicago. The festival showcases award-winning, ensemble-created works spanning traditions such as clown, mime, improv, puppetry, object theater, circus, dance, and street performance, while also highlighting outstanding artists and companies from Chicago.
Last Night, I was lucky to catch COMPAÑIA DE TEATRO’S (The Physical Theater Company) LOS REGALOS (The Gifts). The company is from Peru, where it was founded in 2014 with the goal to create stage works using languages that speak from the body and for the body.
LOS REGALOS tells the story of a family. A single father and his two sons grow up, grow apart, and grow old together. All the performers wore masks reminiscent of Commedia del arte or Japanese Noh, leaving them to emote, express and communicate only through their bodies. It’s a powerful, visceral experience, to follow a story filled with passion in which no one has a face.
It is a cast of three: Miquel De La Rocha plays the Father with an easy grace. His thoughts play out over his body so expressively, I soon forgot his mask. Diego Sakuray plays the Youngest Son with an explosive, physically stunning performance including pratfalls so realistic, I found myself wondering how they were achieved without special affects (virtuosity is the answer). Sakuray whips seamlessly from frantic child, to toddling babe, to family dog with an effortlessness that must be seen to be believed. Eduardo Cardozo, one of the founders of the company along with Diego Sakuray and Director Fernando Castro, plays the Oldest Son. Cardozo’s Son is a frustrated, solid sort. You get the impression that he is always straining for attention, meaning, and love.
A special mention must also be made of the beautiful set and media component of the experience. The stage is draped in huge, linen swaths; props are carried on and off by the actors. Chalk-like line drawings build and change behind them, reflecting their home, their hearth, or telling part of their story. The drawings are as minimalistic and expressive as the actors are in their simple, beige linen. The muted color and soft, yellow light create an atmosphere of emotional expression that is wholly engrossing and carried the audience with them on their journey through life.
The summary of the show in English is:
“A father and his two sons live in a house. The most routine tasks, such as preparing breakfast, bathing or housework t urn into real adventures when tackled by three inexperienced men and their fear of not knowing what they are doing. The journey that. The elder brothers needs to make in order to leave home, and the fear of saying goodbye to the ones we love, will be the starting point of our story.” The Spanish description suggests that when the elder brother prepares to leave home, his younger brother and father need to learn to communicate.
Neither summary reflects the performance I attended. This is the story of a family over time, told in tight little chapters that jump through time. In each vignette, they argue, play, battle and come to solutions. Circumstances change, sometimes, they even flip completely, as each individual takes a turn as a caregiver, protector, antagonizer or ally. They are always communicating with their bodies, both to each other and to the audience. This performance is wholly in keeping with the goal of the theater festival. It tells a story, through live theater, in a way that is unique, compelling and powerful. Be sure to check it out.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
LOS REGALOS is at The Dance Center at Columbia College Friday, June 5 at 8:00pm, and Saturday, June 6 at 2:00pm and 6:00pm. Run time is 60 minutes. Tickets for LOS REGALOS and the rest of the Physical Theater Festival can be found at: https://www.theaterwit.org/tickets/productions/box_office
To learn more about Physical Theater Festival Chicago, click here: https://www.physicalfestival.com/about
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Miles and Miles of Heart
Damn Yankees
To paraphrase the pullout hit song from this charming and moving musical comedy, world famous actors we haven’t got; loads of splashy scenery, we haven’t got; dazzling special effects, we haven’t got. What’ve we got? We’ve got heart! Miles and miles ’n miles o’ heart! Because, while there’s so much to recommend in this tuneful finale of Theo Ubique’s 29th season, it’s the heart of this production—miles and miles and miles of Heart—that is the super power and the secret sauce behind this pleasurable production.
Read MoreTuta Theatre’s Crime and Punishment seeks resurrection from the dirt.
TUTA Theatre, ever fearless and resourceful, went with a particularly topical play this summer: an adaptation of Dostoevsky’s CRIME AND PUNISHMENT by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus. This adaptation premiered at Writers Theater in 2003 and has enjoyed over 100 productions across the country and internationally from Europe to Australia and Indonesia.
You may be asking yourself why a 160+ year old story of impoverished student Raskolnikov and his twisted, grandiose theories of life and morality could still be so compelling to so many audiences around the world. The answer is, as with all the classics, the questions Raskolnikov is asking and trying to answer, are still being asked and answered today. Even more chilling, Imperialist Russia does not seem so different from 2026 America – rising prices, a poor job market and unsustainable rents sound familiar?

Raskolnikov is an intelligent, sensitive, down on his luck student. He came to the capital riding on the hopes and dreams of his family to make something of himself, but soon found law school unaffordable, and has since been sinking ever deeper into poverty and debt, paralyzed and horrified at the thought of admitting his failures. He’s also the sort of kid who is often the smartest in the room, and, after one too many days alone with his own thoughts, has developed a theory that humans can be categorized into two types: the ordinary and the extraordinary. If someone is extraordinary, then the usual things like law and order, or morality, don’t apply to them. It’s no surprise really, that he finds himself to be in that second group. After talking himself up, and skipping one too many meals, Raskolnikov decides to put his theory to the test, you know, to help mankind by removing an “obstacle” (in the form of a nasty old lady). The reality of his actions quickly leaves him horrified, and he is ushered along his desperate descent into misery by Inspector Porfiry, who decides to play a little with him, to see if he can get a confession.

The cast is made up of three actors: Associated Company Members Clifton Frei as Raskolnikov and Felix as Sonia, and Company Member Huy Nguyen as Porfiry. Frei spends the majority of the play front and center, unravelling in the literal muck as the minutes tick by. Nguyen and Felix weave in and out of his misery, sometimes playing other, minor characters. All of the actors are admirably focused and present, given the tiny theater and minimalist staging. Frei is appropriately haunted, leaning into Raskolnikov’s desperation and misery with all he has. Nguyen, as a deceptively friendly Porfiry gives the impression of a spider encircling its prey, and as Sonia’s drunken father, a broken hearted, beaten man. Felix plays all the female characters, each markedly different. Her turn as Sonia strikes a cool note every time she comes onstage, with an otherworldly, soft voice that changes the atmosphere the minute she opens her mouth.
TUTA Co-Artistic Director, and Director of this production, Jacqueline Stone, made the wise choice to strip the atmosphere as efficiently and powerfully as the adaptors did the novel. The staging itself, is in fact, one of the most powerful aspects of this production. The production team of Set Designers Tatiana Kahvegian and Keith Parham (who also doubles on light design) and Sound Designer Stefanie Senior have created a set that seems to be an outward expression of a devolving mind. The stage is a raised bed of dirt, the walls around it draped in plastic sheeting with the occasional violent looking slit, that fades off into a hallway. Frei spends the brisk, 90 minutes barefoot, groveling in the dirt and growing increasingly filthy, while Nguyen and Felix walk gently across it, supporting, supplicating or goading Raskolnikov as their characters demand. The sound does a lot of the heavy lifting too, taking the audience in and out of rooms and conversations, while the stage never changes – and Raskolnikov never escapes it, one cannot escape one’s own mind, after all.

Most unsettling of all was the creeping sensation, as the story unfolds, that nearly everything the audience witnesses could happen, even is happening, today. Unfortunately for most of us, the types who are currently acting on their ideas of superiority have significantly more resources and power than poor Raskolnikov. Ultimately though, the story of Crime and Punishment is one of the inevitability of morality. No matter how hard we may try to talk ourselves out of our basic humanity, this production seems to say, it never leaves us. It can be a thorn in our sides, causing pain till it is recognized, or in the case of Sonia, a solid foundation that keeps us grounded in the nuanced reality of existence, and in the belief that we are all capable of change, remorse and even resurrection.
Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT is at Tuta Theatre, 4670 N Manor Ave in Chicago. May 11 – June 28, 2026 Thursdays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, and Sundays at 3:00 pm
Pay-what-you-choose reservations available for $20, $45, $60, $100, available at
https://www.tutatheatre.org/crime-punishment-reservations Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
A Swashbuckling Musical
Scaramouche
Quite likely the only recollection anyone has today of the name Scaramouche is from the 1975 song, “Bohemian Rhapsody,” by the British rock band, Queen. And for a minute there was Anthony Scaramucci, the White House communications director during Trump’s first term. But Scaramouche has a much longer history. He was one of several recognized, archetypical masked characters found in 16th-18th century comic theatrical productions. This stylized form of improvised professional theatre was called commedia dell’arte. Similar to Pierrot, Colombine and Harlequin, Scaramouche was a cunning, roguish servant character, usually costumed all in black with a white ruff. The actor portraying Scaramouche was often skilled in swordplay, which inspires this show’s description “a swashbuckling musical.”
Read MoreAlways Look on the Bright Side of Life
Monty Python’s Spamalot
Hilarious, goofy, nonstop mindless adult humor! Fantastic performances by a cast of gifted actors, singers and dancers all blessed with excellent comic timing, tireless energy and contagious enthusiasm! A musical stuffed with beautiful, catchy songs, wild choreography, gorgeous sets embellished with colorful lighting and imaginative projections, props and costumes! And, after two-and-a-half hours of giddy glee, the audience leaves the theatre with huge smiles on their faces. What’s not to like? It’s Monty Python’s SPAMALOT!
Read MoreHookman
In this play, described by its author Lauren Yee as an ‘existential slasher comedy,’ Lexi is a college freshman returning to school after break. She is also returning after the death of her friend Jess in car accident in which Lexi was driving. Her guilt and trauma become wrapped up in a local legend of the ‘Hookman,’ a psycho killer with a hook for a hand, stalking her. I don’t want to say too much more than that since I think this is one of those stories you just need to see for yourself.
Read MoreA Weekend in the Woods
The Targeted
Bringing their impressive 33rd season to a fine finale, A Red Orchid Theatre presents a powerful world premiere drama. It’s a story with so many locations that the company chose to present the production at the larger Chopin Theatre, rather than in their own intimate space on Wells Street. Scenic designer Lauren M. Nichols rises to the occasion by creating a large, practical stage set featuring an outdoor amphitheater with bench seats for the cast that brings the audience right into the play. She’s also created the interior of two cabins, complete with bunkbeds, as well as a cafeteria where guests gather for meals, craft sessions, discussions and lectures. It’s all part of a weekend in the woods with THE TARGETED.
Read MoreThe St. Olaf Way
The Golden Girls: The Cheese Pyramid
Since I’ve been such a fan for so long, it’s hard to believe that Hell in a Handbag Productions has been entertaining Chicago audiences now for a quarter of a century of fun! David Cerda’a delightful company of actors, often appearing in drag, have presented a number of original entertainments, most of them parodies of movies, plays and TV shows that are familiar to many theatergoers. One of Handbag’s most popular tropes is THE GOLDEN GIRLS: THE LOST EPISODES. This gives Artistic Director, playwright and actor, David Cerda, a wide range of possible plot lines and an endless supply of comic characters and situations to explore.
Read MoreKicking and Screaming
An Enemy of the People
Imagine attending a classic play by one of drama’s most respected and brilliant international playwrights, and finding that the production is as surprisingly au courant as today’s headlines. But that’s the sign of a genius, and from another century, who’s written a great play that’s stood the test of time. And TimeLine Theatre’s brand new version of AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE, adapted by Amy Herzog (MARY JANE, 4000 MILES, BELLEVILLE), is so timely that many theatergoers will think that it must’ve been written yesterday. And this extraordinary TimeLine Theatre production effectively drags Henrik Ibsen’s Victorian Era social drama kicking and screaming into the twenty-first century.
Read MoreDo You Hear the People Sing?
Les Miserables
Once again making a welcome return to Chicago, longtime fans of LES MISERABLES, as well as brand new audiences, will have another opportunity to enjoy this refreshed, updated production, but only for the next two weeks. Billed as “the final tour,” the production is based upon the most recent Broadway revival. Co-directors Laurence Connor and James Powell have beautifully guided and creatively restaged this new National Tour version. The production features a beautifully reimagined scenic design by Matt Kinley. Inspired by the paintings of Victor Hugo, the show’s stunning, towering sets, with projections by Finn Ross and Fifty-Nine Productions, sometimes feel almost cinematic. Gorgeously enhanced by Paul Constable’s luminous lighting and a phenomenal surround-sound design, courtesy of Mick Potter, makes this production dazzling to all the senses.
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