Chicago Theatre Review

Chicago Theatre Review

Vampy, sexy, and bloody funny: Dracula gets the pulse rising and the laughs rolling

February 13, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors

Get ready to laugh until your sides hurt at the campy sex-capades of this delightful take on the OG vampire story, no sparkles or Sookie needed.

Lazy Susan Theatre Co.’s production of Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors as directed by company member Matthew Masino is frighteningly perfect. In this modern farce with salacious slapstick and a “f*** gender constructs” attitude, the cast channels the best energy of Saturday Night Live and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Every company member is having such fantastic fun; their energy is infectious. Catch this Jeff Recommended show before it flies away!

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Rediscovering Love

February 13, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Come Back Little Sheba

Renowned playwright, novelist and Pulitzer Prize recipient, William Inge was known as the Playwright of the Midwest. His first big Broadway hit during the 1950’s is this story about a frustrated, middle-aged married couple’s resolution to put their troubled past behind them, finally move forward toward a better future and rediscover their love. The drama is a stirring, often sad story about lost youth and shattered dreams. Doc and Lola who, by the end of this play, have sunk as low as they can go, try to salvage a slice of hope from the ruins of the past.

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Stay Gold

February 13, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Outsiders

During puberty, the journey from childhood to adulthood is referred to as a Coming of Age. The adolescent years are filled with self-discovery, personal growth and maturation. For Ponyboy Curtis, his coming of age is just one of the themes explored in the musical, THE OUTSIDERS, now playing at Chicago’s Cadillac Palace Theatre for two weeks. In this powerful and poignant musical adaptation of S.E. Hinton’s classic novel, all of the teenagers who live on different sides of the tracks experience their own, individual, coming of age journey. The musical takes Ponyboy and the others through a loss of innocence, as they overcome difficult challenges and try to navigate their respective roles in society. This is one show, especially geared toward juvenile theatergoers, that should not be missed by anyone!

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Happiness Over Wealth

February 11, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Holiday

Johnny Case, a self-made, 30-something Wall Street lawyer, met Julia Seton at a spiffy health spa in New York City. His visit to the holiday health facility was a gift from his friends for all his hard work and helping them with some fundraising. However, he never expected that a day of luxurious pampering would result in a romance and an engagement to this lovely young woman. What Johnny didn’t realize at the time was that Julia (who was using an assumed surname) was a member of the affluent and legendary Seton clan, one of the wealthiest families in New York City, if not all of America. He doesn’t discover Julia’s real identity until he visits her at the family’s ostentatious Upper Eastside mansion. But when Johnny meets the entire family, including, Edward Seton, the demanding patriarch of the clan, the situation begins to shift.

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Second City is “Black and Highly Flavored” this February and March

February 10, 2026 Reviews No Comments
Tyler Vanduvall, Jillian Ebanks, E.J. Cameron, Jason Tolliver, Lauren Walker, and Kimberly Michelle Vaughn. Photo by Nolis Anderson

The annual Black Excellence Review at the Second City is four years in and has become a great way to spend an evening in the dead of Chicago winter. In a time when light-heartedness has become a radical act, this year’s theme is JOY – while honoring Black artistry, humor, resilience, and community.

Mainstage alumni Julia Morales is the first woman of color to direct a Second City Black Excellence Revue, and she takes Second City’s tried and true formula of long and short-form sketches, musical numbers and improv games to a place with a vibrant, celebratory feel. One of the best aspects of Second City is that the performers always seem to be having a good time, and this show was no exception. Music Director Cesar Romero was particularly involved in this show, and the same could be said for him! He provided emotional tone and even punchlines with sound that felt organic and impromptu – hard to do with music. In one sketch, he was key for the Dance fight through decades of music that was impossible not to dance and sing to, right along with the cast.

As ever with comedy shows, one doesn’t want to give too much away, but my personal favorite sketches were often the ones that dealt with identity, or nostalgia. A repeated sketch was The Crits Family Show, a play on 80s and 90’s era sitcoms, that managed to stay sharp, funny and current while still giving memories of classics like Living Single, Family Matters, and even older shows like Good Times. Another fun one was Two Girls in a Taco Truck, which had a wild time with all of the many ways people can choose to identify – while staying appropriately raunchy.  

Another sketch played with the experience of social awkwardness, and yet another with middle school girls celebrating Black History, but you know, Sexxxxay. Happily, outright silliness was a feature as well, like a sketch about a cat roommate and another involving missing pants that had the audience roaring.

(L-R) Jillian Ebanks, E.J. Cameron, Kimberly Michelle Vaughn, Jason Tolliver, Lauren Walker, Tyler Vanduval

The cast deftly jumped from role to role, keeping the momentum going and using their own, specific talents to great effect. E.J. Cameron channels a spot on professor of history, a crazy old man and a silly, forgetful waiter with such believability, I found myself looking for him in every scene. Jillian Ebanks’ warm smile and welcoming air lent a wholesomeness that wouldn’t seem likely, given the subject of some of the skits. Jason Tolliver has the air of a buttoned up businessman but then busts a dance move with such commitment and enthusiasm that all assumptions fly out the window. Tyler VanDuvall enters every role with a confidence and old-school charm that makes his forays into outright silliness even more entertaining than they would otherwise be. Lauren Walker has total command over her body, disappearing completely into her roles, but also, in a few scenes, using it like a musician would an instrument, or a clown, props. Finally, Kimberly Michelle Vaughn’s obvious formal dance training and total commitment to insanity is used to perfection in a scene about a dance audition.

In case there was any doubt that the cast was having at least as much fun as the audience, they played two more improv games at the end of the show. Their quick wit and good nature made for an interactive night. The audience, it seemed, was yet another cast member. If a night of culture, comedy and camaraderie sounds like a good time, Black and Highly Flavored is where to be.

Highly Recommended

Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia

Black and Highly Flavored runs February 5 – March 20, with performances on Thursdays and Fridays at 8pm in UP Comedy Club, located at 230 W North Ave, 3rd Floor of Piper’s Alley, Chicago. Tickets start at $39 and are available at The Second City Box Office, by phone at 312-337-3992, or online atwww.secondcity.com

Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.


Poor Little Rich Girl

February 9, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Hedda Gabler

It’s always interesting and kind of fun to shake things up a bit, especially with a well-known play. When a time-honored drama is adapted and produced in a fresh, starkly different style, it earns our attention. But when the drama is a groundbreaking classic that’s stood the test of time, a brand new interpretation can be a little risky. If the writer is able to offer new insight into the original work by updating it, then it makes sense to craft a new adaptation. Otherwise, it seems like merely showing off. 

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Heartbreaking and Hopeful

February 9, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Mary Jane

Northlight Theatre’s play for the New Year is about caregiving, friendship and about the fragility of our lives. Evoking endless empathy, Pulitzer Prize-nominated playwright, Susan Herzog creates a powerful portrait of the helpless world for a single mother and her sick child. Both heartbreaking and hopeful, this 100-minute one-act luminously depicts the life of a parent whose life completely changes when she must suddenly center her entire world around a seriously ill infant. This moving drama is about a mother, her fragile little baby and the power of love. Herzog presents all manner of unimaginable complications and challenges that a caregiver must selflessly face. And through their network of generosity and solidarity her new, chosen family offers strength and care for both Mary Jane and baby Alex.

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The Rhythm Is Gonna Get You

February 7, 2026 Reviews No Comments

On Your Feet

Drury Lane’s first production of the New Year is a musical that’s exciting, often heartfelt and filled with pulsating, Latin-infused music and songs that everyone will recognize. The show offers two hours of comedy, drama and pure escape, where we can all enjoy and fall in love with Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine, all over again. It’s also a musical that had its tryout in Chicago, when it premiered back in 2015. This is the first local professional production for Chicagoland audiences and this new version offers some wise script changes, something that most reviewers suggested eleven years ago. But Drury Lane’s production is wonderful, overflowing with infectious rhythms that leave the audience pulsating with a desire to just “Get On Your Feet.” But a warning to every future theatergoer: “The Rhythm is Gonna Get You!”

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Salome at the Lyric Opera is an Unsettling Dream

February 4, 2026 Reviews No Comments

In 1902, Richard Straus saw Oscar Wilde’s Salomé. He went home that night and wrote his opera. It debuted in Dresden just two years later. Audiences were immediately taken with the shocking, salacious story of a homicidally obsessed teenaged girl. One hundred and twenty years later, this dark, uncomfortable show is still packing houses.

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Gender Bias and Racism

February 3, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Confederates

Throughout this mesmerizing, award-winning one-act by Dominique Morisseau (AIN’T TOO PROUD, SUNSET BABY, SKELETON CREW), now playing appropriately during Black History Month, we find that time is fluid. As the play unfolds, we discover ourselves immersed in two gripping stories that focus on gender bias and racism. And this riveting play, set both during the Civil War and in modern day Academia, often defies categorization by genre. In Ms. Morisseau’s play, there are equal elements of comedy and satire balanced by drama and pure surprise.

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