Monthly Archives: September 2019
Love Survives as Opposites Attract
The Pajama Game – Theatre at the Center
For those of us who grew up during the Eisenhower years, the songs from Richard Adler and Jerry Ross’ score provide a blast from our past. Haunting ballads like “Hey There,” as well as sexy, catchy novelty tunes such as “Steam Heat” and “Hernando’s Hideaway,” were all familiar standards often heard on the radio. George Abbott’s dramatic collaboration with author Richard Bissell on his novel, 7 1/2 Cents, turned into 1955’s Tony Award-winning Best Musical. The show has been revived twice on Broadway (the latest 2006 version starred Harry Connick, Jr. and Kellie O’Hara) and has become a staple with regional, community and educational theatres. The reasons are many, as demonstrated in Linda Fortunato’s magnificent production, now playing in Munster.
Read MoreLullaby as Lament
I will fly like a bird – Thompson Street Opera Company
Beginning in Louisville, Kentucky, in 2013, and thriving in Chicago since 2016, the Thompson Street Opera Company continually presents the works of living composers at the highest level of the storefront opera scene. Their season opener this year is no exception. Canadian composer John Plant, with librettist J.A. Wainwright, has created a tone poem of intense feelings of anticipatory joy and poignant sadness around the horror that we see on our television and computer screens every day: Immigrants and the welcoming of refugees gone terribly awry. Skillfully lead by conductor Alexandra Enyart, the orchestra of four strings, piano, and clarinet created not only the textual moments, but the swirls of deep feeling that would carry the stories arc to the next moment where the poetry caught up with the journeys.
Read MoreParamount Once Again Seizes the Day
Newsies – Paramount Theatre
Paramount Theatre has done it again! Opening their new season is Disney’s stage adaptation of their own so-so 1992 cult movie musical of the same name. Taking Broadway by storm when it opened in 2012, “Newsies” went on to play over 1,000 performances before hitting the road in an excellent National Tour. Deservedly this musical earned eight Tony nominations, winning two for its athletic choreography and contemporary score. History promises to repeat itself as this regionally produced musical, now playing to sellout houses at the Paramount Theatre, is once again demonstrating why it’s one of our most highly-respected professional Chicagoland venues.
Read More“Love and Information” with Trap Door Theatre
Trap Door Theatre is currently performing Caryl Churchill’s Love and Information as a part of their 26th season. With direction by Kim McKean and an ensemble of nine performers, the production seeks to analyze how the over-saturation of media has enhanced and weakened modern day relationships between humans. The performance succeeds in presenting this theme with an interesting twist that I will elaborate on later; however, the unfinished framing technique as well as an inconsistent ensemble may leave some audience members uninspired.
Read MoreMembers of an Exclusive Club
Five Presidents – American Blues Theater
Rick Cleveland’s fictionalized docudrama, which is generously laced with comic zingers and one-liners that lighten the subject, imagines a 90-minute get-together between past presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, and the current Leader of the Free World, Bill Clinton. The year is 1994 and the setting is a gathering room in the Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, California, tastefully designed by Grant Sabin and nicely lit by Alexander Ridgers. The occasion for this meeting is the funeral of President Richard Nixon. Even though these five men would’ve greeted each other on this occasion, it’s unlikely that they spent an hour and a half talking together about so many different topics.
Read MoreMasters of Our Fate
Be Here Now – Shattered Globe Theatre
Set in a small town in upstate New York, Bari is a cynical former college professor, who taught a course in nihilism. She’s lowered her standards by working to make ends meet at a chotchke shop that deals in religious souvenirs, that are made in China. She’s suffering from writer’s block when it comes to finishing her dissertation. But she’s also suffering from severe, debilitating headaches that often result in seizures. Bari radiates negativity about everything in life and it deeply troubles her longtime friend and coworker, Patty Cooper, as well as a young, tirelessly optimistic newcomer to the mail order warehouse, Luanne.
Read MoreAnother Trip to the Bright Side of Life
Spamalot – Mercury Theatre
At some point in this hilarious musical, the plot simply goes out the window and unbridled hilarity and bawdy humor takes over the Mercury Theater stage. Eric Idle’s brilliant adaptation of his popular film, “Monty Python and the Holy Grail,” which features an infectious score by both Idle and John DuPrez, won the coveted Tony Award for Best Musical in 2005. The show first hit the boards in its Chicago PreBroadway preview. It went on to become a Big Apple and West End hit, as well as everywhere around the world.
Read MoreTry to Remember When Everything Was Fantastick
The Fantasticks – Skokie Theatre
17,162 performances running over 42 years off-Broadway at a Greenwich Village Playhouse. It played from 1960 to 2002 and is listed in the Guiness Book of World Records for longest uninterrupted running play at the same theatre. As if that wasn’t enough, it was revived off-Broadway from 2006-2017. There are also approximately 250 new high school and community productions put on each year since its premiere. Obviously, this play has staying power. There must be a reason. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
This production, running from September 6 to October 6 at the legendary Skokie Theatre was a pleasure to observe. As anyone will assume (correctly), we have not been to a substantial amount of the thousands of performances enjoyed by so many over the decades. But still, we feel that this one should stand out for several reasons.
Flatfooted
Aces and Eights – BYOT Productions
Aces and Eights, a film noir farce, started its life in 2015 as a ten minute scene for one of Bring Your Own Theater’s 24-hour theater festivals and over the years, it has been worked into a full length show. Focusing on Francine Noir, Frank to most people, she must find a missing will and a stolen painting, all while trying to stay above the corruption that pervades her city and her nascent alcoholism. It’s a fun set-up. Unfortunately, I don’t think it quite sticks the landing.
Read More“At the Wake of a Dead Drag Queen” with The Story Theatre
For their second season, The Story Theatre has opened At the Wake of a Dead Drag Queen, written by Terry Guest, their current season’s resident playwright. You will be attending Courtney Berringers’ funeral, but with a twist. Before burying and laying her to rest, we must revisit the truths and the lies of Berringers’ life. Instead of a night of somber respect and lowered eyes with hands clasped in laps, it is a celebration of queerness, blackness, and identity told through traditional scenes as well as direct monologues and drag numbers and stagecraft. Directed by Mickael Burke, this fascinating, captivating, and heart-wrenching examination of the concepts organic, inorganic, and the combination of both inspires the audience to evaluate the presence of these concepts in their own lives.
Read More