Chicago Theatre Review

Monthly Archives: January 2023

Politics is So Abstract

January 29, 2023 Comments Off on Politics is So Abstract

Andy Warhol in Iran

Holed up in his air-conditioned room in the Tehran Hilton, American pop artist, Andy Warhol, decides to escape the intense summer heat while on a 1976 trip to Iran. He’s come to this country to take Polaroid photographs of Empress Farah Pahlavi, the wife of the Shah, to use when painting her portrait. She’s commissioned Warhol to paint her likeness, like many other celebrities and political figures before her. His past pop art portraits had included such diverse names as Elizabeth Taylor, Jackie Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Chairman Mao and, his most famous subject, Marilyn Monroe. This part of the play is based on true events, but what happens next is fiction.

Read More

Sixty percent Water

January 24, 2023 Comments Off on Sixty percent Water

the ripple, the wave that carried me home

Told both in the “present,” actually in 1992, and the “past,” 1960’s Kansas, Janice plays a dual role. She’s simultaneously  the narrator of her story and the principle character, seamlessly sliding back and forth throughout the memories of her childhood and adolescence. The story Janice tells always revolves around water. She begins by confessing how, to this very day, she keeps a glass of water beside her bed to drink upon waking up in the morning. Janice hates the taste of water but she also realizes that it’s a necessity of life since, as she reminds us, our bodies are sixty percent water. And, as a child and teenager, she remembers how water was always at least sixty percent of her parents’ lives. 

Read More

Is It Nice?

January 23, 2023 Comments Off on Is It Nice?

The Birthday Party

At the top of the play, a reticent, middle-age man named Petey ambles into his house and sits down at the table, buried in his newspaper. From the kitchen serving window, his wife Meg calls out to whoever just entered, “Is that you, Petey?” At first he doesn’t respond; then, finally, he confirms that, yes, he’s back from work. She brings him his breakfast which is cornflakes, continually asking, “Is it nice?” He finally answers her. Then Meg brings in a surprise entree: fried bread. Again she asks, “Is it nice?” Her constant, repetitive questions are probably the same exchange of small talk that’s taken place every single morning of their married lives. But the broken record of questions evokes laughter, especially as delivered by the two talented, beautifully directed actors in this production. However, this ambivalent opening scene also sets the tone for the rest of this three-act play.     

Read More

All That Jazz and Much More

January 18, 2023 Comments Off on All That Jazz and Much More

Chicago

“Ladies and Gentleman,” announces an ensemble member bathed in a spotlight, “You are about to see a story of murder, greed, corruption, violence, exploitation, adultery and treachery—all those things we hold near and dear to our hearts.” And then suddenly the stage becomes ablaze with sexy, bluesy music and a cast of brilliant performers, singing and dancing their hearts out, all ready to set this story in motion. In pure Brechtian style, the fourth wall is shattered and the audience becomes included in the telling of this cynical, satirical story. This is “Chicago”!

Read More

An Explosion of Talent

January 16, 2023 Comments Off on An Explosion of Talent

tick, tick…Boom!

Jonathan Larson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning composer of the powerful, popular hit musical, “Rent,” wrote this piece in response to a host of life-changing events: a lackluster reaction to his first New York musical workshop, his live-in girlfriend, Susan, had made the decision to leave him, and Mike, his best friend since childhood, confessed to Jonathan that he’d contracted AIDS and was dying. Larson was hearing the clock loudly ticking away as he was about to turn 30 years old. The young artist was having strong, nagging doubts about his own career choice in theatre. Larson was watching as his peers and those closest to him were either becoming more successful or simply moving on to more promising, lucrative venues. He felt frustrated that he was wasting away simply waiting tables while treading water as an artist.

Read More

You Can Always Count on Me

January 16, 2023 Comments Off on You Can Always Count on Me

City of Angels In Concert

Two stories play side-by-side in this 1990 Tony Award-winner for Best Musical, book and score. Cy Coleman and David Zippel’s sultry music and smart lyrics add so much to Larry Gelbart’s sassy homage to film noir motion pictures and Hollywood screenwriters of the 1940’s. The first story puts the spotlight on Stine, a popular author of detective stories who’s butting heads with a movie producer/director over artistic integrity; the second plot focuses on a private detective named Stone, the product of Stine’s imagination, and the character the author has created for his successful series of books. Both men share the same frustrating experiences with women, while being pushed around by a bunch of bullies, thugs and criminals. In Artistic Director Jeffrey Cass’ stellar concert staging, the real world meets the reel world. The result is a smart, exciting show that celebrates those wonderful B-movie film noirs from Hollywood’s Golden Era.

Read More

Thank You For Being a Pal

January 13, 2023 Comments Off on Thank You For Being a Pal

The Golden Gals Live!

With the Ball dropping and a New Year beginning, the 2023 theatre season kicks off at Mercury Theater Chicago with a brand new production. Most of the cast is also brand new to Chicago audiences, but the characters they play and the stories they share are old favorites to most every audience member. Anyone who’s a fan of the 1980’s television sitcom, “The Golden Girls,” now in syndication on cable and streaming on Hulu, will know Dorothy, Rose, Blanche and Sophia, the Golden Gals who are sharing a house in Miami, Florida. Faithful viewers will also recognize many of the familiar storylines, plot twists and bizarre complications that have been melded together in this fresh visit with the quartet of sassy, brassy senior citizens.

Read More