Chicago Theatre Review
The Whole Being Dead Thing
Beetlejuice
Back in 1988, a new movie hit the silver screen. One of the earliest films directed by the inimitable Tim Burton, “Beetlejuice” was a huge popular success. Much like his many other gothic horror/fantasy films that would follow, including “Edward Scissorhands,” a creepy remake of “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” “Sleepy Hollow,” “Batman” and “Batman Returns,” “Alice in Wonderland,” “Sweeney Todd” and the animated classics “The Nightmare Before Christmas” and “Corpse Bride,” Tim Burton’s work is recognizable by its artistic style. Dark, eerie, often filled with supernatural situations and characters, and peppered with his recognizable black-and-white stripes, the stories are usually tangled and tortuous. “Beetlejuice” was Tim Burton’s first foray into the world of the occult.
Read MoreThe Gun Song
Assassins
Sacrificing oneself for the greater good, fighting against political injustice, seeking a brighter world, feelings of desperation and disillusionment and simply the desire for attention are all motivations for the assassin’s bullet. Imagined by playwright John Weidman and composer & lyricist Stephen Sondheim, this edgy, controversial 1990 musical probably won’t be everyone’s cup of tea. But as one of its melodies proclaims, this is “The Gun Song,” and indeed it is. A lovely score, a fresh look at American history plus the sheer artistry of this production are reasons enough to see Theo Ubique’s latest offering.
Read MoreSecond to None
Oh, the Places You’ll Glow!
Is there anything more delightful to do in Chicago as the days turn dark and dreary then to experience the world-class sketch comedy of Second City e.t.c.’s new show, Oh, the Places You’ll Glow? Disregard the dopey title (the show features glow sticks and brilliantly colored fiber optics, but a hundred other titles would’ve sounded more appealing and less juvenile) and focus instead on a troupe of comic performers and writers at the pinnacle of heart and hilarity.
Read MoreLANDSLIDE VICTORY
A key moment in Steppenwolf’s triumphant new Chicago premiere production, POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Great Women Trying to Keep Him Alive, features a buxom young White House aide named Stephanie (Caroline Neff) clad only in her underwear, high on THC-enriched Tums, drenched in blood, and racing around the office of the First Lady of the United States (FLOTUS) with an enormous, translucent, lime-green inflatable flotation donut around her ankles.
Read MoreWhere Is the Money?
The Night of the Hunter
The canon of mysteries and thrillers, scripts written expressly for the theater, has increased in recent years. Sometimes original works, or those adapted from novels and loosely based upon popular films, are typically box office hits. Recent productions of plays like “Deathtrap,” “Sleuth,” “The Pillowman,” “London Road,” “Wait Until Dark,” “Night Watch” and Agatha Christie classics, like “Witness for the Prosecution” and “The Mousetrap,” have become increasingly popular. Even musical thrillers, such as the recent hit Broadway revival of “Sweeney Todd,” the long-running “The Phantom of the Opera,” cult hits like “Little Shop of Horrors” or the dark and bloody “American Psycho” play to sell-out audiences.
Read MoreSelling Your Soul to the Devil
Witch
Loosely adapted by Jen Silverman from the Jacobean play, “The Witch of Edmonton,” this prolific and talented playwright also gave us “The Roommate,” the tense two-hander presented by Steppenwolf Theatre, and “The Moors,” seen a while back at A Red Orchid Theatre. In Silverman’s 95-minute supernatural tale they offer a captivating, freshly told and mesmerizing story of six individuals who are all hoping to sell their souls to achieve something. Even the Devil, as cocky and confident as he appears to be, has his own aspirations. Employing contemporary dialogue, complete with 21st century expletives and expressions, audiences can’t help but associate this need to achieve with our current political and social climate. In spite of Rachel Lambert’s authentic 17th century costumes, each character still feels startlingly familiar and au courant.
Read MoreA Limited Vista
¡Bernarda!
The new production by Teatro Vista at Steppenwolf’s intimate 1700 Theatre, ¡Bernarda!, is a play by Emilio Williams based on the classic Andalusian drama by Spanish poet and playwright Federico Garcia Lorca, La Casa de Bernarda Alba.
Read MoreIf Music Be the Food of Love…
Twelfth Night
The Summer has come and gone, Halloween has passed on and now the cold, wintry winds are blowing. It’s the perfect season for a holiday in the warm Caribbean isles. Guest director Tyrone Phillips, a first-generation Jamaican American and Chicago artist of many talents, has reimagined William Shakespeare’s perfect comedy set on a tropical island. And, taking his cue from the play’s opening line, “If music be the food of love, play on,” Mr. Phillips has filled his spectacularly colorful, comic production with a generous amount of song and dance. And love, don’t forget love, which seems to be everywhere for every single character.
Read MoreBeing Alive
Company
Happy 35th birthday, Bobbie! The festive celebration will soon be shared by Bobbie’s married friends, all crammed into her tiny Manhattan apartment to throw a surprise party for their single friend. Throughout this wonderfully re-imagined, mellifluous musical, filled with new surprises and laugh-out-loud hilarity, and some heartbreaking sentiment and truths, Bobbie decides that maybe it’s time to make a big change in her life, which she sing in her plaintive, “Marry Me a Little.”
Read MoreUn-Poe-etic
Into That Darkness: The Corrosive Hours of Edgar Poe
Into That Darkness: The Corrosive Hours of Edgar Poe is a labor of love one-man passion project written and enacted by Jacob Mundell that brings Edgar Allan Poe to life through dramatizations of his letters and book reviews, as well as a few of his poems.
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