Chicago Theatre Review

Chicago Theatre Review

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February 10, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on Much More

The Fantasticks – Citadel Theatre

Nearing the conclusion of their seventeenth season, a fantastic achievement of its own, one of Chicago’s most reliable suburban theatres presents a gorgeous production of an American musical theatre classic. This little gem premiered at Greenwich Village’s tiny Sullivan Street Theater back in 1960. It went on, not only to become the world’s longest-running musical (playing 42 years and logging in a staggering 17,162 performances), but to become the most widely-produced musical in the world. With its intimate tone, pure poetic story, a gorgeous, lush score (demanding only a piano, harp, perhaps a bass and some percussion accompaniment), an eight-member cast and very modest technical requirements, this musical is a favorite among professional, regional and educational theatres, alike.

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A Musical Bonbon

February 10, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on A Musical Bonbon

Emma – Chicago Shakespeare Theatre

In an age when social media has usurped our lives, it’s refreshing to visit a time when people actually spoke to each other, and with eloquence, too. As in all her stories, Jane Austen’s fourth novel is an 1815 comedy of manners, set in Georgian-Regency England. The title character, however, is unlike Austen’s other heroines in that Emma is pretty, smart and rich, but also strong-minded, overindulged and rather full of herself. Because a woman’s goal and main occupation at that time focused on landing a good husband, Emma is also unlike her peers. While she fancies herself an accomplished matchmaker for other young women, Emma isn’t particularly interested in marriage herself. As one of the self-entitled, she finds meddling in other people’s lives far more fun and fulfilling than minding her own business.

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The Way We Were

February 9, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on The Way We Were

Boys in the Band – Windy City Playhouse

During the repressive 1960’s a gay man was forced to become very secretive about everything. Being “in the closet” was how most homosexuals survived being hassled or, quite often, brutally attacked for what was perceived as a perverted life style. A small percentage of men braved all the hostility and met their peers at the few underground gay bars and bath houses located primarily in certain large cities. Mart Crowley wrote his groundbreaking drama in response to the prevalent oppressive social attitude of that time. The lives of every homosexual was threatened daily with violence and unfair laws. Gay men continually were the brunt of heterosexual jokes, degradation anger and, although claiming to not be an activist, Crowley felt the need to expose this oppressing milieu to the world through the theatre.

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It’s All Fun and Games

February 9, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on It’s All Fun and Games

Adaptation – Theatre Above the Law

Theatre Above the Law is opening its fourth season with a revival of Elaine May’s Adaptation, a play that sets the choices and compromises we all have to make over the course of our lives as a brightly colored, chaotic game show.

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6th Annual Chicago Musical Theatre Festival

February 9, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on 6th Annual Chicago Musical Theatre Festival

Chicago Musical Theatre Festival – Underscore Theatre

The Chicago Musical Theatre Festival returns to Underscore Theatre for the sixth year with a slate of eight shows, with stories ranging from time travel to Moby Dick.

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A Gershwin-ner of a Show

February 7, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on A Gershwin-ner of a Show

An American in Paris – Drury Lane

Five years ago this highly-anticipated stage version of the 1951 Gene Kelly/Leslie Caron musical film classic burst upon Broadway. After playing Paris, New York and the West End, and launching a two-year National Tour that played Chicago, we finally have our own regional production. It is truly magnificent. It’s elegant, romantic, gorgeously produced and beautifully danced and sung. For anyone who adores those classic movie musicals and big, old-fashioned, splashy theatrical productions, this is the show for you.

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Somebody’s Watching You

February 7, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on Somebody’s Watching You

Bug – Steppenwolf Theatre

In a foul, frowzy hotel, two lost souls find one another, but that’s only the beginning. Agnes lives in these two fetid rooms while she works at the nearby strip club. The phone rings and rings, but Agnes refuses to answer it because she’s fairly certain that someone’s watching her. And that someone is Jerry, her violent ex husband, who was sent to prison, but may have finagled his way out in an early release. But there are others watching the occupants of the grimy little motel room.

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A Thriller That Disappoints

February 7, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on A Thriller That Disappoints

How a Boy Falls – Northlight Theatre

It seems like mysteries and whodunits are playing in theatres all over the Windy City. At Northlight, under the tight direction of Halena Kays, prolific playwright Steven Dietz’s latest play is being given its World Premiere, right here in Chicago. Like his play, “On Clover Road,” a hit hair-raiser at American Blues Theater a season ago, this new play, although not nearly as filled with tension, is another thriller.

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Rooted in the Mistakes of the Past

February 6, 2020 Reviews Comments Off on Rooted in the Mistakes of the Past

Labyrinth – Broken Nose Theatre

Beth Steel’s powerfully intoxicating drama is a roller coaster ride through the whirlwind world of international finance. It’s about swaggering, profit-hungry American banks lending excessive amounts of money to countries on the brink of bankruptcy. The play drives the audience at breakneck speed inside the 1980’s Latin American financial crisis in a hard-hitting trip through a nightmarish Wonderland world of debt and would-be redemption.

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Empathy is a Bird

February 4, 2020 Reviews 1 Comment

Do You Feel Anger? – Red Orchid Theatre

Brava to Mara Nelson-Greenberg, a talented, new playwright who, clearly, has a lot to say about toxic workplaces. In her comically absurdist one-act play, she depicts a place of business in which male stupidity dominates and the females have sadly been reduced to babbling idiots, trying their best to survive in this septic environment. Ms. Nelson-Greenberg’s play had its professional debut at the 42nd Humana Festival of New American Plays and went on to its Off-Broadway New York premiere at The Vineyard Theatre. Chicago audiences can now enjoy a powerfully intimate production of this play at A Red Orchid Theatre, under the sharp direction of Ensemble member, Jess McLeod.

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