Sanaz Toossi’s Pulitzer Prize-winning ENGLISH is a beautiful, well-paced exploration of language’s simultaneous ability to open up our worlds, and yet for new language learners, make them smaller in terms of what we can express.
Continue reading “Review: ENGLISH at Goodman Theatre”Author: rachelrweinberg
Review: DEATH BECOMES HER Musical Pre-Broadway World Premiere
DEATH BECOMES HER is a campy, hilarious romp of a musical. I wasn’t sure exactly how book writer Marco Pennette and composers Julia Mattison and Noel Carey would pull off a stage adaptation of the cult classic 1990s movie starring Meryl Streep and Goldie Hawn, but they’ve made stage magic happen. The musical has great flow and pacing as audiences watch the antics of frenemies Madeline Ashton (Megan Hilty) and Helen Sharp (Jennifer Simard) in their attempts to one up each other and retain their youthful looks.
Continue reading “Review: DEATH BECOMES HER Musical Pre-Broadway World Premiere”Review: TURRET at A Red Orchid Theatre
World premiere of Levi Holloway’s dystopian play runs through June 22, 2024 at The Chopin Theatre
Levi Holloway’s dystopian play TURRET introduces audiences to an intimate bunker in a post-apocalyptic world. And notably, the play marks Michael Shannon’s return to A Red Orchid. Shannon plays Green, who presides over this mysterious bunker in which he’s holding captive his trainee, Rabbit (Travis A. Knight). At the play’s opening, this particular iteration of Rabbit appears to be one of many test subjects within Green’s clutches. The first several scenes of TURRET have a kind of mundanity: Rabbit runs furiously on a treadmill while Green performs a series of tests. The text doesn’t reveal much about the nature of these experiments, and audiences are left to wonder what, exactly, is happening for much of the play.
Continue reading “Review: TURRET at A Red Orchid Theatre”Review: THE THANKSGIVING PLAY at Steppenwolf Theatre Company
The Chicago premiere of Larissa FastHorse’s play runs through June 2, 2024
In THE THANKSGIVING PLAY, four actors’ road to creating an elementary school Thanksgiving performance is paved with good intentions. But good intentions aren’t enough to save them from their “white savior” complexes.
Continue reading “Review: THE THANKSGIVING PLAY at Steppenwolf Theatre Company”Review: JUDGMENT DAY at Chicago Shakespeare Theater
The world premiere comedy starring Jason Alexander runs through May 26, 2024
JUDGMENT DAY may be a world premiere comedy, but it trades in old-school jokes. Rob Ulin’s play is relatively simple and wears its moral heart on its sleeve (Main takeaway: Don’t be a jerk), even if lead role Sammy Campo doesn’t have a heart at all. While JUDGMENT DAY pokes some fun at the Catholic church, the play’s satire is not that deep. That said, this play is swiftly moving and delightfully entertaining, and it fully delivers on the promise of offering audiences a good time.
Continue reading “Review: JUDGMENT DAY at Chicago Shakespeare Theater”Review: AUGUST WILSON’S JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE at Goodman Theatre
Director Chuck Smith’s production runs through May 19, 2024
JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE conveys the search for Black American identity among the inhabitants of Seth and Bertha Holly’s boarding house in 1911 Pittsburgh. Chronologically, it’s the second play in Wilson’s Twentieth Century Cycle (though, admittedly, the first this critic has seen on stage!), and it’s a layered character study within Wilson’s body of work. Director Chuck Smith has a long history of championing and producing Wilson’s work at the Goodman and here he leads a talented Chicago cast who weave artfully between the play’s moments of grounded reality and eerie mysticism and spirituality. Perhaps that’s one of the most striking parts of this play: In the characters’ search for identity, they must reckon with the hauntings of their pasts.
Continue reading “Review: AUGUST WILSON’S JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE at Goodman Theatre”Review: THE CHOIR OF MAN at Apollo Theater
The pub of nine singing lads is open for business through May 26, 2024
Raise a glass to THE CHOIR OF MAN, a rollicking good time of a show. The show’s a UK transfer and it transports audiences to the fictitious pub The Jungle, modeled after classic Irish and British pubs. Therein, the eponymous nine man choir serves up pop and rock hits on tap. THE CHOIR OF MAN is all about having fun and delivering on its promise of great vocal arrangements.
Continue reading “Review: THE CHOIR OF MAN at Apollo Theater “Review: JERSEY BOYS at Mercury Theater Chicago
The “homegrown” premiere of the bio jukebox musical showcasing the story of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons runs through July 28, 2024
Mercury Theater Chicago has staged a “homegrown” production of JERSEY BOYS full of Chicago heart. The bio jukebox musical has graced Chicago tour stages over the years (in fact, I had a chuckle looking back at the review of the first national tour I wrote for my high school newspaper), but this is the first staging to showcase Chicago talent — and it definitely accomplishes that goal.
Continue reading “Review: JERSEY BOYS at Mercury Theater Chicago”Review: PURPOSE at Steppenwolf Theatre Company
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s world premiere family drama runs through April 28, 2024
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins has set the table for one hell of a family dinner in PURPOSE.
Directed by Phylicia Rashad in a world premiere for Steppenwolf, this family drama keenly focuses on the privileged Jasper family, whose patriarch is a Civil Rights icon. The first act moves at a brilliant clip with lots of darkly funny moments during a contentious family drama, then unspools into a more serious and somber contemplation of the skeletons in the family’s closet in the second.
Continue reading “Review: PURPOSE at Steppenwolf Theatre Company”Review: THE PENELOPIAD at Goodman Theatre
Artistic Director Susan V. Booth’s production runs through March 31, 2024
Retellings of ancient Greek mythology and texts have been the subject of many theater productions — and now Goodman Theatre Artistic Director Susan V. Booth puts her own spin on Margaret Atwood’s decidedly feminist tale THE PENELOPIAD. THE PENELOPIAD is a reimagining of the story of Odysseus’s’ wife Penelope, who waits 20 years for his return from the Trojan War. Notably, Atwood’s play focuses on Penelope and 12 of her maids, who are hanged upon Odysseus’s return for supposed treason and conspiracy with Penelope’s slimy suitors. As with her famous novel THE HANDMAID’S TALE, Atwood uses THE PENELOPIAD as a device to convey the horrors and abuse committed against women. While Penelope feels confined to her role as dutiful wife, her maids likewise long for the freedom she has as a woman who’s not enslaved like they are. Atwood’s points are valid and mirror the gender inequalities and abuse women still experience now (the original novella was penned in 2005). But THE PENELOPIAD’s feminist argument isn’t revelatory. Instead of providing truly new insight or perspective, the play rather reinforces existing (though rightfully undeniable) points.
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