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PicksInSix Review: Guys and Dolls - Drury Lane Theatre

 
 

Shake the Dice. Save a Soul!
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Looking for the oldest established permanent floating crap game in New York with tough guys packing heat and cracking wise while a couple of old-time love stories unwind in locales as exotic as Havanna and the Hot Box Cabaret? If so, then, the rock’em sock’em revival of the 1950 Tony Award winning “Guys and Dolls” now playing at Drury Lane Oakbrook is the show for you.  

Director/choreographer Dan Knechtges with co-music directors Roberta Duchak and Chris Sargent, who also conducts, have assembled an impressive ensemble of multi-talented performers for a highly-charged production showcasing the most cherished music and lyrics of Broadway’s legendary songsmith Frank Loesser and a book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows based on Daymon Runyon’s stories and characters. The cavalcade of Loesser hits like the touching ballads “I’ll Know” and “More I Cannot Wish You,” the superb bigtime, song and dance spectacles “A Bushel and a Peck,” “Luck be a Lady,” and “Sit Down You’re Rocking the Boat,” make Drury Lane’s “Guys and Dolls” a musical extravaganza that pokes good-natured fun of the rough and tough guys and the glitzy glamor dolls from Runyon’s creative imagination.

As the story unfolds, the lovable huckster Nathan Detroit (Jackson Evans) has been unofficially engaged for 14 years to the vivacious Miss Adelaide (Alanna Lovely), headliner at the Hot Box Club. Adelaide is trying to get him to stop gambling and settle down to the life she has imagined all along. Meanwhile, Detroit and his ‘associates” Nicely-Nicely (Nkrumah Gatling) and Benny (Christopher Llewyn Ramirez) are trying to get a spot for some nightly action and stay a step or two ahead of the law in the process.

Against the backdrop of petty larceny and bawdy late night revelry, the dutiful missionary Sarah Brown (Erica Stephan), struggling to make a difference one sinner at a time at the Save-A-Soul Mission, falls hard and fast for the suave, high-stakes charmer Sky Masterson (Pepe Nufrio). When the love table turns on Sky, he finds himself suddenly searching for any way to win her back again including making good on his mark to fill up the evening prayer meeting to impress the zany General Cartwright (Heidi Kettenring) and save the mission from closing.

Drury Lane Theatre presents “Guys and Dolls” through June 9, 2024. More information and tickets HERE.

Stephan and Nufrio are perfect together. Their rich vocals and chemistry shine in the heartfelt Act I closer “My Time of Day/I’ve Never Been in Love Before.” Stephan, one of Chicago’s top performers, is simply marvelous. Nufrio’s smooth and effortless Sky is spot on in “My Time of Day,” and with the brilliant ensemble in “Luck Be a Lady.” Lovely sparkles as Adelaide, displaying excellent comedic chops in “Adelaide’s Lament” and singing, dancing and leading the Hot Box Girls in a sizzling version of “Take Back Your Mink” while chumming up with Evans’s hilarious and heartwarming Nathan for lots of laughs and their touching duet “Sue Me.”

Back at the mission, Gene Weygandt’s serves up a splendid Arvide Abernathy, Kettenring is a riot and everybody gets in the act when Gatling explodes into the rousing crowd favorite “Sit Down You’re Rocking the Boat.” Angela Weber Miller’s scenic design, framed in a glistening Broadway skyline, alternates seamlessly between the relatively solemn confines of the mission to the gritty underbelly of the city and the sultry Hot Box Club where Leon Dobkowski’s stunning costumes set the place on fire. All in, Drury Lane’s “Guys and Dolls” is a night filled of 7’s and 11’s for every high stakes roller in the audience.  

PHOTO|Brett Beiner

Drury Lane Theatre
presents
Guys and Dolls
100 Drury Lane
Oakbrook Terrace
through June 9, 2024

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PicksInSix Review: Peter Pan-Broadway in Chicago

 
 

Take Flight with Reimagined PETER PAN!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Kaitlyn Linsner

“Peter Pan” opened in a limited run at the James N. Nederlander Theatre on Wednesday night with an audience full of children eager to watch the beloved characters soar off to Neverland. The wholesome production, directed by Lonny Price, maintains much of the magic of the original musical. Everyone was delighted the moment Peter Pan (Nolan Almeida) flies on stage to later search for and grapple with his mischievous shadow. In fact, all of the flying scenes are such fun with the best being the remarkable staging of the initial flight of Peter and the Darling children to Neverland.

This version also re-conceptualizes the story in important and necessary ways to create a more inclusive and less harmful portrayal of women and indigenous characters. These changes come from the additional book of Native American playwright Larissa FastHorse. Her telling gives a long overdue backstory to Tiger Lily (Raye Zaragoza) and the indigenous tribe now inhabiting Neverland. Each tribe member is the last of their people who have taken refuge on the island to preserve their culture before returning home someday. Tiger Lily and Peter also team up to run the island, and the two of them plus Wendy (Hawa Kamara) fight together against the pirates.

All of this is a great refresh to the original musical yet the production lacks depth and caters to a very young crowd. The narrative and dialogue only scratch the surface in addressing the full range of emotions and themes that have drawn so many into the story of a boy who refuses to grow up. “Peter Pan” focuses on innocence and imagination, and in turn leaves behind the more profound and at times darker feelings that arise when exploring concepts like home, preserving memories, motherhood and aging.

The musical is at its best, then, when leaning into spirited and cheerful musical numbers such as a tap dance from the Lost Boys and stage turtles, and when Peter Pan, Tiger Lily and the full company perform “Friends Forever” with endearing choreography and such heart.

Singularly, the actors do well in portraying their characters. Almeida plays Peter with confidence and charm. Kamara’s Wendy is warm and strong. Cody Garcia’s theatrics as Captain Hook are extravagant and entertaining. The pirates as a whole, though did not come across as gritty villains but instead goofy and cartoonish.

Yet, “Peter Pan” still brings plenty of enchantment to Chicago and will have many young audience members in wonder. The show runs through April 7.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | KAITLYN LINSNER is a Chicago-based attorney practicing construction and surety law.

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy

Broadway in Chicago
presents
PETER PAN
James N. Nederlander Theatre
through April 7, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Jersey Boys - Mercury Theater Chicago

 
 

Sweet, Sassy, Success Story, Richly Told!
PicksInSix® Gold Review | Ed Tracy

After an electrifying opening on Thursday night at Mercury Theater Chicago,  “Jersey Boys,” the mega-hit Tony Award-winning musical has officially launched its first regional production in Chicagoland. Get in step, folks. This will be the hot ticket to get in town!

The Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice book follows the origin story of The Four Seasons, one of the top selling vocal groups of their, or any, time told from the perspective of each of the four guys who traded up from a Newark street corner to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame – Tommy DeVito (Adrian Aguilar), Nick Massi (Jason Michael Evans), Bob Gaudio (Andrew MacNaughton) and Frankie Valli (Michael Metcalf).

JERSEY BOYS: The Story of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons at Mercury Theater Chicago through May 19, 2024.

Along the way, all night long, the memorable Bob Gaudio and Bob Crewe hits keep coming, backed by the highly-charged Mercury Theater band under co-musical directors Eugene Dizon and Linda Madonia, and with choreography by Christopher Chase Carter, all under the co-stage direction of L. Walter Stearns and Brenda Didier.

And everyone on and off stage make it look easy, something that this magnificent show is decidedly not. With over 30 numbers, lots of moving parts, and barely over a dozen players covering numerous roles, Mercury’s “Jersey Boys” is a sweet, sassy, success story, richly told. Things move along at lightning speed on Bob Knuth’s mammoth, two-story scenic design framed with G. “Max” Maxin IV graphics that serve to both reinforce the story and provide multiple visual surprises. With Rachel Boylan’s costumes, lighting by Denise Karzcewski and Stephanie M. Senior’s sound design, this marvelous production is everything you could hope for.

The show also serves as a right of passage for a very select group of actor/singers at the top of their craft who can navigate a musical marathon of intricate harmonies, stage show choreography and the rigorous ebb and flow of a dramatic story that allows for multiple narrators to tell their own version of the story about friendship, family, overcoming obstacles and achieving success.

The multi-layered Mercury creative team hit solid gold with this extraordinary cast. Aguilar’s gritty, commanding portrayal of Tommy DeVito, the hardened, street smart leader of the group, propels the origin story forward at the outset while Evans’s superb, more introspective, troubled Nick Massi wins us over, particularly when the stress of keeping up wears him out.

The teaming of MacNaughton and Metcalf is inspired. MacNaughton’s pure voice and vocal range add depth to the musical mix and Metcalf has all the right stuff for the demanding vocal range and lush delivery of Frankie Valli—a star turn of the first order—charming and poised, with just the right mix of confidence and vulnerability.

Grant Alexander Brown shines as the ebullient matchmaker Joe Pesci. Starmaker producer/songwriter Bob Crewe is played by the multi-faceted Adam Fane who hires the group as backup singers to his corral of recording artists and becomes the pivotal driving force in their success co-writing with Gaudio. It’s in Crewe’s studio where the transformation begins, their unique sound starts to coalesce and the show throttles up. And true to the real-life rags-to-riches story, Gaudio delivers the chart busting hit they have been waiting for and “Sherry” vaults the Four Seasons on to fame, fortune and all the trappings that follow.

From top to bottom, strong supporting performances from the ensemble are delivered by Dan Gold (Nick DeVito), Eric A. Lewis (Barry Belson), Kayla Shipman (Mary), Jason Richards (Norm Waxman), Haley Jane Schafer (Lorraine), Carl Herzog (Gyp) and Maya McQueen (Francine).

When we get through the drama of it all, Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons find their place in history, and Mercury’s “Jersey Boys” is on a path all its own–another milestone run on Southport for the foreseeable future.

Oh, what a night, indeed!  

PHOTO|Liz Lauren


Mercury Theater Chicago
presents
JERSEY BOYS
3745 N Southport Avenue
EXTENDED through July 28, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: PURPOSE - Steppenwolf Theatre Company

 
 

Steppenwolf’s Sterling “PURPOSE” Examines Family Dynamic.
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

“I need to find my path again…” Thus spoke the Jasper family patriarch Solomon “Sonny” Jasper at the end of a challenging evening of family dynamic and self-examination.  Every character in this sterling production of “PURPOSE,” now playing at Steppenwolf Theatre through April 28 in the Downstairs Theater, hits a point in their lives on this particular day where each could utter these same words.  And the marvelous playwright Brandon Jacobs-Jenkins has seen to it that the audience has plenty of emotional and intellectual subject matter to chew on vigorously. I love a play that makes its viewers think in the moment, as it moves along its storytelling.

Indeed, the title is the rudder that pushes this piece forward.  We begin with an appearance by the youngest family member, Naz (our narrator and chief character focus in the play done in wondrous, properly questioning tones by Jon Michael Hill), whom we find has completed a trip to the Canadian wilderness in his newly-found avocation as nature photographer.  He’s left the divinity school that Sonny (Harry Lennix in a strong, dominant gait and attitude) has so wanted for that son, because his calling seems different. Meanwhile, his older brother Solomon Jr. (where Glenn Davis fully shines with who is arguably the most problem-laden character in the play) has just been released from prison for embezzlement and trying to find his way again.  In the meantime, Junior’s wife Morgan (an almost unrecognizable Alana Arenas, full of proper anger and consternation at a family so totally aware of its public image), is about to serve time herself for tax evasion.

In the midst of all this is the mother figure Claudine (Tamara Tunie is a real wonder here as she expertly offers a matriarch with hugely enabling responsibilities), whose awareness of the family’s public persona is always on guard and on point. She and the entire clan are surprised at the arrival in the middle of a snowstorm by Naz’s friend Aziza (Ayanna Bria Bakari in a generous and altogether charming portrayal), whose presence is necessary because she and Naz have haphazardly tried to help her have a baby, her own unique search for peace and purpose.

Every character in the play eventually finds a point where that wall of ‘purpose’ is prepared for the scaling. Jacobs-Jenkins knows his as a playwright, having assembled these characters in an almost epic-telling that ranks with the best this writer has witnessed in recent years.  Director Phylicia Rashad has helped map out the paths walked by these characters with genuine care and affection.  It is unmistakable that this play is an authentic comparison with the accomplished and colorful family of Jesse Jackson. Rashad helps us care deeply about the Jasper family, even in the middle of all the emotional chaos, with loving and gentle strokes. This production only enhances the Steppenwolf mystique as the American template for ensemble theatrical presentation.

“PURPOSE” brought to mind one of my favorite quotes. From the pen of American author/poet Stephen Crane:

A man said to the universe:
“Sir, I exist!”
“However,” replied the universe,
“The fact has not created in me
A sense of obligation.”

Hence, the search for one’s own purpose. And we all get to be a part of it.  

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL. www.solochicagotheatre.com  Coming soon, his new solo play “Echo Holler.” www.echoholler.com
PHOTO: Michael Brosilow

Steppenwolf Theatre Company
presents

No Man’s Land

Downstairs Theater
1650 N. Halsted St.

EXTENDED
through May 12, 2024

(312) 335-1650

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PicksInSix Review: The Matchbox Magic Flute - Goodman Theatre

 
 

Reduced Retelling with Epically Goofy Grandeur!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Scott Gryder

The star-swirled proscenium of the Goodman’s Owen Theatre playfully invoked the essence of a childhood bedroom, ripe with stories to be told, creating the perfect backdrop for the opening night/world premiere performance of Mary Zimmerman’s “The Matchbox Magic Flute.” A spirited reworking of a centuries-old tale, this playful mini-rendition is the perfect introduction to the piece and the artform of classical storytelling, while maintaining a respectful reverence for the opera’s origin.

“The Matchbox Magic Flute” follows the adventures and trials of Prince Tamino, your stock prince charming. Along the way, he makes a bird-brained friend, Papageno, and they are tasked with finding and rescuing the Queen of the Night's daughter, Pamina, who’s been captured by a sinister fiend. A completely family-friendly event, this production takes the original Singspiel source material of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” and powders it with a more floral, playful Gilbert & Sullivan operetta flair.

In keeping with the original operatic style, “The Matchbox Magic Flute” weaves together a spellbinding storytelling through song, with very minimal moments of dialogue, and the star-studded cast commits full tilt. In a way, as the text has been thinned, the characterizations and their goals have been inflated. Of the trio of Ladies, reminiscent of the witchy sisters of Hocus Pocus, First Lady Lauren Molina truly captures the manic intensity of over-the-top subtext, while later naturally transforming into the frolicking and foul beloved Papagena. As Tamino, the always-handsome Billy Rude plays a dependable Prince. Although beautifully layered in vocal range, Rude lacks a solid singing line in comparison to the rest of the cast. Speaking of, watch out, Maria Callas! The fierce, fiery vocals of Emily Rohm’s Queen of the Night truly strike fear in all hearts who share her stage! Even her dress flows with a magma-like rage as her vocal acrobatics sear. And, like mother, like daughter, Marlene Fernandez’s Pamina warbles a range of deep richness, while also enchanting with a soaring soprano. Pair Fernandez with the clownish Papageno of Shawn Pfautsch, part Piglet/part Tigger, and their schmaltzy repartee is endearing and amusing. Most vocally soothing is Keanon Kyles as Sarastro, whose basso profondo delivers chills and thrills.

Whether you’re a fan of the original story, or hardly familiar with it at all, you’ll be truly captivated by Chicago-favorite Mary Zimmerman’s adaptation and direction. Zimmerman is no stranger to this elevated artform, with a resume reaching all the way to the Metropolitan Opera. What she does with “The Matchbox Magic Flute” is combine her knack for musical theater timing with the grandeur strokes of opera, creating a youthful retelling. For the music, while lyrics sometimes edge more toward basic rather than inventive, music adaptors and arrangers Amanda Dehnert and Andre Pluess refreshingly revive these original melodies, succinctly capturing the frothy character motivations.

The more petite venue of the Owen Theatre helps to capture the matchbox concept of the show, further instilling the image that “The Matchbox Magic Flute” could be boxed up and set on wheels to travel from town to town, with a Jack in the Box ease. Even the dual role casting throughout emphasizes the traveling troupe aesthetic. Set designer Todd Rosenthal leans into the collapsible concept with tracked, sliding flats and effortlessly spun walls, painted pastorally and with brocade patterns. And what a delightful concept to have the orchestra in a raised pit at the foot of the stage, bringing the musicians into the action, sometimes literally, within arm’s reach of the vaudeville style stage.

The production elements of “The Matchbox Magic Flute” are so cleanly executed, it’s as if you could simply close the door on the Owen, latch it securely and then carry this marvelous musical moment onto another venue entirely; opening it like a music box to reveal the same darling show on the move. For patrons who don’t fancy themselves operagoers, or for anyone wishing to dabble in the genre, “The Matchbox Magic Flute” satisfies. The sure sign of a winning musical experience is when the melodies linger in your ear as you leave. And how could these tuneful masterpieces not, especially when so daringly and darlingly delivered? Bravi tutti!  

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | SCOTT GRYDER received a Non-Equity Jeff Award for his performance in the one-man show BUYER & CELLAR. www.thescottgryder.com

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Goodman Theatre
presents
The Matchbox Magic Flute
Adapted and Directed By
Mary Zimmerman
EXTENDED
through March 24, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Billy Elliot The Musical - Paramount Theatre

 
 

Billy Elliot: “It’s Showtime Baby!”
PicksInSix® Gold Review | Ed Tracy

What’s happening right now at Paramount Theatre in Aurora will not soon come this way again. “It’s showtime, baby!” Bring it on!

“Billy Elliot The Musical,” the Elton John/Lee Hall ten-time Tony Award winner with a long, rich love affair with Chicago, opened Friday in what can only be described as a phenomenal, electrifying production. As directed by Trent Stork and choreographed by Isaiah Silva-Chandley, this quintessential “Billy Elliot” features an enormously talented cast led by Ron E. Rains as Dad, Michelle Aravena as Mrs. Wilkinson and, on opening night, the arresting performance of Neo Del Corral as Billy Elliot, the young boy discovering his life’s passion in the midst of a tumultuous period of unrest as his small hometown north of London is embroiled in the 1984 coal miner’s strike.

The story unfolds amid a visual feast—adorned with Izumi Inaba’s costumes on scenic designer Michelle Lilly’s colossal sixty-foot-high steel-themed coal mine set with two-story moving stairway systems that are reconfigured to frame the evolving scenes moving effortlessly in sync with Greg Hoffman’s dynamic lighting design, Mike Tutaj projections and a crisp sound design by Adam Rosenthal.

The lovely and talented Aravena commands the stage in a fierce performance as the dance instructor who first discovers Billy’s true potential in ballet and fights for his opportunity to pursue a dream. Del Corral—who alternates the role of Billy with Sam Duncan—plays the 1,900 seat Paramount Theatre with extraordinary poise, presence and a strength of character that belies his years. And when Billy and his gay friend Michael (Gabriel Lafazan) get together, it’s showtime, baby! — a dynamic duo of pint-sized firebrands tap dancing and singing up a storm with a streak of sassy larceny a mile long in the show-stopping hit “Expressing Yourself.”

One of the most impressive ensembles ever assembled at Paramount includes many of Chicago’s most accomplished actors who cover the citizenry of life-worn miners opposed by an army of police along with a bevy of early career prima ballerinas all under the brilliant musical direction of Kory Danielson who conducts the Paramount Orchestra. Rains returns to a role he has played previously with a seasoned, passionate and superb multi-layered performance as Billy’s Dad. Barbara Robertson is exquisite as Billy’s endearing Grandma and Jennie Sophia is a beacon of purity as Billy’s Mum in the tender, emotionally charged ballad “The Letter” with Aravena and Del Corral.  Dakota Hughes (Mr. Braithwaite), Joe Foust (George), and Spencer Davis Milford (Tony) are all stellar, as is the stunning Swan Lake ballet with Billy and Older Billy (Christopher Kelley)— a work of art that utilizes the full range of the Paramount’s expansive stage.

The sheer grandeur of the closing moments of this production left me in awe and ranks as the most beautiful visual tapestry I have ever—repeat, ever—seen in a theatre. I am still thinking about it and how Paramount's stunning production of "Billy Elliot" will now occupy a permanent place in my memory box of this show.

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

PARAMOUNT THEATRE
presents
Billy Elliot The Musical
through March 24, 2024


23 East Galena Boulevard
Aurora, IL 60506


(630) 896–6666

WEBSITE

TICKETS

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PicksInSix Review: Fiddler on the Roof - Drury Lane Theatre

 
 

Even “Old Ways Were Once New.” 
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Kaitlyn Linsner

Drury Lane Theatre winds up its 2023/2024 season with a heartfelt production of the Tony Award-winning classic “Fiddler on the Roof” featuring music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick and book by Joseph Stein. Set in the Pale of Settlement of Imperial Russia in 1905, this cherished musical centers on Tevye (Mark David Kaplan), an endearing milkman with five daughters, facing challenges to his Jewish religion and cultural traditions as change approaches the village of Anatevka. 

Director Elizabeth Margolius describes “Fiddler on the Roof” as a “memory play” and decided to approach the tale completely from Tevye’s memory. In the program notes, Margolius writes: “This new, evocative approach to Fiddler on the Roof puts the focus on the people in hopes of illuminating this story as never before and inspiring us to question who we are and what we will leave behind for future generations.”  

The minimal yet highly effective scenic design by Jack Magaw combined with the beautiful projection design of Mike Tutaj creates a deeply imaginative space for the audience to truly see the depths of the characters and the legacies that shape them. The projected images and video artfully transform the set to Tevye’s dreamscape in the musical number “The Dream” as he convinces Golde (Janna Cardia) that Motel (Michael Kurowski) is the right husband for their daughter Tzeitel (Emma Rosenthal). Kaplan and Cardia are an absolute delight. 

Other notable musical numbers include Kurowski’s spirited performance of “Miracle of Miracles” and the celebratory “To Life” by Kaplan, Lazar Wolf (Joel Gelman) and the company of villagers. Yael Chanukov shines as Hodel, and as a whole, the cast sings, moves and dances well together on stage with a warm chemistry. 

Fiddler on the Roof at Drury Lane Theatre Oakbrook through March 24, 2024.

Kaplan plays Tevye with excellent comedic timing and whimsy. He also skillfully portrays a father being tested by the actions of his three oldest daughters. The asks from his daughters become increasingly difficult (“unthinkable!”) as they each seek modern, non-arranged but different marriages. Tevye must grapple with first being asked for permission to marry, then his blessing and lastly only for his acceptance. Where does a father draw the line and what does the good book say about evolving relationships with those you love? 

Embrace these questions and more in this beloved show now playing through March 24, 2024 at the Drury Lane Theatre. 

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | KAITLYN LINSNER is a Chicago-based attorney practicing construction and surety law.

PHOTO|Brett Beiner

Drury Lane Theatre
presents
Fiddler on the Roof
100 Drury Lane
Oakbrook Terrace
through March 24, 2024

WEBSITE

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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PicksInSix Review: In The Heights - Marriott Theatre

 
 

Marriott’s ‘Heights” Bursts With Celebratory Spirit!

PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Usnavi has a dream to escape, like everyone on his block in Washington Heights. And those few hot days in July play out in what is sure to be a blockbuster revival of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “In The Heights” that looks and sounds as fresh and vibrant as ever at Marriott Theatre Lincolnshire. The strong sense of family unfolds in a neighborhood teeming with a celebratory spirit that is so inherently baked into this show it erupts again and again with uncontrollable passion and hopeful promise. Look no further than the rousing Act II “Carnaval del Barrio” which prompted a thunderous ovation and the waving of flags in the audience. Not the usual Wednesday opening night in Lincolnshire to be sure.

It is hard to believe that Miranda created what would become “In The Heights” twenty-five years ago when he was a sophomore in college. With thirteen 2008 Tony Award nominations and four wins including Best Musical and Best Musical Score, there was no doubt that Broadway had welcomed a new force of nature—a playwright, composer, lyrist and performer whose talents speak for and to generations of performers of Latino decent—and just about everyone else on the planet, as well.

And that other revelatory musical by Miranda “Hamilton” would arrive little more than seven years later.

Director James Vásquez has hit the mark and assembled an astounding cast around the gifted Joseph Morales as Usnavi, who essayed the role on the first Broadway national tour. Conceived by Miranda with a book by Quiara Alegria Hudes, Usnavi runs a bodega with his cousin Sonny (Jordan Arredondo) who is prodding Usnavi to take the next step with Vanessa (Paola V. Hernández). When Vanessa’s best friend Nina (Addie Morales) returns home and announces to her parents Camila (Cruz Gonzalez-Cadel) and Kevin (Rudy Martinez) that she lost her Stamford scholarship, Kevin makes the decision to sell the family business to fund her education. All that does not sit well with Nina or her mother and turns into a standoff with longtime employee Benny (Yasir Muhammad), who is Black and in love with Nina. Everyone in the neighborhood knows the score, too, as the delightful gadabout Daniela (Lillian Castillo) who runs the salon with Carla (Michelle Lauto), along with Sonny, begin to stir the pot to get everyone together.

“In The Heights” now playing at Marriott Theatre Lincolnshire through March 17, 2024.

Abuela Claudia (Crissy Guerro), a kindred spirit to Usnavi and everyone in the neighborhood, has a windfall that just might bring financial security to those around her. It’s an emotional roller coaster ride when the power goes out during the July 4th celebration and everyone “In The Heights” realizes that the most important thing in life is being there for each other. You will find yourself deliriously swept away by the music, directed by Ryan T. Nelson and conducted by Noah Landis, and the nonstop exuberance of William Carlo Angulo’s choreography, of which one patron of a certain age said to me on the way out, “I wish I could bottle up that energy and take it home!”

I could not agree more.  


PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Marriott Theatre Lincolnshire
presents
In The Heights
through March 17, 2024


WEBSITE

TICKETS

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PicksInSix Review: Highway Patrol - Goodman Theatre

 
 

Like Nothing You Will Ever See.
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

It may appear glamorous, but the life of a lead actor in a hit television series is, by all accounts from those in the know, a bit of a grind. Long hours in preparation memorizing lines, early morning makeup calls, missed holidays and family gatherings, and the interminable wait time between takes are a way of life for the months that the show is in production. Around the edges of all this activity, it’s a challenge to maintain somewhat of a normal life and to keep the business side of entertainment moving forward while maintaining a personal life. And then there are matters of the heart. And sleep. And wine.

The charming Dana Delany, whose career includes a string of long-running hits like China Beach and Body of Proof— the kind of success that most actors can only dream of having—appears to be one of the fortunate ones who can take all it in stride, even as she admits there has been little time to pursue the joy and the fulfillment of what it means to have a meaningful relationship. Even when those opportunities did come along she could not always be present and things went nowhere.

All that changed in October 2012 when Delany was wrapping up the last few months of filming Body of Proof which is the point of reference for the opening scene of “Highway Patrol,” a fact-based memoir of sorts that peers into Delany’s daily life on and off the set. The network has asked the usually private Delany to embrace Twitter to build a social following for the show. Although somewhat reluctant at first, Delany soon dives in enthusiastically and the interaction with fans begins to fill a void in her life.

One of those fans is an inquisitive young boy named Cam (Thomas Murphy Molony) who was different. He was encouraging, thoughtful, brave and persistent. The relationship between the two deepened, encouraged by her friend and fellow actor, Peter Gallagher, due to the nature of Cam’s terminal disease and in cooperation with Cam’s guardian and grandmother Nan (Dot Marie Jones). In a few short weeks, Delany was communicating regularly to make the boy’s final days bright and meaningful, sending photos and telling his story to close friends and to those around her on the set.

“Highway Patrol,” which opened Tuesday night at Goodman, is based on Delany’s digital archive of her experience in text messages that have been curated by playwright Jen Silverman. Delany, a superbly engaging central star who has an arresting presence on stage throughout the play, is narrative storyteller. The show—created by Delany, Silverman, director Mike Donohue and scenic designer Dane Laffrey—moves with precision over the course of two-acts, retelling a captivating story that, at times, defies belief except that at every turn we know this all happened. Delany gives a stunningly poised performance, as if she were recounting these events in a more intimate setting than Goodman’s 856-seat Albert that was filled to capacity.

That same ease of delivery is highlighted in Molony’s endearing performance as Cam who is making his Goodman debut. And although it would be unfair to give more away about their relationship in what becomes a fascinating and intriguing thriller, watching Delany’s story unfold made for a marvelous night of theatre. Like nothing you will ever see.      

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Goodman Theatre
presents

HIGHWAY PATROL
through February 18, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: FLOOD - Shattered Globe Theatre

 
 

“FLOOD” Hits Absurdist High-Water Mark!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

In today’s world, we are so attuned to what our own realities are and don’t always know how to adjust them to fit the moment at hand.  We forget sometimes that satire in all its challenging glory is a prime path to making such changes and to look at life in a totally different way.  Shattered Globe Theatre’s Chicago premiere of “FLOOD” by Mashuq Mushtaq Deen grabs its audience by the throat and takes it on an unusual journey of absurdity—admittedly the kind of trip we are not taken on much these days in the theatre.

Deen has fashioned a story with what would normally be quite opposing elements.  The Lauren Nichols design of the set we view in its telling—an apartment or condo setting that looks like a colorized version of an old 1950s situation comedy (read: Father Knows Best, Bachelor Father, etc.)—sets us up from the beginning; there is no doubt as to its functionality as the story goes.  There is a desk with a man (an impervious HB Ward as Darren, the family patriarch) sitting with sections of a model he’s been working on for quite a while.  Darren wears a mask for practically the entire play, one that covers his eyes and nose and hairline; there are other identical masks hanging on the wall behind him.  Darren’s attitudes are almost authoritarian and solid, as if it were what he learned from his own parents, and the hierarchy here is well-defined.  Mr. Ward is appropriately manipulative and commanding in Darren’s position up center stage, almost dictator-like in perception; he controls every conversation, every breathing moment between husband and wife. We don’t know about his job, his early history…he is simply a constant where he is.

Meanwhile, Darren’s wife Edith (the great SGT stalwart Linda Reiter) is frustrated with her husband, because he seems to have created an impenetrable cocoon of focus on the project he is building.  And all she wants to do is have a cup of tea with him and rebuild those ties that seem to be rapidly disappearing from her emotional reference.  Edith is a grand example of that 50’s housewife—keeping the home in order, doing most of the talking to the children—while wondering openly for the audience to see how long she can maintain this “peaceful” aura.  Ms. Reiter expertly shares Edith’s feelings and uses only a glance or a body shift to get it all across.  Edith is always asking questions.  Indeed, Darren and Edith have a “book of unanswered questions” that has regular entries put into it—all pointing toward the day when the building and creating is done and they can sit and actually talk about those questions, and whatever else might come up.  Like their future.

There are two children—Darren Jr. (Carl Collins) and Edith Jr. (Sarah Patin)—who are totally unlike their parents in nearly every way.  They live on lower floors of this tall apartment building.  At first, we think they live together, to be honest—an absurdity if ever there was one in the family dynamic.  But we do discover in time that they have their own lives (Darren Jr. is actually a father himself).  And, they are wet.  It’s raining outside at this locale, set by a beach bordering the ocean. And the water is rising, and apparently very quickly.

In experiencing all this, the kids are trying to share with Mom in phone calls—the phones, by the way, are simple tin cans with twine as electrical cord—that they are drowning and they need help. But their cries go unheeded, for the most part, as Darren has convenient excuses and reactions for everything that happens, except for the obvious: the building is flooding. And not just now; RIGHT now.

Directed by Ken Prestininzi in detailed, intimate strokes that all strike a familiar chord, Deen has thrown many of the elements in theatre of the absurd to good use. Dialogue here harkens back strongly to Beckett and Ionesco. Disparate elements of time and space here create much debate on what exactly this family is facing.  There are moments that comment in their presentation on everything from climate change to social media to parental regard for children to marital challenges to the creative impulse in people… I could go on and on.  FLOOD is a difficult piece to absorb, but upon examination, that’s actually in its favor.  Certainly, there is lots for the audience to chew on.  And I won’t share the play’s ending.  But Deen and Shattered Globe Theatre are both to be commended for taking a chance on new work in an art form that audiences really do not see much of anymore in a full play.  “FLOOD” forces the audience to look at life in a more encompassing way than the day-to-day aspect by actually utilizing that same thought to show the absurdities we all face every day… and how one family deals with them.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL. www.solochicagotheatre.com  Coming soon, his new solo play “Echo Holler.” www.echoholler.com

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Shattered Globe Theatre
presents
Chicago Premiere
FLOOD
Theater Wit
1229 W Belmont
through March 9, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Anything Goes - Porchlight Music Theatre

 

Blow Gabriel! Murphy is Heaven Sent!
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Porchlight Music Theatre celebrates the Chicago Cole Porter Festival and launches their 29th Season with a sparkling, effervescent 90th anniversary production of “Anything Goes” superbly directed by Michael Weber featuring Meghan Murphy in a big, boisterous star turn as the seaworthy siren Reno Sweeney. The book by Timothy Crouse and John Weidman, was adapted for the 1987 Broadway revival from the 1934 original by P.C. Woodhouse, Guy Bolton, Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse. It tells the story of an oceanic crossing with a zany cast of characters with Murphy’s Sweeney at the delectable center of Porter’s most beloved music and lyrics.

Luke Nowakowski shines in the role of Billy Crocker who yearns for Hope Harcourt (played beautifully by Emma Ogea) even as he falls in with a gangster named Moonface Martin (an inspired performance by Steve McDonaugh) and his partner Erma (a scintillating Tafadzwa Diener) who all want to flip the tables on the wedding between Harcourt and Lord Evelyn Oakleigh (Jackson Evans). At the matinee on Saturday, Evans—in one of the most hilarious of his many stage appearances to date—and Murphy create an irresistible comic cosmos in “The Gypsy in Me” that literally brought tears to my eyes. In the end, of course, love conquers all and everything works out, except for a few clay pigeons off the starboard bow and anyone who actually sold their Amalgamated stock.

Under the lush musical direction of Nick Sula, Porter’s rich, melodic score comes vibrantly alive in “You’re The Top,” “Friendship” and “It’s De-lovely.” And when conductor Linda Madonia’s band kicks into high gear, it’s time to clear the decks for Tammy Mader’s rock-solid, toe-tapping choreography—and one of the finest singing and dancing ensembles seen on a Porchlight stage—to blast the big production numbers like “Anything Goes,” and “Blow, Gabriel Blow” straight to the heavens, with Murphy leading the way.

Jeffrey D. Kmiec’s magnificent two-story ship deck is dressed in navy blue and white with seaworthy stairs that frame a series of three revolving doors providing access to the main stage area. Kmiec’s masterfully sturdy design, complete with ship’s railing and arched pylons, reveals more than a few surprises along the way.

Under the steady hand of artistic director Michael Weber, Porchlight Music Theatre has built a superb reputation for developing exceptional new talent. In recent years, on the intimate Ruth Page Center for the Arts main stage, the company has forged full steam ahead through harsh winds and heavy seas to stay on course despite the challenges that the performing arts community has been navigating. Weber and Executive Director Jeannie Lukow’s bold, innovative, award-winning, musical productions include a long list of outstanding veteran performers like the late Hollis Resnick in a memorable production of “Sunset Boulevard,” E. Faye Butler’s showstopping performance as Mama Rose in “Gypsy” and Broadway veteran Felicia P. Fields in “Blues in the Night” who elevate the performances of everyone around them to new heights.

Add the exquisite Meghan Murphy to the company of Chicago’s all-time brightest stars. What a performance. What a show! 

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

PORCHLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
presents
ANYTHING GOES
Ruth Page Center for the Arts
EXTENDED
through March 10, 2024


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DIGITAL PROGRAM

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PicksInSix Review: It's a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago!-American Blues Theater

 
 

A New Home. An Enduring Classic!
PicksInSix® Review|Ed Tracy

American Blues Theater has officially opened their permanent home—the first in the 35-year history of the professional theater company in Chicago—and they did it in grand style with the 22nd annual production of the holiday chestnut “It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago!” The theatrical tradition—a family show with a message for the young at heart—is year after year ABT’s delightful homespun offering. On Sunday afternoon, the show took on special meaning as the first to officially christen the 137-seat main stage with music, mirth and merriment that makes it the perfect choice to ring in the season.

The live radio show— based on the short story The Greatest Gift by Philip Van Doren Stern that was the basis for the 1946 Frank Capra film—is under the direction of longtime Executive Artistic Director Gwendolyn Whiteside and features Christmas carols, local “on-air“ commercials, audience shout-outs and a warm, engaging show that looks, feels and sounds—thanks to Foley artist J.G. Smith—every bit like a broadcast from the 1940s. That is except when music director Michael Mahler is delightfully churning out a holiday parody to a familiar REO Speedwagon tune in the pre-show. That’s one of several clever additions to previous sing-alongs I have attended. The ensemble was having a blast warming up the audience prior to the main event—a 90-minute true-to-telling of one of the most heartfelt of all holiday stories about the fateful day in Bedford Falls when George Bailey learns from his guardian angel Clarence that no man is failure who has friends.

Returning with gusto for his seventh run on the Bailey Building and Loan, Brandon Dahlquist has the corner on George Bailey, delivering a marvelously sensitive and present performance—a fine balance between familiarity with the material and navigating the limitations of the radio play format where scenic elements and props are all but non-existent, unless they make a sound. We are truly moved by George’s anguish as he struggles to confess his love for Mary—beautifully portrayed by Audrey Billings— and the explosive frustration unleashed upon Manny Buckley’s befuddled Uncle Billy when Billy is duped by Mr. Potter (played superbly by Joe Dempsey) and threatens the solvency of Bailey’s Building and Loan setting the wheels in motion for George’s frenzied emotional collapse. George’s redemption may be the most familiar part of this story, but Dahlquist keeps the dramatic tension fresh, coming literally unhinged at the sight of the world without him a player in it.

Along with Mahler, who shines as announcer and pianist, the company includes Dara Cameron, Mahler’s real-life spouse who is lovely as Violet and Zuzu; the multi-talented Ian Paul Custer and versatile Buckley, who collectively have many of the most heartfelt and touching moments in the show. At the opening press performance on Sunday, Cameron was honored by the onstage company for her longtime service and contributions. Richly deserved!

Over the years, I look forward to coming back to “It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago!” In 2016, I recorded a delightful conversation with Wendy Whiteside together with then-Foley artist Shawn Goudy on main stage at The Greenhouse Theater. It was Dahlquist’s first year and the 15th for the late John Mohrien whose performance as Clarence/Potter was broadcast in a memorable pandemic era broadcast that elevated my deep respect and admiration for the ABT Ensemble who have continued to adapt, enhance and deliver truly inspired work at venues across Chicagoland.

Brandon Dahlquist (George Bailey) and Joe Dempsey (Mr. Potter) in the 2023 American Blues Theater production of “It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago!” now playing through December 31, 2023. Video|The Stage Channel

As much as their sparkling new home is a labor of love and an extraordinary accomplishment for Whiteside, the ABT Board and Artistic Ensemble, it is just the beginning. The new facility has a second, small flexible rehearsal studio that will serve as a venue for other theatrical companies and, altogether, a stunning cultural anchor for the neighborhood and lots of old and new friends.  

PHOTO|Michael Brosilow

American Blues Theater
presents
It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago!
through December 31, 2023

5627 N. Lincoln
(773) 654-3103


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2023 BACKSTAGE GUIDE

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PicksInSix Review: BOOP! The Musical - Broadway in Chicago

 
 

“BOOP! The Musical” Has It All!
PicksInSix® Gold Review | Ed Tracy

When the stunning new show “BOOP! The Musical” arrives on Broadway next year, a new generation will discover the iconic Betty Boop through the spellbinding performance of Jasmine Amy Rogers in the title role, and through the eyes of one of their own—16 year-old pop media phenom Angelica Hale, making her stage debut as Betty’s new pint-sized BFF.  

At the magical moment that Betty catapults into present day Comicon from her cartoon world of the 1930s, she is searching to both escape the adulation of her own time and to satisfy her yearning to discover an answer to the pivotal question: “Who am I?” Upon arrival, she finds a vibrant world in the radiant colors of the rainbow, none of which she knows by name. She also has a predilection to put an ‘L’ in everything, so her new marshmallow world is “plurple.”

It's the black, white and red-hot opening sequence of “BOOP! The Musical” with Rogers as the charming, charismatic, and confident heroine created by illustrator, animator and cartoon innovator Max Fleischer who revolutionized the graphic technology of the day, merging illustrations and live action to create whimsical cartoon series and shorts featuring Betty Boop, Popeye and a cavalcade of quirky characters who morph from inanimate objects to all forms of comic incarnations.

The world premiere of “BOOP!” opened Wednesday at Chicago's CIBC Theatre. After years in development, there is now a dream team in place for the Broadway-bound project directed and choreographed by multi-Tony Award winner Jerry Mitchell, the first musical venture by Grammy and Emmy award-winning composer/producer David Foster with lyrics by Susan Birkenhead (“Jelly’s Last Jam”) and book by Bob Martin (“Drowsy Chaperone,” “Elf”). The creative team includes a spectacular scenic design by David Rockwell that is beautifully enhanced by Finn Ross’s projections and Gareth Owen’s sound design, Philip S. Rosenberg’s lighting and the stunning costumes of Greg Barnes.

With big, boisterous dance numbers, tender ballads, an extraordinary scenic landscape and masterful illusions courtesy of Skylar Fox, “BOOP!” has it all. It's a love story—three actually—but even more it’s a free-spirited and endearing comedy that has a message for all of us about who we are and the impact we can make on the world and the people in it.

At Comicon, Betty collides with Dwayne (Ainsley Melham) a jazz musician and for maybe the first time, Betty senses an attraction. Overcome by her new surroundings, Betty forges a friendship with Trisha (Hale) a young fan and aspiring artist in need of a little confidence of her own. It doesn't take long before we find that Trisha lives with her aunt Carol (Anastacia McCleskey), who serves as manager for the New York City mayoral campaign of Raymond Demerest (Erich Bergen) and Carol’s brother, who just happens to be Dwayne. The hook is set and a youthful love story begins to unfold.

Back in early 30s, the studio directors, Aubie Merrylees and Ricky Schroder, are in a tizzy when they discover that Betty is nowhere to be found. Grampy (Stephen DeRosa) realizes that Betty’s absence will have a disastrous impact on their present and the future, so he embarks on a cross-dimensional journey of his own with his dog Pudgy (the brilliant marionette artist Phillip Huber). In Times Square he meets up with Valentina (Faith Prince) a retired NASA scientist who is still holding a torch for Grampy that was lit 40 years earlier. At first on a quest to find Betty before it’s too late, Grampy discovers that the fire is still smoldering between the two.

The cat’s out of the bag on the secret that Betty Boop is now alive in the present when she shows up and brings the house down at Nellie’s Place, the jazz club where Dwayne is trying to get a regular gig. Once the news is public, the corrupt Demerest, the King of Waste, tries to hitch his dump truck, and whatever else he has at his disposal, to Betty’s instant celebrity. But it’s Betty who turns the tables on the plan and as always, love wins out overall.  

Martin’s book moves briskly and effortlessly with zingers and easter eggs, old and new, along the way. Musically, Foster has infused the score with a plethora of styles from jazz and pop to some socko Broadway show tunes that allow Mitchell a full range of dance routines for the superb, multi-talented ensemble. Among the highlights, Rogers leads the ensemble in the opening “A Little Versatility,” “My New York” and “In Color,” and the show is at full throttle for the truly sensational Act I closer “Where I Wanna Be.”

World Premiere of “BOOP ! The Musical” at Broadway in Chicago’s CIBC Theatre through December 24, 2023.

Price and DeRosa shine in “A Cure for Love” and the touching “Together, You and Me.” Melham joins Schroder and Probst for “Sunlight” and delivers a blissful “She Knocks Me Out.” Hale’s powerful “Portrait of Betty” is a smash and the lovely “My Hero” with Rogers is one of the show’s many highlights.

It all comes down to Rogers though, whose radiant stage presence is all at once inquisitive, vulnerable and decisive as she evolves to the real version of who she will become: a loving role model of strength and independence.

Rogers’s charismatic performance of “Something to Shout About” is a showstopper. After taking center stage surrounded by a glistening celestial panorama, she steps decisively and defiantly forward and, in that one moment, appears larger-than-life, captivating the audience and signaling the presence of a star.

That she is.  

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

Broadway in Chicago
presents the
World Premiere of
BOOP! The Musical
CIBC Theatre
through December 24, 2023

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PicksInSix Review: The Wiz - Broadway in Chicago

 
 

“THIS IS A WHOLE ‘NOTHER LEVEL!”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

The national tour of the Broadway-bound musical “The Wiz” opened its limited Chicago engagement at the Cadillac Palace on Wednesday with all the blissful promise and brilliant colors of the rainbow you could ever imagine. With a massive, techno-landscape—a marvel all in itself—the L. Frank Baum-based classic that made its groundbreaking 1974 debut in Baltimore and conquered Broadway the following year with eight nominations and seven Tony® Awards on the way to a four-year run, now comes vibrantly alive for a new generation.

“The Wiz” is ingeniously directed by Schele Williams with some clever choreography by JaQuel Knight that amplifies a superb company large in number and steeped with talent running through their paces at a size and scope rarely seen in a touring production. The show premiered in Baltimore in late September and is making a multi-city tour in advance of its scheduled debut on Broadway in March 2024 with a lot of professional steam behind the William F. Brown book with music and lyrics by Charlie Smalls.

The revival includes new musical moments from Joseph Joubert (music supervision, orchestrations, & music arrangements), vocal arrangements and music arrangements by Allen René Louis and additional material by Amber Ruffian. Nearly sixty producers and co-producers led by Kristin Caskey, Mike Isaacson, Brian Anthony Moreland, Kandi Burruss, Todd Tucker, Common, MC Lyte and The Ambassador Theatre Group are the team behind the curtain making this a feat of epic proportions.

Those elements work extremely well for “The Wiz” and are sure to be crowd-pleasers at every stop along the way. The tour will also allow time for the performance elements to coalesce for what is one of the most highly anticipated Broadway openings next spring—a straight-up adaptation focused squarely and beautifully on the central themes of friendship, family and home with just the right touch of panache—with all the right stuff to appeal to contemporary audiences of all ages. If you are a fan who knows this familiar, and much beloved, score that includes “Ease On Down The Road,” “If You Believe,” “Everybody Rejoice” and “Home” by heart, you will not be disappointed.  

Nichelle Lewis’s debut performance as Dorothy will be turning heads in the months to come with her charm, wholesome innocence with a little sass, and heavenly vocal range. Melody A. Betts is a powerhouse in the dual role of Aunt Em/Evillene. You will love the cohort of the remarkably limber Avery Wilson’s Scarecrow, the soulfully spirited Phillip Johnson Richardson’s Tinman and Kyle Ramar Freeman’s effervescent Lion. Alan Miongo, Jr. delights as the inimitable Wiz. The charismatic and glamorous Deborah Cox as Glinda, another superb vocalist, looks amazing in costume designer Sharen Davis’s creations.

The journey begins in Kansas, on a black and white tapestry by scenic designer Hannah Beachler. Once in the full color Land of Oz, the opulent scenic transitions race by at the speed of light through imaginative corn fields with tilted windmills, dark forests and a lion’s den in the jungle, to a stunning glimpse of the Emerald City. Once in Oz, the palate turns emerald and the majestic lighting design (Ryan J. O’Gara), sound design (Jon Weston) and projections (Daniel Brodie) continue to an awe-inspiring scene in Evillene’s lair for “Don’t Nobody Bring Me No Bad News” and Lewis’s soaring delivery of “Home” that will sweep you away and ease on down the road all the way to Broadway. No bad news here. 

Post Script: André De Shields
Earlier this week via text, I asked the original Wiz, the omnipresent André De Shields, if he would share a memorable highlight from the original 1974 production. He told me that during the run, the entire company was invited to a homecooked meal prepared by his mother and two of his sisters:  

“The group was so large, that it spilled out of my family’s modest two-story row house onto the 1800 block of Division Street. Forty-nine years later, in September 2023, the revival of “The Wiz” opened in Baltimore at the Hippodrome Theatre, during the same week that the 1800 block of Division Street was renamed ‘André De Shields Way.’”  

And in case you were wondering, the company feasted on everything from oyster fritters, steak fish and kidney stew to sweet potato pie and Chesapeake blue crabs, washed down with assorted flavors of Kool-Aid. et  

PHOTO|Jeremy Daniel

BROADWAY IN CHICAGO
presents
THE WIZ
Cadillac Palace Theatre

through December 10


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PicksInSix Review: Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas

 
 

Delightful Holiday Treat for All Ages!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Kaitlyn Linsner

The stars of this show—Ma, Emmet Otter and a darling group of critters—have been warming the hearts of many for over fifty years. They first appeared in an illustrated 1971 children’s book by Russell Hoban and Lillian Hoban. Jim Henson then brought the book to life in a one-hour 1977 television special featuring puppets from his Creature Shop and a delightful score from Academy Award-winning songwriter Paul Williams. Folks fell in love, and now, old fans, and anyone looking for 75 minutes of sheer joy, can visit the Studebaker Theatre for the charming holiday celebration that is the live theatrical adaptation of “Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas” with music and lyrics by Williams, book by Timothy Allen McDonald and Christopher Gattelli, who directs and choreographs.

This is the Chicago premiere of “Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas” and should not be missed when planning this year’s holiday festivities. The story follows Ma and Emmet Otter who so badly want to buy each other the perfect Christmas gift. Ma (Kathleen Elizabeth Monteleone) wants to buy Emmet (Andy Mientus) a guitar, and he wants to buy Ma a piano. You see, these two come from a family enriched with musical talents and traditions—Ma with her lovely singing voice, and Emmet with his own set of pipes and a mean rhythmic streak on the washboard bass. Problem is, they don’t have enough money to buy these special gifts for each other. So, when the mayor of nearby Waterville announces the town will be having its first annual talent show, Ma and Emmet decide to take their chances at entering and vying for that first-place prize of fifty dollars.

Turns out Ma and Emmet Otter are up against some stiff competition. Toward the end of the production, the audience becomes the patrons of the inaugural talent show and get to see humans and puppets alike showcase their talents. The magnificent Madame Squirrel (Sawyer Smith) delights in a performance with acrobatic squirrels. Mrs. Mink (Sharriese Hamilton) heats up the stage with a wildly entertaining burlesque performance, and we cannot forget a skunk on a tuba and tap-dancing rabbits.

At the core of “Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas” is true enchantment. Each scene bursts with charm, clever humor and whimsical visuals. Take, for example, the costumes by Gregg Barnes and the makeup by Megan E. Pirtle. The costumes, like Madame Squirrel’s playfully large tail and Wendell Porcupine’s quills (Steven Huyhn), and the makeup both do well to transform the cast into their cute furry characters on Anna Louizos whimiscal set.

The puppetry, though, is what takes this family-friendly musical to the next level of creative, good fun. There are many laughs to be had when a band of squirrels tries to grow an evergreen tree in the winter by blowing hot air on it. There are also big feelings to be felt when puppet Pa Otter, deceased, appears to tell Ma to never stop dreaming and when that same band of squirrels advises Emmet to follow his heart and take flight. The opening-night audience audibly reacted in wonder when the puppet jug band practiced in a tree house, which looked exactly like the scene in the television special. The Jim Henson way of blending both worlds together worked seamlessly on stage and truly elevates the production.

Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas with music and lyrics by Paul Williams, book by Timothy Allen McDonald and Christopher Gattelli, directed and choreographed by Christopher Gattelli. Now playing at Studebaker Theatre through December 31, 2023.

Of course, there are also plenty of themes and lessons that make “Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas” a true holiday classic. Ma and Emmet Otter show us how to heal together after experiencing loss. We see bravery and growth in characters learning to trust themselves and each other when facing challenges. We also get to experience a show filled with so much love, which, in and of itself, is enough of a reason to join everyone in Frogtown Hollow and Waterville this season.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | KAITLYN LINSNER is a Chicago-based attorney practicing construction and surety law.

PHOTO|Michael Brosilow

ITheatrics with Broadway & Beyond Theatricals,
in association with the Jim Henson Company
presents
Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas
Music and Lyrics by Paul Williams
Book by Timothy Allen McDonald and Christopher Gattelli
Directed and Choreographed by Christopher Gattelli

Studebaker Theatre
Fine Arts Building
through December 31, 2023


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PicksInSix Review: Beetlejuice-The Musical - Broadway in Chicago

 
 

“Beetlejuice” – ‘Being Dead Has Its Perks!’
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

There is a monster sandworm burrowing its way into theaters across the country and its filling houses and bucking ticketing trends at every stop. There are levitating bodies and the tiny head guy is there, too, albeit briefly, for the multiple Tony Award nominated musical “Beetlejuice” that opened here at the Auditorium Theatre on Wednesday to the delight of enthusiastic movie followers, cult fans and a dusting of first-timers, of which I was one.

I am pleased to say that those attending were treated to a black and white striped (and green-hued) spectacle of snappy repartee, soaring ballads, splashy production numbers and eye-popping special effects that showcased a superb ensemble. But it is the unhinged brilliance of stage veteran Justin Collette as the sly, demonic and blue-cheesy Beetlejuice, and the enormously talented Isabella Esler making a star turn in her national tour debut as Lydia Deetz, that people will be talking about for a long time.    

For those uninitiated: “Beetlejuice” opened on Broadway in 2019, closed during the pandemic, was successfully resurrected in April 2022, and closed in January 2023 with plans for this tour well underway. The show is based on Tim Burton’s 1988 film starring Michael Keaton with the musical book by Scott Brown and Anthony King, with music and lyrics by Eddie Perfect. It begins with Beetlejuice (Collette) at the graveside services for Lydia’s mother, Emily, who is grief stricken by the loss. Meanwhile, at the home of Adam (Will Burton) and Barbara Maitland (Megan McGinnis), death come quickly and the pair are exiled to the attic. When Charles (Jesse Sharp), along with his gal Friday/lover Delia (Kate Marilley) and Lydia show up to move in, everyone is initially amused by the couple’s ghostly antics, except Lydia, who will do anything to thwart her father’s plan to marry Delia and preserve the memory of her mother.

The Maitland’s form an alliance with Lydia, but when things don’t go very well, Lydia succumbs to Beetlejuice’s deceptive charm, says his name three times, and “It’s Showtime!” From there, it’s not long before this farce gains momentum, the house is overrun with ghouls, goblins and other wild goings-on, and Lydia realizes that she is the only rational living thing in the middle of all the madness. A trip to the Netherworld and lots of freakish folly follows that all adds up to one helluva show.

Collette’s comic timing and impish glee serves his bizarre otherworldly character well. The super-charged chemistry with Esler is a perfect match. And, when she’s by herself, Esler explodes with a powerhouse vocal range that belies her youthful stature. This is a magnificent breakout performance, delivered with charm, passion and sincerity and wonderful to see and hear.

You could not ask for more visually from the Alex Timbers directed production team including the intricate set (David Korins), elaborate projections (Peter Nigrini), stunning costumes (William Ivey Long), raucous choreography (Connor Gallagher) and outstanding music direction (Kris Kukal). Of particular note are the multiple views of the Maitland’s  house through its various transitions and a clever transition to the Netherworld that reminds one of the opening of a Twilight Zone episode. So, if you already have a ticket to see this production of “Beetlejuice-The Musical” you are in luck. The relatively short run through November 19 is selling fast, so quickly, in fact, that it was announced this week that the show would be returning in May 2024 at the Nederlander when everyone will again be saying: Beetlejuice! Beetlejuice! … You get the idea.  

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy

Broadway in Chicago
presents
Beetlejuice
Auditorium Theatre
through November 19


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PicksInSix Review: Twelfth Night - Chicago Shakespeare Theater

 
 

“Twelfth Night” — Free-Spirited, Comic Gem!
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Without a doubt, the astounding quality and resulting popularity of productions of Shakespeare’s work at Chicago Shakespeare Theater rests firmly on the theater’s decades-long artistic commitment to presenting work with universal clarity and understanding, multi-talented casts and purely whimsical staging. A large part of this artistic ethos has to do with the diversity of the massive audiences drawn to Navy Pier, a top Midwest destination attraction that offers a once-in-a-lifetime experience for visitors to Chicago and an endless stream of students whose trip to the magnificent Courtyard Theatre is often their introduction to both theater and Shakespeare.

So, it is no surprise that the opening of “Twelfth Night”—a free-spirited, comic gem directed by Tyrone Phillips—was enthusiastically received on Thursday night. Shakespeare’s celebration of the many facets of love, and its impact on who we are, takes on new meaning in Phillips adaptation which is at the same time true to the comic roots of the original and cleverly awash with 21st century references that fit together seamlessly. With Shakespeare’s robust characters bursting forth with purpose, passion and promise, Chicago Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night” is clever, smart and a joy to watch from beginning to end.

Set in the Caribbean, the story revolves around the separation of shipwrecked twins Viola (Jaeda LaVonne) and Sebastin (Justen Ross) on the island of Illyria. In order to deal with the grief and abandonment that she is feeling with the supposed loss of her brother at sea, Viola disguises herself as a young man named Cesario and takes a position as page to Duke Orsino(Yao Dogbe). The Duke implores Viola(as Cesario) to become the intermediary for his love interest, the Countess Olivia(Christiana Clark) who is in mourning herself about the recent passing of her brother. While Viola finds herself falling hard for the Duke, Olivia, determined to shun the Duke, begins to woo Viola(as Cesario).

Olivia lives with her uncle Sir Toby Belch(Ronald L. Conner) who spends most of his time in drunken—and hilarious—merrymaking with his companion Sir Andrew Aguecheek(Alex Goodrich) along with Olivia’s gentlewoman Maria(Danielle Davis), Fabian(Shelby Lynn Bias) and the jester Feste(Israel Erron Ford).  The group’s brand of roguish behavior riles Olivia’s cynical steward Malvolio(Paul Oakley Stovall) into such a fit that the group conspires to deceive him into believing that Olivia is enamored with him. One comic situation follows another with love eventually conquering all.

The show is infused with a universal blend of contemporary hip-hop and reggae music by music director Robert Reddrick and movement director Sadira Muhammad that befits the storytelling. Philips and his creative team, led by scenic designer Sydney Lynne with costume designer Christine Pascua, have conceived a striking seaside atmosphere that transitions effortlessly from scene to scene. With extraordinary precision, the crystal blue Caribbean skies turn to a thunderous rainstorm in the blink of an eye and a nod to the evocative lighting design of Xavier Pierce, stunning projections by Mike Tutaj and an intricately charged sound design by Willow James.

It all feels like an expertly-crafted ensemble piece. LaVonne’s earnest and engaging Viola/Cesario is a delight. Sir Toby Belch and Aguecheek, two of Shakespeare’s most beloved comic foils, are played here by Conner and Goodrich with reckless comic abandon. Davis, whose sustained laughter is infectious, and the sublime vocals of Ford, round out the band of hooligans at the center of the comic subplot to upend Stovall’s staunchly priggish servant turned infatuated manic lover Malvolio—the brilliant and commanding performance of the night—all make “Twelfth Night” a show to see and enjoy!  

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Chicago Shakespeare Theater
presents
TWELFTH NIGHT
Courtyard Theater
Navy Pier
through November 26


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PicksInSix Review: Dennis Watkins - The Magic Parlour

 
 

Magician Dennis Watkins – Showman Par Excellence!
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Chicago’s consummate magician Dennis Watkins has moved The Magic Parlour from the Palmer House Hotel—where it enjoyed a hugely successful, decade-long run—into a new home in the exquisitely renovated space on the lower level of Petterino’s Restaurant in the heart of the Loop theater district. With high expectations and reservations running through the roof, it was announced in advance of the press openings last weekend that the new show, presented in partnership with Goodman Theatre and Petterino’s, has already been extended well into 2024.  

Watkins is a brilliant third generation magician and showman par excellence who performs close-up magic for about 60 guests at the new venue, which he says is the perfect number to ensure that everyone will have the same experience and opportunity to participate. For 90 minutes, Watkins offers up a captivating, multi-faceted show that includes spell binding effects, phenomenal psychic prognostications, audience participation and engaging storytelling mixed with witty comedic moments that come out of—and disappear into—thin air.  No saws, trap doors or rabbits here. Watkins artistry is in full view and on glorious display!

There is a through line of the show that is not readily apparent and will not be disclosed here, but that story hinges on the accumulation of Watkins special brand of illusions, mind-reading, numerical wizardry and sleight of hand elements that keep things moving so quickly that you will be asking for more.

And there is more.

Immediately following the main show, Watkins literally rolls up his sleeves in The Encore Room for a VIP close up table session providing an additional opportunity to witness his dazzling skills from only a few feet away. All in, Dennis Watkins superb talent and engaging personality makes everyone feel at home, and, a visit to The Magic Parlour, one of the most entertaining experiences you can have in Chicago right now!

The house opens an hour before the show and Petterino’s offers both light bites onsite for an additional charge or the full menu experience upstairs before or after the show with advance reservations suggested, particularly for the upcoming holiday season.  And, if you believe in magic, you just might nab seats in The Encore Room to make your evening complete!

PHOTO|Kyle Flubacker Photography

DENNIS WATKINS
THE MAGIC PARLOUR
presented by
GOODMAN THEATRE & PETTERINO’S
50 W Randolph Street

Open Run

TICKETS

THE MAGIC PARLOUR WEBSITE

PETTERINOS

GOODMAN THEATRE

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PicksInSix Review: Brigadoon - Music Theater Works

 
 

Movement and Music Channel the Myth.
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Scott Gryder

A lush lullaby of music lured the audience into the North Theatre at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie for the opening of the Music Theater Works production of the Lerner and Loewe classic “Brigadoon.” An ethereal pastoral landscape, swirling with misty enchantment, set the tone for the story of wonder, witchcraft and love ahead.

The legendary story of Brigadoon follows two wandering New Yorkers, Tommy and Jeff, traveling across the Scottish Highlands. After losing their way, their curiosities are piqued by the entrancing sounds coming from the vague image of a village tucked within the haze of the hills and absent from their map. What the two men find beyond the melodious voices is the secret village of Brigadoon, whose magical fate is to only appear every hundred years, defying time and space. Stumbling into Brigadoon, Tommy and Jeff not only discover an astonishing living time capsule of community, but they are also faced with deciding whether the lives they’ve left behind are worth trading for the magic they’ve found.

The cast of “Brigadoon” delivers a pleasantly proper portrayal of the tradition that is American Musical Theater. Leading man Conor Jordan brings a tenacious tenor to Tommy Albright, not just in his brash voice but with his heroic physique and protagonistic drive. Adding finesse and flare to the leading couple is ingénue Fiona MacLaren, played by Sarah Obert with a vocal beauty that could enchant all of Scotland to make their way directly to their hidden village. The leading couple shares a romantic fire that’s lit not with a conventionally saccharine enthusiasm but with a sincere investment of newfound potential. It’s the sarcastic Jeff Douglas of Zachary Linnert and whimsical wit of Timothy Wolf’s Mr. Lundie that ground the story in levels of their respective realisms. Linnert brings a keen honesty to Jeff’s text and predicaments, concisely hitting notes of humor and revelation with ease. And Wolf’s Lundie is lovably expounding throughout, despite the rants and rhymes of could-be lunacy.

Much like the mythical village of Brigadoon, Lerner and Loewe’s melodic Great American Songbook contributions have also stood the test of time with such beloved standards as “There But For You Go I" and “Heather on the Hill” to the catchy “Almost like Being in Love” and “Come to Me, Bend to Me.” Although the book of “Brigadoon” can be plodding and predictable at times, what director Sasha Gerritson does to help lead this production, beyond harmoniously staging across a myriad of times and places on one nearly static set, is to fully engage the ensemble. It’s obvious that Gerritson took the time to instill backstory and intent for each character, so the considerable ensemble isn’t just living wallpaper, they are alive in each moment.

What truly enhances the storytelling most is assistant director Clayton Cross’s choreography. As is the case with most musicals, when words fail the characters, they burst into song; however, Clayton’s choreography, ranging from fun and fanciful traditional Scottish dance to elegantly executed ballet, fiercely embodies the emotional mood of the musical numbers. Even when there are text breaks, and there is only music, the story continues to be told through Cross’s movement. Perfectly partnered with the choreography is the period costuming by Jazmin Aurora Medina, utilizing warm tartan prints and playful floral patterns to create a tone of history, tradition and mirth. And Ann Davis’s set design so rustically recreates the bewitching landscape of the Scottish Highlands, complete with a multi-level cobblestone bridge, that any wandering traveler would be hard pressed to refuse giving in to the enchantment of Brigadoon.

Solid serenading and energetic choreography guide us down the winding path to the otherworldly village of Brigadoon, whisking an audience away from the cares of everyday life and into an alternate reality. If you’re looking to escape into the spellbinding delights of the foundational canon of musical theater, then follow the sounds of the musical moors to Music Theater Works production of “Brigadoon.”  

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | SCOTT GRYDER received a Non-Equity Jeff Award for his performance in the one-man show BUYER & CELLAR. www.thescottgryder.com

PHOTO|Brett Beiner


MUSIC THEATER WORKS
presents
Lerner and Loewe’s
BRIGADOON

through November 12
North Shore Center for Performing Arts
9501 Skokie Blvd., Skokie


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