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PicksInSix Review - Water for Elephants-Broadway in Chicago

 
 

‘WATER FOR ELEPHANTS’ IS TRUNKING AMAZING!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Catey Sullivan

Chicago’s Nederlander Theatre may well be the most thematically appropriate venue in the country for the first national tour of “Water for Elephants.” The endlessly ornate venue opened in 1926, a scant five years before the musical based on Sara Gruen’s 1931-set novel about a travelling circus trying to outrun the Great Depression. There are literally elephants in the vestibule of the 100-year-old Nederlander, their tusked heads holding orb-like lamps. There’s also at least one elephant built into the house, a fanciful pachyderm amid the sea of gryphons and other fantastical creatures sculpted into the walls around the seats.

It’s a marvel of an interior, and a place that ups the ambiance in the stellar production (book by Rick Elice, music and lyrics by Pigpen Theatre Co.) running through July 5. There are a few significant departures from the novel, including the inexplicable decision to excise a pivotal plot point involving the Brookfield Zoo. Directed by Ryan Emmons (original direction by Jessica Stone) “Water for Elephants” is a whiz-bang of a show, beguiling, jaw-dropping, and irresistible.

Crucially, an astounding array of circus acts are incorporated into a story that takes the brutal impact of the Great Depression and wraps it around a star-crossed romance, a host of indelible circus folk and, obviously, an elephant. Shana Carroll’s circus design has cast members flying on wings of billowing silk, spinning on gleaming hoops and acrobat-ing up and down 15(ish)-foot pools. There are jugglers, burlesque dancers, roustabouts and extraordinary puppet creatures (designed by Ray Wetmore, JR Goodman and Camille LaBarre) that look every bit as sentient as the humans on stage. Rosie is the showpiece with massive lumbering legs, a swinging trunk and expressive, saucer-large eyes.

The cast knows its business: As Jacob Jankowski, who joins the circus after his parents die, Zachary Keller delivers just the right mix of vulnerability and leading man bravissimo. The love interest is Marlena (Helen Krushinski, navigating the score’s treacherous modulations with ease) who performs, trains, befriends and tries to protect Rosie. Working against her: the villainous ringmaster August (Connor Sullivan), whose final confrontation with Rosie is immensely satisfying. But arguably the most memorable member of this rag-tag troop is Walter the clown. Tyler West is a hilarious showstopper, combining physical slapstick and rapid-fire wit and impeccable comic timing. West has one of the best, most ridiculous death scenes I’ve seen in 35 years of reviewing musicals. (He’s actually got a couple of death scenes, it’s the first one that’s snort-level side-splitting.)

Pigpen’s score is a terrific mix of up-tempo, energized, stunt-filled numbers (the all-hands on deck opening “Prologue”) slower, fluid ballad-like tunes (Krushinski’s flowing “Easy”) that come with a dream-like quality.

“Water for Elephants” unfolds as a memory, bookended by Jacob as an elderly man (Robert Tully) from the nursing home he is desperate to get out of. The show then gracefully vacillates between soft-focus beauty and vivid detail. Either way, the production is—if not the most spectacular show on earth—surely one of the best musicals on the tour circuit.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | CATEY SULLIVAN has been covering Chicago theater for more than 30 years. Her work has been published in the Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Reader, Windy City Times, Playbill, Chicago Magazine, Chicago Tribune and New City, among others. She has an MFA in creative writing from the University of Illinois. 

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy for MurphyMade

Broadway in Chicago
presents
WATER FOR ELEPHANTS
James M. Nederlander Theatre
through July 5, 2026


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PicksInSix Review: Clue - Broadway in South Bend

 
 

Dying For Laughs In Riotous “Clue”
PicksInSix® Review |
Ed Tracy

What will strike you most at the top of the second national tour of “Clue” currently crisscrossing the country, is the massive foyer of a mansion where, in quick succession, the ensemble of characters arrive with invitation in hand and are then whisked off into a non-stop, comic murder mystery. And at the Broadway in South Bend opening on Friday night at the Morris Performing Arts Center, the audience was ready, willing and thoroughly entertained.

Yes, it’s a whodunit and bodies are popping up again and again until you realize there is no real mystery here, it is all for fun. This fine ensemble of comic actors who each define the familiar characters of the famous board game and 1985 film are now, well, for the most part, alive, until they are not. It is not a matter of who but when, how, and by whom, of course.

Unlike the Hasbro board game, there is only one possible conclusion in this production—original screenplay by Jonathan Lynn and book by Sandy Ruskin with additional material by Hunter Foster and Eric Price—that allows endless avenues and rabbit holes to explore along the way. Just as you think that it is all chaos and confusion, you are wrangled back on course with a twist of the knife or a fatal conk on the noggin that leads to another highly-stylized group romp from room to room.

Director Casey Hushion has the spirited company operating on full throttle for a precise 90 minutes, a mix of shock, awe and riotous antics you would expect when bodies are dropping left and right. It all unfolds on Lee Savage’s impressive and elegant mansion set with hidden doorways, expanding rooms, and spilt-second changes awash in the sights and sounds of a dark and stormy night courtesy of Ryan O’Gara’s stellar lighting design, Jeff Human’s keen sound design and all gussied up in Jen Caprio’s outrageous costumes.

The talented company who are in lock step all night are: Sarah Mackenzie Baron (Mrs. White), Adam Brett (Wadsworth), Camille Capers (Miss Scarlet), Nate Curlott (Colonel Mustard), Joseph Dalfonso (Mr. Boddy and others), TJ Lamando (Mr. Green), Madeline Raube (Mrs. Peacock), AT Sanders (The Cook and others), Zoie Tannous (Yvette), Kebron Woodfin (The Cop and others) and Kyle Yambiro (Professor Plum). Brett’s Wadworth has one of the longest and most hilarious death scenes ever. You can see that kind of thing in every character all night long. It’s over-the-top, just-for-laughs and it all flies by.

Coming up in the week ahead: the “Clue” tour travels to the Weill Center in Sheboygan, Wisconsin (6/1-2); the Ferguson Center for the Arts in Newport News, Virginia (6/4); the Clay Center in Charleston, West Virginia (6/5); and, the Koger Center for the Arts in Columbia, South Carolina (6/6-7) where they will be dying for laughs every night.

PHOTO | Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade.jpg

Broadway in South Bend
presents
Clue
Morris Performing Arts Center
211 N Michigan Street
South Bend, Indiana
through May 31, 2026

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PROGRAM

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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