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PicksInSix Review: Holiday - Goodman Theatre

 
 

Goodman’s ‘Holiday’: An Unabashed Comic Classic!
PicksInSix® Gold Review |
Ed Tracy

The scintillating Robert Falls directed Goodman Theatre world premiere production of the late Richard Greenberg’s stellar final work—a fresh, funny and thoroughly engaging adaptation of Phillip Barry’s 1928 play “Holiday”—may just be the best production of a promising young season of terrific offerings in Chicago. The timeless love story now playing through March 1 on the Albert Theater stage features an exceptional ensemble and a brilliant Walt Spangler scenic design that is a sight to behold.

The action unfolds before, during and after New Year’s 2020. Johnny Case (Luigi Sottile), a lawyer and idealist has fallen for and proposed marriage to Julia (Molly Griggs) before he was aware that she is the daughter of Edward Seton (Jordan Lage), the patriarch of New York’s wealthy Seton dynasty. Upon arrival at the Seton Mansion on Fifth Avenue, Johnny meets Julia’s older sister Linda (Bryce Gangel), a free-spirited individualist and the younger gay brother Ned (Wesley Taylor), a happy-go-lucky aristocrat with a long list of addictions.

The inevitable meeting between the elder Seton and Johnny sets the stage for the story that follows, a confrontation between the ideologies of Seton’s uber wealthy ideals that permeate the family who consider the “only thing better than a lot of money is more money,” and Johnny’s more eclectic course to have enough money to allow life to be fully lived.

The family operates more or less under the will of their father who favors Julia’s burgeoning financial career over Linda’s bohemian lifestyle in Red Hook and Ned’s inept existence at the family home. Favoritism for Julia has driven both Linda and Ned emotionally closer together with each serving as protector for the other. Things start to unravel when Linda offers to plan a quaint New Year’s Eve party to make the couple’s formal announcement only to have Julia invite a guest list in the hundreds. At the party, Linda hides away in the family’s attic playroom with Johnny, Ned, her Brooklyn friends Nikka Washburn (Christiana Clark), and Nikka’s partner, Susan Feld (Jessie Fisher). The imposing cousin, Seton Cram (Erik Hellman) and his wife Laura (Alexandra Esclante) crash the party, the wheels start to come off the wagon, and all plans for the future are up in the air.

The ensemble, which includes Rammel Chan as the estate’s private chef Walter, delivers Greenberg’s witty, razor-sharp dialogue flawlessly, never missing a comic turn-of-the-phrase. That goes double for Taylor who gives the performance of the night. It all plays out on Spangler’s stunning scenic design that transforms from a richly-appointed living room to the expansive attic playroom and back again in the blink of an eye.

With all of the superb technical elements—from Kaye Voyce’s costumes and original music and the sound design by Richard Woodbury to the Amith Chandrashaker’s evocative light design—Goodman’s “Holiday” is an unabashed comic classic!

PHOTO|Todd Rosenberg

Goodman Theatre
presents
World Premiere
HOLIDAY
Albert Theater
170 N Dearborn Street
through March 1, 2026


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