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Filtering by Tag: Josiah Croegaert

PicksInSix Review: The Targeted - A Red Orchid Theatre

 
 

‘TARGETED’: Conspiracy, Harassment and Human Obsession
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor |
Ronald Keaton

Well, it's both comic and intense. Profane and highly satirical in tone and in presentation. “The Targeted,” Hanna Kime's world premiere receiving a bang-bang production through the auspices of A Red Orchid Theatre at the Chopin Theatre, spares no quarter in its group of quite radical, disparate people and viewpoints. Director Grace Dolezal-Ng gives it all an almost improvisational feel in many of the exchanges between characters. She also makes it easy to follow in the frenetic pace of the writing, recognizing Ms. Kime's highly emotional back-and-forth in compartmentalized staging with three definitive areas of the camp, the lodge, whatever it seems to be.

The conceit is the Solidarity And Truth Summit, organized by Jeff (Lawrence Grimm shines as a smarmy leader of the weekend), who has researched all kinds of torture and surveillance groups that seem, in his mind, to have a "Big Brother" influence on all of society. Echoes of Jim Jones-like figures emanate every time he speaks. It's in the woods, of course, to protect all who attend from as much pain and upheaval as possible.

Everyone who is present has their own axe to grind, so to speak, even one person, Mia (Stephanie Shum, who carries the heavy weight of doubt in all these proceedings quite admirably), attending the conference to support her younger brother Eric (Glenn Obrero in a fine turn), who has a chip of sorts in his arm that constantly itches.

Meanwhile, the strongest advocate in the group, Rhonda, (the wonderful Kirsten Fitzgerald, who makes intensity look easy), an acclaimed author, is highly suspicious of anyone and everyone in attendance. Rhonda intimidates with authority in these proceedings, while never really having come to grips with her own problems with her daughter. She influences Sherry (a bright performance by Sadieh Rifai), whose seeming innocence belies an anger that she's never shared. The most interesting relationship in the play is between Rhonda and Sherry. One is quite dominant and forceful in her opinions. One learns how truly naive she's been in her own life. Both Ms. Fitzgerald and Ms. Rifai own these moments with strength and commitment.

AROT stalwart Natalie West, blessed with impeccable comic timing, garners her share of laughs as Didi, an apparent victim of all kinds of emotional and mental torture, but who retains somehow a sense of humor and grace to all. The Lauren M. Nichols set design is quite minimalist and wonderfully appropriate with its three playing areas on the set itself.

There actually is a fourth area for the actors out in the first couple of rows in the audience, where all are included whenever Jeff speaks to participants as the erstwhile host. Smart mood and area lighting are thanks to Josiah Croegaert's design talents. I'm guessing the real fun in rehearsals for this play came from what knowledge that Dan Washelesky, the dramaturg/script supervisor could impart. It's a challenging and fascinating story that's written here, dealing in conspiracy, harassment and human obsession—only a few of society's ills touched in a well-conceived script.

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 about Ben Franklin, THE FIRST EMBASSY.

PHOTO | Evan Hanover

A Red Orchid Theatre
presents
WORLD PREMIERE
THE TARGETED

Chopin Theatre
1543 West Division
through June 14, 2026


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DIGITAL PLAYBILL

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PicksInSix Review: An Iliad - Court Theatre

 
 

Kane’s Mesmerizing Performance Returns To Court!
PicksInSix® Gold Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

Bravura. That's the appropriate word for the Court Theatre production of “An Iliad,” running now through June 29.

It's a solo play based on the legendary epic poem by the Greek poet Homer, who also wrote The Odyssey. Both these poems form the foundation of Greek literature, even as there are continuous attempts to deny authorship, not unlike what the reputation of William Shakespeare occasionally experiences. This version is co-authored by Lisa Peterson and Denis O'Hare in an endlessly eloquent fashion.

The term 'bravura' is most often used to praise what musical elements are being presented, as well as to the skills of the performers sharing their wares. This play offers itself in such a way that it is quite easy to compare it to a musical motif. The play itself is a kind of verbally spectacular music on its own, and Ms. Peterson and Mr. O'Hare hold nothing back in what they offer.

As the audience watches and takes it in, the story becomes easily absorbed in each movement, much like a symphony or even an opera, with its tragic plotlines that challenge believability in today's terms but were comfortably accepted back in "the day". And each character—Achilles the god-like Greek warrior; Hector, the greatest soldier of Troy; Patroclus, the Greek second-in-command; Agamemnon and Paris, the two sons whose actions make them so vulnerable—has his/her own section of the story devoted to them. It really is symphonic itself, both tragic and grand.

This sounds odd, but all the almost fantastical elements that the great director Charles Newell has assembled are almost players in their own right. Scenic Designer Todd Rosenthal and his Associate Scenic Designer Lauren M. Nichols have created a dystopian-like shelter with a variety of levels and steps and holes in the back wall, as well as a very sharp raked platform that an actor can negotiate for any part of the play. Sound Designer André Pleuss and Associate Sound Designer Josh McCommon share an almost constant low-level drone that surrounds the storytelling with an enhanced tension, matching the language and character in its various and sundry auditory nooks that push the environs of the piece even higher.

Rachel Anne Healy's costume for the actor Timothy Edward Kane is a highly layered vision, where Mr. Kane takes off pieces as he goes in a compliment to the exposure of man's vulnerability to his thoughts and actions, one by one. Lighting Designer Keith Parham and his Associate LD Josiah Croegaert have done absolute yeoman work in "giving light to the dark," so to speak, with their angles and shafts of light and faded colors that enhance what is seen. All this expert technicality greatly heightens the elegiac authenticity and makes this truly a special ensemble experience.

And the conductor of this symphonic reality is Mr. Kane as The Poet. He sings. He speaks in an otherworldly language. He moves balletically across the stage. His seasoned command of the character—in rage and in vulnerability, with the entire range of the actor's voice and emotions—is one of the best this writer has ever witnessed. Yes, there is lots of purple prose here, but it's all well-earned. Mr. Kane takes us on a journey that, even if you've never read the original epic poem, you can easily understand and appreciate the flowing, heightened story—another bow to the authors. He has mined humor where it's a surprise, and his own relationship with the audience is at once intimate and grand. It's one of the great performances presented this year at Court and, dare we say, ever in Chicago.

A favorite actor, Robert Duvall, said once: "I remember something Sandford Meisner told us. When you create a character, it's like making a chair, except instead of wood, you make it out of yourself. That's the actor's craft—using yourself to create the character." This is indeed what Mr. Kane, Mr. Newell and the other fabulous artists of this exceptional orchestra have ultimately accomplished over the course of four productions of the piece dating back to 2011—unique, mesmerizing and an extraordinary accomplishment that is not to be missed.

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 “Teddy’s Last Ride.”

PHOTO | Michael Brosilow

Court Theatre
presents
An Iliad
featuring
Timothy Edward Kane

Abelson Auditorium
5535 S Ellis Ave
through June 29, 2025


WEBSITE

TICKETS

PROGRAM

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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