PicksInSix Review: PARADE - National Tour - Broadway in Chicago
The Weaving and Unravelling of Murder.
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy
The national touring production of the 2023 Tony Award-winning musical revival of “Parade,” an arresting examination of the grisly rape and murder of a thirteen year-old girl in a Georgia pencil factory on April 27, 1913, opened Wednesday at the CIBC Theatre. You may ask why it is vitally important to experience this brilliant Alfred Uhry/Jason Robert Brown work, directed by Michael Arden, about a deplorable act, the subsequent miscarriage of justice and rush to judgment in a case that the facts of which are still being examined to this day.
You might also be curious why a show that received Tony Awards for both Uhry (Book) and Brown (Score) in the 1998 Hal Prince Broadway debut despite a run of only two months. I know I still am, not having seen the original and only introduced to the show through a memorable regional production at Writers several years ago. I suspect that “Parade” either fell into a category that may be considered too sad and dark a topic for audience members or at the time seeking more of an uplifting escape than a truly emotional jolt to the soul. It may also be that “Parade” was ahead of its time all those years ago, before we became a nation that was—and is still—reckoning with its past, the direction of our collective moral compass and in many ways, our uncertain ability to affect lasting change in a social climate that feels much like the crowd mentality of the time that demanded justice whatever the cost.
The opening night audience was captivated by the plight of the Brooklyn-born Jewish factory supervisor Leo Frank (Max Chernin) who skipped spending the Confederate Memorial Day festivities with his wife Lucille (Talia Suskauer) to spend a Saturday in the factory and was charged and convicted for the death of Mary Phagan (Olivia Goosman) on largely fabricated and coerced testimony. The extraordinary cast includes a number of the original Broadway company and provides what can only be imagined as one of the closest, and most compelling, staged versions of the revival you will ever see and hear.
Visually, the action unfolds on a Dane Laffrey set that features a massive, raised platform center stage serving multiple purposes as courtroom, jail cell, and various interior and exterior locations that are aided by stunning projections (Sven Ortel) that support each scene and also aid in advancing the historical progression, all with virtually no transition time from scene to scene. On either side of the main area are embellishments and staging areas for the cast who often form a phalanx to the action as the compelling court and public rallies occur.
In addition to the extraordinary work of Chernin and Suskauer, there are many noteworthy, featured performances including: a heart rendering turn by Jenny Hickman as Mrs. Phagan, Andrew Samonsky as prosecuting attorney Hugh Dorsey, Chris Shyer’s Governor Slaton and his wife Sally played by Alison Wing (who has THE line of the show), Michael Tacconi’s relentless newsman Britt Craig, Griffin Binnicker as the evangelical Tom Watson, the fine “A Rumblin’ and a Rollin’” by Prentiss E. Mouton (Riley) and Oluchi Nwaokorie (Angela), and a chilling Ramone Nelson as Jim Conley, the Black factory worker who testified that he was an accomplice with Frank but is speculated to be the actual murderer.
We may never know the answer to the ultimate question of who took Mary Phagan’s life that day. Frank maintained his innocence and was in the years-long process of an appeal for a reexamination of the proceedings when an unruly gang abducted him from jail and lynched him in Mary’s hometown of Marietta, Georgia in 1915. This sad period of racial injustice and antisemitism became a national story sparking an examination of the resurgence of the lawlessness of the time. Now, over a hundred years later, “Parade” challenges us to face our own prejudice and has become a constant reminder that the search for truth and justice never ends.
PHOTO|Joan Marcus
Broadway in Chicago
presents
National Tour
PARADE
CIBC Theatre
18 W Monroe
through August 17, 2025
WEBSITE
NATIONAL TOUR WEBSITE
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