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PicksInSix Review: East Texas Hot Links - Court Theatre

 
 

Articulate, Impactful ‘East Texas Hot Links’
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

There is a stellar production of Eugene Lee’s signature play “East Texas Hot Links” playing now at Court Theatre in Chicago through September 29. It is an articulate, impactful play that echoes in one’s mind long after the curtain comes down in its eloquent and painful comment on the remnants of the civil rights movement in America, how it continues to resonate and affect so many of our societal mores.  It bears the unmistakable stamp of the great director Ron OJ Parson, who has a relationship with this piece that forces us, in its sheer professionalism alone, to see an unencumbered view of what Jim Crow has done to our world and continues to do today.

Imagine the mid-1950s in the South—in this case, east Texas—at a small café/saloon back in the “piney woods.”  We are privy to a group of folks who all know each other, whose familiarity is not just palpable, it’s vital for the telling of this story. And this production offers one of the finest presentations of true ensemble acting we will ever see.  The intimate banter, the intuitive approaches in character, the story’s roadmap that is laid out for the cast, enhancing each actor’s planting of their artistic feet by literally grabbing and shaking us. It’s as hard as anything we may have seen in recent seasons at Court.  And it’s all couched in, yes, the love that people can have for each other by pointing out the bad and raising high the good in us.

This cast. The play begins with Kelvin Roston Jr., a Court favorite, as Roy, a man whose checkered past (a trait shared by others here) has made him look at starting over in a more productive way. He’s always had a huge attraction for the owner/bartender Charlesetta (a glowing AnJi White), who keeps him and all the men in the bar constantly at bay. There’s Adolph (Willie B. in a strong portrayal), a blind philosopher of sorts whose gravitas helps steer the conversation. Beside him at his table is Columbus (Alfred H. Wilson is a compelling influence) whose ownership of property gives him a more telling voice.

There’s the formidable AC Smith whose hustler/fortune teller Broochie dominates the story halfway through by a simple reading of the palm of Delmus (a naïve young man given wonderful shrift by David Dowd), a kid with big dreams and plans. Then there’s Buckshot (a dark and yet emotionally delicate performance by Geno Walker) who’s just gotten out of jail and simply trying to find his way.  And there’s Juwan Lockett in a defining portrayal as XL, a man whose instinct for survival overpowers his sense of decency and responsibility to his friends and family.

Little by little, the silence at the beginning of the play—one that is held to observe for a reason—gives way to exchanges between characters that make you listen to the words, other times to their rhythms, all the time to the presence and power of the voices. With the specter of the Klan exerting power all through it, director Parson deftly handles the intensity with the skill of a surgeon. This kind of story telling is indeed his specialty and it’s marvelous to watch.  And it’s a simple, highly effective Jack Magaw set design, this small tavern that offers big story. It’s highly complimented by a soft, layered lighting design from Jason Lynch.

Let us also remember that the setting and locale for “East Texas Hot Links” lives in the wake of Brown vs. Board of Education and Emmitt Till and Rosa Parks and the emergence of MLK in the public eye. This is not just Black history, but American history, no matter any regard for political expedience. These characters are etched so well within these creative walls by Mr. Lee, an August Wilson disciple and accomplished actor/writer in his own right, and expertly guided by Mr. Parson to the ultimate surprise at the end of the play.  Well, unfortunately not a surprise to all, as you will see.  

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

COURT THEATRE
presents
East Texas Hot Links
5535 S Ellis Ave.
through September 29, 2023

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PROGRAM

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PicksInSix Review: ROYKO: The Toughest Man in Chicago

 
 

ROYKO: “Always, always say it now.”

PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

In his exceptional one-man show “ROYKO: The Toughest Man in Chicago” that opened Friday in a limited run at the Chopin Theater, writer/actor Mitchell Bisschop brings the life and career of Mike Royko into sharp focus. Using Royko’s own words, the show is culled from nearly eight thousand columns spanning four decades that were syndicated nationally at a time when everything was not a click away. It is a remarkable historical archive—epic in nature—on topics ranging from Chicago politics and personalities to Picasso and pizza from the early 50s to his untimely passing in 1997.

Much of what Royko has written is still available thanks to his own foresight to reprint much of his writing in numerous books, the committed nature of his family to preserve his work in print and online, and to the publications themselves who have made them publicly accessible. Ask anyone over fifty living in Chicago about Royko’s work and you will understand the enormous impact that he had on daily readers through the years.

Bisschop and director Steve Scott deliver a compelling, and at times, deeply moving portrait of the man who was by his own account equally beloved and despised but never pulled a punch on a point he believed in. Whether it was the 1960s Daley political machine or recollections of Jackie Robinson’s first day at Wrigley, the stories flow effortlessly.  Scott’s influence can be seen all over this work, in Bisschop’s superbly-paced delivery and the sequential transitions of the storyline aided by the timing, placement and impact of Smooch Medina’s projections and stylized musical underscoring by Christopher Kriz.

In the center of it all is Bisschop weaving together a tapestry of Royko’s early career, not so much in a linear sense, but through the varied topics of his columns—Frank Sinatra’s city sponsored security detail, his mother’s dry cleaning and tailoring store, Chicago’s diverse neighborhoods, RibFest—each punctuated with personal details and wry commentary.  There are frequent trips to the Billy Goat Tavern, which stands as a living testament to Royko’s roots.

For the record, I was a Royko neophyte when I first moved to Chicago in 2002. What I could not gather from many of the references at the time, others helped fill in the gaps. With so much material to choose from, Bisschop wisely concentrated his efforts on a balance between the serious and sublime, equally framed in the brazen insight and searing satire that Royko used to highlight public injustice. The sensitive, emotionally-charged choices are evidence of the appeal that drove readers to his column first whether in the Chicago Daily News, the Chicago Sun Times or the Chicago Tribune.  Royko’s touching tribute following the unexpected passing of his first wife Carol is one of the night’s most powerful moments. There are tributes to Martin Luther King and John Belushi. And Royko’s passionate struggle with the Chicago Cubs plays out here as well.

“Royko: The Toughest Man in Chicago” will serve to introduce a new generation to this remarkable life. There is a helpful historical timeline in the show’s program and a note where Bisschop states that he is trying to “allow people to feel the same magic that I felt when I read Mike for the first time.” Take a look for yourself and you will certainly agree that it is a staggering accomplishment. See this show and you will know that only a gifted actor of Bisschop’s unique skills and rarified commitment to the source material could succeed so well.  

PHOTO|Sarah Larson

Toughest Man Productions
presents
ROYKO: The toughest Man in Chicago
Chopin Theater
through September 29, 2024

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PicksInSix Review: The Audience - Drury Lane Theatre

 
 

Brooks Holds Court in “The Audience.”
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

I had the unique opportunity of seeing the original Broadway production of Peter Morgan’s historical play about Queen Elizabeth II, “The Audience,” back in 2015, with the fabulous Helen Mirren and a host of excellent actors in support.  The research into the subject matter is meticulous and well-organized, and if you’re a history buff, you will absolutely love this wonderful creativity.  If you’re not and you keep an open mind, it will lure you in with a kind of picture-book approach of a history lesson, that couldn’t be more entertaining in its turns, and they’re offered by the fine actors seen here. 

“The Audience” takes place during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, specifically focusing on her weekly meetings with the prime minister in office.  It’s not told in a linear fashion, but in a kind of memory focus, so we get an interesting and full scrapbook of storytelling.  There’s even a narrator-on-staff, so to speak—the versatile Jürgen Hooper as the Equerry—to help guide us through the maze of time and place and, well, all the prime ministers, as well as a young Elizabeth (Omi Lichtenstein in an impressive turn) to whom the adult Queen can relate to on occasion.

All the meetings are held in what’s called ‘The Meeting Room’ in Buckingham Palace. It is very simple, accessible staging by director Jessica Fisch. Center stage are two chairs with a small table between them, where all the discussions take place. It might have helped a bit to have the prime ministers and/or the Queen get up and move more often to vary the scene, but that’s nothing that overcomes the fine storytelling.  Ms. Fisch also has created a smooth, absolutely silent scene change habit for those chairs and other set pieces, musically underscored, that actually entertains on its own, thanks to a wonderfully restrained, elegant scenic design by Andrew Boyce.

The entire play is owned by Queen Elizabeth II and taken into charge by the redoubtable Janet Ulrich Brooks, one of Chicago’s truly talented, fascinating actors. She plays Elizabeth from the beginnings of her reign in 1952 by meeting her first Prime Minister, Winston Churchill (an irascible, almost knightly Matt DeCaro), who detests and resists any turn from tradition in the meetings and, indeed, reinforces the Queen’s grandfather, George V, in his insistence on maintaining such structure. The Queen stands up to the great man with questions and methods of her own; they reach a shaky truce of sorts by meeting’s end, and one tips a hat to her resolve.

All the Prime Ministers are at once impressed, shaken and establish their own friendly joust with the Queen.  The first PM appointee Anthony Eden (excellently manipulative and fearful by Mark Ulrich) betrays his reputation with his mismanagement of the Suez Canal affair. Ron E. Rains offers a surprisingly full-bodied and humorous Harold Wilson, thanks to the playwright’s gift of three different scenes with the Queen. (Mr. Wilson did have two separate terms in office, thus justifying what we see.) Susie McMonagle clutches the expected aggressive stance as Margaret Thatcher in a gripping, properly uncompromising exchange with Brooks’ Queen. Both John Major (John Judd) and Tony Blair (Alex Goodrich) leave strong marks on their terms in the office for totally disparate reasons. The Scot, Gordon Brown (Raymond Fox) followed the Churchillian path of Chancellor of the Exchequer in stabilizing the UK’s economy, which led to his PM appointment.  And David Cameron (a second turn by Mr. Goodrich) led the first peacetime British coalition government that voted to leave the European Union in 2016, forcing him to resign.

The richness in history is handled by Elizabeth with varying degrees of attitude, but always in support of each charge. And the many physical changes in Ms. Brooks’ appearance onstage are deftly handled through those aforementioned scene changes with wig and dress by a hugely talented palace staff, both in the story and through the craft. This fine production of a rare play runs at Drury Lane Theatre in Oakbrook Terrace through October 20.  

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| Brett Beiner

Drury Lane Theatre
presents
The Audience
100 Drury Lane
Oakbrook Terrace
through October 20, 2024

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THE LEHMAN TRILOGY - Edward Gero - Guthrie Theater

 
 

THE LEHMAN TRILOGY - Edward Gero - Guthrie Theater

The Lehman Trilogy is now in rehearsal at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Stefano Massini’s epic multi-generational story, adapted by Ben Power and directed by Arin Arbus, chronicles the true-to-life rise of three Jewish immigrant brothers who built their own version of the American Dream from a small fabric business in 1844 to the international financial firm whose spectacular collapse in 2008 sent global markets spiraling out of control. The Guthrie Theater production includes Edward Gero, Mark Nelson and William Sturdivant in the cast of three who play the Lehman brothers and recreate all of the over fifty other roles.

Edward Gero’s performance is another highlight in a distinguished, award-winning career spanning forty-seven years with upwards to one hundred fifty roles and counting. In our 2018 CONVERSATION, Gero was in the middle of a run of The Originalist at Court Theatre in Chicago. Last season in Washington, he appeared in Angels in America at Arena Stage and earlier this year, in the critically-acclaimed production of The Lehman Trilogy at the Shakespeare Theatre Company that has now transferred to the Guthrie and opening September 19, 2024.

There is much more in our CONVERSATION about the inner workings of the show and balancing a professional career with the rigors of serving as a full professor at George Mason University from one of America’s most accomplished and gifted actors, Edward Gero.

LISTEN to the CONVERSATIONS podcast on Apple Podcasts

About The Lehman Trilogy …
Edward Gero:
“The Lehman Trilogy is an amazing piece of writing. It's a play that covers the arc of the Lehman Brothers who arrived in 1844 in America and we follow the family over several generations, 150 years, through to the collapse of the Lehman Corporation in 2008. … we're really seeing the story of the rise of America and capitalism through the immigrant experience of these three men and their descendants. It's a remarkable play … three acts. … in a Greek trilogy form. Three actors. Three hours. We never leave the stage and we play the three brothers and a total of probably fifty other characters by the end of the evening.”

On the Washington DC production …
EG:
“We did the play back in March (2024) at the Shakespeare Theater Company in Washington, directed by Arin Arbus. That was really daunting. It's a lot of text, right? … each one of us have roles that are longer than King Lear, probably close to Hamlet. So, it took two months to learn it, because it's not just straight dialogue. It's narrative. You become characters. It's a juggling act really and so that style of storytelling was very different. It's very Greek. I think that's my sense of it. It's like, let's gather around a fire and we're going to tell you the story of America through the eyes of these three brothers, and we'll take on the character as we go. We had maybe three and a half, four weeks of rehearsal to put it together. So we had to work ahead of time to be ready to get it up. … we worked very quickly and efficiently. And the design for those who have seen the Broadway production—it's now reopening on the West End—Sam Mendez directed it originally in a sort of acrylic box that moved very sort of contemporary. We did it on the proscenium. It was more open.”

Moving the show to the Guthrie …
EG: “We were very fortunate that the Guthrie was interested in bringing our team up here. We had to replace one actor. René Thornton Jr. was very fortunate to book (the national tour of) Harry Potter. We have William Sturdivant an actor from the Minneapolis area who's terrific. … Mark Nelson and I, who have done the play before, are finding different nuances. But we're shifting from a proscenium to a thrust. So that's challenging to unlearn what we knew … to open it up and change the space. And there's a much more intimate, direct connection to the audience in this configuration than the proscenium. It's the same set. They had to make some modifications. There are a lot of rear projections. So there is a sort of proscenium section of this thrust and the rear projection screens are there.”

Playing Multiple Characters …
EG:
“The challenging ones are the ones that you have to turn on a dime and then let it go. And you have to want to find some way to establish it as quickly as you can. … changing the voice or changing the physicality, that's the challenge of keeping the balls up in the air. It really is juggling. Not only is it epic, Homeric—because the original novel is written by an Italian—there's also the Virgil tradition,. There is the Commedia tradition. There is Fellini. There is circus. It really feels like a circus. You're juggling lines, you're juggling characters and the magic of it is to be able to transform in a beat and then let it go in a beat.”

Performing at the Guthrie Theater…
EG:
”I've wanted to work here since I was a young actor. Many of the actors that I admired and watched and emulated and learned from and, in some cases, had the privilege of working with came from the Guthrie, whether it was with Tony Guthrie or Michael Lanham, Garland Wright, Joe Dowling. I have worked with Joe several times. It has been a destination. … The regional theater movement was sort of anchored by Arena Stage in Washington, the Goodman in Chicago, and the Guthrie in Minneapolis. And it took me forty years, but I finally got the trifecta. … It's a thrill and the new building is spectacular. The architecture is really interesting. I have not had a chance yet to explore Minneapolis because we are in rehearsal, but I am looking forward to maybe getting to a Vikings game.”

The Future …
EG:
“There are some roles I'd like to do. I would like to get a shot at a play like Death of Salesman … or Prospero or Falstaff. I've done Falstaff in (Henry IV) Part 1. I'd like to finish that. Lear. … There are a few still out there … some got away… like Brutus and Iago, but, you know, maybe there's a chance for Iago. I don't know. I'll do the older version of Iago. Maybe he's just an old grouchy man, who knows.?”  

This content has been edited for clarity and length.

PHOTO|Joshua Cummins

GUTHRIE THEATER
presents

THE LEHMAN TRILOGY

September 14 (Previews)
September 19-October 13, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: The Full Monty-Paramount Theatre

 
 

Paramount’s “Full Monty” Really Measures Up!
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Do not fear. If you are looking for a big, bawdy, unabashed comic revival—with all the twists, turns and pelvic thrusts you can imagine—then Paramount Theatre’s “The Full Monty” is the show for you. Sure, it’s suggestive and saucy, but beyond the boisterousness, it’s a moving story about building self-esteem through dedication, hard work and the support of friends and family. Adapted for the stage by Terrence McNally with a lot of heart there are surprises galore to be found in the music and lyrics by David Yazbek. Add in a terrific cast and you’ve got a winner from top to bottom!

Based on the 1997 hit film about six out-of-work steel workers who decide to bare it all at a local nightclub to pay the bills, the ten-time Tony Award nominated 2000 Broadway musical was reset to middle class America in Buffalo, New York. Jerry Lukowski (Ben Mayne) is struggling to maintain a relationship with his son Nathan (a split role for Will Daly and Ellis Myers) and stuck trying to catch up with child support payments to his wife Pam (Rebecca Hurd) during their divorce. Jerry and his buddy Dave Bukatinsky (Jared David Michael Grant), who is under similar pressure from his wife Georgie (Veronica Garza) to take a security job to tide things over, decide to hatch a plan to make a bundle at a one-night-only strip show at Tony Girodano’s club.

The two first recruit the depressed and despondent Malcom MacGregor (Adam Fane) and then turn to Harold Nichols (Jackson Evans), a former plant supervisor-turned-dance-instructor to help them put the act together. The men then team up with Jeanette Burmeister (Liz Pazik), an adorably salty rehearsal pianist for auditions. Busting out of the pack at auditions Noah “Horse” T. Simmons (Bernard Dotson) and Ethan Girard (Diego Vazquez Gomez) round out the somewhat dubious, but committed, sextet who hilariously transform into “Hot Metal” before the night is done.

At every turn, Director Jim Corti with choreographer Tor Campbell meticulously move the men from initial awkwardness and insecurity forward. It all plays out against scenic designer Michelle Lilly’s brilliant skyline of Buffalo, framed by a massive, multi-story urban landscape that morphs effortlessly from night club to rehearsal hall where the men perfect their dance steps often in uncontrolled unison when least expected.

Music director/conductor Kory Danielson and the orchestra are in exceptionally fine form with Yazbek’s first Broadway score that features the men in “Scrap,” “Michael Jordan’s Ball” and “Big Black Man” (featuring Dotson in a commanding performance), the women in “It’s a Woman’s World,” and the company in the rousing “The Goods.”  Pazik is a blast in “Jeanette’s Showbiz Number” while Mayne and Grant team up well for “Man” and are joined by Fane in the somewhat dark themed, but clever, “Big-Ass Rock.”

Among the quieter moments, Ann Delany “Life with Harold” is a delight. Mayne is superb in “Breeze Off the River” while Evans and Grant shine in the anthem “You Rule My World.”  The inspirational musical highlight of the night belongs to Fane for his soaring vocal in the hymn-like “You Walk with Me” with Gomez that helps pave the way for the showstopping finale “Let it Go” which is full of bright lights and “Hot Metal” enough for everyone.  

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

PARAMOUNT THEATRE
presents
THE FULL MONTY
The Broadway Musical
through October 6, 2024


23 East Galena Boulevard
Aurora, IL 60506


(630) 896–6666

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PicksInSix Review: 1776 - Marriott Theatre

 
 

“TO THINK THAT HERE WE ARE.”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

The inspiring production of “1776” that opened Wednesday at the Marriott Theatre brought a few familiar thoughts to mind about our young and exuberant country.  Democracy is messy. The more things change, the more they stay the same. And a line from one of Sherman Edwards’ songs: “To think that here we are.”

That jubilant statement is sung out by Benjamin Franklin (Richard R. Henry) to John Adams (Tyrick Wiltez Jones) and Thomas Jefferson (Erik Hellman) as the newly drafted Declaration of Independence is being read to the 2nd Continental Congress. They know that there are pitfalls and more debate ahead—and the reality of the bloody war already underway that is underscored throughout the show with missives from ‘G. Washington’ himself—but for a brief instant, getting to this point feels like a small victory.

Obviously, no one truly knows what transpired in the room where this happened. That said, Edwards’ 1969 Tony Award-winning concept, music and lyrics and Peter Stone’s book together create a captivating menagerie of historical characters who are (mostly) bent on unification. All those years later we are today mired in a never-ending election cycle and immersed in an escalating debate about the future vision for our democracy. There is hope and we do generally agree that a new, yet imperfect, nation was formed on July 4, 1776 for the people of the thirteen original colonies, even as freedom and equality for all is still lagging woefully behind.

With director Nick Bowling’s steady hand, sharp choreography by Tanji Harper and a casting coup that has assembled many of Chicago’s top performing artists together on one stage, Marriott Theatre’s “1776” has a sweeping professional sheen as one of the finest and most unique shows on stage right now.

The opposing voice to Adams’s passionate colonial independence is embodied in Pennsylvania delegate John Dickinson, a stellar performance by Heidi Kettenring. The two opposing forces—mediated by Joel Gelman’s stalwart John Hancock and Gabriel Lott-Rogers‘s Charles Thomson with assistance from the ever-present Karl Hamilton as Andrew McNair—weave arguments and slow progress to a bitter stalemate. Along the way, songs teeter from the humorous—“Sit Down, John,” “The Lees of Old Virginia” and “He Plays The Violin”—to the horrific, by South Carolina’s Edward Rutledge (Matthew Hommel) whose chilling referendum to slavery “Molasses to Rum” is alarmingly prophetic. The moving performances of Katherine Alexis Thomas (Abigail Adams), Alicia Kaori (Martha Jefferson), Lucy Godinez (Richard Henry Lee) and a remarkable performance by Jay Westbrook (Courier) in “Momma Look Sharp” deserve special mention in a company stocked with extraordinary voices under the musical direction of Ryan T. Nelson and conductor Brad Haak.

Regina Garcia’s crisp, multi-level scenic design expands Marriott’s in-the-round configuration to create a wide and striking panorama of the chamber interior punctuated by Jesse Klug’s evocative light design and Michael Daly’s pinpoint sound design. The visual picture is complete with Theresa Ham’s gorgeous costumes that make “1776” a truly wonderful—and historic—theatrical event.  

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Marriott Theatre Lincolnshire
presents
1776
through October 13, 2024


Ten Marriott Drive
Lincolnshire, IL 60069

WEBSITE

TICKETS

847-634-0200 (Box Office)


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PicksInSix Review: Back to the Future-The Musical-Broadway in Chicago

 
 

“It works. It Works. IT WORKS!”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

It’s hard to avoid the what-if’s of time travel when it comes to the 1985 Robert Zemeckis film “Back to the Future” and its two sequels that have been entertaining audiences over the last 40 years. Jettisoning back along the space-time continuum to intentionally—or unintentionally—reorder events, change the future or restore balance to the universe has always been the stuff of classic science fiction storytelling.

The original “Back to the Future” was a real crowd-pleaser and a revelation for those of us around at the time. Sure, we had home movies, photo albums and family histories, but we could only imagine the past through the memories of those closest to us. Years from now, those memorable moments will be documented on a digital device in all formats, but obviously none of that existed when we were first introduced to a youthful rock n’ roller and his eccentric pal, the physicist who discovers a way to go back in time 1985 style. Taking the story from film to a live stage version creates some challenges and provides a splendid opportunity for eye-popping special effects.

At the opening of the national touring production of the John Rando directed “Back to the Future—The Musical” on Wednesday at the Cadillac Palace Theatre, I realized there was now a new generation introducing live theater to a much younger version as evidenced by a family of five sitting directly in front of me.  It was apparent to me that somewhere along the line I had taken for granted Doc Brown’s childlike wonder or the campy awkwardness of George McFly as he heroically confronts Biff in a parking lot, but not this crew.

For at least one of the three boys ranging in age from eight to mid-teen, this show was a first and they had a blast! Their joyous, wild enthusiasm for the extraordinary special effects and the techno star of the show—a slick, shiny DeLorean DMC-12 that makes a series of dramatic entrances and exits—was infectious. As avid young fans, their enjoyment was enhanced by the story as well because of its close proximity to the film and as a result, they followed along intently. And while we all know pretty much what was coming next, the Bob Gale book wisely stays within the margins and allows the stage version of “Back to the Future-The Musical” to evolve into a night of fun-filled family entertainment with more than enough whimsy and heart to wow the crowd.  

Or to borrow one of the Alan Silvestri/Glen Ballard lyrics sung by Doc Brown (a terrific role for Don Stephenson) when he first discovers proof of the viability of the flux capacitor: “It works. It Works! IT WORKS!” From Caden Brauch’s energetic portrayal of Marty McFly coaching the younger version of his dad George (a hilarious Burke Swanson) in “Put Your Mind To It” and the sultry Zan Berube’s rendition of “Pretty Baby” as the youthful Lorriane Baines in her bedroom with a trio of singers to Cartreze Tucker knocking the stuffing out of “Gotta Start Somewhere” as the young Goldie Wilson with the multi-talented ensemble and Stephenson’s blissful ballad “For the Dreamers,” this show has something for the young-at-heart of all ages.  But, oh that car is the real star!

When the original 2020 production was shut down in its first week due to the pandemic, you can bet that producers had no idea that four years later productions of “Back to the Future—The Musical” would be running concurrently in London, on Broadway and now in a 28 city national tour through August 2025. Safe to say that Marty, Doc and all the rest will be back in time well into the foreseeable future.       

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy & Evan Zimmerman

BROADWAY IN CHICAGO
presents
National Tour
BACK TO THE FUTURE—THE MUSICAL
Cadillac Palace Theatre
through September 1, 2024


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BROADWAY IN CHICAGO

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PicksInSix Review: The Lord of the Rings-A Musical Tale - Chicago Shakespeare Theater

 
 

“We Hobbits Like A Good Tale!”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Wizards, Hobbits and Elves have taken up residency in a Middle-earth all their own at Chicago Shakespeare Theater with the U.S. Premiere of the adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s masterpiece “The Lord of the Rings-A Musical Tale” that opened Friday in The Yard, CSF’s state-of-the-art 700-seat venue. The show, directed by Paul Hart, boasts awe-inspiring special effects, whimsical puppetry and a superb, multi-talented Chicago cast to tell the story of Bilbo Baggins (Rick Hall), Gandolf (Tom Amandes), Frodo (Spencer Davis Milford), Samwise (Michael Kurowski), and the rest of Fellowship of the Ring who save mankind from destruction.

With book and lyrics by Shaun McKenna and Matthew Warchus and music by A. R. Rahman, Värttinä and Christopher Nightgale, “The Lord of the Rings” incorporates actors as singer/musicians in what is largely a play with music versus a traditional musical. Characters move throughout The Yard’s massive space, in, out and above the audience with eye-popping surprises along the way, not the least of which is the impressive entrance and commanding performance of Tony Bozzuto as Gollum, who is everywhere all at once.

The dense story of the journey to Mordor by Frodo and Sam to destroy the ring in the foundry where it was forged has been streamlined in such a way that those not familiar with the story can follow the evolving action even if many of the characters come and go in the blink of an eye. There is more than enough here for loyalists as well although the overall pace would be improved by reducing the 2 hour and 45 minute run time, not including the 15 minute intermission.

There is remarkable, and often startling, puppetry early on—and one additional confrontation that took everyone by surprise—which when combined with the live action sequences elevate the mystical nature of the piece. Those familiar with Peter Jackson’s film trilogy will not be disappointed, but may do well to manage their expectations as this show is more about the characters and story.

Chicago audiences are fortunate to have the premiere here at Shakes through September 1. Later this fall, the production travels to the 2,379-seat Civic Theatre in Auckland, New Zealand, the locale that Jackson chose for Hobbiton, the mythical shire that today is an international tourist destination for Tolkien enthusiasts.  At three times the size of The Yard with an expansive proscenium and lift system, the Civic, built in 1929 is an atmospheric theatre—one of only seven in the world—with a unique skyscape of stars and clouds which will surely allow audiences an enhanced experience for the show.

So it was natural for me to feel that in its present form, “The Lord of the Rings-A Musical Tale” still has some room to coalesce for its next date with destiny. Staging Tolkien’s epic fantasy is a high order for the stellar cast of Chicago-based talent who are leading the way and more than up for the task. An adventure of a lifetime for sure.

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Chicago Shakespeare Theater
presents
The Lord of the Rings - A Musical Tale
through September 1

The Yard
Navy Pier

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PicksInSix Review: The Bridges of Madison County - Dunes Arts Summer Theatre

 
 

“Spinning By In One Split Second”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Francesca (Kristianna Dilworth) and her husband Richard “Bud” Johnson (Gabriel Reitemeier) have overcome multiple challenges to forge a life on a 300 acre farm in Winterset, Iowa with their two teenage children Michael (Jackson Mikkelsen) and Carolyn (Emma Radtke). As “The Bridges of Madison County” opens, she sings hopefully of the life they have built together, one we find out along the way that is not at all what she envisioned as a young girl growing up in Italy during World War II. She would meet Bud after the death of her soldier fiancé, leave Naples as it was being brutally torn apart and arrive in America to start anew, learning the language and all that comes with raising a family.

Now, years later in 1965, Francesca’s feelings of isolation in the Midwest, trapped within the daily routine of her life, are all consuming. So, with little enthusiasm for the Indiana State Fair and more for reading a book and watching the sky go by, she decides to stay behind alone as Bud takes the kids and a two-ton steer to the 4H national competition. The separation feels natural in a way: Bud, Carolyn and Michael are excited about the event and Francesca admits that having no plans at all for the few days by herself will be a liberating experience.

When Robert Kincaid (Max DeTogne), a National Geographic photographer on assignment, arrives at the door of the Johnson home, Francesca offers to ride with him to the location of Roseman, the last bridge he needs to photograph and the first step on a path that leads the two together into a passionate affair that presents both unimaginable opportunities and a potentially devastating outcome.

The Dunes Arts Summer Theatre production, the brilliant and sensitively staged work of Artistic Director Steve Scott, features the equally superb music direction of Andrew Flasch who renders the rich Jason Robert Brown score brimming with melodies and counter melodies with ease. The book by Marsha Norman is based on the bestselling novel by Robert James Waller that also spawned the 1995 film starring Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood.

The Dunes ensemble, whose impressive vocal harmonies add depth and nuance to the piece, are led by the extraordinary performances of Dilworth and DeTogne in lead roles. Dilworth, a St. Louis native who now lives in Arlington, Virginia, is simply stunning in all facets of the deeply layered role of Francesca expressing the complexity of a woman at a turning point in her life, upended by passion, conflicted and longing for a path to what could be.  I have long admired DeTogne’s work in Chicago and this may well be one of his finest performances to date, delivering a strong, yet sensitive man who understands the enormous consequences of his deep, abiding love for Francesca.

Director Scott also successfully navigates two delicate relationships in the piece: the ebb and flow between Francesca and Bud, a finely-paced line that Reitemeier follows impeccably with depth and understanding while displaying his own exceptional vocal skills; and, Marge (Kim Lampl) and Charlie (Jim Lampl), the down home neighbors who recognize what is transpiring and provide the caring support that Francesca will need to sort things out. Framed in a sleek modular set designed by Micheal Lasswell, fine costume work by Emily Chidalek with evocative lights and sound by Arturo Pozos and Jake Tillman, the Dunes production of “The Bridges of Madison County” is a moving and memorable evening of theatre not to be missed.

PHOTO|Andy Neal

Dunes Arts Summer Theatre
presents
The Bridges of Madison County
Michiana Shores, Indiana
through August 11


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PicksInSix Review: Midnight In The Garden of Good and Evil - Goodman Theatre

 
 

“What A Lovely Place To Die.”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

The long-awaited, world premiere of the musical version of John Berendt’s epic book “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil” directed by Rob Ashford and choreographed by Tanya Birl-Torres opened Monday in Goodman’s Albert Theatre with all the opulence that befits a true crime story set in 1980s Savannah, Georgia. There in the darkness at the start the voodoo priestess Minerva (Brianna Buckley) is revealed whose reach into the past beyond the world of the living has a mystical and spiritual impact on believers searching for otherworldly assistance.  At the center of the unfolding story is the stately, upper-crust of Savannah society whose sole purpose it is to know the business—ahem, the “historical legacy”—of everyone else. In between, there is a bizarre cavalcade of characters who frame the true-to-life story that compelled Berendt to move from New York to Savannah to tell it.

Berendt’s contribution to Savannah’s legacy spawned a four-year run as a New York Times bestseller, a major motion picture directed by Clint Eastwood, and now, three decades later, the musical faces head-on the challenge of condensing all of the complicated relationships, visual imagery and dramatic energy into one, robust, marketable production that will appeal to a universal audience. Or more specifically, three distinct audiences— one composed of diehard fans who have been immersed in the book and film and have even visited the city that Sherman spared in his 1864 March to the Sea and that Berendt has made famous (or to some, infamous); those who have either read the book or seen the film, but not both; and, those to whom the musical will be their first introduction to the material.

I met one of those people in that last group in the lobby at intermission. He was curious about the format of the book, had just purchased an autographed hardcover—Berendt was in the house and took a deserved bow at curtain call—and was mildly perplexed, but genuinely excited, about where things were going. As the questions kept coming, it occurred to me that each of these adaptations—book, film and musical—are so vastly different from each other that I could spend a lot of time, and more than space allowed, highlighting similarities and differences and never get around to the purpose at hand. So, I politely suggested that Part I of Berendt’s exceptional book brought us to, more or less, precisely where we were at intermission of the musical—a shooting in the Mercer House, built by the great-great grandfather of Johnny Mercer, has left the owner and sole occupant facing trial for the murder of his male lover. Based on what had happened thus far I admitted that it would be anybody’s guess how things come together in Act II.

Bernedt’s story is as much a true crime drama as it is a reflection of Southern aristocracy. And although Taylor Mac’s script refers to it as “a work of fiction inspired by a non-fiction book,” adding that “Dramatic license is used, honey,” the central figures in this drama are a combination of real people or composites of others. Jim Williams (Tom Hewitt), The Lady Chablis (J. Harrison Ghee), Danny Hansford (Austin Colby) and Emma Dawes (Sierra Boggess) and the Preservation League Ladies bring much of Berendt’s whip-smart dialogue to life, which those familiar with the book and film will find satisfying. Many who know the material will be listening for those pearls amid Mac’s reimagined timeline framed in Christopher Oram’s magnificent scenescape that vividly recreates the antebellum grandeur of the city in one moment and exposing the eerie, gothic nature of Bonaventure Cemetery in the next.

With Berendt’s richly defined characters in place, the musical challenge is to build and sustain suspense along a fairly predictable arc that leads to Williams public condemnation and multiple trials and Ashford has infused a zesty, comic wink and nod along the way. The over-arching element that stands alone in this treatment is the magnified contrast between the confident flamboyance of J. Harrison Ghee’s brilliant portrayal of Chablis, the transgender Empress of Savannah against Hewitt’s measured and less charismatic, but increasingly cold and calculating Williams whose Teflon charms serve him well at every turn.

With so much attention on the comic relief of Emma and the Preservation League Ladies storyline, some of the finer aspects of Berendt’s work—most notably the trial scenes that serve to elaborate on the facts of the case in the book—are conjoined together in one number of composer and lyrist Jason Robert Brown’s score. And while Brown’s impressive musical stylings and expert music direction by Thomas Murray include “Mercer House,” “Since My Mama Died,” “True Crime,” “What A Ride,” “Reasonable Doubt,” and “Restoration,” and prove to be essential to the story, there is a smattering of numbers that attempt to hold a weaker subplot together. These sections feel both forced and out of place to the point that the eventual message of equality that is trying to find a light of its own lacks the necessary inspirational spark.

Depending upon where in the audience categories you may fall, “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil” will leave you with a range of conflicting emotions. In its current iteration, the choice of replacing a universal narrator with characters telling their own stories places a lot of responsibility on the audience who clearly serve here as both author of the story being told and as a participating partner with Lady Chablis’s clever and enjoyable repartee. How that story transcends to a Broadway stage rests on the enormous talents of Ghee and Hewitt to keep things on track.

And, if you see a dogless dogwalker or the late night ritual of burying dimes and pouring rainwater anywhere near Times Square in the not-too-distant future, you will know that there are other spiritual forces at work.   

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

GOODMAN THEATRE
presents
WORLD PREMIERE

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
Albert Theatre
through August 11, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Ain't Misbehavin' - Drury Lane Theatre

 
 

AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ - Revival Worth Waiting For!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Kaitlyn Linsner

For those looking to enjoy a soulful and spirited night of jazz music, consider a visit to Drury Lane Theatre for the wildly entertaining revival of Richard Maltby Jr. and Murray Horwitz’s 1978 Tony Award–winning musical revue, “Ain’t Misbehavin’: The Fats Waller Musical Show. 

“Ain’t Misbehavin’” celebrates the music of legendary Thomas “Fats” Waller, a popular and influential performer who first studied classical piano and organ before becoming a master of Harlem stride piano playing. The production features over 30 of Waller’s captivating melodies and an incredibly talented cast that brings to life Waller’s prolific songwriting skills with an impressive range of artistry that captures all the emotions of Waller’s catalog from the heartfelt and sultry moments to the upbeat and comedic.

Director E. Faye Butler set the production in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood to share its history through Waller’s music. Butler and choreographer Mz. Flo Walker-Harris do a remarkable job in staging an old fashioned good time, right here in Chicago, and the creative team similarly soars with a set, costumes, wigs, hair and makeup that truly transport and transcend — Andrew Boyce (scenic designer), Lee Fiskness (lighting designer), McKinley Johnson (costume designer), and Kevin S. Foster II (wig, hair and makeup designer).  

The rich vocals of the five-member cast, under the musical direction of William Foster McDaniel and sound engineering of Stephanie Farina, make it so easy to lose track of the time and to get lost in the thrill of it all.  While each song shines in its own right, a few must be highlighted. James T. Lane, Alanna Lovely, Alexis J. Roston, Micah Mixon, Lorenzo Rush Jr. are sensational in “Black and Blue” in reaching heavenly harmonies together. Lorenzo’s comedy chops shine in “Your Feet’s Too Big,” and Lane is too smooth in “The Viper’s Drag.” Other standouts include “Honeysuckle Rose,” “Mean to Me” and the jubilant audience interaction in “Fat and Greasy.”

Perhaps the best part of “Ain’t Misbehavin’” is just how entertaining it is from start to finish. As soon as the show begins, a vibrancy takes hold and pulls the audience into an evening of celebration and delight. It felt good to connect with the stories that unfolded with each song and to fully embrace the feeling of, well, feeling good. 

“Ain’t Misbehavin’” is something special and in the words of Waller himself “the piano’s thumpin’ The dancers are bumpin'. This here spot is more than hot. In fact, the joint is jumpin.’  

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

PHOTO|Justin Barbin

DRURY LANE THEATRE
presents

AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’
The Fats Waller Musical Show
100 Drury Lane
Oakbrook Terrace
through August 18, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Talley's Folly - Dunes Arts Summer Theatre

 
 

Lovers Reunite in Dune’s “Talley’s Folly”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

The second production of the 2024 Dunes Arts Summer Theatre season is Lanford Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Talley’s Folly,” the second installment of Wilson’s Talley Trilogy that includes “Fifth of July” and “Talley and Son.” Released as a prequel to the critically acclaimed “Fifth of July” set in Wilson’s hometown of Lebanon, Missouri and chronicling the Talley family in 1977, the two other installments are set thirty three years earlier on the same day: July 4, 1944.

While “Talley and Son” plays out in the Talley homestead as a confrontation between generations about the future of the Talley family and is chronologically first in the trilogy, Wilson wrote and set “Talley’s Folly” in an isolated and decaying folly on the estate where Sally Talley (Amanda Tomczak), a young nurse, reunites with Matt Friedman (Rob Morris), a middle-aged Jewish accountant who returns to rekindle the romance of the previous summer and to propose marriage.

Directed at Dunes by Morgan McCabe, the two-hander unfolds over the course of ninety-seven minutes on an elaborate and impressive dockside set designed by Michael Lasswell with evocative lighting by Arturo Pozos. In the early evening, Matt awaits the arrival of Sally who has vigorously avoided him over the past year since their passionate liaison yet seeks him out. One might expect a more heartfelt reunion, but Sally’s abrupt and immediate admonishment comes as a shock to Matt. There are reasons for Sally’s behavior, we learn, as things progress. At the same time, Matt discloses the stunningly severe, inhumane treatment his family has endured as they fled Nazi oppression.

Early on, “Talley’s Folly” feels like an ill-fated love story, particularly as we discover the clash of Sally’s southern roots and Matt’s Jewish heritage. When the couple first met in the summer of 1943, the tide of the war had not yet turned so we are left to imagine the two lovers finding their emotional escape together within the fear of the time and isolation of the folly. That hopefulness, dashed by the family’s wholesale rejection of the affair, leaves only Matt’s dogged persistence to bring them back together.

Morris and Tomczak dive into these two challenging roles with gusto and there is a sense that their destiny is to escape together when all is done. Tomczak’s Sally is a strong, southern survivor whose life, shaped by fate, now offers few hopeful alternatives. In playing to the uneasy pressure and remorse to abide by her family’s wishes, Tomczak often overshadows the genuine love and affection that lies just beneath the surface and is desperate to reveal itself. Morris, whose lively character sets the tone of the piece, is effective in breaking through those emotional barriers to find common ground. And while satisfying, the production would benefit from the hint of playfulness that lovers have in such a secluded rendezvous to help elevate the humor in Wilson’s text while sustaining the moments of confrontation and drama in the piece as the two face the prospect of a challenging, post-war future together.

“Talley’s Folly” runs through July 14 at the Dunes theatre and is followed by “The Bridges of Madison County” with book by Marsha Norman and music and lyrics by Jason Robert Brown, directed by Dunes artistic director Steve Scott opening July 26. 

PHOTO|Dunes Summer Theatre
Dunes Arts Summer Theatre
presents
Talley’s Folly
Michiana Shores, Indiana
through July 14


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PicksInSix Review: Little Bear Ridge Road - Steppenwolf Theatre Company

 
 

METCALF IN MESMERIZING RETURN AT STEPPENWOLF
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Samuel D. Hunter’s brilliant new play “Little Bear Ridge Road” now enjoying an extended world premiere run at Steppenwolf’s Downstairs Theater might not have ever happened if Tony Award winning director Joe Mantello and iconic Steppenwolf Ensemble member Laurie Metcalf had not approached Hunter to develop a project for Metcalf.  

That was a little more than a year ago and the resulting work traces the reemerging relationship between Metcalf’s irascible character Sarah and her gay nephew Ethan (Micah Stock), the last surviving members of the Fernsby family who are navigating the aftermath of the death of Ethan’s estranged father. Ethan has arrived on Sarah’s doorstep near Moscow, Idaho with little more than a writing degree and the wherewithal to rent a hotel room for a few days let alone the weeks he would need to settle his father’s estate. Sarah lives a private, secluded life alone on Little Bear Ridge Road, her 40 year nursing career shrinking to three shifts a week and is not at all excited that Ethan may now be her house guest for an undetermined period of time.

Things move quickly in conversations between the two, exposing Sarah’s unbridled opinions and hilariously mundane lifestyle, Ethan’s conflicted relationship with his father in the years prior to his death and his own disheveled personal life and uncertain future. The combination of Metcalf and Stock, with Mantello’s expertly paced direction, allow the series of crisp early scenes of Hunter’s script to seamlessly define both characters.  As time passes, Ethan ventures out to a bar and hooks up with James (a rock solid performance by John Drea), who sees some potential in a relationship, but wants to slow things down at first. As that relationship takes shape, James finds himself in a revealing conversation with Sarah. Details about Sarah’s health challenges emerge, which have the two-fold effect of bringing the two men closer together and shifting the dynamics of the drama in Sarah’s direction.

Hunter’s writing is clever, succinct and punctuated by Metcalf’s marvelous presence on stage. Even as we revel in the robust early comic interaction of the play, it is the dramatic turn of the piece that elevates this drama, exemplifies Hunter’s exceptional storytelling ability and exposes the emotional core of the piece.

The elegant, stylized stage design by Scott Pask is set with a home theater seating unit that revolves to suggest alternate scenes. There is a lone ceiling fan above and an expansive, circular stage floor all enhanced by Heather Gilbert’s lighting design and Mikhail Fiksel’s sound design. The look of this show is clean, simple and amazingly effective.

Over the course of ninety minutes, Metcalf is a mesmerizing force on stage and a joy to watch, her flawless, wide range of comic timing and dramatic sensibilities on full display. Stock plays Ethan with a fragile, measured intensity that emerges in a definitive scene with Drea and then becomes unhinged in a stunning definitive confrontation with Metcalf. And when Meighan Gerachis appears in a brief but powerful and satisfying coda to the drama, we are left to ponder the importance of making choices that look forward with hope rather than backward with regret.

PHOTO|Michael Brosilow

STEPPENWOLF THEATRE COMPANY

Presents

WORLD PREMIERE

LITTLE BEAR BRIDGE ROAD
Downstairs Theater
1650 N. Halsted
Extended
through August 4, 2024

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PicksInSix Review: The Kite Runner—Broadway In Chicago

 
 

“Kite Runner” poignant, moving… and shocking.
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

If you’ve never read the bestselling novel The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini—a tale of friendship between two Afghan boys and how their choices dictate their adult lives—you are missing a real treatise in the nature of youth growing up. And as the audience was witness to the luscious theatrical take of the novel by Matthew Spangler, playing at Broadway in Chicago’s CIBC Theatre through June 23, it is striking how many of the themes that progress throughout the story are so universal and timeless, both in the family dynamic and inside us all as individuals. Friendship, betrayal, bigotry, sacrifice, courage (or lack of), there is an endless touch on all these ideas. It’s a stark lesson for all in Afghan culture and tradition that becomes highly accessible to all who invest in the storytelling, which, even in its challenges, is first rate and quite articulate.

The play opens atmospherically with a tabla player, offering some gentle, syncopated rhythm on his hand drum set, even as the audience enters the house.  Most of the story then revolves around the main character telling his side of things. His name is Amir, a comparatively well-to-do boy whose family has servants. One of the servants is Hassan, who serves Amir not only in deed but in their relationship as best friends. The separation between them is never really forgotten, it’s simply cast aside when convenient for the two boys to enjoy each other in growing up. There is an annual kite competition and Amir and Hassan enter it. It’s not a normal kite fight, so to speak. Contestants also have to run down the competition while in the air, last man standing. Amir feels special pressure from his father Baba to participate, since Baba senses that his sensitive son is not up to all the expectations that are placed in front of him. As the father did as a youth, Amir (with Hassan’s expert help) stunningly wins the competition and find at least a little compassion and respect in Baba’s house, even if it’s temporary.

Amir and Hassan are menaced by a gang of young thugs, whose claim on the prize for the kite competition was interrupted. That gang, in its continual harassment of the two friends, steals the magic blue kite that wins the prize and physically assault Hassan in the process while Amir watches helplessly.  Amir acquires a growing, lifelong guilt for not having stopped the violence, and Hassan is so loyal to his friend and master that he takes whatever punishment comes. In fact, the guilt is so strong that Amir simply denies the friendship any more influence and even tries to plant a theft under Hassan’s bed, so that he and his family will be banished. To Amir’s utter surprise, Hassan confesses to a crime he did not commit. And a bigger surprise comes when Baba forgives him—something that shapes the father/son relationship for the rest of their lives.  Eventually Hassan and his father leave the house in shame, taking with them a dreadful family secret owned by both fathers. In the meantime, the country is invaded by the Russians (the entire story all takes place between 1973-2001), and so Baba and his family need to leave for their own protection and come to America, specifically San Francisco. And this is just Act I.

From then on, the family becomes somewhat Americanized. Amir becomes the writer he always wants to be. He meets his future wife Soraya, a teacher in her own right. They want to have children but cannot conceive and consider adoption. Her father, a general back home, distastefully rejects such a notion because of a “blood” consideration—a bit like the old notion “but you don’t know where that’s been” in his regard for adoption. You know, purity of the bloodline and all. And at this point, Amir goes back to Afghanistan to discover the moment in his own life where guilt can at last be assuaged and shape itself into a kind of redemption. It’s a part of the story that one needs to witness to understand its impact. It’s abrupt and shocking and very personal. And quick, almost too much for some. But it works in a grandly affecting manner, as a part of the entire directing challenge ably steered by Giles Croft, who also directed the Broadway production.

Truth is, this is a full ensemble play at its core; everyone is not only involved in character, but to support the story as props and musicians. The two most elegant and touching scenes they have are where kites are flown in a ritualistic, poetic presentation. There is also a gorgeous set of kite representations onstage that are used as a kind of combination curtain and backdrop to separate the scenes out, arriving onstage like a giant butterfly. Wind effects, background noise, all are offered up by the marvelous ensemble here. 

Ramzi Khalaf is a wonderfully effective Amir and does the really difficult task of narrator/actor a great justice. Shahzeb Zahid Hussain as Hassan grabs you hard and eloquently in his character’s vulnerability and loyalty. As the well-to-do merchant Baba, Haythem Noor is both menacing and vulnerable in trying to find a way to identify with the son Amir.  As Soraya, Awesta Zarif is properly reserved at first, only to finally open up to Amir in that awkward, loving way that all youth discovers love.  The entire experience here is poignant and moving. And shocking. And just what theatre, in my eyes, should be. It’s not at all like humming a tune from a musical, but leaving the theatre in a thoughtful mood.  

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|Bekah Lynn Photography

Broadway in Chicago
presents
The Kite Runner
CIBC Theatre
through June 23, 2023

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PicksInSix Review: Blithe Spirit - Dunes Summer Theatre

 
 

“I’ll Be Loving You…Always”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

Is there a better way to introduce an audience to a superb regional theatre production of Noël Coward’s classic farce “Blithe Spirit” at the Dunes Summer Theatre than a hauntingly beautiful performance of Irving Berlin’s immortal love song “Always” by the enchanting spirit of the play herself? It’s one of many nuanced enhancements by director Michael Lasswell who has crafted a briskly-paced comic offering for the acclaimed summer theatre that opened its 73rd season on Friday night.

The word “crafted” is not used lightly here since in addition to directing an exuberant cast in a smart, spry and entertaining production of one of Coward’s most well-known and challenging works, Lasswell also contributed a stunning 1940s era scenic design. The creative elements of this show—Emily Chidaleck’s stylish costumes accented by Arturo Pozos’s flawless lighting design and the gentle but mystical touch of Jake Tillman’s sound design—and that exquisite performance at the top by Danielle Kerr, set the tone perfectly for all the enjoyable mayhem that follows.

The “Blithe Spirit” of Coward’s title is actually Elvira Condomine (Kerr), the long-deceased first wife of British novelist Charles Condomine (Sean Kelly) who is ‘materialized’ from the otherworld by Madame Arcati (Madeline Pell), an appealingly eccentric psychic who is invited for cocktails, dinner and a séance at the Condomine manor house in southeast London. It’s all a bit of a ruse by Charles who is working on a new project and hopes to gather research into the mixed up, mystic world in which Arcati resides. What starts out as after-dinner entertainment evolves into comic chaos as Elvira answers Arcati’s call and begins to wield her own special havoc first on Charles and then on his current wife Ruth (Danielle Bilderback) for her own ends.

While Ruth tries to rationalize the erratic actions of her husband, things start to fly about and Ruth senses the very real threat that Elvira’s spirit may be settling in to stay. So, it’s up to the spiritual prowess of Madame Arcati to bring things back to normal with a spell or two of her own.

Lasswell draws fine performances from Kelly and Bilderback who have to cope with the haunting presence of Kerr’s captivating Elivira. Pell’s brilliant comic turn as Madame Arcati is a laugh-out-loud riot. Rounding out the cast is Mary Jane Britton as the Condomine’s unwavering maid, Edith, Dean Johanson as Dr. Bradman and Stacy Nelson as Mrs. Bradman.

The Dunes Summer Theatre, the oldest continually produced company in Northwest Indiana, is under the artistic direction of Chicago-based theatre artist and director Steve Scott and managing director Elise Kermani. “Blithe Spirit plays through June 16 and the summer season continues with productions of Talley’s Folly (June 28-July 14) directed by Morgan McCabe and The Bridges of Madison County (July 26-August 11) directed by Scott – exciting and promising nights of theatre for the months ahead in Michiana Shores.

PHOTO|Dunes Summer Theatre
Dunes Arts Summer Theatre
presents
BLITHE SPIRIT
Michiana Shores, Indiana
through June 16


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PicksInSix Review: Black Sunday - TimeLine Theatre Company

 
 

‘BLACK SUNDAY’ – A Captivating Cautionary Tale
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

TimeLine Theatre Company’s world premiere production of “Black Sunday” written by Chicago playwright Dolores Díaz and directed by Helen Young, is a gripping drama about life in the harrowing days leading up to Sunday, April 14, 1935, when a dust bowl of epic proportions consumed the plains states with a devastating impact that reverberated across the nation.

TimeLine’s “Black Sunday” begins with a stunning cinematic prologue that traces the ecological impact of two decades of homesteading that initially reaped the rewards of the fertile prairie land but would ultimately disrupt and destroy the natural balance of the ecosystem. Drought and an increase in the jackrabbit population led to crop failure as coyotes preyed on farm animals created a perfect storm of destruction for the once promising frontier.

In the midst of this decaying situation, homesteaders who had flocked to the west with hope of starting a new life now faced a daily battle for survival. For one family—Pa (David Parkes), Ma (Michelle Moe) and Sunny (Angela Morris)— the heightened anxiety of living in squalor and fear as the impending winds blow all around them is palpable. Pa is a defiant settler, angry and unhinged but determined to keep his family together at all costs, even in the face of life and death. Ma is increasingly haunted by visions of the future, images and dreams that manifest themselves in a crude series of drawings that could hold the key to what is to come. Sunny has known only despair and isolation in her young life and now aspires to find any way to escape the hopelessness that she feels for her situation and the ruthless nature of her father’s control over the situation.

Díaz weaves into this family drama Jesύs (Christopher Alvarenga), a Mexican migrant worker who had hoped to start a new life for his family in California and Jim (Vic Kuligoski) a minister who has attracted the attention of Sunny over her mother’s protective objections. As the days click down on this intense drama and the gritty tension of the pending storm reaches a fever pitch, emotions flare and a stunning twist is realized.

“Black Sunday” is both a brilliant historical retrospective and a captivating cautionary tale for our time about the impact of climate change on our resources. The work also shines a light on the migrant workers story of the era and comes at a time when that story is being told to a new generation. Moreover, it stands as a powerful statement—then and now—about our personal responsibility to the environment and as stewards to our resources for future generations.

And “Black Sunday” steps in line as the final production in the 25-year succession of TimeLine’s rich dramatic storytelling in their Wellington location. Over the course of the next season, TimeLine Theatre Company will produce shows in association with Court Theatre, DePaul University’s Cortelyou Commons and Writers Theatre as plans for a new home in Uptown take shape for one of Chicago’s most revered professional theatres.    

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

TIMELINE THEATRE COMPANY
presents
World Premiere
BLACK SUNDAY
615 W. Wellington Avenue
through June 29


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PicksInSix Review: Death Becomes Her - Broadway in Chicago

 
 

“Death Becomes Her” - Masterful Musical Macabomedy!
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

The world premiere of the rollicking new musical “Death Becomes Her” opened Sunday at the Cadillac Palace Theatre combining an all-star cast with eye-popping special effects for a high-flying, side-splitting show. The book by Marco Pennette, with an original score by Julia Mattison and Noel Carey, is remarkably true to the absurd 1992 film directed by Robert Zemeckis starring Meryl Streep, Goldie Hawn, Bruce Willis and Isabella Rossellini about the search for immortality.

The new show is a masterful musical macabomedy with an unmatched, award-winning creative team led by director/choreographer Christopher Gattelli with music supervision by Mary-Mitchell Campbell and an equally outstanding cast starring Megan Hilty, Jennifer Simard and Christopher Sieber as the love triangle in the sights of the mystical temptress Viola Van Horn played by Michelle Williams who promises physical perfection and “Siempre Viva” (forever life) for a not-so-small fee and some stringent strings attached.  

At the heart of the storyline is the embattled relationship between the aging actress Madeline Ashton (Hilty) and struggling author Helen Sharp (Simard) who have been competing for the other’s riches all their lives. Everything Helen has Madeline wants which includes her doctor fiancé Ernest (Sieber) who is an easy mark for the wily starlet. The two are married which spirals Helen into a nervous breakdown.

Seven years pass and while Madeline and Ernest are trapped in an unhappy, loveless marriage, Helen emerges as a youthful, successful author seeking revenge for all of the misery Madeline has wrought. As she begins to plot with Ernest to put her out of the way so the two can live happily ever after, Madeline returns from her own meeting with Viola and the two face off, well, to the death. And that’s just the beginning of Ernest’s problems to keep the two looking fresh and fit in their forever lives.

At its best, the Mattison/Carey score—with magnificent orchestrations by Doug Besterman and dance and incidental music arrangements by Sam Davis all under the music direction of Ben Cohn—is terrific as evidenced by the electrifying crowd-pleaser “For The Gaze,” showcasing Hilty and the ensemble in the show within the show. Individually, Simard’s vocal and versatile comic abilities are on full display from the tortured, outcast in “Madeline” and “Falling Apart” to vengeful ex-lover who stands up for what she believes is rightfully hers. Williams’s stoic Viola, and the cast of immortals who surround her, delivers the soaring anthems “If You Want Perfection” and “I Warned You” in high style.  Sieber shines throughout as someone we can root for in “Till Death” and “The Plan” but it is the musical duel of Hilty and Simard evidenced in “Confrontation,” “Hit Me” and “Alive Forever” that propel the show forward to life ever after.

Derek McLane robust scenic design with Justin Townsend’s dazzling lighting provides the perfect backdrop for an array of magnificent costumes by Paul Tazewell. Peter Hylenski’s sound and Rob Lake spellbinding illusions  make the Broadway-bound “Death Becomes Her” a visual feast for the senses. Previews begin in October with opening scheduled for November 21, 2024, at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, but you can see it now at the Cadillac through June 2.

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy & Evan Zimmerman, 2024

BROADWAY IN CHICAGO
presents
World Premiere
DEATH BECOMES HER
Cadillac Palace Theatre
through June 2, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Midsummer Night's Dream - The Joffrey Ballet

 
 

WHAT A WEIRD AND REMARKABLE DREAM
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Kaitlyn Linsner

Sometimes, a once clear line between dream and reality will blur. A fantastic and boundless dreamscape may blend into everyday surroundings causing tired eyes confusion as they awake and search for clarity in the recognizable. This uncertainty might conjure up an unease followed by an urge to ascribe meaning to the dream and the desire to still be in it. How chaotic and beautiful. Then, an alarm goes off. Time to start another day.

This is perhaps the best way to describe the immersive experience of The Joffrey Ballet’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” staged at the Lyric Opera House through May 5, 2024. The Joffrey Ballet first premiered “Midsummer Night’s Dream” by internationally renowned Swedish choreographer Alexander Ekman in 2018. Now, the talented company closes its 2023-2024 season with its masterful return and by daring Chicago audiences to get real weird with it.

The first of two acts begins with a Dreamer (Dylan Gutierrez) in his bed seemingly dreaming before he awakens and joins a Hostess (Victoria Jaiani) for the Midsummer festivities. The curtains open to a visually stunning piece where the company dances amidst hay tossing up pieces in joyous synchronicity. The first act continues to weave through the summer solstice with rhythmic choreography around the maypole and a striking piece at a long communal dining table. The original lighting design by Linus Fellbom and recreated by Chris Maravich enchantingly transitions scenes from day to night before helping the audience later sink into the surreal in act two.

Ekman’s choreography blends classical and contemporary ballet. There’s freedom, fluidity and sheer fun that fills the stage throughout the production. The company connects seamlessly with each other, the set (Ekman) and the audience despite the massive size of the stage. They reflect dream-like scenarios through slow and precise movements and sprawl throughout the theater as both actual persons and shadowy figures on the walls. It is truly a vision.

The second act starts much like the first but quickly spirals into the large-scale absurdity of a wild dream. With widened eyes, audience members watch fleeting scenes of Headless men (Edson Barbosa and Davide Oldano) contorting on stage, floating tables, fish and bodies. The frenzy is magical to witness. Yet, one of the most impressive pieces in “Midsummer Night’s Dream” springs from a rare moment of tranquility amidst the dreamscape chaos. Adorned in sleepwear button downs, the women command an intoxicating beat and traverse the stage with stirring power and grace toward the end of the second act.

From start to finish, “Midsummer Night’s Dream” is a vivid celebration of love, dance, theatrics and wit. It blurs the lines between dream and reality and in doing so showcases the brilliance of leaning into imagination and sheer creativity. A must see.  

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

PHOTO|Cheryl Mann

The Joffrey Ballet
presents
Midsummer Night’s Dream
Lyric Opera House
through May 5, 2024


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PicksInSix Review: Joe Turner's Come and Gone - Goodman Theatre

 
 

Riveting Performances Drive Goodman’s “Joe Turner”
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton

“A man forget his song, he forget who he is”… It was a line shared by Bynum Walker, a ‘conjure man’ whose awareness of life and people is reflected in Walker’s role as the compass, the conscience of “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone,” the staggering August Wilson play now at the Goodman Theatre through May 19.  There are several themes that flow throughout the play, all expertly articulated by Mr. Wilson—the song inside us all, identity, search, discovery, prejudice, the effect of money, the comparison of status, the supernatural, on and on.  It quietly inspires us to follow on one hand, then forcefully repels us with its stark reality on slavery and its influence on culture and society.

The story is so thick and full of imagery that it’s a real challenge to distill its essence in this forum.  It ostensibly takes place in and around the steel mills of 1911 Pittsburgh, focusing on the boarding house of Seth Holly (an easy, yet riveting portrayal by Dexter Zollicoffer), who charges guests a weekly rate “up front” and works at turning scrap metal into dustpans; and his wife Bertha (an elegant and comforting TayLar), whose natural ease belies her character’s real moral center in the house. And there’s a cast of wide-ranging tenants and visitors, whose performers all deserve kudos.

There’s the aforementioned Bynum Walker (Tim Edward Rhoze is eloquent, rock-steady and takes Walker’s purpose into firm hands); Rutherford Selig (a stoic, wonderfully deadpan Gary Houston), a peddler and ‘peoplefinder’ who visits the house on Saturdays; Herald Loomis (a dynamic presence from A.C. Smith), whose life was forever altered by ‘Joe Turner’, being kept in slavery for seven years, and whose search for his wife is both heroic and tragic; Mattie Campbell (the wonderful Nambi E. Kelley), a woman waiting for her own man to come home, but who wants to find direction through the eyes of others; and Jeremy Furlow (Anthony Fleming III in a real star turn), playing guitar, romantically preying on women and fighting his bosses all the way to unemployment.

Then there’s Molly Cunningham (Krystel V. McNeil, in a strong rendering of a character with conflicting impulses), a single woman on her own road, whose huge strain of independence tempts all the men in the house; Martha Loomis (Shariba Rivers skillfully inhabits her with both a sense of obligation and a feeling of dread), Herald’s wife, who is finally found after all the years of separation; Zonia Loomis (a simply heartbreaking presence by Kylah Renee Jones), who has accompanied her father on this endless quest at the tender age of 11; and Harper Anthony (the charming Reuben Mercer), whose scenes with Zonia result in a first kiss and a realization of growing up.

The grand Goodman spirit Chuck Smith, an avid and long-supportive interpreter of Mr. Wilson’s cycle, directs this play like a symphony conductor, with all the crescendos and quiet moments we can witness, as well as displaying Mr. Smith’s own deep affection for the playwright’s words and thoughts.  The not-so-abstract and stylish set design by Linda Buchanan shows an authority in understanding what’s needed to help tell this complex story.  And here’s something I’d like to mention.  It takes a real professional to keep this moving so smoothly and to affect how an audience perceives it all; the production stage manager Mars Wolfe surely had Mr. Smith’s vision in hand like it was personal.  Exquisite work.

Finally.  We began our reaction here with a referral to song, that we create our lives (or should) with a message of some kind.  Mr. Wilson recognizes that our message is indeed a song inside us, waiting to come out and be recognized in a world that doesn’t always know to do that.  “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” is a truly extraordinary piece of theatre, of storytelling, of the song that resonates for all of us within the human spirit. 

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

GOODMAN THEATRE
presents
August Wilson’s
Joe Turner’s Come and Gone

NOW EXTENDED
through May 19


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