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PICKSINSIX Review: 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEAS

"ONE STAGGERING VISION HEAPED ON ANOTHER."

First things first... If you are looking for a rousing adventure story, rich and rugged scenic elements, dynamic performances, imaginative puppetry and high-flying excitement above and below the waterline - or as the script says, "one staggering vision heaped on another" - Lookingglass Theatre Company's 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas is sure to rock your boat!

High seas exploits... The Jules Verne classics have been majestically reimagined for the stage and this fascinating science fiction epic bubbles up from the deep in a new stage adaptation by David Kersnar and Steve Pickering(Althos Low) weaving all the mystery and suspense of Captain Nemo's high seas exploits together with shipwrecks and sea creatures, great and small, in a thrilling evening of entertainment. 

What it's about... Prisoners from a Confederate prison camp escape and crash land a hot-air balloon on a remote island. In time they discover and recognize the Natalius from a familiar published work by the noted French expert Professor Morgan Aronnax, and meet its aging, anguished and sole surviving crew member, Captain Nemo (a spellbinding Kareem Bandealy). The story unfolds through the recollections of Professor Aronnax(the dynamic Kasey Foster), her compatriot, Brigette Conseil(a spirited performance by Lanise Antoine Shelley) and the swashbuckling harpooner Ned Land(a beefy, rugged role for Walter Briggs) who are central to the inner story of seas storms, intrigue and more than a few twists and turns. The superb supporting ensemble includes Thomas J. Cox, Joe Dempsey, Micah Figueroa, Edwin Lee Gibson, Glenn-Dale Obrero and an extraordinary stage crew who make the magic happen.

Fantastic voyage... Fans of the Jules Verne classics or the film version will find this reimagined story right in their wheelhouse, a fantastic voyage with a new, engaging twist of character relationships. 

A visual feast... Todd Rosenthal's ruddy, versatile set design is complemented by Sully Ratke's brilliant period costumes highlighted by Christine Binder's lighting and Rick Sims sound. The inspired circus choreography by Slyvia Hernandez-DiStasi, massive rigging by Issac Schoepp and the creative puppet designs of Blair Thomas, Tom Lee and Chris Wooten, make this David Kersnar directed production a visual feast. 

REFLECT... Lookingglass presents a post-show discussion entitled REFLECT following the 2:00 p.m. matinees on select Sundays. The June 24th topic: Jules Verne and Victorian Sci-Fi... the July 15th offering is Creatures From The Deep presented in partnership with scientists from Chicago's Shedd Aquarium. For the complete schedule, visit: REFLECT.



PHOTOS|Liz Lauren

Lookingglass Theatre Company
presents
20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEAS

Adapted by David Kersnar and Althos Low
From the Books by Jules Verne
Directed by David Kersnar

through August 19th
821 N Michigan Ave.

TICKETS: 312.337.0665
WEBSITE

For more reviews, visit: 
Theatre In Chicago

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PICKSINSIX Review: MEMPHIS

"THE BIRTH OF ROCK AND ROLL."

Something in the water … There are a lot of reasons for you to run to see MEMPHIS, the exhilarating new Porchlight Music Theatre production directed by Daryl Brooks that opened Wednesday at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts. One is certainly the charismatic performance of Liam Quealy as Huey Calhoun, a character inspired by the life and career of Memphis DJ and personality Dewey Phillips. Another is the radiant and explosive Aerial Williams in the role of Felicia Farrell. Then there is an amazing company of talented dancers, singers, actors, and musicians who are non-stop great! Maybe there is something in the water at PMT these days. They've done it again. MEMPHIS is a SMASH!

Embraces R&B music … Part revolutionary, part rebel, Quealy’s Calhoun oozes with the kind of passion that drives a dream - a crusader who rejects stereotypes, fights bigotry, racism and the segregation of the era in which he lived. Against the odds, he embraces R&B music as a way of bringing people together, first on the radio, and then on television. As this engaging, often dark and richly soul-filled journey unfolds in Calhoun’s 1950s Memphis, what we are really seeing is the birth of rock and roll.

On the radio … From his musical awakening in a black nightclub on Beale Street with “The Music In My Soul” and falling for Felicia, we follow Calhoun through his unlikely success as a D.J in a department store and eventually on the radio extolling his commitment to African-American music. Along the way, Williams thrills with the poignant “Ain’t Nothin’ But a Kiss” with Quealy, “Colored Woman” and “Love Will Stand When All Else Fails”.

Musical revolution ... The bittersweet love story inevitably leads to rejection and reprisals. Felicia’s brother, nightclub owner Delray Jones (Lorenzo Rush, Jr.) sees only trouble and Huey’s mom, Gladys (Nancy Wagner) experiences hate firsthand. Through it all, Huey single-mindedly pursues what is right until his own musical revolution - and rebellious nature – wear him out. Rush makes the role of Delray all his own and in Bobby, the triple-threat talents of James Earl Jones II are on full and glorious display. Gator finds his voice in fine form from Gilbert Domally.  

What to watch and wait for … so many spirited, high-energy company numbers including “Scratch My Itch” … “Everybody Wants to Be Black On A Saturday Night” … “Someday” and “Stand Up” … Rush’s powerful “She’s My Sister” … Jones at his best in “Big Love” ... Christopher Carter & Reneisha Jenkins dynamic choreography ... be sure to lean in and listen every time Williams steps up to the microphone. 

Porchlight motto … fulfilling the Porchlight motto - “american musicals. chicago style” - in rousing fashion,  MEMPHIS completes the 23rd season for the company and the first in their new home at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts. MEMPHIS has already been extended to June 10th, but don’t wait a moment longer to see this show.    




PHOTOS|MICHAEL COURIER

PORCHLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
Presents
MEMPHIS

through June 10th
Ruth Page Center for the Arts
1016 N. Dearborn St.
773.777.9884
WEBSITE

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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PICKSINSIX - THIS WEEK!

Firebrand Theatre's 9 TO 5 THE MUSICAL is on the short list of six picks in and around Chicago this week, and we are just getting started. Much more to come in the De Usuris Blog, but be sure to make a date to see these shows before it's too late.

THE ELAINE DAME TRIO - WINTER'S JAZZ CLUB Start the weekend off right with the Elaine Dame Trio at Winter's Jazz Club, Thursday, April 5th. Shows at 7:30 and 9:30. We had a memorable conversation on March 31, 2017 at Winter's with Elaine, one of Chicago's most gifted jazz singers and vocal coaches, about her musical influences and career. HEAR THE PODCAST  WINTER's SCHEDULE 

AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE - GOODMAN THEATRE The superb Philip Earl Johnson leads a powerhouse cast, but it is the razer-sharp, searingly-electric confrontations that have him under siege and at odds with his evil brother - a commanding performance by Scott Jacek - that delivers the explosive conflict between truth and deception. Robert Fall's stirring adaptation of the Ibsen classic is currently playing at the Goodman Theatre. PICKSINSIX REVIEW  TICKETS Through April 15th PHOTO|LIZ LAUREN

GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER - COURT THEATRE Despite how we feel personally about bias and prejudice, facing up to it in our own lives is another matter. This play fits well into our national dialogue, an inspired choice for Court's season, and further proof that even in this very entertaining and fast-paced comedy, the underlying issues of race in America are profoundly real. PICKSINSIX REVIEW  TICKETS Through April 15th

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner at Court Theatre (l-r Sydney Charles, Bryce Gangel, Michael Aaron Pogue) PHOTO|MICHAEL BROSILOW

THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE - NORTHLIGHT - This dark comedy of deceit, deception and the ravages of mental illness, written by Martin McDonagh and directed by BJ Jones, is manifested in the riveting performances of Wendy Robie and Kate Frye. Resentment mixed with fear shrinks Robie’s demanding mother Mag in the face of the mounting frustration and anger of Frye’s Maureen. A powerful and moving experience that will stay with you. TICKETS Through April 22nd PHOTO|MICHAEL BROSILOW

LETTERS HOME|GHOSTS OF WAR - THE DEN THEATRE LETTERS HOME returns in repertory with Artistic Director William Massolia’s new production, GHOSTS OF WAR, based on the true story of Ryan Smithson, who joined the Army Reserve at 17 and was deployed to Iraq two years later as an Army Engineer. PODCAST TICKETS April 6th through May 6th  

9 TO 5 THE MUSICAL - FIREBRAND THEATRE -THE DEN THEATRE The 2nd production of Firebrand Theatre's inaugural season is 9 TO 5 THE MUSICAL featuring music and lyrics by Dolly Parton, book by Patricia Resnick, directed by Firebrand's Artistic Director Harmony France with music director Andra Velis-Simon and choreographer Kasey Alfonso. TICKETS 
April 7th through May 20th

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PICKSINSIX Review: GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER

RIGHT THERE IN BLACK AND WHITE

Meet Matilda “Tillie” Banks … There is quite a bit of Tillie in all of us. In fact, the world might be a whole lot better if we could bottle up her special mix of irreverence, humanity and infectious charm and spread it around when we think that everything is fine just the way it is. You see Tillie’s point of view of the eyebrow-raising revelations unfolding at the Drayton’s San Francisco hilltop home – served up in all its splendidly-stylish 1960’s glory in the superb new Court Theatre production of Todd Kreidler’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner directed by Marti Lyons with Associate Director Wardell Julius Clark – is a spot-on reflection of what we believe is our point of view. That’s why we relate so strongly to her, even as the two families involved –  one white and one black – struggle with essentially the same bias and prejudice toward one another. Don’t get too comfortable or be fooled by all of this.  Our prejudices are still very much intact, 50 years later, and they are hard to miss in the intimate confines of the Abelson Auditorium. It’s all right there in black and white.

Packed and ready to go … If you are not familiar with the story, you need to know that it is spring 1967, Joanna “Joey” Drayton and Dr. John Prentice are ten days in love and have returned for a very short visit to tell her parents, Matt and Christina, that they are getting married. Christina’s excitement for the news slowly dissolves as she finds out from Joey that in addition to John being a world-renowned research physician, he is also an older, black man. Matt, whose golf game has been suddenly and mysteriously interrupted by a telephone call from Tillie, is equally aghast at the news and decides that he needs time to process. There isn’t much of that around because we learn that the couple is leaving that night and Joey has invited John’s parents over for dinner. This is when it all gets very interesting because we find out that the poised and proper John has not been altogether forthcoming about the situation with his parents at all. In between Tillie stepping in to hold things together and stocking the bar so Monsignor Ryan can make it to the first course, we see all the hilarious and poignant sides of this complex situation play out.

What’s really happening … Despite how we feel personally about bias and prejudice, facing up to it in our own lives is another matter. That is what’s really happening to these families. Tillie and Monsignor Ryan represent the voices of reason, reminding us that the bigotry of the past — embodied early on by Hilary St. George (Rachel Sledd) whose zero-tolerance dismissal is a vitally important event — is still prevalent in every sector of our society. This play fits well into our national dialogue, an inspired choice for Court's season, and further proof that even in this very entertaining and fast-paced comedy, the underlying issues of race in America are profoundly real.

Who stands out … The remarkably talented and balanced ensemble combines Mary Beth Fisher, Tim Hopper, Jacqueline Williams and Dexter Zollicoffer from the houses of Drayton and Prentice. Fisher and Williams bring maturity and sensitivity to their roles, displaying a wide range of patience and empathy for their children, in contrast to the autocratic nature of the fathers, deftly portrayed by Hopper and Zollicoffer, who wrestle openly with their own fears that are squarely based in social perceptions of the time. Hopper gives an impassioned summation that speaks to universal acceptance. Michael Aaron Pogue's considerable talent is on full display when he is defending his right to a life of his choosing and standing with the charming Bryce Gangel (Joanna) to both support and defend their decision. Dan Waller is perfect as the spirited Monsignor Ryan, who actually is spirited throughout. The evening, however, belongs to the marvelous Sydney Charles who wraps herself up in Tillie's subtle and not-so-subtle musings with uproarious delight.

Split-level interior … Scott David has created a 60’s era split-level stark white interior, centered in the shadow of massive scaffolding and bridge abutments in the wings that together with Samantha Jones’ costumes and lighting by Lee Fiskness suggest that this is a snapshot in the rearview mirror of life and not to be confused with anything closer than it appears. Then again ...

Special Film Series … The Court Theatre will be hosting three film screenings  at various locations including the original 1967 film version of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner directed by Stanley Kramer and starring Sidney Poitier, Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. The screening will be held on Saturday, April 7th at 3:00 p.m. at the Logan Center for the Arts, 2nd floor. Complimentary admission with reservations at: www.CourtTheatre.org.  

PHOTOS|Michael Brosilow

COURT THEATRE
PRESENTS
GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER
Written by Todd Kreidler
Directed by Marti Lyons
with Associate Director Wardell Julius Clark
through April 15th


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