Dance

Kimberly Katz

Kimberly Katz

The Story Theatre’s world‑premiere staging of Paul Michael Thomson’s Pot Girls bursts to life in a vivid, full‑throttle production at Raven Theatre. Pot Girls is a sharp, funny, and thought‑provoking new play that fuses feminist history, artistic accountability, and a rainbow haze of 1980s, weed‑soaked poetry and art.

Inspired as a thematic counterpart to Caryl Churchill’s Top Girls, Pot Girls - directed by Ayanna Bria Bakari - leans into humor, theatricality, and a cloud of intoxication to explore how women create, collaborate, and collide both onstage and off. And in a bit of theatrical serendipity, both productions are currently running simultaneously at Raven Theatre. In fact, Raven Theatre and The Story Theatre are even offering special marathon days, giving audiences the chance to catch a matinee of Lucky Stiff’s directed Top Girls, stick around for some conversation with the creative team, then return in the evening for Pot Girls - all at a discounted rate (click here for details).

The story follows Caryl herself, a playwright on the cusp of her first major, Olivier‑eligible production - a show designed to spotlight women in the workplace. The year is 1982 and as she toasts the achievement with friends, her colorful London flat transforms into an impromptu hub where a lively, time‑spanning cohort of feminist writers drop in to drink, smoke, debate, and probe the ideas she’s celebrating.

The haze of a jubilant night eventually clears, and what remains is a sharper truth: this play lays bare the exhausting contortions women are expected to perform just to gain a foothold as authors and playwrights. It highlights not only the uphill battle of competing in a landscape where men still discriminate against women in their productions regarding creative authority, but also the added burden of being scrutinized for perfect political correctness the moment a woman-led production finally reaches the stage.

The many ways that women as authors have been discriminated against and unfairly censored or even hunted over the centuries is thoroughly laid out in a fantastic cast of intelligent expressive women.

The period feels fully realized, aided by Katelyn Montgomery’s evocative scenic work and Racquel Postilgione’s sharp costume design.

As the play unfolds, Caryl is pulled through a tangle of personal and professional upheaval - romantic tension with her partner Edith, pointed accusations about her racial blind spots, and the mounting pressure to tell women’s stories with integrity. Around her, the ensemble slips effortlessly between roles, embodying historical figures, colleagues, and critics who collectively push her toward an uncomfortable, necessary self‑examination.

In Pot Girls, Brenna DiStasio centers the production as Caryl, offering a steady emotional clarity that grounds the play’s wilder turns and quietly establishes her as its moral anchor. Ireon Roach, as Edith, wields her well-rolled blunt with sharp wit and charismatic intelligence, building a lively, charged dynamic with DiStasio that keeps the energy flowing like a river.

Peter Ferneding lends understated but essential texture as he shifts through historical and contemporary figures, his easy timing playing neatly against Tamsen Glaser’s agile, precise turns as multiple feminist icons, which bring warmth, wit, and tonal delicacy.

Vibrant, expressive energy radiates through each of Emily Marso’s roles, elevating every moment and sparking electric interplay with Glaser and Maya Bridgewater. Glaser and Bridgewater, in turn, deliver a fierce yet deep human presence across their characters, adding tension and charge to the ensemble’s debates. One of Bridgewater’s characters delivers a beautifully crafted, cathartic reflection on a young girl’s kidnapping and rape - written with such grace and restraint that it resonates powerfully with the conversations society is having today about trafficking and vulnerability.

Rounding out the cast, Laney Rodriguez displays a great sense of humor and threads emotional nuance through each character she inhabits, serving as a subtle connective force while carving out memorable moments opposite DiStasio and Roach. As a unit, the ensemble stays quick, engaged, and combustible, amplifying the play’s ideas with palpable charge.

Ultimately, Pot Girls crackles with ensemble energy and sharp ideas, offering an engaging, thought‑rich night of theatre for anyone drawn to fresh feminist work.

Highly recommended.

Pot Girls has been extended through March 8th. For tickets and/or more show information, click here.

This review is proudly shared with our friends at www.TheatreInChicago.com

Paramount Theatre’s staging of Dear Evan Hansen brings fresh dimension to the Tony‑winning contemporary musical. Under Jessica Fisch’s direction, the story follows Evan, an anxious, isolated teenager whose therapist‑assigned letters to himself inadvertently spark a misunderstanding with the Murphy family - one that grows into a lie swelling far beyond them and eventually into a community‑wide phenomenon. What begins as a desperate attempt to feel seen evolves into a moral knot that forces Evan - and everyone around him - to confront grief, loneliness, and the universal hunger for connection.

The Murphys are drawn into Evan’s story with a fragile mix of hope and heartbreak, briefly finding in him an echo of the son they lost. His presence momentarily pulls their shattered family together, even as the truth threatens to reopen long‑buried wounds. The family’s grief feels immediate, Evan’s anxiety is rendered with nuance, and the show’s viral‑culture elements land with a more human, grounded weight.

While the video projections are deployed with striking precision that greatly assist in the storytelling, Fisch’s staging ultimately leans into the intimacy at the core of the piece. Rather than echoing the Broadway production’s digital spectacle, Paramount foregrounds character, relationships, and the rawness of teenage interior life.

The score - including “Waving Through a Window,” the very powerful and moving “You Will Be Found,” and “For Forever” - lands with the kind of vocal power and clarity that Paramount’s acoustics tend to amplify beautifully. The production highlights the contrast between the soaring, hopeful music and the messy, complicated truth underneath Evan’s choices.

Overall, Paramount’s Dear Evan Hansen becomes less a story about the internet and more a story about the quiet ache of wanting to matter. It’s intimate, empathetic, and emotionally direct - the kind of staging that makes the show feel newly personal.

“Dear Evan Hansen explores the boxes we put ourselves in: the emotional, the metaphorical, and the digital ones we post, like and share,” says Jessica Fisch, making her Paramount Theatre directorial debut with the Chicago Regional Premiere of the Tony Award-winning musical. It features (from left) Devin DeSantis as Larry Murphy, Elaine Watson as Alana, Bri Sudia as Cynthia Murphy, Pablo David Laucerica as Jared and Isabel Kaegi as Zoe.

The cast is exceptional - let’s take a moment to celebrate each of them.

Paramount Theatre’s Dear Evan Hansen finds its emotional center in Cody Combs, whose Evan is tender, tightly wound, and achingly human. Combs, in his Paramount debut, captures Evan’s anxious spirals and fragile hopes with remarkable clarity, pairing superb acting with vocal work that feels both raw and crystalline, grounding the entire production in authenticity. His performance never slips into caricature; instead, he shapes a portrait of a young man straining to breathe in a world that feels unbearably loud.

Evan's mother Heide Hansen is played by Megan McGinnis who brings a beautifully layered warmth to the role. Her scenes with Combs pulse with a lived‑in tension  - the kind of love that’s fierce, imperfect, and stretched thin. McGinnis’s voice carries both exhaustion and devotion, making Heidi’s arc one of the production’s most affecting threads.

As Zoe Murphy, Isabel Kaegi delivers a performance full of quiet strength and emotional transparency. She sidesteps the trope of the unreachable girl, giving Zoe a grounded, searching presence. Her chemistry with Combs feels gentle and believable, especially in the moments when her grief and Evan’s longing quietly intersect.

Jake DiMaggio Lopez makes a striking impression as Connor Murphy, balancing volatility with a haunting vulnerability. We really feel for him. His presence lingers long after he leaves the stage, shaping the show’s emotional landscape in ways that feel honest rather than sensational. Taking on the role of gamer and Evan’s “family friend” Jared Kleinman, Pablo David Laucerica brings sharp comedic timing and unexpected warmth to. His dry wit consistently lands, yet he still reveals the softer insecurities beneath the sarcasm.

Bri Sudia and Devin DeSantis anchor the Murphy household with sharply etched, deeply felt performances. Sudia’s vocally impressive Cynthia Murphy is all open‑hearted ache - a mother clinging to hope with both hands - while DeSantis’s Larry carries a quieter, more guarded grief. Together, they create a portrait of a family fractured not by a single tragedy, but by years of unspoken pain.

Rounding out this wonderful cast, Elaine Watson brings crisp intelligence and real emotional nuance to Alana Beck, capturing her need to matter with disarming sincerity and seeming confidence. She becomes a quiet mirror to Evan - another teen outrunning her own loneliness in a very different way.

This cast moves with remarkable cohesion. Every scene feels interconnected, every emotional beat supported by the ensemble’s shared sense of truth. Combs’s Evan doesn’t exist in isolation; he’s shaped by McGinnis’s tenderness, Kaegi’s resilience, Lopez’s lingering shadow, and the layered grief Sudia and DeSantis bring to the Murphy household. In fact, every character is beautifully shaped. Their performances lock into one another like facets of the same story, creating a production that feels cohesive, intimate, and deeply human.

For a story centered on so‑called “losers,” this production proves itself a winner in every sense. And though the subject matter is heavy, there’s plenty of levity and genuine laugh‑out‑loud moments to keep the balance just right.

With a book by Steven Levenson and music and lyrics by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, the musical premiered at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. in July 2015. Since then, it has traveled nationally and internationally - and now Chicago‑area audiences get to experience it in one of the region’s most beautiful venues, the Paramount Theatre.

Highly recommended.

Dear Evan Hansen is being performed at downtown Aurora’s Paramount Theatre through March 22nd. For tickets and/or show information, visit https://paramountaurora.com/events/dear-evan-hansen/.

This review is proudly shared with our friends at www.TheatreInChicago.com

Drury Lane’s On Your Feet! The Story of Emilio & Gloria Estefan opens with a confident, inviting energy that immediately sets the tone for the evening. The production draws the audience into its momentum with ease, creating a lively atmosphere without ever feeling over the top. It’s an engaging, high‑spirited musical experience, delivered with polish and warmth, and even the ushers seem subtly swept up in the show’s rhythm.

The band is cooking, the lights are vibrating with tropical confidence, and the whole room feels like it’s been lightly spritzed with Miami humidity and pure optimism. By the time the first big number lands, you’re not watching a show - you’re being drafted into a celebration.

On Your Feet! charts the rise of Gloria and Emilio Estefan with the kind of momentum that feels less like a biography and more like a rocket launch wrapped in a drumbeat. The story begins in Miami’s vibrant Cuban‑American community, where a shy, songwriting Gloria is coaxed into performing, and a young, fiercely ambitious Emilio is determined to build a sound that reflects both their heritage and their future – that sound eventually becomes Miami Sound Machine. As Miami Sound Machine starts climbing the charts, the musical follows their battles with an industry that keeps trying to box them in, their insistence on bringing Latin rhythms to mainstream pop, and the personal sacrifices required to chase a dream that refuses to stay small.

The show doesn’t shy away from the fractures beneath the glitter - family tensions, cultural expectations, and the emotional cost of pushing against every barrier in their path. And when the near‑fatal bus accident threatens to end everything they’ve built, the story shifts into something deeper: a portrait of recovery, resilience, and the stubborn, beating‑heart belief that music can pull you back into the world.

At its core, On Your Feet! is a celebration of love, grit, and the unstoppable force of a rhythm that refuses to be quiet. It’s about two people who changed the sound of American pop by insisting that their own sound mattered. And it’s about how music - loud, joyful, defiant - can move people in every sense of the word.

Gaby Albo as Gloria and Samuel Garnica as Emilio ignite this production. Their vocals, their chemistry, their sheer “we were absolutely put on this earth to do this” presence turns On Your Feet! into a two‑person supernova at the center of an already electric show.

Albo’s Gloria is a revelation. She glides from the sweetness of “Anything for You” to the soaring emotional punch of “Reach” with a voice that feels both effortless and fiercely intentional. When she launches into “Conga” or “Rhythm Is Gonna Get You,” the room practically levitates. She doesn’t just sing these songs - she detonates them.

Garnica’s Emilio is all drive, charm, and quiet fire. His rendition of “Don’t Wanna Lose You” lands with a sincerity that hushes the room, and when he steps into the rhythmic swagger of “1-2-3,” you see exactly why Emilio Estefan became a force in the music world. He plays the role with a grounded confidence that makes every scene feel lived‑in and every choice feel earned.

Together, they’re magnetic. Their scenes crackle with the kind of natural rapport that makes you believe they’ve been finishing each other’s sentences for years. Every high note lands, every emotional beat resonates, and every dance break feels like a tiny cardio miracle powered by pure joy. Their performances anchor the show - they lift it, spin it, and send it sailing straight into the audience’s heart.

The supporting cast in Drury Lane’s On Your Feet! enrich, sharpens and gives heart to the world around Gloria and Emilio.

Claudia Quesada brings a fierce, layered presence to Gloria Fajardo - Gloria’s mother, capturing both the steel and the sorrow of a woman who sacrificed her own dreams so her daughter could chase hers. She commands every scene she enters, grounding the story with emotional weight and a voice that cuts cleanly through the chaos.

As Consuelo, the grandmother who sees Gloria’s spark long before anyone else does, Ana Maria Alvarez is pure warmth. She radiates humor, tenderness, and that unmistakable abuela magic - the kind that can lift a room with a single line or a knowing smile.

Angel Hikari Salgado is a delight as Nayib and Young Emilio, slipping between characters with ease and charisma. Whether delivering a punchline or dancing with fearless enthusiasm, Salgado adds a spark that keeps the show’s energy humming.

Together, this assembly of co‑stars forms the emotional architecture of the production - funny, heartfelt, and deeply human. And the ensemble? A joyful hurricane. They flip, spin, and salsa with the kind of precision that makes you wonder if they’ve all been sharing one giant, collective heartbeat backstage.

The stripped‑down set and props open the entire stage for those big, high‑energy dance breaks. Shifts in place and time come from a series of well‑placed visual screens along the back wall, each one snapping into a new image or texture to give the scene exactly the atmosphere it needs.

Drury Lane’s production of On Your Feet! is masterfully directed and choreographed by Luis Salgado, a longtime member of the show’s creative legacy and part of the original 2015 pre‑Broadway Chicago engagement. The show’s biographical curve is handled with warmth and momentum. It never drags, never panders, and never forgets that the Estefan’s story is as much about grit as it is about glitter. Salgado leans into that balance beautifully - one minute you’re laughing, the next you’re clutching your chest, and then suddenly you’re dancing in your seat like rhythm is, in fact, going to get you.

After the opening night performance, I told Luis Salgado how much I appreciated the way he showed Gloria and Emilio’s relationship developing from genuine mutual affection, even as Gloria’s mother worried that his strong business instincts might overshadow her daughter’s already established talent. The way the production threads their now‑iconic love songs through that arc reminded me how authentic and organic their partnership and marriage truly were.

Salgado said he was glad I picked up on that, noting that Gloria and Emilio are still going strong as a couple today. He added that he’s exploring a similar dynamic in his current project about another well‑known creative partnership, and he proudly showed me a congratulatory text from Hamilton’s Lin‑Manuel Miranda - smiling at him from a snowy mountainside - that had arrived just before the show!

I appreciated how he handled the tense moment between Gloria and Emilio after the devastating tour‑bus crash. While she’s still recovering, Emilio pushes her to return to performing, and she snaps back that she had asked for just one day to rest and see her family - a request he denied - and that the crash happened on that very day.

Salgado made room for that imbalance in their marriage as well. Emilio’s drive may have helped propel Gloria to international success, but the scene also makes clear that he could be a demanding partner - and that Gloria ultimately learned to trust her own instincts about balancing ambition with a sustainable, healthy life.

This production delivers on every level - from personal struggles to relationship dynamics to the creation of a sound that became a global phenomenon.

On Your Feet! The Story of Emilio & Gloria Estefan is the rare jukebox musical that feels like a celebration rather than a playlist. Drury Lane’s production is vibrant, heartfelt, and irresistibly fun. You walk out lighter than you walked in, humming a tune you didn’t realize you remembered, and wondering if it’s socially acceptable to start wearing sequins to work.

If you want a night that’s equal parts concert, dance party, and theatrical hug, On Your Feet! delivers it with style.

Highly recommended!

For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://drurylanetheatre.com/on-your-feet/.

Paul Slade Smith’s Unnecessary Farce - a 2006 comic whirlwind that is fast becoming a modern staple of the genre - lands with full force in Buffalo Theatre Ensemble’s lively production at The McAninch Arts Center in Glen Ellyn. The show is a reminder of how exhilarating a well‑constructed farce can be when every door slam, double‑take, and spiraling misunderstanding is executed with precision.

The setup couldn’t be more straightforward: two green cops stake out a bargain‑basement motel, poised to catch a small‑town mayor admitting to embezzlement. The camera is trained on the adjoining room, the accountant is prepped to draw out the confession, and everything should go smoothly. Naturally, it doesn’t. What follows is an avalanche of mistaken identities, disappearing clothing, and panicked improvisation as characters burst through the wrong doors at precisely the wrong time.

Smith’s script operates like a beautifully rigged Rube Goldberg machine of mayhem, each beat triggering the next with wicked precision. The comedy lands not because anyone is a cartoon, but because these poor, well‑meaning souls are desperately – hilariously - outmatched by the situation. And just when the chaos feels like it can’t possibly escalate further, in stomps a thick‑accented Scottish hitman, sending the whole affair hurtling into a delirious, side‑splitting crescendo that has the audience laughing at both the gags and the sheer engineering genius behind them.

The production thrives on the strength of a sharply attuned ensemble, each performer bringing a distinct spark that fuels the play’s escalating hilarity. Lisa Dawn, as the ever‑frazzled accountant Karen Brown, and Brad Lawrence, playing the straight‑laced Officer Eric Sheridan, ignite the evening with a rhythm that blends sharp comedic timing and buoyant physicality. Their energy sets the tone long before Frank Nall ambles in as Mayor Meekly, whose beautifully understated, steady presence becomes even funnier as he’s swept - again and again - into one absurd predicament after another.

Laura Leonardo Ownby, as the ever‑eager Billie Dwyer, injects the show with a burst of quick‑witted, slightly off‑kilter energy that’s instantly endearing. There’s a touch of Julie Hagerty in her wide‑eyed charm—funny, irresistible, and just unpredictable enough to keep the audience leaning in. When she hits her big moment, she lands it so cleanly and with such delightful abandon that the crowd breaks into spontaneous applause. Stepping in for Robert Koon for this performance, David Scott Crawford takes on the role of Todd with an easy confidence and a nimble, quick‑thinking presence. He slips into the ensemble’s rhythm without a hitch, matching their pace and tone so naturally that the substitution feels entirely organic.

Doreen Dawson, as Mary Meekly, offers a warm, steady presence that subtly elevates the entire ensemble, giving every twist, turn, and impeccably timed door‑slam an extra spark of comedic payoff. And closing out the company, Bryan Burke storms in as Agent Frank - uproariously funny and armed with expertly dialed‑in bluster that sends the chaos over the top in the best possible way. He leans into the character’s bluster and bravado with such sharp comic instinct that every entrance, line, and reaction becomes its own little punchline. Burke’s presence adds a final, satisfying jolt of absurdity to the ensemble’s chaos. I remember really enjoying his performance in Buffalo Theatre Ensemble’s Native Gardens. That same sharp instinct for timing and that wonderfully unforced comedic presence show up again here.

Together, this ensemble operates like a finely tuned comic engine - fully committed, perfectly synchronized, and clearly delighted by the demands of farce. Their collective precision makes the escalating madness feel effortless, transforming the production into something that doesn’t just execute farce, but celebrates it.

Superbly directed by Kurt Naebig, Buffalo Theatre Ensemble embraces the play’s breakneck rhythm and gleeful silliness, delivering a production that feels both tightly engineered and joyfully unhinged. It’s the kind of show that rewards timing, commitment, and a willingness to lean into the ridiculous - and this staging at The MAC does exactly that.

A crowd‑pleaser from start to finish, Unnecessary Farce proves once again that when farce is done right, it’s irresistible.

For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://atthemac.org/events/unnecessary-farce/.

As a lifelong Phantom of the Opera devotee in every form it takes, I was genuinely delighted to see BrightSide Theatre tackling Phantom in Concert. As the title promises, this version reimagines Gaston Leroux’s classic novel as a sweeping musical experience.

With actors reading from scripts accompanied by a full orchestra, Maury Yeston & Arthur Kopit’s Phantom in Concert reframes the tale as a lush, emotional melodrama centered on Eric, a brilliant but disfigured musical genius who lives beneath the Paris Opera House. In contrast to Andrew Lloyd Webber’s darker, gothic interpretation, this musical leans into Eric’s tragic origins, his yearning for genuine affection, and the profound musical bond he shares with Christine - the voice that has captured his heart completely.

Despite living in the shadow of Lloyd Webber’s megahit, the Yeston–Kopit Phantom has enjoyed more than a thousand productions worldwide and earned a devoted following for its sweeping score and heartfelt storytelling. Signature numbers such as “Without Your Music,” “Home,” “My True Love,” and “This Place Is Mine” are often cited among Yeston’s finest compositions.

In this telling, Eric - the Phantom - haunts the catacombs beneath the Paris Opera, a reclusive genius consumed by music and beauty. When he discovers Christine, a gifted young soprano, he becomes her unseen mentor, shaping her talent from the shadows. Turmoil erupts when longtime manager Gerard is dismissed and replaced by the imperious diva Carlotta and her husband, Cholet – the new owners of the theater. Driven by jealousy, Carlotta deliberately ruins Christine’s voice, Eric retaliates, sending the Opera into panic and prompting a relentless police pursuit. Eric’s fury ripples through the opera house like a living thing. What begins as confusion quickly curdles into fear, the company realizing that someone with both brilliance and rage is pulling the strings. All of it builds toward that moment when the truth about Gerard comes crashing in, reframing the chaos not just as vengeance, but as the desperate thrashing of a man who has been wounded far deeper than anyone understood. Gerard’s secret casts a long, quiet shadow over those final moments, turning them into something more intimate - a reckoning shaped as much by vulnerability as by the haunting beauty of Eric’s music.

Under the finely tuned direction of Artistic Director Jeffery Cass, Phantom unfolds with a sense of fluidity and imagination. Cass uses the entire venue as his canvas, sending cast members weaving through the seating area so the story seems to breathe around the audience rather than simply play out in front of them. It’s an approach that keeps the energy alive and the tension palpable.

Leading the production is Caden Cole, ideally cast as The Phantom/Eric, the enigmatic and tormented musical prodigy. He brings a striking blend of vulnerability and command to the role, and his vocal power is undeniable - soaring in the big moments, simmering in the quieter ones, and always grounded in emotional truth. Cole doesn’t just sing the Phantom; he inhabits him, giving the production its beating heart. Emily Lewis meets Cole’s fire with equal force, matching his intensity note for note in the role of Christine. She brings a luminous clarity to the character - wide‑eyed innocence layered with a growing emotional strength - and her voice carries both the sweetness and steel the role demands. Lewis’s chemistry with Cole heightens every duet, creating a dynamic that feels electric from the moment they share the stage.

Julie Ann Kornak commands the stage with a lavish, full-throttle diva presence that renders her Carlotta utterly unmissable. Each line and note - and every sly, well‑placed comic nuance - lands with the assurance of a performer who knows the spotlight belongs to her the moment she steps into it. She balances grandeur with just the right touch of comedic sparkle, turning Carlotta into a character who is not only vocally formidable but irresistibly fun to watch. Phillipe - Christine’s steadfast admirer and emotional counterweight to the Phantom - is brought to life with admirable warmth by Joe Moerschel. He plays the role with an earnest sincerity that grounds the love triangle, offering a gentler, more human alternative to the Phantom’s tortured brilliance.

The production is further elevated by standout supporting work. Among other outstanding players, Stan Austin delivers a crisp, comedic take on Cholet, cutting through the surrounding chaos with razor‑sharp timing, while Michael Rivera brings a grounded, steady warmth to Gerard, his voice blooming with striking clarity and power, especially throughout the second act. Phantom in Concert is bolstered by a remarkably cohesive ensemble whose vocal strength and fluid movement enrich every scene. This is a company that works in true harmony, elevating the production at every turn.

BrightSide’s Phantom in Concert emerges as a genuine musical‑theatre treasure, the kind of production that reminds you why this story endures. It marries lush orchestration, expressive performances, and a palpable sense of passion into an experience that feels both intimate and grand. This is the sort of evening that rewards longtime fans and newcomers alike, making it not just worth seeing, but worth savoring.

Phantom in Concert is being performed on a limited run from January 9th-18th. For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://brightsidetheatre.com/.

Under the deft direction of American Blues Theater’s Executive Artistic Director Gwendolyn Whiteside, Frank Capra’s beloved holiday classic It’s a Wonderful Life is reborn as a charming 1940s radio broadcast. With vintage microphones, live foley effects, and a versatile ensemble shifting seamlessly between characters, the production becomes more than a retelling - it’s a joyous homage to the art of storytelling itself. Audiences are invited to step back into the golden age of radio, where imagination takes center stage and George Bailey’s timeless journey resonates anew.

In Bedford Falls, George Bailey devotes his life to helping others, setting aside his own dreams for the good of his community. But when financial disaster strikes on Christmas Eve, he begins to doubt his worth. Enter Clarence, a guardian angel, who reveals a chilling vision of a world without George - a town consumed by Mr. Potter’s greed and stripped of hope. Confronted with the profound impact of his generosity, George rediscovers the value of his life. As his neighbors rally to support him, he learns that true wealth lies not in money, but in friendship, love, and the lives he’s touched.

By casting the audience as “studio listeners,” the production erases the boundary between stage and spectator. Foley effects—the slam of doors, the crunch of snow—lend a tactile realism that cinema rarely achieves. The ensemble’s deft shifts in voice and character populate Bedford Falls with remarkable clarity, their energy carrying the narrative even through George’s darkest moments. The touchstones are all here: George’s sacrifices, Potter’s greed, Clarence’s intervention, and the jubilant finale of community over isolation. In radio-play form, these familiar beats gain fresh resonance, reminding us that sound and imagination can be more powerful than spectacle.

The ensemble of It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago! shines with warmth, artistry, and undeniable chemistry, breathing vibrant new life into this holiday treasure. At the heart of the production, Brandon Dahlquist embodies George Bailey with a sincerity that feels both timeless and immediate. His performance is layered with emotional depth - capturing the optimism of youthful dreams, the weight of sacrifice, and the aching vulnerability of despair. Dahlquist’s portrayal is not only heartfelt but profoundly inspiring, reminding us why George Bailey remains one of the most enduring figures in American storytelling. With every gesture and inflection, he draws the audience into Bailey’s journey, making the character’s triumphs and struggles resonate as if they were our own. It is a performance that anchors the show with humanity and elevates it with grace.

Equally compelling is Ian Paul Custer, who delivers a masterful dual turn that showcases both his range and precision. As Clarence, he radiates warmth and gentle humor, embodying the guardian angel with a tender humanity that uplifts the story and offers moments of levity. In stark contrast, his portrayal of Mr. Potter is steeped in chilling authority - a ruthless presence whose greed and menace cast a long shadow over Bedford Falls. The seamless transition between these two extremes underscores not only Custer’s remarkable skill but also the production’s emotional contrasts, reminding us that the heart of It’s a Wonderful Life lies in the tension between compassion and cruelty, hope and despair.

Justin Banks infuses Harry with an effortless charm, while Audrey Billings embodies Mary Bailey with a luminous blend of grace, resilience, and radiant warmth. Her presence anchors every scene, offering both steadiness and emotional depth as she navigates the joys and hardships of George’s journey. Manny Buckley lends Joseph a dignified gravitas, and Dara Cameron sparkles as Violet, bringing wit, vivacity, and a touch of glamour to Bedford Falls. Michael Mahler elevates the atmosphere as the charismatic Announcer, while his live piano accompaniment bathes the production in nostalgic glow, perfectly evoking the golden age of radio.

Rounding out the ensemble, J.G. Smith delivers a dazzling performance as the Foley artist, transforming everyday objects into extraordinary tools of imagination. With impeccable timing and inventive flair, Smith crafts the soundscape that breathes life into Bedford Falls - snow crunching underfoot, doors creaking open, coins clinking, and bells ringing with holiday cheer. Each effect is not merely background noise but a vital layer of storytelling, immersing audiences so completely that George Bailey’s world feels tangible and immediate. Smith’s artistry underscores the magic of live radio theater, reminding us that sound alone can transport us across time, space, and emotion. It’s a masterclass in creativity and precision, and his contribution ensures the production resonates with authenticity and wonder.

Together, this gifted ensemble weaves storytelling, music, and imagination into a seamless tapestry - proving that collaboration, heart, and craft are what make this production truly wonderful.

The magic begins even before the curtain rises. Arrive early and you’ll be treated to a lively pre-show experience, where the stage comes alive with playful antics, warm laughter, and spirited music. Cast members set the tone with a burst of energy that instantly draws the audience into the festive spirit. It’s more than a warm-up - it’s an invitation to step into the world of Bedford Falls with joy already in the air. By the time the official performance begins, you’ll feel like part of the celebration, swept up in the camaraderie and holiday cheer.

For close to 25 years, American Blues Theater has brought Frank Capra’s classic to life in the form of a 1940s radio broadcast. It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago! has earned its place as the second longest-running holiday production in the city.

American Blues Theater has discovered a beautiful new permanent home just west of Andersonville. The venue strikes the perfect balance - intimate yet expansive - with seating that is both comfortable and generously spaced. Fully ADA accessible and thoughtfully designed, the theater even offers the convenience of its own dedicated parking lot right beside the building. The parking is easy and the theater offers free spots for disabled patrons.

Recommended!

It’s a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago! is being performed at American Blues Theater through December 28th. For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://americanbluestheater.com/2025-its-a-wonderful-life-live-in-chicago/.

Paramount Theatre’s White Christmas unfolds like a living snow globe - bursting with holiday sparkle, sweeping dance numbers, and the timeless melodies of Irving Berlin. From the first notes to the final snowfall, the production wraps audiences in a nostalgic embrace, blending old-fashioned charm with Broadway-sized spectacle. Each scene glitters with warmth and wit, inviting theatergoers to laugh, swoon, and hum along as romance blossoms and friendships deepen against a backdrop of wintry wonder. By curtain call, the joy is infectious - sending audiences out into the night with hearts lightened, spirits lifted and smiles as bright as the marquee.

Paramount Theatre’s White Christmas sparkles like a holiday jewel box - both warmly intimate and magnificently grand. The theater’s historic stage transforms into a canvas of sweeping spectacle with majestic sets, while the lush resonance of a full orchestra directed by Korey Danielson gives Berlin’s timeless score a cinematic glow.

White Christmas tells the story of army buddies Bob Wallace and Phil Davis, who, after serving in World War II, reinvent themselves as a wildly successful song-and-dance duo. Their path crosses with the enchanting Haynes sisters, Betty and Judy, sparking a mix of romance, comedy, and showbiz sparkle. The foursome’s journey leads them to a cozy Vermont inn, only to discover it’s owned by their former commanding officer, General Waverly, now facing financial hardship. With loyalty and holiday spirit driving them, Bob and Phil rally their entertainment world connections to mount a spectacular Christmas show - one that not only saves the inn but restores the General’s faith in community and camaraderie. The tale blends laughter, love, and nostalgia, culminating in a finale where snow drifts from above and Irving Berlin’s “White Christmas” envelops the theater in timeless magic.

Phil Davis (Evan C. Dolan, left) and Judy Haynes (Jessie J. Potter, right) tap dance atop a piano, surrounded by fellow talented ensemble hoofers, in the popular tap number “I Love a Piano” in Irving Berlin’s White Christmas. Nostalgia, pageantry and spectacle come to life in Paramount Theatre’s 14th Broadway Series holiday season blockbuster. Stephen Schellhardt directs.

At the heart of the production, Alex Syiek embodies Bob Wallace with a commanding gravitas that instantly draws every eye to him. His stage presence is nothing short of magnetic - effortlessly blending charm, authority, and vulnerability in a way that makes the character pulse with life. When he launches into “How Deep is the Ocean,” the moment transcends performance and becomes pure artistry: his voice, rich and resonant, soars across the theater, wrapping the audience in waves of emotion. Each note seems to shimmer with sincerity, sending goosebumps rippling through the crowd and holding them in rapt silence. Syiek crafts an experience, a breathtaking highlight that lingers long after the curtain falls.

Evan C. Dolan and Jessie J. Potter electrify the evening as Phil Davis and Judy Haynes with tap-driven brilliance in “I Love a Piano,” their infectious energy matched by glowing precision. Sophie Grimm as Betty Haynes weaves glamour and wit into every scene, balancing romance with sharp comedic sparkle. Grimm’s voice flows with velvety smoothness, matched by a striking blend of power and precision. And grounding the story with gravitas is David Girolmo’s General Waverly, whose gruff exterior masks a deep well of tenderness, reminding us that the season’s true gifts are selflessness, community, and enduring bonds. Together, this ensemble stitches a holiday tapestry that flashes with spectacle yet pulses with heart - an experience as joyous as it is unforgettable.

Abby C. Smith also shines brilliantly as Martha Watson, the inn’s warm-hearted concierge, infusing the role with wit, vitality, and irresistible charm. She commands the stage with a natural ease, and when given the chance to unleash her powerhouse vocals in “Let Me Sing and Be Happy,” the theater practically vibrates with joy. Her voice radiates strength and exuberance, turning the number into a jubilant showstopper that leaves the audience grinning and applauding with unrestrained delight.

Beyond its iconic title tune, White Christmas offers a treasure trove of Irving Berlin gems that keep audiences humming long after the curtain falls. “Blue Skies” bursts with optimism and ensemble flair, while “Sisters” delights with playful charm and comic timing. “Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep” slows the pace with tender intimacy, reminding us of the quiet joys of gratitude, and Alex Syiek’s soaring “How Deep is the Ocean” delivers a moment of pure vocal power that ripples through the house. The show’s choreography shines brightest in its showstoppers: “Snow” sparkles with ensemble energy and frosty whimsy, while “I Love a Piano” erupts into tap-driven brilliance, its infectious rhythm impossible to resist. And of course, the finale - Berlin’s timeless “White Christmas” - arrives like a gift, wrapping the evening in nostalgia and emotional payoff as snow drifts from above. More than a holiday musical, Paramount’s White Christmas is a glittering celebration of romance, comedy, and community spirit, stitched together with dazzling choreography and songs that linger like cherished memories of the season.

(Center L-R) Evan C. Dolan, Jessie J. Potter, Alex Syiek and Sophie Grimm with cast in White Christmas at Paramount Theatre through January 11th.

Tiffany Krause’s choreography in this production of White Christmas is simply breathtaking. This ensemble doesn’t just sing - they ignite the stage with dance that radiates brilliance and energy. From sharp, exhilarating tap sequences to sweeping partner and swing routines, the performers elevate the show to dazzling new heights. The number “Everything Good Happens When You’re Dancing” embodies the very spirit of the production, showing how romance flourishes and multiplies through the cast’s sheer joy, elegance, and remarkable artistry.

A timeless holiday favorite, White Christmas weaves together romance, comedy, and twinkling song-and-dance spectacle as two veterans-turned-entertainers join forces with a captivating sister act. Their journey to a snow-dusted Vermont inn blossoms into a story of love, laughter, and loyalty, culminating in a heartfelt mission to save their former general’s struggling lodge. Along the way, Irving Berlin’s melodies and dazzling choreography transform the stage into a celebration of community, generosity, and the enduring magic of the season.

Recommended for big holiday fun!

White Christmas is being performed at Paramount Theatre through January 11th. For tickets and/or more information, visit https://paramountaurora.com/events/irving-berlins-white-christmas/.

Goodman Theatre’s 2025 production of A Christmas Carol delivers a reimagined yet reverently faithful vision of Charles Dickens’ enduring holiday masterpiece. Directed by BOLD Artistic Producer Malkia Stampley, the staging infuses fresh energy into the familiar tale, striking a delicate balance between honoring tradition and embracing innovation.

Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol follows Ebenezer Scrooge, a cold-hearted miser who scorns Christmas and human kindness. On Christmas Eve, he is confronted by the ghost of his former partner, Jacob Marley, and guided by three spectral visitors - the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Yet to Come. Their haunting revelations force Scrooge to witness his own failings, the hardships of others, and the bleak destiny awaiting him. Awakened to the power of compassion and generosity, he greets Christmas morning as a transformed man - joyful, benevolent, and fully embracing the spirit of the season.

At the center of this transformation is Christopher Donahue, returning to the role of Ebenezer Scrooge with a performance that brims with nuance. Donahue embodies the character’s frosty detachment and biting cynicism with precision, while gradually revealing the vulnerability and humanity that make Scrooge’s redemption so powerful. His portrayal anchors the production, ensuring that audiences experience not only the spectacle of Dickens’ ghosts and festive scenes, but also the emotional depth of one man’s journey from isolation to generosity.

Surrounding him is an ensemble that blends the wisdom of seasoned Goodman veterans with the energy of exciting newcomers, forging a dynamic interplay that keeps the production alive and ever-evolving. Their chemistry, paired with imaginative staging and subtle special effects, ensures that longtime patrons experience the story anew while first-time audiences are swept into its magic.

Beyond the performances, the production dazzles with fresh choreography, inventive musical direction, revitalized design elements and special effects that elevate the performance. The stage becomes a canvas of contrasts: the eerie, otherworldly visitations of Marley and the Ghosts unfold with haunting theatricality, while the warmth and intimacy of the Cratchit household radiate joy and tenderness.

Every moment is meticulously layered with detail, reminding us that Dickens’ tale is more than a seasonal tradition—it is a living parable of generosity, compassion, and the enduring bonds of community.

(L-R) Jon Hudson Odom, Ella Boparai, Carmelo Kelly, Viva Boresi, Bethany Thomas, A’mia Imani, Henry Lombardo, Sól Fuller and Helen Joo Lee.

For close to fifty years, Goodman Theatre’s A Christmas Carol has stood as a defining ritual of Chicago’s holiday season—a theatrical gathering place where generations of families, friends, and theatergoers return year after year. More than just a retelling of Dickens’ classic, the production has become a civic tradition, woven into the fabric of the city’s winter celebrations.

This year’s staging carries that legacy forward with renewed vitality, reminding audiences why the story continues to resonate across centuries. At its core, A Christmas Carol is not simply the tale of Ebenezer Scrooge’s redemption; it is a parable about the power of empathy, generosity, and human connection. Goodman’s production magnifies those themes by transforming the theatre itself into a communal space - where laughter, music, and the haunting presence of Dickens’ ghosts converge to awaken the spirit of compassion.

The endurance of this holiday cornerstone lies in its dual nature: it is both deeply personal, charting one man’s journey from isolation to belonging, and profoundly collective, celebrating the bonds that unite a community. Each performance becomes a reminder that the true gift of the season is not material wealth, but the shared warmth of kindness and fellowship.

The cast assembled for Goodman Theatre’s A Christmas Carol is nothing short of outstanding. Christopher Donahue, stepping into the role of Ebenezer Scrooge after Larry Yando’s celebrated tenure, delivers a performance that is both commanding and deeply human. His portrayal captures the character’s sharp edges and biting cynicism, yet gradually reveals the warmth and vulnerability that make Scrooge’s transformation so moving - you can’t help but be won over by him. Donahue was nothing short of electrifying, also bringing a masterful sense of graceful physical comedy to the role. He embodied the rakish, childlike exuberance and sheer JOY that floods Scrooge when he discovers it’s not too late to transform his life.

One of the evening’s biggest laughs came as Donahue realized that only a single night had passed with the spirits—despite their showing him years of missteps and warning that he must change his ways immediately or face a hated death and generations of sorrow. The audience roared, and I’ve never heard such sustained laughter in this production before. It was pure delight.

Ella Boparai brings a radiant charm to Tiny Tim, embodying the innocence and hope that anchor the story’s emotional core. The ensemble as a whole is vibrant and cohesive, each member contributing to the production’s energy and richness.

Among the spirits, Bethany Thomas shines with grandeur and generosity as the Ghost of Christmas Present, while Daniel José Molina delivers a chilling, spectral presence as the Ghost of Christmas Future. Lucky Stiff rounds out the trio with a compelling and evocative Ghost of Christmas Past, guiding Scrooge through memories with both tenderness and gravity.

 (L-R) Christopher Donahue and Daniel José Molina.

Jon Hudson Odom brings remarkable depth to Bob Cratchit, embodying Dickens’ humble clerk with a warmth and sincerity that make him the beating heart of the production. His performance captures Cratchit’s quiet resilience and steadfast kindness, elevating the role from supporting character to emotional cornerstone. Odom’s nuanced portrayal balances gentle humor with the weight of hardship, reflecting the struggles of working families while never losing sight of Cratchit’s unwavering optimism.

In scenes with the Cratchit family, Odom radiates tenderness and devotion, particularly in his interactions with Tiny Tim. The father-son bond he conveys is both poignant and inspiring, a reminder of the fragile yet enduring hope that sustains the family through adversity. His presence underscores the stark contrast between Scrooge’s cold isolation and the Cratchits’ warmth, amplifying the play’s central themes of compassion, perseverance, and the transformative power of love.

Together, this company breathes fresh life into Dickens’ timeless tale, ensuring that every scene resonates with theatrical magic and emotional depth.

I wholeheartedly encourage audiences to experience this beloved Goodman holiday tradition - an annual production that never fails to capture the true spirit of the season. For anyone eager to embrace the warmth, wonder, and festive magic of Christmastime, A Christmas Carol at Goodman Theatre is the perfect way to step into the holiday “spirit.”

A Christmas Carol is being performed at Goodman Theatre through December 31st. For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://www.goodmantheatre.org/show/a-christmas-carol/.

Million Dollar Quartet Christmas brings the legends back together - Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Carl Perkins - for a high-energy holiday jam at Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee. Packed with rock 'n' roll hits and festive favorites, this jukebox musical delivers a nostalgic blast of seasonal cheer. Now staged in the round at Marriott Theatre, it’s a toe-tapping celebration you won’t want to miss.

This thrilling holiday musical whisks audiences back to December 4, 1956, inside Memphis’s iconic Sun Records studio, where the birth of rock ‘n’ roll gets a festive twist. Framed as a lively holiday reunion of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Carl Perkins, the show plays like a jukebox time capsule - glittering with tinsel, rhythm, and seasonal joy. The studio glows with holiday charm - garlands strung, mistletoe dangling, and a decorated tree tucked in the corner - as four rock ‘n’ roll legends reunite to trade stories, revisit Christmases past, and muse about the road ahead. Their banter is light, their bond electric with nostalgia, and every song reverberates with the unfiltered energy of icons at the height of their powers.

Framed as a rockin’ ride through Christmas past, present, and future, the show fuses tender reflections with turbo-charged takes on holiday favorites and golden-age rock hits. Each legend infuses the stage with their signature sound, transforming timeless tunes into pulse-pounding celebrations of the season - and the rebellious heart of rock ‘n’ roll.

Million Dollar Quartet Christmas at Marriott Theatre ignites the stage with a high-voltage blend of rock ‘n’ roll swagger and holiday spirit. Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Carl Perkins deliver powerhouse performances that showcase their iconic styles while wrapping the season in nostalgic charm. Alongside the show’s signature hits, audiences are treated to festive favorites like “Blue Christmas,” “Santa Claus Is Back in Town,” “Boogie Woogie Santa Claus,” “Run, Rudolph, Run,” “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,” and a rollicking mashup of “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” and “Jingle Bell Rock.”

This cast doesn’t just shine - they explode off the stage. Million Dollar Quartet Christmas blazes to life with a powerhouse ensemble that doesn’t imitate rock ‘n’ roll royalty—they channel them. With razor-sharp musicianship, magnetic charisma, and a sleigh-load of seasonal swagger, these performers ignite a musical storm that’s both heartwarming and high-octane. It’s not just a performance - it’s a full-blown holiday revival of rhythm, soul, and rock ‘n’ roll cheer.

Let’s raise the curtain on this extraordinary cast - each performer a vital spark in the blazing brilliance of Million Dollar Quartet Christmas.

JP Coletta plays Jerry Lee Lewis and detonates onto the stage with a performance that’s equally volcanic and virtuosic. From the moment his fingers hit the keys, it’s clear we’re in for a wild ride: he attacks the piano with manic glee and devilish precision, channeling the raw, unfiltered spirit of rock’s original wild child. Every note ricochets with rebellion, every flourish drips with swagger, and every sideways grin feels like a wink to chaos itself. Coletta’s portrayal is a masterclass in musical mayhem - blistering, magnetic, and utterly irresistible. By the end, the piano’s smoking, the audience is beaming, and the ghost of Jerry Lee is surely somewhere backstage, grinning in approval.

As Carl Perkins, Trevor Lindley Craft brings a cool, soulful swagger, anchoring the show with crisp guitar licks and vocals laced with rockabilly grit. He’s the ensemble’s steady heartbeat - cutting through the chaos with finesse, style, and a quiet confidence that keeps the rhythm grounded. Whether trading riffs or harmonizing with the quartet, Craft exudes the kind of understated charisma that lets the music speak volumes.

Michael D. Potter steps into Johnny Cash’s boots with quiet power and commanding presence. His voice rolls in low and steady, like distant thunder on a Tennessee night, and his portrayal hums with authenticity. Potter doesn’t overplay the legend - he funnels him, letting the stillness between notes carry as much weight as the music itself. Stoic yet stirring, he draws the audience in with a magnetic gravity that feels both timeless and true.

Colton Sims doesn’t just impersonate Elvis Presley - he inhabits him with velvet vocals and hip-shaking bravado along with a gaze that could melt vinyl. From his first entrance, Sims radiates the kind of stage command that made Elvis a cultural phenomenon. His voice smolders, his movements sizzle, and his charisma is pure dynamite. It’s a performance that balances swagger with sincerity, capturing the King in all his electrifying glory.

As Elvis’ girlfriend Dyanne, Teah Kiang Mirabelli is a revelation. She infuses the stage with elegance, wit, and vocal brilliance, elevating every scene she’s in. More than just a supporting role, Mirabelli brings emotional depth and radiant charm, offering a counterpoint to the testosterone-fueled jam session. Her solos soar with precision and passion, and her presence adds a layer of warmth and complexity that rounds out the show’s dynamic pulse. Mirabelli is especially adorable during her cute, mandolin-playing Hawaiian themed number “Mele Kalikimaka”.

Ross Griffin grounds the show with quiet intensity as Sam Phillips, the visionary behind the music and the man holding the emotional reins. His performance is taut, urgent, and deeply human - a portrait of ambition, loyalty, and the weight of legacy. Griffin narrates the story; he lives in its tension, embodying a producer torn between past glories and future dreams.

Rounding out the ensemble with flair and finesse are Jed Feder as Fluke and Cody Siragusa as Brother Jay. With razor-sharp timing, rhythmic fire, and a dash of comic mischief, they keep the backbeat tight and the energy sky-high. Whether laying down grooves or landing punchlines, they’re the unsung heroes who make the whole jam session sing.

Together, this cast absolutely ignites. Every note, every gesture, every glance is charged with passion, precision, and holiday joy. It’s a Christmas musical miracle wrapped in tinsel and rock 'n' roll. The actors’ live musical performances - executed with impressive skill - infuse the production with an electrifying energy. With guitars in hand, a stand-up bass thumping, and drums driving the rhythm, the stage often pulses with the raw excitement of a live concert.

Under the spirited direction of Scott Weinstein, this holiday edition of Million Dollar Quartet strikes a joyful chord between festive fun and nostalgic reverence. Weinstein orchestrates the production with a keen sense of pacing and emotional texture, allowing the show to glide effortlessly from quiet, intimate moments to full-throttle rock ’n’ roll revelry. Whether it’s a tender ballad shared under the glow of Christmas lights or a raucous jam session that rattles the rafters, each scene is staged with precision, heart, and a wink of holiday mischief. The result is a dynamic, feel-good celebration that honors the legends of Sun Records while wrapping the audience in the warm glow of seasonal spirit.

Before the curtain rises, treat yourself to a festive feast at Embers Christmas Grille, the seasonal pop-up nestled inside the Lincolnshire Marriott Resort - just steps from the theater. Offered Wednesday through Friday, this holiday dining experience features a three-course prix fixe menu for $49 per person, served with a generous helping of cheer. Each dish is playfully named and thoughtfully crafted, blending seasonal inspiration with upscale comfort. With options spanning beef, chicken, and fish, the menu offers a whimsical twist on traditional holiday fare - perfect for theatergoers looking to savor the spirit of the season in style.

Million Dollar Quartet Christmas is holiday fun at its fullest.

Highly recommended.

For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://www.marriotttheatre.com/show/million-dollar-quartet-christmas.  

If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if a glam-rock concert, a sci-fi B-movie, and a drag ball collided in a castle during a thunderstorm—The Rocky Horror Show Live has your answer, and it’s wearing fishnets.

The Rocky Horror Show Live is a glitter-drenched, gender-bending, sci-fi rock ‘n’ roll romp that turns theater into a wild party. Expect corsets, chaos, and a whole lot of “Time Warp” madness. This madness has now made its way to Naperville – Brightside Theatre to be exact.

When prim-and-proper sweethearts Brad Majors and Janet Weiss find themselves stranded in a thunderstorm, their search for shelter leads them to a looming, otherworldly mansion - a castle pulsing with secrets, sequins, and scandal. What begins as a pit stop quickly spirals into a surreal plunge down the rabbit hole of desire, decadence, and intergalactic mischief.

Inside, they meet the castle’s master of ceremonies: Dr. Frank-N-Furter, a gloriously flamboyant, corset-clad scientist who struts with the swagger of a rock god and the flair of a cabaret queen. Hailing from the distant planet of Transsexual in the galaxy of Transylvania, Frank is in the midst of unveiling his latest experiment - a living, breathing Adonis named Rocky, sculpted from muscle, myth, and pure libido. With golden locks and glistening abs, Rocky is less Frankenstein’s monster and more a pin-up fantasy brought to life.

As Brad and Janet’s innocence begins to unravel, the castle transforms into a playground of provocative floor shows, alien revelations, and boundary-blurring seductions. The air crackles with glam-rock anthems, pelvic thrusts, and a deliciously campy celebration of everything taboo. Gender norms are tossed aside, sexuality is fluid and fearless, and the audience is swept along in a glitter-drenched whirlwind of liberation and lunacy.

It’s not just a descent - it’s a transformation. What starts as a dark and stormy night becomes a kaleidoscopic journey into the heart of pleasure, identity, and unapologetic self-expression. And by the time the curtain falls, Brad and Janet - and everyone watching - are forever changed.

From left to right Frank-n-Furter (John McNally), Brad (Michael Lynch) and Janet (Brooke Kassal).

Brightside delivers a dazzling revival of this cult classic, transforming the stage into a riotous playground of glam, grit, and glorious excess. With a knockout cast and inventive use of props, the production doesn’t just invite the audience into Dr. Frank-N-Furter’s castle - it plunges them headfirst into its glittering heart, where every velvet curtain and pelvic thrust feels like an invitation to mischief.

John McNally is an absolute revelation as Dr. Frank-N-Furter, commanding the stage with a magnetic blend of sensuality, sway, and razor-sharp wit. From the moment he slinks into view, clad in fishnets and attitude, McNally’s presence is undeniable - he doesn’t just enter the scene, he devours it. His performance pulses with a deliciously understated sexiness, balanced by theatrical bravado and a knowing wink that keeps the audience hanging on every gesture. Whether crooning through “Sweet Transvestite” or orchestrating the castle’s chaos, McNally delivers a masterclass in camp charisma.

Brooke Kassall lights up the stage as Janet Weiss, infusing the role with vocal brilliance and comedic precision. Her transformation from wide-eyed ingénue to liberated vixen is a joy to watch, and she navigates the character’s emotional arc with both heart and hilarity. Kassall’s timing is impeccable, her voice crystalline, and her physicality sharp.

Michael Lynch, as Brad Majors, is pitch-perfect in his portrayal of the uptight, earnest fiancé caught in a whirlwind of glitter and temptation. Lynch leans into the camp with gusto, delivering his lines with just the right mix of sincerity and absurdity. His vocal moments land with strength and clarity, and his chemistry with Kassall adds a layer of authenticity to the madness unfolding around them.

Together, this trio anchors the production with energy, nuance, and a confident embrace of the show’s outrageous spirit.

Scott Kelley delivers a pitch-perfect performance as the Narrator, wielding deadpan delivery like a scalpel and slicing through the chaos with dry wit and subtle nuance. His timing is impeccable, his tone delightfully sardonic, and his ability to anchor the madness with a raised eyebrow or a well-placed pause makes him the ideal guide through this glitter-drenched fever dream. Kelley doesn’t just narrate—he punctuates the production with comedic finesse, offering a steady stream of meta-humor that keeps the audience both grounded and giggling.

One of the most inspired casting choices in the show is Mary Grace Martens in the dual roles of Eddie and Dr. Scott - a double act that showcases her range, charisma, and comic chops. As Eddie, Martens bursts onto the scene like a rock ‘n’ roll cannonball, delivering a hilariously unhinged performance that’s equal parts punk energy and vaudevillian flair. Her physicality, vocal grit, and sheer commitment to the chaos make Eddie’s brief but explosive appearance unforgettable.

Then, in a brilliant pivot, Martens reemerges as Dr. Scott, trading leather and rebellion for tweed and gravitas. Her portrayal is spot-on, capturing the character’s stiff demeanor and scientific earnestness while still mining the role for laughs. The contrast between the two characters is a testament to Martens’ versatility - she doesn’t just play two roles, she inhabits two worlds, and does so with style, precision, and a wink to the audience.

When opportunity came knocking, Charlie Kungl didn’t just answer - he flung the castle doors wide open and stormed the stage with a performance that was nothing short of electrifying. Originally cast as one of the Phantoms, Kungl stepped into the role of Riff Raff with fearless precision, filling in for Thomas McMahon and transforming the castle’s creepy handyman into a scene-stealing force of nature. From the moment he slithered into view, Kungl embodied Riff Raff’s eerie elegance and twitchy menace with uncanny style, layering in just the right amount of weirdness, wit, and vocal prowess.

His performance in “Over at the Frankenstein Place” was hauntingly beautiful, and his contributions to “Time Warp” were delivered with such gusto and vocal strength that the audience couldn’t help but be swept into the madness. Kungl delivered one of the most memorable turns of the night.

Playing opposite Riff Raff as the sultry and sardonic Magenta is Michelle Bolliger. Bolliger brings a sly humor and smoky vocal tone to the role, delivering her lines with a delicious blend of deadpan and mischief. Her chemistry with Kungl added a layer of twisted charm to the castle’s eerie ambiance, and her vocal work - especially in ensemble numbers - was smooth, confident, and richly textured.

From left to right Eddie (Mary Grace Martens), Frank-n-Furter (John McNally) and Columbia (Collette Michelle).

Ben Chalex delivers a standout turn as Rocky Horror, infusing Frank-N-Furter’s golden-haired creation with a magnetic blend of innocence, physicality, and comic ability. From his shimmering entrance in gold lamé to his wide-eyed reactions and expressive vocals—especially in “The Sword of Damocles”—Chalex elevates Rocky beyond caricature. He brings surprising emotional depth and impeccable timing, making Rocky not just a lab-grown fantasy, but a breakout presence bursting with kinetic charm and comedic gold.

Rounding out the cast with flair is Collette Michelle, who shines as Columbia with a vibrant mix of vocal prowess and comedic sparkle. Her performance surges with energy, capturing Columbia’s manic charm and showgirl sass to perfection. Michelle even delivers a crisp, crowd-pleasing tap routine that seals the deal—she’s a triple threat with glitter to spare.

The ensemble of Phantoms brought a vibrant pulse to the production, serving as Frank-N-Furter’s pleasingly twisted entourage with flair and finesse. These talented performers didn’t just dance - they slinked, strutted, and seduced their way across the expansive three-quarter thrust stage, turning every corner into a playground of provocative movement – including the aisles. Their presence added texture and tension, amplifying the castle’s decadent atmosphere and ensuring that Frank’s every whim was met with theatrical devotion and dazzling spectacle.

Under the sharp direction of Jeffrey Cass and the spirited musical guidance of Phil Videckis, The Rocky Horror Show Live at Brightside Theatre explodes with vigor, irreverence, and irresistible charm. This production doesn’t just break the fourth wall - it invites the audience to dance through it, shout back at it, and throw Scott’s toilet paper at it. With highly encouraged audience participation that leaps at every campy cue and innuendo, the show becomes a shared spectacle of chaos and delight. It’s a glitter-drenched, fishnet-clad thrill ride that’s tailor-made for the Halloween season - and absolutely unmissable for fans of theatrical mischief.

Highly Recommended.

The Rocky Horror Show Live is being preformed at Theater at Meilly-Swallow Hall through November 9th. For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://brightsidetheatre.com/the-rocky-horror-show/

Page 1 of 28

 

         20 Years and counting!

Register

     

Latest Articles

Does your theatre company want to connect with Buzz Center Stage or would you like to reach out and say "hello"? Message us through facebook or shoot us an email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

*This disclaimer informs readers that the views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the author, and not necessarily to Buzz Center Stage. Buzz Center Stage is a non-profit, volunteer-based platform that enables, and encourages, staff members to post their own honest thoughts on a particular production.