Dance in Review

Displaying items by tag: Studebaker Theater

Chicago Opera Theater (COT) closes its 2025/26 season with the concert premiere of a new opera Trusted - the seventh full-length opera developed through COT’s Vanguard Initiative. Composed by Aaron Israel Levin to a libretto by Marella Martin KochTrusted was developed over the course of Levin’s two year tenure as COT’s Vanguard Composer. Earlier this season, audiences were invited to view a piano-vocal workshop of the opera and provide feedback. Now, audiences can see how the piece has developed since the first workshop in its fully orchestrated premiere. Trusted will be presented on Saturday, May 30 at 3:00 p.m. at The Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building, 410 S Michigan Ave. Tickets are $30-$70 and available at chicagooperatheater.org.

Founded in 2018, COT’s Vanguard Initiative is a two-year residency for composers ready to enter the world of opera. Participants are immersed in every aspect of the art form, from repertoire study and vocal writing to administration and production, culminating in a commissioned full-length opera.

“It’s easy to imagine that new operas arrive fully formed from the minds of a composer and librettist. In reality, they are built over time—through collaboration, experimentation, and the opportunity to hear the work come to life at different stages of its development,” explains COT’s General Director Lawrence Edelson. “This past fall, we invited audiences not only to experience an early version of this exciting new work, but to actively engage with it—offering invaluable feedback to Aaron and Marella through Liz Lerman’s Critical Response Process. By opening the workshop process to the public, we’re able to bring fresh perspective to the creators while also demystifying how a new opera actually comes into being. The insights we gathered during that first workshop were instrumental as Aaron and Marella continued refining the piece in advance of the upcoming Concert World Premiere.”

About Trusted

Set against the backdrop of a high-stakes financial scandal, Trusted is an intimate exploration of deception, betrayal, and the emotional toll of broken faith. When an accomplished financial advisor is exposed for orchestrating a decades-long fraud, the fallout extends far beyond his clients — it fractures the very foundation of his family. His two daughters struggle to reconcile the man they knew with the crimes he has committed. As the truth unravels, so do their own perceptions of loyalty, morality, and the fragile nature of trust itself. Through a dynamic score by COT’s Vanguard Composer in Residence Aaron Israel Levin, and a taut, contemporary libretto by Marella Martin Koch, the opera delves into the complexities of family bonds, the weight of inherited legacies, and the search for redemption in a world where trust—once lost—may never be regained.

The Concert World Premiere of Trusted will be conducted by Eli Chen. The cast features sopranos Tracy Cantin and Meghan Kasanders, mezzo-soprano Quinn Middleman, and bass-baritone Kyle AlbertsonKate Pitt serves as dramaturg.

About Chicago Opera Theater

Chicago Opera Theater’s mission is to enrich the lives of those who live, work and play in Chicago by bringing rarely produced and contemporary operas to life, supporting gifted emerging artists, and providing hands-on experiences with opera that entertain, empower creativity, and cultivate a lasting and meaningful connection to the arts. Guided by our core values, COT serves Chicago through unique, relevant, and innovative opera experiences that reflect the aspirations of our city — dynamic, inclusive, and forward-thinking — fostering inspiration, dialogue and belonging. Since its founding in 1973, COT has grown from a grassroots community-based company to a national leader in an increasingly vibrant, diverse, and forward-looking art form. COT has staged over 160 operas, including over 90 Chicago premieres and 50 operas by American composers. COT is led by General Director Lawrence Edelson who was appointed in 2023.

For more information on Chicago Opera Theater productions, visit chicagooperatheater.org/

Published in Upcoming Theatre

Music of Remembrance (MOR) presents the world premiere of The Dialogue of Memories, a new opera by composer Tom Cipullo and acclaimed Chicago Tribune journalist Howard Reich, on a three-city U.S. tour this May. The work marks the first time Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel is portrayed as a character in an opera, drawing on Reich's real-life friendship with Wiesel and his investigation into his mother's long-hidden past.

Performances take place at Benaroya Hall in Seattle (May 17), Presidio Theatre in San Francisco (May 20), and the Studebaker Theater in Chicago (May 23-24).

The opera opens with Reich's line, "I suffer from an event I have not even experienced." When his mother Sonia's trauma from the Holocaust resurfaces late in life, Reich is drawn into a history his family had long avoided.

As he begins to uncover his mother's past, Reich forms an unexpected bond with Wiesel, who appears throughout the opera as a guiding presence. As in life, Wiesel challenges Reich to ask questions, tell his mother's story, and reckon with what he has inherited – and what he chooses to do with it.

In the final moments of the work, Wiesel's message is direct: "We are ordered to hope."

"When I published my mother's story, my identity as the son of Holocaust survivors was revealed on the front page of the Chicago Tribune," said journalist Howard Reich. "This was a secret I'd been urged to keep my entire life. My friendship with Elie Wiesel changed how I understood my family's silence – and my own responsibility to break it."

The premiere comes as the world marks the 10th anniversary of Elie Wiesel's passing. The last generation of Holocaust survivors is fading, and firsthand testimony is giving way to accounts passed down across generations.

"Elie Wiesel spent his life insisting that these stories be told," said MOR Artistic Director Mina Miller. "Bringing him to the stage now, ten years after his death, raises the question of who carries that responsibility forward."

That sense of inheritance extends into Cipullo's score, which weaves echoes of Schumann, Gershwin, and Tchaikovsky into his own contemporary musical language. The opera unfolds in episodic scenes that move between past and present as Reich pieces together his mother's history.

For nearly three decades, MOR has excavated long-silenced voices while expanding the repertory with commissions that confront injustice through music. The Dialogue of Memories brings those strands together, transforming a deeply personal story drawn from Reich's own life into a new opera. Audiences in Seattle, San Francisco, and Chicago can now experience Reich's story – a reflection on legacies still unfolding in families around the world.

The Dialogue of Memories
World Premiere Tour • Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago

Composer: Tom Cipullo

Librettist: Howard Reich with Tom Cipullo
Based on The Art of Inventing Hope: Intimate Conversations with Elie Wiesel

Conductor: Alastair Willis

Director: Erich Parce

Media Design: Peter Crompton

Elie Wiesel: Daniel Belcher

Sonia Reich: Megan Marino

Howard Reich: Dominic Armstrong

MOR Chamber Ensemble: Christina Medawar, flute; Laura DeLuca, clarinet; Mikhail Shmidt, violin; Walter Gray, cello; Cristina Valdes, piano

Sunday, May 17, 2026 @ 4:00pm

Seattle, Washington

Benaroya Hall (200 University Street)

Tickets $60; Students $25 (ID required)

https://musicofremembrance.org/show-details/memories

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 @ 7:30pm

San Francisco, California

Presidio Theatre (99 Moraga Avenue)

Tickets $38–71

https://musicofremembrance.org/show-details/memoriessf

Saturday, May 23, 2026 @ 7:30pm

Sunday, May 24, 2026 @ 3:00pm

Chicago, Illinois

Studebaker Theater (Fine Arts Building)

Tickets $35–75

https://musicofremembrance.org/show-details/memorieschi

Published in Upcoming Theatre

Chicago's Fine Arts Building is excited to bring the legendary comedians and improvisers of Bluebird Improv to the historic Studebaker Theater (410 S. Michigan Avenue) for one night only, Saturday, May 16 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are now on sale starting at $40. For more information, visit fineartsbuilding.com/events/bluebird-improv.

Made up of some of comedy's most recognizable faces from TV and movies, Bluebird Improv was formed out of a shared love for improvising and entertaining audiences. Every performance is a fully improvised, once-in-a-lifetime experience. Bluebird Improv is produced by former longtime Second City producer Beth Kligerman.

The cast of the Studebaker Theater performance on May 16 includes two-time Emmy Award nominee and Chicago native Matt Walsh from HBO's award-winning comedy series Veep and Netflix's new series Vladimir. Walsh also appeared on Apple TV's acclaimed limited series Manhunt, the CBS series Ghosts, and in recent films Novocaine with Jack Quaid and The Good Half with Nick Jonas. Walsh originated memorable roles in several popular comedy films including Life of the PartyOld SchoolStarsky and HutchTed, and Keeping Up with the Joneses.

Additional Bluebird Improv cast members appearing at the Studebaker Theater are Marc Evan Jackson (Brooklyn Nine-NineThe Good PlaceThe Baby-Sitters Club) and Second City alumni Brad Morris (Curb Your EnthusiasmA.P. BioThe Good Place) and Joe Canale (The Mindy Project).

Tickets for Bluebird Improv at the Studebaker Theater on Saturday, May 16 at 7:30 p.m. are now on sale starting at $40. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit fineartsbuilding.com/events/bluebird-improv.

Bluebird Improv is a collective of legendary comedians who tour the world performing shows that are fully improvised, once-in-a-lifetime experiences. Made up of some of comedy's most recognizable faces from TV and movies, as well as some that will become your new favorites, Bluebird was formed out of a shared, (still) burning love for improvising and entertaining audiences. Each and every show is completely unscripted and totally unique—a short conversation with a couple of audience members at the top of the show inspires the spontaneous, unhinged and beautifully hilarious comedy mayhem that ensues! For more information, visit bluebirdimprov.com.

Artist Bios

Matt Walsh is a two-time Emmy-nominated actor from HBO's award-winning comedy series Veep, and cast member of Apple TV's acclaimed limited series Manhunt. He is also a founding member of the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater. Walsh will next be seen in Paramount Pictures' Novocaine starring Jack Quaid, Maybe We Should starring Heather Graham, Little Lorraine starring Stephen Amell, and Utopia's Not An Artist where he co-stars opposite Rza from the Wu Tang Clan. Recently, he appeared in Hulu's Unplugging, which he co-wrote, and starred alongside Eva Longoria. He can also be seen in The Good Half starring Nick Jonas. Walsh has appeared in memorable roles in several popular comedy films including Life of the PartyOld SchoolStarsky and HutchTed, and Keeping Up With The Joneses. Other credits include the CBS series Ghosts, Fox Searchlight's Flamin' Hot, and the recent Father of the Bride film.

Walsh currently does a podcast Second in Command with his Veep co-star Timothy Simons.

In addition to his film and TV work, Walsh is also a charitable founder of Open Book with his wife Morgan. The charity donates LGBTQ affirming books to public elementary schools around the country. Matt resides in Los Angeles with his wife Morgan Walsh and their three children.

Joe Canale has been improvising around the world for the past 30 years, including stints at Boom Chicago in Amsterdam and The Second City Mainstage in Chicago amongst many others. TV appearances include The Mindy Project and Fair Game with Brock Everett. His greatest pleasure is derived from performing live improv for an audience.

Marc Evan Jackson is best known for his roles as Kevin on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Shawn on The Good Place, attorney Trevor Nelsson on Parks & Recreation, and Mary Anne's dad Richard Spier on The Baby-Sitters Club. You may also recognize his voice from Podcasts such as The Good Place: The Podcast, or as Sparks Nevada in The Thrilling Adventure Hour. Marc moved from the Second City to Los Angeles in 2001, where he taught improv at Second City Hollywood and in 2003 formed a long-form improv group of other Second City alumni called The 313, an homage to Detroit. Marc is also the co-founder of The Detroit Creativity Project, a nonprofit that teaches the life-changing skill of improv in Detroit middle and high schools free of charge.

Brad Morris is a veteran TV and film writer, producer, actor, director and improviser. An alum of four of Chicago's Second City's Mainstage revues, the iO Theatre and The Annoyance, Brad is a member of the renowned long form improvisational groups, The Reckoning and Uncle's Brother with Tim Meadows. Brad has improvised around the world with the Second City National Touring company and Matt Walsh and Friends for the USO. As a TV writer, Brad spent three seasons as a producer on the TBS comedy Cougar Town, was a producer on the Showtime series Dice, and was co-ep and head writer for seasons 1 and 2 of the critically acclaimed series for Paramount and Seeso, Bajillion Dollar Properties. Brad has sold original scripts and development to ABC, TBS, Sony and Warner Brothers. On the film side, Brad co-wrote and produced the independent film Unplugging, starring Matt Walsh and Eva Longoria. He is also producing the independent film Stoners and Saints, starring Dylan Gelula and Matt Berry. Brad also recently co-wrote Family Squares, and a movie for Paramount, Rear Naked Choke, produced by Margot Robbie.

As an actor, Brad has starred as a series regular in several network and cable pilots, and has appeared on Curb Your EnthusiasmVeepModern FamilyThe OfficeThe LeagueKey and PeeleGreat NewsPlaying HouseDiceF is For FamilyFriends From College and The Good Place. He has appeared in the films Search PartySingA Futile and Stupid Gesture, and Jay Roach's Bombshell. Brad can also be heard on his new improvisational podcast, Business Trips, that he co-hosts with Mike O'Brien.

About the Fine Arts Building and Studebaker Theater

The Fine Arts Building is a home for art in all forms: from pioneers like Poetry magazine's founding publisher Harriet Monroe, architect Frank Lloyd Wright, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz illustrator W. W. Denslow, sculptor Lorado Taft and the Chicago Little Theatre, to the ongoing legacies of painters, musicians, booksellers, puppeteers, dancers, photographers and craftspeople who inhabit the building today, the Fine Arts Building is buzzing with more than a century of Chicago creativity and innovation. A Chicago Landmark since 1978, the building features original manually-operated elevators, Art Nouveau murals from the late 19th century and the recently renovated Studebaker Theater, one of the city's most historic performance venues. The Studebaker has been graced by performances from luminaries such as Bob Hope, Peter O'Toole, Mae West, Ethel Barrymore, Geraldine Page, Vincent Price, and many more. Today, it hosts performances of musicals, opera, puppetry, comedy, dance and more from a wide variety of organizations. Since its curtain first rose, the Studebaker Theater has been recognized as an architectural gem and one of the most important live theatrical venues in Chicago. For more information, visit fineartsbuilding.com.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

Award-winning Porchlight Music Theatre is proud to announce Chicago theatre veteran and TV favorite Stephen Wallem joins the cast of the Porchlight in Concert production of Follies as “Buddy Plummer.” Wallem assumes the role previously announced to be played by Alexander Gemignani in the April limited engagement. Gemignani had a schedule conflict allowing Wallem, a Rockford, Illinois native, to return to Chicago where he began his professional career. He joins (in alphabetical order) Michelle Duffy (Broadway’s Leap of Faith, Drury Lane’s Sister Act) as “Phyllis Rogers Stone,” Angela Ingersoll (Jeff Award winner for Porchlight’s End of the Rainbow) as “Sally Plummer” and Anthony Rapp (Broadway’s Rent and If/Then) as “Benjamin Stone,” Saturday, April 25 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, April 26 at 2 p.m. at the Studebaker Theater, 410 S. Michigan Ave. This staged concert performance features music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by James Goldman and is directed by Artistic Director Michael Weber and music directed by Linda Madonia. Single tickets are reserved seating and are on sale for $104.50 - $159.50 at PorchlightMusicTheatre.org or by phone with the Studebaker Theater box office at 312-753-3210. Tickets may also be purchased in-person at the Studebaker Theater, 410 S. Michigan Ave., 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Tuesday - Sunday. 

Additional Follies cast members include Anastasia Arnold (Young Sally); Dale Benson (Dmitri Weismann); John Cardone (Max Deems); John Concepcion (Roscoe); Teagan Earley (Young Phyllis);  Felicia P. Fields (Hattie Walker); James Harms (Theodore Whitman); Beck Hokanson (Kevin); Cecilia Iole (Young Heidi); Will Koski (Young Buddy); John Marshall Jr. (Young Ben); Susie McMonagle (Carlotta Campion); Lauren Miller (Heidi Schiller); Mary Robin Roth (Emily Whitman); Genevieve Thiers (Christine Donovan); Sybyl Walker (Solange LaFitte) and Honey West (Stella Deems). 

The creative/production team includes Brenda Didier (assistant director); Eric Watkins (lighting designer); Matthew R. Chase (sound designer); Liviu Pasare (projections designer); Bill Walters (production stage manager); Drew Donnelly (assistant stage manager) and Frank Rose (production supervisor).

Porchlight in Concert debuted in 2024 with sold out performances of Sunday in the Park with George. In spring 2026, Porchlight returns to the Studebaker for a limited engagement of another Stephen Sondheim classic, Follies

Winner of seven Tony Awards, including Best Score, Follies is a dazzling and bittersweet exploration of love, loss and the passage of time. Set at the reunion of the legendary “Weismann Follies” company on the eve of their crumbling theater’s demolition, former showgirls reunite one last time, reliving their heyday and confronting the choices that shaped their lives. With iconic songs like “Broadway Baby” “I’m Still Here” and “Losing My Mind,” this Sondheim gem blends haunting nostalgia with a show-stopping score in a moving celebration of dreams and regrets.

PORCHLIGHT IN CONCERT FOLLIES SPECIAL EVENT

The Creation and History of Follies with Chris Pazdernik

March 28 - April 18, 2026

Classes offered virtually

Fee: $200

Register at PorchlightMusicTheatre.org

As part of Porchlight’s Hobbyist programming, Jeff Award-winner Christopher Pazdernik, with their “near encyclopedic knowledge of musicals” (NewCity), takes participants on a guided tour behind-the-scenes of all things Follies. This four-week class covers the creation of the show and its original production along with major revivals and concerts, including changes made for the London production, which have never again been authorized for use. Guaranteed to be a one-of-a-kind opportunity to do a deep dive into one of the most revered works in the music theatre canon.

ABOUT STEPHEN WALLEM, BUDDY PLUMMER 

Stephen Wallem is overjoyed to return to the Chicago stage after beginning his professional career here from 1986 to 2008. Born and raised in Rockford, Illinois, he is a SAG Award-nominated actor best known as “Thor Lundgren” on the Emmy-winning Showtime series “Nurse Jackie.” He also recurred as “Winston” on “The Resident” (Fox) and, currently, “Rudy Syndergaard” on “Law and Order: SVU” (NBC). Other TV credits include “Difficult People” (Hulu), “Divorce” (HBO) and “Horace and Pete.” Wallem made his feature film debut in the hit romantic comedy “Marry Me” starring Jennifer Lopez and Owen Wilson. His relationship with Stephen Sondheim musicals began with the second national tour of Into the Woods (“Rapunzel’s Prince”), Sunday in the Park with George (New American Theater) and continued at the Ravinia Festival Sondheim Series, appearing with Patti LuPone, George Hearn, Michael Cerveris and Audra McDonald in A Little Night MusicPassion and Sunday in the Park with George. His most recent stage credit was as “The Beadle” in Sweeney Todd at The Muny, where he was previously seen as “Shrek”(Shrek the Musical), “Horton the Elephant” (Seussical) and “Cowardly Lion” (The Wizard of Oz). Other favorite Midwest credits include “Max Bialystock” in The Producers (Farmers Alley), “Buddy” in Elf (Wagon Wheel), and “Judas/Padre” in Court Theatre’s Man of La Mancha (After Dark

Award, Jeff Award). He is also a two-time winner of the After Dark Award for Outstanding Cabaret Artist and a Chicago Cabaret Professionals' National Honoree for 2014. He teamed up with Edie Falco for the original cabaret The Other Steve and Edie in NYC and spent 12 years and 2500 performances playing both “Jinx” and “Sparky” in multiple companies of Forever Plaid, including the first national tour and the long-running production at the dearly departed Royal George Cabaret Theatre.

ABOUT MICHELLE DUFFY, PHYLLIS ROGERS STONE

Michelle Duffy is delighted beyond words to have returned to her beloved Chicago (after a 30+ year hiatus!) and deeply thrilled to be a part of this concert singing one of her all-time favorite Sondheim scores. Other recent Chicagoland appearances: “Mother Superior” in Sister Act at Drury Lane Oakbrook and “Bonnie” and others in Come From Away at Paramount. Broadway: OBC of Leap of Faith (OBCast album); OQ-Broadway: Originated “Ms. Fleming/Veronica’s Mom” in Heathers the Musical (Original Cast Album). Other recent regional: “Irene Adler” and others in Ms. Holmes and Ms. Watson, Apt. 2B at Arizona Theatre Company and “Mrs. Dashwood/Anne” in Sense and Sensibility at Northern Stage. She has appeared in principal roles in theatres across the country and around the world such as The Guthrie, ACT, The Old Globe, The Goodman, Milwaukee Rep, La Jolla Playhouse, Pittsburgh Public and The Barbican in London to name a few, and as a guest star in many television shows; most recently “Dark Matter,” “Law and Order,” “Chicago PD” and “Succession.” 

ABOUT ANGELA INGERSOLL, SALLY DURANT PLUMMER 

Angela Ingersoll is an Emmy-nominated and multi-award-winning actress, singer, producer, director and writer. She received an Emmy Award nomination for the PBS broadcast of her national concert tour “Get Happy: Angela Ingersoll Sings Judy Garland.” She also won acclaim starring as Judy Garland in several productions of “End of the Rainbow,” receiving Chicago's Jeff Award, a BroadwayWorld Award and Los Angeles Times Woman of the Year in Theatre. Also: How to Succeed in Business ... (“Hedy,” Jeff nomination), The Mistress Cycle (“Anais Nin,” Jeff nomination), The Secret Garden (“Martha,” Jeff nomination), South Pacific (“Nellie”), Carousel (“Julie”), Jekyll and Hyde (“Lucy,” Ostrander Award), Disney's Beauty and the Beast (“Belle,” Ostrander Award), Man of La Mancha (“Aldonza,” Ostrander nomination), Ragtime (“Evelyn Nesbit,” Ostrander nomination), Macbeth (“Lady Macbeth,” Ostrander Award), Much Ado About Nothing (“Beatrice”), Richard III (“Lady Anne”), The Wizard of Oz (“Dorothy”) and The Second City (Chicago and Hollywood). Other television: “Chicago PD.” Other concerts include her one-woman show “The 12 Dames of Christmas” and appearances alongside her husband, entertainer and producer Michael Ingersoll. Ingersoll is the artistic director of Artists Lounge Live, a Chicago-based production company presenting concerts nationwide. She writes and directs many of their offerings.

ABOUT ANTHONY RAPP, BENJAMIN STONE

Anthony Rapp is thrilled to return to live and work in the city of his birth. Chicago is also where he earned his Equity card 45 years ago, when he was nine years old. He has since appeared on Broadway, Off-Broadway, in National Tours, at Regional Theatres and in films and on television. But his proudest work these days is as the father, with his husband Ken, of their two sons, Rai (aged 3) and Keony (aged 2).

ABOUT MICHAEL WEBER, director 

Michael Weber is a nationally recognized, award-winning director, producer, actor and educator. Previous Porchlight productions include Sunday in the Park with George, Anything Goes, Cabaret, Sunset Boulevard, Gypsy and Merrily We Roll Along. He recently directed the Off-Broadway and European premieres of both Shake it Away: The Ann Miller Story and Call Me Elizabeth, written by and starring Kayla Boye. Under his artistic leadership, Porchlight Music Theatre was awarded Chicago’s Jeff Award for “Best Production” six times. He previously served as artistic director for the inaugural season of Chicago’s Drury Lane Theatre Water Tower Place (now Broadway in Chicago’s Broadway Playhouse) and at Theatre at the Center in Munster, Indiana. The recipient of two Joseph Jefferson Awards, he has been nominated for nine awards and he wrote and directed 14 Joseph Jefferson Awards ceremonies (2006-2018). Weber’s regional acting credits include The Merry Widow (starring Renée Fleming) at Lyric Opera, Annie Get Your Gun and Gypsy (both starring Patti LuPone) at Ravinia Festival, The Winter’s Tale and Henry V at Chicago Shakespeare Theatre and more. A board member of The League of Chicago Theatres, he is author of the play WAR of the WELLeS (about Orson Welles’ infamous radio broadcast) and he is a longtime pledge host for PBS station WTTW channel 11.

ABOUT LINDA MADONIA, music director

Linda Madonia is thrilled to be back at Porchlight where she recently music directed the ICONS Gala Celebrating Leslie Uggams and previously worked on TitaniqueBroadway in your Backyard, Anything Goes, Cabaret and A Chorus Line. Other recent projects include Legally Blonde: The Musical, Shrek the Musical, Mamma Mia! and Camelot at Music Theater Works and Jersey BoysRock of Ages and Sister Act at Mercury Theater Chicago. Linda also serves as the contractor for the Chicago Federation of Musicians for Porchlight Music Theatre, Music Theater Works and Teatro Zinzanni. She is the vocal coach for the master’s degree program in music theatre pedagogy at Carthage College and owns American Eagle Productions, which has been at the forefront of theatre education in the Chicago area for the past 35 years.

ABOUT PORCHLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE

Porchlight Music Theatre, now in its 31st season, is the award-winning center for music theatre in Chicago. Through live performance, youth education and community outreach, we impact thousands of lives each season, bringing the magic of musicals to our theatre home at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts in the Gold Coast and to neighborhoods across the city. Porchlight has built a national reputation for boldly reimagining classic musicals, supporting new works and young performers, and showcasing Chicago’s most notable music theatre artists, all through the intimate and powerful theatrical lens of the “Chicago Style.” 

Porchlight's history over nearly three decades includes more than 70 mainstage works with 15 Chicago premieres and five world premieres. 

Porchlight's education and outreach programs serve schools, youth of all ages and skill levels and community organizations. Porchlight annually awards dozens of full scholarships and hundreds of free tickets to ensure accessibility and real engagement with this uniquely American art form. 

The company’s many honors include 178 Joseph Jefferson Award (Jeff) nominations and 49 Jeff awards, as well as 44 Black Theatre Alliance (BTA) nominations and 15 BTA awards. In 2019, Porchlight graduated to the Large Theatre tier of the Equity Jeff Awards and has been honored with seven awards in this tier to date including Best Ensemble for Duke Ellington’s Sophisticated Ladies (2019) and Best Production-Revue for Blues in the Night (2022). 

Through the global pandemic, Porchlight emerged as one of Chicago’s leaders in virtual programming, quickly launching a host of free offerings like Sondheim @ 90 Roundtables, Movie Musical Mondays, Porchlight by Request: Command Performances and WPMT: Classic Musicals from the Golden Age of Radio. In 2021, Porchlight launched its annual summer series, Broadway in your Backyard, performing at parks and venues throughout the city which continues this summer.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

As someone who is ever the cynic about telling the same old stories every year under the guise of tradition, A Christmas Carol rarely draws me in. Manual Cinema’s latest production, however, takes a Christmas classic and makes it new again. Told through the eyes of a narrator who shares my skepticism, Dickens’ nearly 200-year-old tale becomes something modern and accessible, shaped by humor and a perspective that understands both the fatigue of repetition and the value of returning to the story.

The first Christmas following the loss of her husband, Aunt Trudy finds herself celebrating on Zoom, begrudgingly carrying on his tradition of performing a one-man puppet show of Charles Dickens’ Christmas Carol for his family. Throughout the night, Trudy experiences every stage of grief, struggling to complete the classic story, and is joined by three ghosts (Lizi Breit, Julia Miller, and Jeffery Paschal) who transform the puppetry from a faltering solo obligation into a fluid, ensemble-driven act of storytelling.

Everyone knows that for every moment that appears effortlessly onstage, there’s ten times as much unseen labor happening behind the scenes. In Manual Cinema’s production, however, much of the typically unshown work takes place on stage. Rather than hiding the mechanics of either the puppetry or music, the show invites the audience to watch its intricate systems at work, transforming the process itself into part of the performance.

The immediate set is Aunt Trudy’s half-packed house, allowing us to watch her in the behind-the-scenes reality of her puppet show. Above this is a projector screen that displays Trudy's show from the other perspective of the video call, allowing us to also watch the show as a member of the Zoom. On one side of Trudy’s space is a projection set-up where the three ghost/puppeteers perform what almost looks like a choreographed dance while creating some of the most intricate and beautifully animated visuals I’ve seen – not only are the puppeteers creating these images LIVE, but also while physically performing themselves. On the other side is the pit orchestra, playing live on stage and dressed in typical performance blacks, who feel almost like esemplastic shadow puppets who also provided beautiful instrumental and stunning vocals throughout the show.

At the center of it all – a smart adaptation of a classic, stunning puppetry, and haunting music – is everyone’s new favorite aunt, Aunt Trudy, played by LaKecia Harris. Truly incredible on every level, Harris portrays a grieving widow and beginner puppeteer on the big screen while simultaneously operating as a vital part of the onstage puppeteering machine, grounding the production with warmth, humor, and emotional clarity.

If you’re a fan of A Christmas Carol, then you have to see this show. And, if you’re a bit tired of the old story, this may be exactly what changes your mind.

Manual Cinema’s Christmas Carol is running at Studebaker Theater through December 28th, as well as live streaming the production on select dates. Tickets are available at

https://manualcinema.com/work/christmas-carol-live.

Published in Theatre in Review

Award-winning Porchlight Music Theatre is proud to announce the cast for Porchlight in Concert production Follies, starring (in alphabetical order) Michelle Duffy (Broadway's Leap of Faith, Drury Lane's Sister Act) as "Phyllis Rogers Stone," Alexander Gemignani (Broadway's Assassins and Sweeney Todd) as "Buddy Plummer," Angela Ingersoll (Jeff Award winner for Porchlight's End of the Rainbow) as "Sally Plummer" and Anthony Rapp (Broadway's Rent and If/Then) as "Benjamin Stone," Saturday, April 25 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, April 26 at 2 p.m. at the Studebaker Theater, 410 S. Michigan Ave. This staged concert performance features music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by James Goldman and is directed by Artistic Director Michael Weber and music directed by Linda Madonia. Single tickets are reserved seating and are on sale for $24 - $110 at PorchlightMusicTheatre.org or by phone with the Studebaker Theater box office at 312-753-3210. Tickets may also be purchased in-person at the Studebaker Theater, 410 S. Michigan Ave., 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Tuesday - Sunday. 

Additional Porchlight in Concert production of Follies cast members include Anastasia Arnold (Young Sally); Dale Benson (Dmitri Weismann); John Cardone (Max Deems); John Concepcion (Roscoe); Teagan Earley (Young Phyllis);  Felicia P. Fields (Hattie Walker); James Harms (Theodore Whitman); Beck Hokanson (Kevin); Cecilia Iole (Young Heidi); Will Koski (Young Buddy); John Marshall Jr. (Young Ben); Susie McMonagle (Carlotta Campion); Lauren Miller (Heidi Schiller); Mary Robin Roth (Emily Whitman); Genevieve Thiers (Christine Donovan); Sybyl Walker (Solange LaFitte) and Honey West (Stella Deems). 

The full creative team and additional artists will be announced soon.

Porchlight in Concert debuted in 2024 with sold out performances of Sunday in the Park with George. In spring 2026, Porchlight returns to the Studebaker for a limited engagement of another Stephen Sondheim classic, Follies

Winner of seven Tony Awards, including Best Score, Follies is a dazzling and bittersweet exploration of love, loss and the passage of time. Set at the reunion of the legendary "Weismann Follies" company on the eve of their crumbling theater's demolition, former showgirls reunite one last time, reliving their heyday and confronting the choices that shaped their lives. With iconic songs like "Broadway Baby" "I'm Still Here" and "Losing My Mind," this Sondheim gem blends haunting nostalgia with a show-stopping score in a moving celebration of dreams and regrets.

PORCHLIGHT IN CONCERT FOLLIES SPECIAL EVENT

The Creation and History of Follies with Chris Pazdernik

March 28 -  April 18, 2026

Classes offered virtually

Fee: $200

Register at PorchlightMusicTheatre.org

As part of Porchlight's Hobbyist programming, Jeff Award-winner Christopher Pazdernik, with their "near encyclopedic knowledge of musicals" (NewCity), takes participants on a guided tour behind-the-scenes of all things Follies. This four-week class covers the creation of the show and its original production along with major revivals and concerts, including changes made for the London production, which have never again been authorized for use. Guaranteed to be a one-of-a-kind opportunity to do a deep dive into one of the most revered works in the music theatre canon.



ABOUT MICHELLE DUFFY, PHYLLIS ROGERS STONE

Michelle Duffy is delighted beyond words to have returned to her beloved Chicago (after a 30+ year hiatus!) and deeply thrilled to be a part of this concert singing one of her all-time favorite Sondheim scores. Other recent Chicagoland appearances: "Mother Superior" in Sister Act at Drury Lane Oakbrook and "Bonnie" and others in Come From Away at Paramount. Broadway: OBC of Leap of Faith (OBCast album); OQ-Broadway: Originated "Ms. Fleming/Veronica's Mom" in Heathers the Musical (Original Cast Album). Other recent regional: "Irene Adler" and others in Ms. Holmes and Ms. Watson, Apt. 2B at Arizona Theatre Company and "Mrs. Dashwood/Anne" in Sense and Sensibility at Northern Stage. She has appeared in principal roles in theatres across the country and around the world such as The Guthrie, ACT, The Old Globe, The Goodman, Milwaukee Rep, La Jolla Playhouse, Pittsburgh Public and The Barbican in London to name a few, and as a guest star in many television shows; most recently "Dark Matter," "Law and Order," "Chicago PD" and "Succession." 



ABOUT ALEXANDER GEMIGNANI, BUDDY PLUMMER

Alexander Gemignani is an actor, artistic director, music supervisor/music director, orchestrator, arranger, conductor, composer/lyricist and educator. 

As an actor on Broadway: My Fair Lady ("Doolittle"), Carousel ("Enoch Snow" - Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle and Grammy nominations), Violet ("Father"), Chicago ("Billy"), Les Misérables ("Valjean" - Drama League nomination), Sweeney Todd (Beadle - Drama Desk nomination), Assassins ("Hinckley" - Theatre World Award), The People In The Picture ("Moishe") and Sunday in the Park With George ("Boatman/Dennis"). 

Off- Broadway: Road Show at the Public ("Addison Mizner" - Drama League nomination), Headstrong at EST ("Nick"), and Avenue Q at the Vineyard Theatre ("Brian"). Favorite Regional: Inherit the Wind ("Brady") at the Goodman,  Hamilton in Chicago ("King George III," original cast), Big Fish ("Edward Bloom") at The Marriott Lincolnshire, The Three Sisters ("Andrei") at Cincinnati Playhouse, The Boys From Syracuse ("Sergeant") at The Shakespeare Theatre of D.C. and the title character in the world premiere musical Saint-Ex at The Weston Playhouse. T.V./Film: "Étoile" (AMAZON), "Servant" (APPLE TV), "Empire" (FOX - Recurring), "Chicago Fire" (NBC), "Homeland" (SHOWTIME - Recurring), "The Good Wife" (CBS), "Empire State" (ABC pilot), the film "The Producers" (UNIVERSAL), three appearances on "The Tony Awards" (CBS) and season 5 of "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel" as "Janusz" (AMAZON - recurring). 

Concerts: The N.Y. Philharmonic at Avery Fisher Hall, The N.Y. Pops at Carnegie Hall, The L.A. Philharmonic at The Hollywood Bowl and the American Songbook Series at Lincoln Center. His solo show, All At Once, premiered at the Kennedy Center as a part of Barbara Cook's Spotlight Series. He served as music supervisor, arranger and conductor for Here We Are, Sondheim's final musical (book by David Ives, directed by Joe Mantello). 

As a music supervisor, he was represented Off-Broadway with Fiasco Theatre's production of Merrily We Roll Along at the Roundabout (also penned new orchestrations) and also served as music supervisor/music director and conductor for the 2019/2020 revival of West Side Story. Additionally, he conducted the New York Philharmonic on New Year's Eve 2019 with the concert, Celebrating Sondheim, featuring symphonic suites, which aired on Live From Lincoln Center

Other projects include an upcoming new production of john & jen (music supervision and arrangements), Whiskeyland (orchestrations and arrangements) and My Ántonia (orchestrations and co-arrangements), premiering at Theatre Latté Da, spring 2026. 

As a composer/lyricist, he is developing three new musicals, Diamond Alice (music/lyrics) swingset/moon (music and co-lyrics) and Broken Eggs (lyrics) and has composed the incidental music for several plays. 

He is an associate professor of Instruction at Northwestern University and has also served on the faculty of the National Theatre Institute at The O'Neill, NYU Steinhardt and CAP21. He has been guest faculty for the University Of Michigan, Texas State University, Syracuse University (Tepper) and NYU Tisch School Of The Arts. 

He is a member of the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Writing Workshop, holds a certificate in Orchestration for Film and TV from Berklee College of Music and holds a BFA in musical theatre from The University of Michigan. 

He is a member of Actor's Equity, SAG/AFTRA and Local 802 AFM. 2018 marked the beginning of his tenure as artistic director for the National Music Theater Conference at The Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center, where he has helped shepherd over 30 new musicals. He is also the artistic director of the National Music Theater Institute at the O'Neill, a semester-long intensive Music Theatre performance training program. 

His greatest joys are his incredible wife, Erin Ortman, and their beautiful daughter.



ABOUT ANGELA INGERSOLL, SALLY DURANT PLUMMER 

Angela Ingersoll is an Emmy-nominated and multi-award-winning actress, singer, producer, director and writer. She received an Emmy Award nomination for the PBS broadcast of her national concert tour "Get Happy: Angela Ingersoll Sings Judy Garland." She also won acclaim starring as Judy Garland in several productions of "End of the Rainbow," receiving Chicago's Jeff Award, a BroadwayWorld Award and Los Angeles Times Woman of the Year in Theatre. Also: How to Succeed in Business ... ("Hedy," Jeff nomination), The Mistress Cycle ("Anais Nin," Jeff nomination), The Secret Garden ("Martha," Jeff nomination), South Pacific ("Nellie"), Carousel ("Julie"), Jekyll and Hyde ("Lucy," Ostrander Award), Disney's Beauty and the Beast ("Belle," Ostrander Award), Man of La Mancha ("Aldonza," Ostrander nomination), Ragtime ("Evelyn Nesbit," Ostrander nomination), Macbeth ("Lady Macbeth," Ostrander Award), Much Ado About Nothing ("Beatrice"), Richard III ("Lady Anne"), The Wizard of Oz ("Dorothy") and The Second City (Chicago and Hollywood). Other television: "Chicago PD." Other concerts include her one-woman show "The 12 Dames of Christmas" and appearances alongside her husband, entertainer and producer Michael Ingersoll. Ingersoll is the artistic director of Artists Lounge Live, a Chicago-based production company presenting concerts nationwide.  She writes and directs many of their offerings.



ABOUT ANTHONY RAPP, BENJAMIN STONE

Anthony Rapp is thrilled to return to live and work in the city of his birth. Chicago is also where he earned his Equity card 45 years ago, when he was nine years old. He has since appeared on Broadway, Off-Broadway, in National Tours, at Regional Theatres and in films and on television. But his proudest work these days is as the father, with his husband Ken, of their two sons, Rai (aged 3) and Keony (aged 2).



ABOUT MICHAEL WEBER, director 

Michael Weber is a nationally recognized, award-winning director, producer, actor and educator. Previous Porchlight productions include Sunday in the Park with George, Anything Goes, Cabaret, Sunset Boulevard, Gypsy and Merrily We Roll Along. He recently directed the Off-Broadway and European premieres of both Shake it Away: The Ann Miller Story and Call Me Elizabeth, written by and starring Kayla Boye. Under his artistic leadership, Porchlight Music Theatre was awarded Chicago's Jeff Award for "Best Production" six times. He previously served as artistic director for the inaugural season of Chicago's Drury Lane Theatre Water Tower Place (now Broadway in Chicago's Broadway Playhouse) and at Theatre at the Center in Munster, Indiana. The recipient of two Joseph Jefferson Awards, he has been nominated for nine awards and he wrote and directed 14 Joseph Jefferson Awards ceremonies (2006-2018). Weber's regional acting credits include The Merry Widow (starring Renée Fleming) at Lyric Opera, Annie Get Your Gun and Gypsy (both starring Patti LuPone) at Ravinia Festival, The Winter's Tale and Henry V at Chicago Shakespeare Theatre and more. A board member of The League of Chicago Theatres, he is author of the play WAR of the WELLeS (about Orson Welles' infamous radio broadcast) and he is a longtime pledge host for PBS station WTTW channel 11.

ABOUT LINDA MADONIA, music director

Linda Madonia is thrilled to be back at Porchlight where she recently music directed the ICONS Gala Celebrating Leslie Uggams and previously worked on Titanique, Broadway in your Backyard, Anything Goes, Cabaret and A Chorus Line. Other recent projects include Legally Blonde: The Musical, Shrek the Musical, Mamma Mia! and Camelot at Music Theater Works and Jersey Boys, Rock of Ages and Sister Act at Mercury Theater Chicago. Linda also serves as the contractor for the Chicago Federation of Musicians for Porchlight Music Theatre, Music Theater Works and Teatro Zinzanni. She is the vocal coach for the master's degree program in music theatre pedagogy at Carthage College and owns American Eagle Productions, which has been at the forefront of theatre education in the Chicago area for the past 35 years.



ABOUT PORCHLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE

Porchlight Music Theatre, now in its 31st season, is the award-winning center for music theatre in Chicago. Through live performance, youth education and community outreach, we impact thousands of lives each season, bringing the magic of musicals to our theatre home at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts in the Gold Coast and to neighborhoods across the city. Porchlight has built a national reputation for boldly reimagining classic musicals, supporting new works and young performers, and showcasing Chicago's most notable music theatre artists, all through the intimate and powerful theatrical lens of the "Chicago Style." 



Porchlight's history over nearly three decades includes more than 70 mainstage works with 15 Chicago premieres and five world premieres. 



Porchlight's education and outreach programs serve schools, youth of all ages and skill levels and community organizations. Porchlight annually awards dozens of full scholarships and hundreds of free tickets to ensure accessibility and real engagement with this uniquely American art form. 



The company's many honors include 178 Joseph Jefferson Award (Jeff) nominations and 49 Jeff awards, as well as 44 Black Theatre Alliance (BTA) nominations and 15 BTA awards. In 2019, Porchlight graduated to the Large Theatre tier of the Equity Jeff Awards and has been honored with seven awards in this tier to date including Best Ensemble for Duke Ellington's Sophisticated Ladies (2019) and Best Production-Revue for Blues in the Night (2022). 



Through the global pandemic, Porchlight emerged as one of Chicago's leaders in virtual programming, quickly launching a host of free offerings like Sondheim @ 90 Roundtables, Movie Musical Mondays, Porchlight by Request: Command Performances and WPMT: Classic Musicals from the Golden Age of Radio. In 2021, Porchlight launched its annual summer series, Broadway in your Backyard, performing at parks and venues throughout the city which continues this summer. 

Published in Upcoming Theatre

Elizabeth McGovern’s embodiment of Ava Gardner in Ava: The Secret Conversations, now playing at the Studebaker Theater inside Chicago’s storied Fine Arts Building, is a riveting study in fragility, fire, and fierce self-preservation. Written by McGovern herself, the play peels back the layers of Gardner’s tumultuous life and career beginning with the tale of her debilitating stroke - when the spotlight had dimmed but her spirit refused to flicker out. 

McGovern opens the play with a moment of unexpected intimacy: she tells her ghostwriter about a day in the park when she and her girlfriend—both dealing with mobility issues in their late fifties—fell and found themselves laughing uncontrollably, unable to get up but utterly delighted by the absurdity of it. It’s a scene rich with vulnerability and joy, but her ghostwriter dismisses it as dull and bleak, insisting that audiences crave the glitz and scandal—her marriages with Frank Sinatra and Mickey Rooney, the dark chapters with Howard Hughes, the abuse, the abortions. Those stories do surface later, rendered with cinematic flair through a series of stylized video projections across the stage, but it’s that quiet, human moment that sets the emotional tone.

Rather than channeling the iconic bombshell of The Killers or Mogambo, McGovern inhabits Gardner as a woman in her sixties: physically impaired, emotionally raw, and intellectually unrelenting. She’s not chasing nostalgia - she’s clawing back control and as she states clearly - she needs the money!  

The play’s narrative draws from Peter Evans’ posthumously published book, Ava Gardner: The Secret Conversations, which documents Gardner’s attempt to enlist Evans as her ghostwriter. Their dynamic - equal parts seductive, combative, and tragically entangled - drives the drama, revealing a star who’s no longer performing, but finally speaking.

McGovern’s Ava is a woman marked by the aftermath of a stroke - her movements are slower, her speech thickened, and her patience often frayed. Yet pity never enters the room. What McGovern delivers is not a portrait of decline, but of defiant survival. She taps into Gardner’s acerbic humor, lingering sensuality, and aching remorse with a candor that borders on confession. The voice, though physically changed, becomes a sharpened tool: gravelly, intentional, and edged with irony. It’s not the voice of a fading star—it’s the voice of a woman who refuses to be erased.

One of the most quietly heartbreaking moments in Ava: The Secret Conversations arrives when Gardner reflects on the loss of her singing voice - not the voice itself, but its erasure. Cast as Julie in Show Boat (1951), she had trained, prepared, and delivered a performance that could have opened doors to multiple revenue streams like a career in music or the Broadway stage. But the studio dubbed her vocals, stripping away not just a sound, but a future. “They stole my voice,” she tells the ghostwriter, her tone heavy with sorrow. “They silenced my voice.” The line lands like a wound - personal, professional, and irrevocable.

For Elizabeth McGovern, Ava: The Secret Conversations is more than a performance - it’s a homecoming and a reckoning. Raised in Evanston, she steps onto the Studebaker stage with the quiet authority of someone returning to familiar ground yet determined to carve something new. Her bond with Ava Gardner runs deeper than biography; it’s a shared lineage of women shaped - and often constrained - by the spotlight. Both endured the seductive pull of fame and the relentless scrutiny of Hollywood’s male gaze.

By writing and starring in the play, McGovern reclaims not only Gardner’s voice but her own. It’s a gesture of artistic defiance, mirroring Gardner’s late-life attempt to seize control of her narrative before it was rewritten or forgotten. In McGovern’s hands, the production becomes a dialogue across decades - between two women, two eras, and the enduring fight to be heard on their own terms

Barefoot for much of the performance - a nod to Gardner’s iconic role in The Barefoot Contessa - McGovern embodies her with a beguiling mix of childlike vulnerability and the unapologetic grit of a grand dame who’s long since stopped caring what anyone thinks. Her voice slinks through punchlines and strikes with precision when pain surfaces. When she briefly recounts the abuse endured in her marriages and career, her delivery is scalpel-sharp. The dynamic with the journalist - played with just the right cocktail of reverence and irritation - fizzes with tension, like ice clinking in a highball glass. 

And the Studebaker Theater itself - nestled in the Fine Arts Building, with its gilded history and intimate charm - feels like the perfect setting for this smoky, seductive tale. The set which portrayed her feminine elegant bedroom was delightful and had wonderful lighting effects, including a rainstorm. The space amplifies the play’s confessional tone, wrapping the audience in velvet shadows and whispered truths.

Elizabeth McGovern’s career is doused in versatility, spanning film, television, theater, and even music with effortless grace. She first made waves with her Oscar-nominated turn as Evelyn Nesbit in Ragtime (1981) and quickly cemented her screen presence in acclaimed films like Ordinary People, Once Upon a Time in America, and The Handmaid’s Tale (1990). On television, she became a household name as Cora Crawley, Countess of Grantham, in the beloved series Downton Abbey, where her performance radiated quiet strength, emotional precision, and aristocratic warmth. But McGovern’s artistry doesn’t stop at the screen - she’s a seasoned stage actor, frequently appearing in London and U.S. productions that showcase her affinity for complex, emotionally rich characters. Offstage, she leads the folk-rock band Sadie and the Hotheads, revealing yet another facet of her creative spirit. Whether she’s channeling historical icons or breathing life into original roles, McGovern brings a signature blend of intelligence, subtlety, and enigmatic charm to everything she touches.

McGovern’s performance in this highly engaging production is a workshop in charisma and control. She’s Ava Gardner with a twist of existential lemon, served in a room where truth and fiction flirt shamelessly and truth wins out. 

The painful reality is that Ava Gardner, discovered at just 18, was exploited and mistreated from the moment she entered Hollywood. Coming from deep poverty, she was especially vulnerable to the industry’s most insidious traps - the ones that have ensnared countless young women whose beauty made them targets. That Elizabeth McGovern not only stars in but also wrote this rich, layered, and deeply compelling theatrical work is extraordinary. I truly hope it reaches a wide audience—it deserves to be seen.

Highly recommended!

AVA: The Secret Conversations is being performed at Studebaker Theatre through October 12th. For tickets and/or more show information visit https://www.fineartsbuilding.com/events/ava-the-secret-conversations/

 

*This review is also shared on https://www.theatreinchicago.com/!  

Published in Theatre in Review

The Roald Dahl Story Company today announces its first production in Chicago, the wickedly funny, family musical based on Roald Dahl's The Enormous Crocodile.  Following the all-ages, smash-hit productions in the UK, Minneapolis and Los Angeles, the production runs at historic Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts Building, 410 S. Michigan Ave, in partnership with the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival, from January 29 to February 21, 2026.

Tickets, $20-$54 for children and $30-$68 for adults, are currently on pre-sale and will go on sale to the public on October 6, 2025. Kicking off the Chicago premiere during the final week of the Chicago International Puppet Theatre Festival, tickets for the first week of performances, January 29- February 1, 2026, will be available through the festival box office at https://chicagopuppetfest.org/event/the-enormous-crocodile/. The production will continue through February 21, and those tickets will be available at  enormouscrocodilemusical.com/chicago

Tuesday-Thursday morning performances, reserved entirely for student audiences, are available at a subsidized ticket price. Requests can be submitted here: https://bit.ly/CrocodileStudents or at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Group discounts for all performances are available by contacting This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

'For my lunch today I would like... a nice juicy little child!'

The Enormous Crocodile is weaving his way through the jungle with his tummy rumbling ... Only the other jungle creatures can foil his secret plans and clever tricks, but they're going to have to find a large amount of courage to stop this greedy brute. From Trunky the Elephant to Muggle-Wump the Monkey, get to know the menagerie of creative puppets in the U.S. premiere tour of this smash U.K.-hit production. You'll go from the jungle into outer space and back again, just in time for a wild dance party! 

This mischievous musical based on Roald Dahl's snappy book has toe-tapping tunes by Ahmed Abdullahi Gallab, a rib-tickling book and lyrics by Suhayla El-Bushra, and additional music and lyrics by Tom Brady. Developed and directed by Emily Lim, it features a menagerie of puppets by co-director and puppetry designer Toby Olié, with set and costume design by Fly Davis, puppetry co-designed and supervised by Daisy Beattie, casting by Annelie Powell, choreography by Vicki Igbokwe-Ozoagu, lighting by Jessica Hung Han Yun and sound by Tom Gibbons.

Originally co-produced by Roald Dahl Story Company, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre and Leeds Playhouse.


The Enormous Crocodile the Musical was developed by Roald Dahl Story Company, Emily Lim, Ahmed Abdullahi Gallab, Suhayla El-Bushra and Tom Brady.

 

Gabrielle Leadbeater, Producer at the Roald Dahl Story Company comments, "We couldn't think of a better place for The Enormous Crocodile's next stop on tour than Chicago. The city and Studebaker Theater are as steeped in creativity as Roald Dahl's stories, and we're proud to have this major new production amongst the world's very best puppetry at the Chicago International Puppet Festival."

"The Enormous Crocodile is a lusciously designed, family friendly jungle musical with an excellent musical score," said Blair Thomas, Founder and Artistic Director, Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival. "The wit and humor of the puppetry matches that of Roald Dahl. Don't miss it."

The creative team for The Roald Dahl Story Company's production of The Enormous Crocodile The Musical includes Suhayla El-Bushra (bookwriter and lyricist), Ahmed Abdullahi Gallab (composer and additional lyrics), Tom Brady (additional music and lyrics, orchestrations, arrangements and music supervisor), Emily Lim (direction and development), Toby Olié (co-director and puppetry designer), Fly Davis (set and costume designer), Daisy Beattie (puppetry co-designer and supervisor), Tim Blazdell (digital designer and production draughting), Vicki Igbokwe-Ozoagu (choreographer), Jessica Hung Han Yun (lighting designer), Tom Gibbons (sound designer), Phij Adams (music technology and ableton programmer), Ben Kubiak (musical director), Annelie Powell CDG (casting director), Aundrea Fudge (voice coach), Tina Thomas (singing coach), Ann Barnard (copyist), Tash Holway (associate director), Blythe Stewart (associate director), Michael Jean-Marain (associate puppetry director), Lucy Adams (associate lighting designer), Johnny Edwards (associate sound designer), Shanelle Clemenson (associate choreographer), Màth Roberts (music associate), Rebecca Gunstone (costume supervisor), Bethan Owens (wigs hair and make-up supervisor), and Gabriella Shimeld-Fenn (casting associate).

About Roald Dahl Story Company 

The Roald Dahl Story Company (RDSC) is the home of Roald Dahl's much-loved stories and characters. With over 300 million books sold globally and translated into 68 languages, our stories have entertained generations of kids and adults with their unique mix of mischief, dark humor and irreverence.

Together with our parent company Netflix, and united by our love of these great stories, we're working with some of the world's best storytellers and creative minds to bring them to life in bold new ways that will surprise and delight existing and new fans. This includes animated and live action films and series, publishing, theatre, immersive experiences, games, consumer products, brand partnerships, and more.

About the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival 

Two weeks every January, Chicago turns into the "Puppetry Capitol of the World" when the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival returns with its annual, 12-day winter flurry of more than 100 puppet shows and events featuring artists from around the globe.

The festival was originally founded in 2015 as a project of Artistic Director and Founder Blair Thomas's puppet theater company. Since then, the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival has introduced audiences to artists from Belgium, Chile, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Korea, Mexico, Norway, Puerto Rico, Poland, Scotland and South Africa, as well as the U.S. and Chicago, with the goal of promoting peace, equality, and justice on a global scale. Already the largest of its kind in North America, last year's 7th Chicago Puppet Festival attracted a record 22,000+ audience members who enjoyed a wildly entertaining and eclectic array of traditional and contemporary puppet styles from around the world at dozens of theaters and community spaces throughout the city.

From January 29-February 1, The Enormous Crocodile will be one of the highlights of the 8th Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival, January 21- February 1, 2026. Stay tuned for the full 2026 Festival line-up, including even more performances by puppet artists from around the world, the U.S. and Chicago. This year's festival will also present 22 puppetry workshops, four symposium panels, three book talks, free exhibitions, late-night puppet cabarets, and the always popular Free Neighborhood Tour. Tickets go on sale later this fall. For more, visit chicagopuppetfest.org

Follow the festival on FacebookInstagram or Vimeo, hashtag #ChiPuppetFest. Sign up for the Puppet Festival's e-news to receive first alerts of festival news, ticket on-sales, added special events and festival merch. 

FACT SHEET

The Roald Dahl Story Company's production of 

The Enormous Crocodile
The Musical 
Book and Lyrics by Suhayla El-Bushra 
Music by Ahmed Abdullahi Gallab 
Additional Music and Lyrics from Tom Brady 

Directed and developed by Emily Lim, it features a menagerie of puppets by co-director and puppetry designer Toby Olié, with set and costume design by Fly Davis and puppetry co-designed and supervised by Daisy Beattie.

Location: The Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts Building, 410 S. Michigan Ave. in Chicago

Dates: January 29 to February 21, 2026.

Tickets: https://chicagopuppetfest.org/event/the-enormous-crocodile/ (for performances January 29-February 1, 2026)

enormouscrocodilemusical.com/chicago (for performances February 2-February 21, 2026)

Recommended for all ages.

Running time: 60 minutes

The Enormous Crocodile was originally co-produced by Roald Dahl Story Company, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre and Leeds Playhouse. The Enormous Crocodile musical was developed by Roald Dahl Story Company, Emily Lim, Ahmed Abdullahi Gallab, Suhayla El-Bushra, and Tom Brady.

US Tour General Management

Doreen Sayegh for Pemberley Productions

Rosie Bross-Rice, Associate

Creative Team
Bookwriter and Lyricist | Suhayla El-Bushra
Composer and Additional Lyrics | Ahmed Abdullahi Gallab
Additional Music and Lyrics, Orchestrations, Arrangements and Music Supervisor | Tom Brady
Direction and Development | Emily Lim
Co-Director and Puppetry Designer | Toby Olié
Set and Costume Designer | Fly Davis
Puppetry Co-Designer and Supervisor | Daisy Beattie
Digital Designer and Production Draughting | Tim Blazdell
Choreographer | Vicki Igbokwe-Ozoagu
Lighting Designer | Jessica Hung Han Yun
Sound Designer | Tom Gibbons
Music Technology and Ableton Programmer | Phij Adams
Musical Director | Ben Kubiak
Casting Director | Annelie Powell CDG
Voice Coach | Aundrea Fudge
Singing Coach | Tina Thomas
Copyist | Ann Barnard
Associate Director | Tash Holway
Associate Director | Blythe Stewart

Associate Puppetry Director | Michael Jean-Marain
Associate Lighting Designer | Lucy Adams
Associate Sound Designer | Johnny Edwards
Associate Choreographer | Shanelle Clemenson
Music Associate | Màth Roberts
Costume Supervisor | Rebecca Gunstone
Wigs Hair and Make-up Supervisor | Bethan Owens
Casting Associate | Gabriella Shimeld-Fenn

Follow The Enormous Crocodile at enormouscrocodilemusical.com/.

Published in Upcoming Theatre
Saturday, 30 August 2025 12:53

Review: 44 The Musical at Studebaker Theater

As someone who has worked on dozens of productions, both producing and technical directing, before committing to a project, I ask myself: “Why this show? Why now?” 

With 44 The Musical, written, directed, and co-produced by Eli Bauman, I struggled to answer those questions. The show, based on Bauman’s “experience” with Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, largely came across at best nostalgia and at worst a cash grab, rather than a meaningful theatrical retelling of history.

It’s telling that this production is the vision of a lone, first-time writer-composer-director. The end result did not feel like the product of collaborative creative voices or one that received (or followed) constructive feedback. The musical does have potential. But it feels like it lacked revisions and, more importantly, experienced outside eyes to transform it from a draft into a polished piece of theater.

Satire can be a powerful tool in art, but only when it pairs humor with meaning. 44 The Musical certainly delivers laughs, but too often without a clear purpose, leaving its comedy feeling flat rather than insightful.

A Disjointed Story

The structure of the show is one of its weakest points. Act I offers little resembling a plot, instead playing like a loosely political cabaret. By Act II, the show insists that a story had been there all along: this story centers on Obama’s struggle to pass the Affordable Care Act, being opposed by a cohort of absurd Republicans. This narrative also features a brief detour into the aftermath of Sandy Hook. Much like real life conversations around gun control, this segment led to no change – and in theatrical terms, added little beyond unnecessary emotional whiplash. It left me asking “Why did we go there?” and felt more like an exploitation of an all-too-real issue than rich political commentary.

The finale, which I won’t spoil in detail, invents a moment of self doubt for Barack which, if it had actually happened, would have surely been used to discredit Obama and prevent his second term. Although creative liberties can be necessary, and often successfully entice audiences into historical events, 44’s second act plot largely lacks any grounding in truth and relies on being merely entertaining and outrageous to keep the audience from holding it to fact and actual history.

Missteps in Representation

Perhaps most concerning is the way minority characters – mainly the female and black figures – are written. Satirizing Sarah Palin is predictable and surely not anything new for the audience of an Obama musical. The only other major female characters in the show, however, were also largely satirized, reducing their very real political achievements. Rather than being Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton is reduced to a bitter also-ran, only deviating from this archetype to be the Bill Clinton-wrangler. Most egregious was Michelle Obama’s representation, stripping her of her intelligence, accomplishments, and public persona. Instead, she is framed as a foil – the blacker counterpart to her husband – whose primary motivation is sex with Barack. Although the script does Michelle a disservice, Shanice’s vocals and presence were exceptional, bringing depth and charisma even with so little to work with, compared to the real woman she was portraying.

Credit where credit is due, the musical did justice in representing the very real struggle of Barack’s struggle to balance embracing his racial identity while combating stereotypes that could have squashed his political career. While one can ask whether Bauman was the right voice to write that struggle, the number “How Black Is Too Black?” certainly brought that struggle to the stage.

The Cast Shines

If there is one reason to see 44, it’s the cast. Every performer brought talent, humor, and physicality to the material, truly making the show.

Barack Obama (T.J. Wilkins) embodied the president’s cadence, lanky charm, and understated humor without resorting to mimicry. His rendition of “Remembering Me” was a rare moment of genuine emotional depth in a show otherwise driven by parody.

Joe Biden (Chad Doreck) anchored the show as both narrator and Obama’s loyal sidekick, delivering physical comedy that energized the stage. The Voice of the People (Summer Nicole Greer) also offered powerhouse vocals.

The cohort of Republican antagonists (Mitch McConnell, Sarah Palin, Herman Cain, Lindsey Graham, and Ted Cruz, played by Larry Cedar, Summer Collins, Dino Shorté, Jeff Sumner, and Michael Uribes, respectively), referred to as W.H.A.M. – White Hetero Affluent Men – were also particular standouts. Their performances struck the balance between over-the-top caricature and recognizable reality, making them consistently hilarious and surprisingly sharp. They gave the show some of its most effective satire.

Joy Amid Flaws

Before the curtain rose, co-producers Eli Bauman and Monica Saunders-Weinberg addressed the audience, asking only that we leave having felt “something in short supply these days: joy.” And despite my criticisms, I can honestly say I did feel joy watching this cast at work.

Still, joy alone can’t sustain a new musical. Satire can be a powerful tool in theater, but only when it pairs humor with meaning. 44 The Musical certainly delivers laughs, but too often lacks direction, leaving its comedy feeling shallow rather than resonant. To have a life beyond its current run, the show will need sharper writing, stronger dramaturgy, and above all a clearer purpose — without meaning, satire risks becoming little more than noise.

44 The Musical will be at the Studebaker Theater through September 21st. Tickets are available at https://buytickets.44theobamamusical.com/.

Published in Theatre in Review

When an opportunity arose to see a sneak preview of a new musical about President Barack Obama, there was a clash amongst younger generations to see who would get the chance to see it. Though it has been nearly two decades since Barack Hussein Obama was inaugurated into his first term, the allure and awe of the man still resonates to this day. His presidency was a historic event, a pivot point for our nation marked by hope and positivity and grace under pressure. It was no surprise to me that so many writers jumped at the opportunity to see a sneak preview about 44 – The Musical about the former beloved president.

Barack Obama’s election changed history. And as we can clearly see, it also ended racism forever! But 44 is the story of Obama you won’t read about in the history books…because history books are now banned in most states. But also because 44 is the story of Obama as Joe Biden kinda sorta remembers it.

44 – The Musical is a satirical, unofficial, and unsanctioned musical about the rise and presidency of Barack Obama, told from the perspective of then Vice President Joe Biden. It boasts itself as a satirical political musical featuring over twenty original songs with titles such as “M.F.O.”,F*&# You Ted Cruz”, and “How Black is Too Black.” In the few musical numbers showcased, it was too difficult to discern whether this musical is anything more than a cash-money grab capitalizing on the nostalgia and love of the former president. The musical numbers performed featured tag lines repeated ad nauseum during Obama’s terms, mother-f*&#ing-Obama, there are no red states or blue states, they even showcased a stereotypically campy comedic relief with a ‘sleepy’ Joe Biden narrating the events.

The musical was written and directed by former Obama campaign staffer Eli Bauman whose wry and acerbic comedic styling was evident even in the brief showcase. From the beautifully shot B-Roll footage and hype videos played, one would think this musical is poised to become the next Broadway darling. There is no denying the talent of the actors and singers, belting out beautiful riffs and runs that tickle your brain, but there doesn’t seem to be much substance for them to work with.

44 – The Musical strikes me as a satirical farce written with good intentions but lacking depth and meaning. Stereotypes seem to abound in the musical, and it appears to be banking on Chicagoans' love and admiration for Barack Obama to draw people through the doors of the Studebaker Theatre. It’s tough to say how the musical will be received in the competitive Chicago Theatre scene. There’s no shortage of talented writers in the Windy City, shows that start on time, and plays and musicals that leave you wanting more. It’s not clear whether 44 – The Musical will be a one-term or two-term play, but it’s safe to say it hopes for the best. 44 – The Musical will be playing at The Studebaker Theatre (410 South Michigan Avenue Fine Arts Building, Chicago, IL) in a limited run from August 23-September 21, 2025. Tickets are available at www.44theobamamusical.com/tickets.

Published in Theatre in Review
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