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Displaying items by tag: TUTA Theatre

TUTA Theatre announced today it will mount the 90-minute, three actor adaptation for the stage of Dostoevsky's CRIME AND PUNISHMENT by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus. TUTA's production will be performed on their intimate home stage at 4670 N. Manor, Chicago, from May 7 through June 28. This adaptation, which premiered at Writers Theater in 2003, has enjoyed over 100 productions across the country and internationally from Europe to Australia and Indonesia. It has been produced at such distinguished US theaters as Berkeley Rep, Intiman Theater, 59E59th Street Theater, Cleveland Playhouse, Actors Theater of Louisville, Indiana Rep, Cincinnati Playhouse, Baltimore's Center Stage, and Trinity Rep in Providence. It compresses all the tension and pathos of the novel into a powerful 90 minutes of theatre that is at once fresh and faithful to the original. 
 
Impoverished student Raskolnikov believes himself to be above the law and extraordinary to such an extent that he may decide who is worthy of life and of death. But that all ends when he meets Inspector Porfiry, a master of mind games who is determined to elicit a confession from the ever-more-tortured Raskolnikov. Is Raskolnikov going to crack? This taut, thrilling award-winning adaptation will be directed by TUTA Co-Artistic Director Jacqueline Stone. THE NEW YORK TIMES said, "Who would have thought that the novel no high school student has ever finished reading would make such engrossing theater?" 
 
Stone's three actor cast will include Clifton Frei as Raskolnikov, Huy Nguyen as Porfiry, and Felix as Sonia, with Nguyen and Felix also playing other characters. Associate Company Member Frei mesmerized audiences last summer with his performance as Tom in TUTA's production of TOM & ELIZA by Celine Song. Company member Nguyen earned critical raves for his opening night performance in WHITE RABBIT, RED RABBIT, which was performed cold by a different actor each night, including Frei and Felix. Frei and Nguyen returned to TUTA later last year for THE LONG CHRISTMAS DINNER. Associate Company Member Felix was, along with Frei, a member of TUTA's Jeff Award-winning ensemble of ATTEMPTS ON HER LIFE. 

The CRIME AND PUNISHMENT production team includes Tony Award nominee Tatiana Kahvegian (for her set design of THE OUTSIDERS) and Obie Award winner Keith Parham (for ADDING MACHINE, A MUSICAL) as Co-Set Designers. Kahvegian and Parham were Jeff Award nominees for their work on TUTA's TOM AND ELIZA. Parham is also the Lighting Designer for this production. The CRIME AND PUNISHMENT production team also includes Lia Wallfish (Costume Designer), Stefanie Senior (Sound Design), Helen Lattyak (Properties Design, Creative Producer), Becky Warner (Stage Manager), Milan Pribisic (Dramaturg), Letitia Guillaud (Assistant Director), Aileen Wen McGroddy and Jacqueline Stone (Co-Artistic Directors), and Brad Gunter (Managing Director).
 
Seats for all performances of CRIME AND PUNISHMENT can be reserved by purchasing in advance. Pay-what-you-choose reservations for all performances are $20, $45, $60 and $100. Any seating not reserved in advance will be available the day of the performance for in person, pay-what-you-choose tickets at the door 30 minutes before curtain time. There is no late seating. Additional information on TUTA Theatre's ticketing is available at www.tutatheatre.org/crime-punishment.
 
LISTING INFORMATION
 
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Adapted from the Fyodor Dostoevsky novel by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus
Directed by Co-Artistic Director Jacqueline Stone
Featuring TUTA company members Huy Nguyen, Clifton Frei, and Felix
May 7 – June 28, 2026
Previews Thursday, May 7, Friday, May 8, and Saturday, May 9 at 7:30 pm 
Regular run: May 11 – June 28, 2026
Thursdays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, and Sundays at 3:00 pm
TUTA Theatre - 4670 North Manor, Chicago
Pay-what-you-choose reservations available for $20, $45, $60, $100, available at https://www.tutatheatre.org/crime-punishment-reservations
 
Dostoyevsky's epic novel distilled into a 90-minute play for three-actors and performed in TUTA's hyper-intimate 24-seat theater.  CRIME AND PUNISHMENT focuses on the plight of an intellectual young man whose moral struggle with his belief system compels him to commit a horrendous crime. A psychological game of cat and mouse ensues with the investigator who hunts him down. Dreams, waking visions, even ghosts paint this psychological portrait of crime, guilt, and retribution.
 
BIOS

Jacqueline Stone (Director, Co-Artistic Director) is honored to be Co-Founder and Co-Artistic Director of TUTA. She recently served as the Artistic Producer of TUTA's hit production WHITE RABBIT RED BABBIT. Her TUTA directing credits include the Chicago premiere of Thornton Wilder's THE LONG CHRISTMAS DINNER, the world premiere of HEDDA GABLER (as well as adaptor), Chicago and New York premieres (59E59 Theaters) of Adam Rapp's THE EDGE OF OUR BODIES, world premiere of THE ANYWAY CABARET (AN ANIMAL CABARET), and U.S. premiere OF THE SILENT LANGUAGE.  Her TUTA performance credits include FULTON STREET SESSIONS, BAAL, THE WEDDING (1996, 2010, 2011), UNCLE VANYA (2008, 2009), A STILL LIFE IN COLOR, THE BIRDS, THE SWEET LITTLE PRINCE, ALICE, and THE HOUR.  

In addition to TUTA, Stone currently serves as Producing Artistic Director of Breckenridge Backstage Theatre in Breckenridge, CO. BBT directing credits include EVERY BRILLIANT THING, the Colorado premiere of Jim DeVita and Josh Schmidt's musical adaptation of THE GIFT OF THE MAGI, MT Cozzola's A LADY'S GUIDE TO MOUNTAINS (Denver Fringe), and A CHRISTMAS STORY. This summer she will direct MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS.

From 2016 - 2020, Stone served as Artistic Director of Emerald City Theatre Company, Chicago's largest professional theatre serving young audiences. ECT directing credits include the Chicago premiere of FANTASTIC MR. FOX, the Chicago premiere of KEN LUDWIG'S TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS (Broadway Playhouse), the Chicago premiere of THE SNOWY DAY & OTHER STORIES, the world premiere of MOTHER GOOSE'S GARDEN, world premiere of PETER RABBIT (also adapter), JUNIE B. JONES, RAMONA QUIMBY, and the world premiere of Mo Willems' DON'T LET THE PIGEON DRIVE THE BUS.  

Select Chicago directing credits include Strawdog Theatre, Chicago Dramatists, Chicago Immersive, Broadway in Chicago, Piven Theatre, The Second City, Mudlark Theater, Akvavit Theatre, Step Up Productions, 20% Theatre Company, You & Me Productions, and DCASE.  Jacqueline is co-founder of Sirens, the longest running all-female improv group in the country.  She has appeared and created over 200 original shows with them.

Stone taught acting and improvisation at The Second City for ten years and Columbia College Chicago for five years.  She spent twelve years as Emerald City Theatre's Education Director, building and fostering new acting programs for young people ages 3.5 - 13 years old.  Other select teaching credits include The Faculty of Dramatic Arts (Belgrade, Serbia), Chicago Improv Festival, Miami Improv Festival, Duke University's FUQUA School of Business, UCLA, and University of Chicago.
 
Curt Columbus (Co-Adapter) Currently the Artistic Director of Trinity Repertory Company in Providence, Rhode Isalnd, Curt lived and worked as an actor, director, adaptor and playwright in the Chicago theater scene for almost twenty years. He was artistic associate of Victory Gardens Theater from 1989–1994, the director of the University of Chicago's University Theater from 1994–2000, and the associate artistic director of Chicago's Steppenwolf Theater Company from 2000–2005, where he premiered his translations of Chekhov's UNCLE VANYA and CHERRY ORCHARD.  His adaptation of Dostoevsky's CRIME AND PUNISHMENT with Marilyn Campbell has won awards and accolades at theaters around the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia. Columbus's translations/adaptations also include Chekhov's THREE SISTERS, SEAGULL, IVANOV, and FUENTE OVEJUNA. 
 
Marilyn Campbell (Co-Adapter) is a co-founder of both the Writers Theatre-New York and the Writers Theatre in Glencoe . She is also an Original Core Founder of New Classics Collective, (Paul Oakley Stovall, Artistic Director). Her co-adaptation with Curt Columbus of Dostoyevsky's CRIME AND PUNISHMENT (Joseph Jefferson Award for New Adaptation) has enjoyed over 100 productions across the country and internationally from London, Greece and Hungary to Australia and Indonesia.  It has been produced at such distinguished US theaters as Berkeley Rep, Intiman Theater, 59E59th Street Theater, Cleveland Playhouse, Actors Theater of Louisville, Indiana Rep, Cincinnati Playhouse, Baltimore's Center Stage, Trinity Rep, and numerous productions on the West Coast , where in 2009 the play won an  L.A. Backstage Garland Award and a nomination from the L.A. Drama Critics Circle for Best New Adaptation.  Other plays include THE BEATS (based on the writings of the 1950 beat writers) first produced at Writers Theater in 1997, starring David Cromer and named one of the best productions of the 1997 Chicago theater season by the CHICAGO SUN-TIMES. MY OWN STRANGER a co-adaptation with Linda Laundra based on the writings of Pulitzer Prize winning poet Anne Sexton, was first produced off Broadway in 1981 and won a Villager Downtown Theater Award for "Best Production."
 
ABOUT TUTA THEATRE
 
TUTA Theatre was established in 1995 in Washington, DC by co-founders Zeljko and Natasha Djukic, who brought a unique sense of artistic expression from their European homeland. In 2002, they relocated the company to Chicago. In the ensuing 23 years, TUTA has presented numerous US premieres of foreign plays from France, Russia, Austria, and Serbia. TUTA has produced seven world premieres, eight US premieres, four Midwest premieres and many modern re-imaginings of classics.  In 2012, longtime company member Jacqueline Stone stepped into the role of Artistic Director, and TUTA added productions for youth with the US premiere of THE SILENT LANGUAGE. TUTA's productions have been listed on Chicago critics' 'best of the year' list eight times in the past 10 years and have been produced nationally (in NYC and LA) and internationally (in Serbia with the National Theatre in Belgrade). Aileen Wen McGroddy and Jacqueline Stone are Co-Artistic Directors and Brad Gunter is Managing Director.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

"White Rabbit Red Rabbit" isn’t your typical night at the theater. It’s unscripted, unpredictable, and unlike anything you’ve seen before. Performed cold by a different actor each night, it’s a play that blends humor, vulnerability, and a quiet kind of bravery—both from the performer and the audience.

There are plenty of ways to spend a Sunday or Monday evening, such as relaxing on the couch, cooking something ambitious (or just heating up leftovers), maybe taking a stroll through the park. I, however, choose to spend my Monday night at one of the most surprising and engaging plays I’ve ever experienced. I head over to TUTA Theatre to see White Rabbit, Red Rabbit by Iranian-German playwright Nassim Soleimanpour. Safe to say, I have absolutely no idea what I’m getting myself into.

"White Rabbit Red Rabbit" is an experimental play performed “cold” by a different actor at every show. The catch? The actor has never seen the script beforehand. There’s no rehearsal, no director, and barely even a set. It’s theatre stripped down to the bones: one actor, one script, one shot. Unable to leave his home country, Soleimanpour offers a deeply personal glimpse into his life in Iran and the complex power dynamics at play, not just there, but everywhere.

As the show begins, the actor for the night, Huy Nguyen, opens a sealed envelope containing the script. He introduces himself, then asks the small audience to count off. It’s Soleimanpour’s way of making sure we all know how many people are about to go on this strange little journey together. Final headcount: 30.

Right from the start, it’s clear Nguyen is a gifted performer. He delivers each line with power and clarity, pausing just enough to let the weight or the weirdness of the words sink in. Through his performance, he brings Soleimanpour’s voice to life, striking a balance between humor, tension, and vulnerability with impressive ease.

White Rabbit Red Rabbit audience

TUTA company member Huy Nguyen (left) with audience member Robert Bry Hunter.

Those numbered seats aren’t just for counting heads. Nguyen, following Soleimanpour’s instructions, pulls audience members into the performance. Like it or not, we aren’t just watching the play, we become part of it. Each person is assigned a number, a role, and, weirdly enough, a sense of shared responsibility. Before long, the stage fills with everyday people acting out a strange and quietly heartbreaking tale about a rabbit trying to get into a circus. It feels whimsical at first, but the deeper metaphors quickly surface. These surreal moments offer a glimpse into the constraints Soleimanpour faces, using allegory to explore themes of power, obedience, and isolation.

As the performance continues, it becomes clear that "White Rabbit Red Rabbit" is more than just a theatrical experiment. It creates a deeply personal connection with Soleimanpour as he reaches out to share his trauma and vulnerability with the audience. The play explores what it means to lose power not only as a citizen but also as a performer and audience member. Soleimanpour expresses his strong desire to travel and meet the people watching, to connect fully through shared experience. Throughout the show, Nguyen beautifully captures the deep emotions and longings at the heart of Soleimanpour’s story.

One of the wildest things about "White Rabbit Red Rabbit" is how it keeps you laughing. . .until it doesn’t. One minute, Nguyen is running around the stage pretending to be an ostrich. The next, he’s calmly listing ways people commit suicide. It’s emotional whiplash in the best (and most jarring) way. That sudden shift from comedy to darkness really shows the inner chaos Soleimanpour must have been dealing with. He’s clearly trying to make sense of heavy stuff while still holding on to humor and hope.

This was my first time seeing a “cold read” performance, where the actor hasn’t seen the script before stepping on stage. I was genuinely impressed. The whole thing felt unpredictable, not just for the audience but for the actor too. It created this weirdly intimate vibe where we were all discovering the story together. Surprisingly, nothing felt awkward or forced. Nguyen handled it all like a total natural, even in the most bizarre moments. The rawness of the format made everything feel immediate, real, and kind of thrilling.

I highly recommend "White Rabbit Red Rabbit" to anyone who’s spontaneous and looking for something completely different. It’s a one-of-a-kind experience that keeps you guessing. That said, I’d think twice about bringing kids or anyone who might be uncomfortable with sensitive subjects, especially suicide. The show does dive into some heavy themes that may not be for everyone.

The show has a fast runtime of about 70-90 minutes without any intermissions. Make sure to eat dinner before as the small theatre doesn’t have any concessions but do offer drinks in exchange for a theatre donation.

The production is presented by TUTA Theatre, a company known for its bold and experimental approach to theater in Chicago. The show is brought to life by TUTA’s Co-Artistic Director, who also serves as the Artistic Producer for "White Rabbit Red Rabbit."

TUTA Theatre is located at 4670 N Manor Ave in Chicago’s Ravenswood neighborhood. It’s an intimate space, with the show staged in a small back auditorium through a garage entrance. The venue seats about 30 people, which makes the whole experience feel up close and personal.

"White Rabbit Red Rabbit" runs from July 6 through August 11, with shows on Sunday and Monday evenings at 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from $20 to $60. You can grab yours at tutatheatre.org.

*Extended through September 29th

So if you’re free on a Sunday or Monday night, skip Netflix and take a chance on something different. You might walk away thinking a little deeper…and may even begin looking at rabbits a little differently, too.

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

Published in Theatre in Review

Immediately following the gastronomical excesses of Thanksgiving are the monetary investments and personal sacrifices we make for Christmas.  At the heart of both is family and the importance we place in coming together to sustain and strengthen seminal bonds. 

In 1931, a 34-year-old college professor at the University of Chicago took the long view of these ritual gatherings and focused on what they look and feel like over time.  In his beautifully crafted one act play, The Long Christmas Dinner, Thornton Wilder also manages to deliver an incisive and sobering treatise on time and its fleeting fragility.  What he does so exquisitely in the 26 pages of his script is to point us in the direction of using that time most fully and appreciatively.  Chicago’s TUTA Theatre, who “searches for the unique and exceptional in the language of theatre”, has generously brought this rarely produced treasure to the stage at the sparkling new Bramble Arts Loft in Andersonville for the Christmas season.

Wilder has the prosperous Bayard family act as proxies for all families and takes us with him as he visits them experiencing Christmas dinners that span the course of 90 years and four generations.  He pays close attention to how the family interacts and the way they voice convictions, concerns and priorities.  In many ways, perhaps in all ways, they’re a very typical and intrinsically familiar family.  That notion becomes more and more entrenched as the play progresses.  When it opens, Lucia (Alexis Primus) is about to welcome her mother-in-law, Mother Bayard (Joan Merlo), to the dinner table of her new home.  Her husband, Roderick (Matt Miles) leads the family firm and is the classic head of the house as seen in the era.  Proud of his wife, his mother and his success, he glows with the light of the supremely satisfied.   Although wheelchair bound, Mother Bayard’s vibrant mind and observant eye reveal a robust inner vitality.  It’s her penchant for too frequently repeating how clearly she remembers seeing Indians in the streets during her youth and riding rafts across the Mississippi that hint at the creeping cognitive malaise common found in the aging.

Although rather formal by today’s standards, you can still easily recognize that beneath the rituals of decorum the family practices in their interactions that there is a true closeness of hearts. You feel how sacrosanct kinship is to them. Still, the circle of life encompasses families just as it does individuals.  We are born and we die.  And it’s the way that The Long Christmas Dinner treats these events that make us evaluate ourselves and our relationships with our own families.

The entire play occurs around a stately dining table in the middle of the stage.  Laden with gleaming silverware and China, the luxurious Oriental carpet it rests on and the elegant linear chandelier floating above it are the few things that will remain unchanged.  Two dimly lit doorways, one on the left and the other on the right of the stage, represent the ending and beginning of life, respectively.  Keith Parham’s quietly graceful set surreptitiously becomes its own character.   Stoic and impassive as it witnesses transitions through each doorway.   His lighting design would go on to memorably propel and enhance the dramatic impact of the play. 

Watching the arch of Uncle Branden’s presence was particularly impactful. Full of life, song and playful mischief, he was such a bright light when he first came to dinner.  Assuredly played by Wain Parham, he began to change when Roderick, his cousin, fell victim to his excesses in drink.  Branden’s silence began to grow when Roderick later passed through the doorway symbolizing death.  As he watched Roderick and Lucia’s children, Charles (Huy Nguyen) and Genevieve (Charlie Irving) grow, his warmth remained, but his effervescence and spontaneity notably faded until he too slowly drifted through the portal on the left.

As new generations of Bayard’s are born, explosions of joy and happiness are plentiful on the right where nurses dressed in immaculate white emerge through the passageway cradling babies who soon grow to teenagers and adults.   Often bearing the names of those who proceeded them, old names become new again and we can’t avoid noticing the cyclicality of existence.  Rather than a crown denoting succession, among the Bayard women a shawl becomes the item that chronicles the passage and toll of time.  Used to keep aging shoulders warm, it symbolizes both the inevitable and the blessing of continuity.   That same continuity can be heard when certain random phrases and observations are made by each successive generation that none had heard spoken before by someone else in the family.

Rifts, discord and the realities of life erupt in this very respectable family as they can and do in all.  Stifled by family expectations and the limitations of living in a small town, Charles’ son, Roderick II (Matt Miles) bolts to California when confronted about his drinking and lack of interest in familial responsibilities.  Charles and his wife Leonora (Seoyoung Park) had already lost a son during the first World War and their second son’s departure marked a crippling blow.  As we’re reminded by numerous characters throughout the play, time may not heal grief, but it soothes sufficiently to ease its pain and weight.  When Joan Merlo reappears as distant cousin, Ermengarde, that kind of wisdom flows with the power of rushing rapids.  A highly accomplished craftsman, Merlo’s phrasings of speech were transfixing as she wrapped the profound in tiny pellets of simplicity.  Her gleam of excellence ran through the entire cast, who were uniformly splendid. 

Most impressive was the meticulous pacing and abundance of satisfying nuance director and TUTA co-artistic director, Jacqueline Stone, built into the production.  She insured small gestures resonated with unexpected force and light touches of humor glittered brightly enough to make the project shine with warmth and contemporary flair.

In a time and landscape where holiday entertainment options are virtually endless, The Long Christmas Dinner counts as an especially rewarding option from a company who has a knack for curating works of discreet brilliance.

The Long Christmas Dinner

Through December 29th, 2024

TUTA Theatre Company

Venue:  Bramble Arts Loft

5545 N. Clark Street

Chicago, IL  60640

https://www.tutatheatre.org/the-long-christmas-dinner-tickets

Published in Theatre in Review

This was an interesting production that oddly enough had very little to do with radio. ‘Radio Culture’ is a one act play with a somewhat unique concept where just one actor holds a speaking role.

TUTA’s home theatre space (4670 N Manor in Chicago) is a small little place that makes you feel at home upon entering. I grew up in that neighborhood and the idea of having a small theatre in that area never even crossed my mind. I give a lot of credit to the people putting on these smaller productions since there isn’t very much money coming in outside of donations that are crucial in keeping the theatre going. You gotta really love what you are doing when you work with small, or storefront, theatres.

The setting takes us to a Russian construction site. The small audience is literally in a room under construction. This is a plus as we get a true intimate theatre experience that is about as up close and personal as you can get.

Kevin V. Smith plays Volodya who lives in Minsk with his parents. He acts more as narrator to the events, speaking in the third person. The whole play basically takes place in a day in the life of the Russian construction foreman who finds comfort in the classical music he listens to as the program Radio Culture is pushed across the airwaves. Natalie Ferdova does an impressive job in translating this story from Russian to English while Amber Robinson gets a nod for some very creative direction. Huy Nguyen and Wain Parham complete the ensemble with non-speaking roles.

This is one of those ideas that probably wouldn’t work as well on the big stage since the intimacy of the production is one of the attributes that makes this play so special, though the story is engaging and peaks one’s interest throughout. At times, the actors were right in front of you making eye contact, as if they were in your own living room.

The visuals don’t exactly make or break the performance but get the point across while the dialog was written in such a way that it was very easy to follow. I really want to give a shout out to Smith for his ability to flawlessly rip out 70 minutes of very convincing dialogue. A true professional, there was never a hesitation in his delivery and he truly keeps your attention through the entire play.

I would without hesitation recommend going to see ‘Radio Culture’ at TUTA.

‘Radio Culture’ is being performed at TUTA Theatre through December 2nd. For tickets and/or more information visit www.tutatheatre.org.

*Extended through March 3rd

Published in Theatre in Review

 

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