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
“No man is a failure who has friends,” is to film what “God bless us everyone” is to literature. Frank Capra’s 1946 film ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ is as close to an American retelling of ‘A Christmas Carol’ as anyone has ever gotten.
Though the film has been a Christmas classic for nearly 80 years, the stage version has become its own tradition for many theatergoers during the holiday season. It’s likely you can find a production of the stage version in practically any town in the country during December, right next to ‘The Nutcracker.’ For those unfamiliar, the stage version is traditionally performed as a “live radio broadcast.” Meaning, the actors play voice actors performing a “live” production of a radio play, including old-timey sound effects.
American Blues Theater has been bringing this tradition to Chicago for 23 years! They’ve turned their new permanent home on Lincoln Ave into a quaint, 1940s era radio studio for the month. Audiences get a glimpse into the past and in addition to learning the true meaning of Christmas, they’ll see how radio dramas were produced.
An all-around great cast led by Brandon Dahlquist and Audrey Billings brings the story of suicidal, down-on-his-luck George Bailey to life in a quick, charming 90-minute production. The cast will certainly help you get into the spirit with a few rounds of Christmas carols before the show gets going.
What really works about this interpretation of ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ is that it gets right to the point. Parts of Capra’s black and white film feel a bit drawn out, and that can distract from the heartbreaking and bittersweet moments in the script. Here, emotion is mined in a more immediate way. However, for those who have not seen the film, this version is pretty easy to follow.
Whether you’ve seen ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ once, or 22 times, each year American Blues Theater makes it feel new. Year to year faces change and little embellishments are added, so that it always feels fresh for a new generation.
Through December 22 at American Blues Theater. 5627 N Lincoln Ave. (773) 654-3103.
After pausing its operations last year to reorganize and create a new business model, Chicago's Tony-Award winning Lookingglass Theatre Company is proud to announce two new Board members as it prepares to reopen January 30, 2025: founding ensemble member, actor and director David Schwimmer and Chicago employment and healthcare attorney James (Jimmy) Oh. Lookingglass' Board of Directors is now composed of 25 business, civic and arts leaders charged with advancing the mission of this ensemble-based company founded in 1988. Located inside the historic Water Tower Water Works building, 163 E. Pearson St. at Michigan Ave., Lookingglass will present two world premieres this season: Circus Quixote, Jan. 30 – March 30, 2025, and Iraq, But Funny, May 29 – July 20, 2025, plus Young Ensemble performances and special events in neighborhoods throughout Chicago. A renovated lobby, bar and café also reopens Thursday, Jan. 30, with its menu and programming to be announced in the coming months. The full list of Board members and 2024/2025 season details may be found at LookingglassTheatre.org.
"We are thrilled to welcome Jimmy and David to our Board of Directors, as we continue to strengthen Lookingglass' leadership at this pivotal moment for the Company," said Board Chair Richard Chapman. "David and Jimmy bring a passion for the performing arts and unique skill sets and networks that will help advance our vital mission—to redefine the limits of theatrical experience and to make theatre exhilarating, inspirational and accessible to all."
Jamey Lundblad (formerly with the City of Chicago's Cultural Affairs department) joined Lookingglass as managing director this fall, and ensemble member and multi-hyphenate artist Kasey Foster was named artistic director earlier this year. Additionally, this past spring, the Company welcomed four new members into its ensemble: Atra Asdou, Wendy Mateo, Ericka Ratcliff and Matthew C. Yee.
"Lookingglass has been my artistic home for more than three decades, and I have worked hard to sustain it, but this is my first time serving on the Board," said David Schwimmer. "I'm incredibly excited to partner with our dedicated Board of Directors, talented Ensemble and hardworking Staff to bolster an organization that means so much to me, and to Chicago."
"My passion for theatre is personal. All four of our sons performed in children's theatre, three earned theatre degrees—and now they're working in the arts," said Jimmy Oh. "So, I'm thrilled to be directly involved in and supporting the creative industries through my Board service at Lookingglass, one of the best regional theatres in the U.S."
ABOUT DAVID SCHWIMMER
David Schwimmer's many television and film acting credits include the hit comedy series "Friends," for which he received his first Emmy Award nomination, "American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson" for which he received a second Emmy nomination, "Band of Brothers," "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "Madagascar 1, 2 &; 3," "Feed the Beast," "Six Days Seven Nights," "Apt Pupil," "The Pallbearer," "Duane Hopwood," "The Iceman," "The Laundromat" and "Little Death." Schwimmer executive produced and starred as the lead in the Sky TV/Peacock original sitcom "Intelligence" and in "Extrapolations" for Apple TV+.
He will next be seen in Disney's anthology series "Goosebumps," based on R.L. Stine's bestselling Scholastic series.
Schwimmer has directed over twenty plays, including his adaptations of Studs Terkel's RACE and Upton Sinclair's The Jungle for Lookingglass and Laura Eason's Sex with Strangers for the Second Stage Theatre. Other stage credits outside of Lookingglass include Detroit at Playwrights Horizons, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial on Broadway and the premiere of Neil LaBute's Some Girls in the West End, London.
Schwimmer's television and film directing includes ten episodes of "Friends," the HBO series "Little Britain USA," "Growing Up Fisher" for NBC, the feature films "Since You've Been Gone," "Run Fat Boy Run" and the independent drama "Trust" starring Clive Owen, Catherine Keener and Viola Davis. He also produced the film "LOVE" directed by Alexander Zeldin for the BBC based on his play produced at the National Theatre in London.
ABOUT JAMES (JIMMY) OH
Jimmy Oh is an employment and healthcare attorney based in Chicago, with a passion for theatre. At Epstein Becker Green, Oh's work traverses all three of the firm's core practices: employment, labor and workforce management (ELWM); health care and life sciences (HCLS) and litigation and business disputes. He has tried cases in federal courts around the country on both employment and healthcare-related issues.
Oh is a member of Epstein Becker Green's ELWM Steering Committee, health employment and labor (HEAL®) strategic industry group (which consists of members of both the ELWM and HCLS practices) and litigation and business disputes practice. He also holds leadership roles on the firm's Diversity and Professional Development Committee and serves on the Executive Committee of the firm's Minority Attorney Forum.
In addition, he has published numerous articles and made presentations on a variety of topics. He is a graduate of Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law and Northwestern University.
ABOUT THE 2024/2025 SEASON
WORLD PREMIERE
January 30 – March 30, 2025
Joan and Paul Theatre at Water Tower Water Works, 163 E. Pearson St. at Michigan Ave.
Based on Miguel de Cervantes' Don Quixote of La Mancha
Written and Directed by Kerry and David Catlin
Circus by Sylvia Hernandez-DiStasi
Produced in Association with Actors Gymnasium
Somewhere in La Mancha there lived a man who read so many books that his brains dried up...Saddle up with Lookingglass as they go tiltingly, acrobatically into the dreamy madness of Don Quixote and his impossible folly-filled quest to bring good-deed doing back into the world— whether the world wants it or not!
Circus Quixote production sponsors include Greg Thompson & Greg Cameron and Marla Mendelson, M.D. & Stephen Wolf.
WORLD PREMIERE
Iraq, But Funny
May 29 – July 20, 2025
Joan and Paul Theatre at Water Tower Water Works, 163 E. Pearson St. at Michigan Ave.
Written by Atra Asdou
Directed Dalia Ashurina
A raucous satire about five generations of Assyrian women reclaiming their stories, as narrated by a British guy. Making its world premiere at Lookingglass Theatre, Ensemble Member Atra Asdou's original dark comedy jauntily marches through the Ottoman Empire to modern-day U.S.A. exploring history, family and dysfunction.
2024/2025 season sponsors are Joan & Paul Rubschlager, Shirley Ryan Ability Lab, HMS Media, Waldorf Astoria Chicago and the City of Chicago.
Lookingglass Young Ensemble
March 2025
The Lookingglass Young Ensemble (YE) is a group of Chicago-area young adults, ages 13-18 years old, committed to building their theater skills, lifting their voices and developing theircreativity through collaborative creation. Three months of rehearsal and ensemble-building amongst this incredible group of artists will culminate in three public performances.
Lookingglass Outdoors
Summer 2025
Lookingglass takes their art outside the historic Water Tower Water Works and into the neighborhoods through special events like Sunset 1919, educational opportunities like summer camp and recurring programs that tour around town. This summer, Lookingglass continues its ambitious video project to bring Chicago together despite the lines that divide us, 50 Wards: A Civic Mosaic. The series currently has 10 wards available for viewing at LookingglassTheatre.org.
ABOUT LOOKINGGLASS THEATRE COMPANY
Founded in 1988 by graduates of Northwestern University, Lookingglass Theatre Company is a nationwide leader in the creation and presentation of new, cutting-edge theatrical works and in sharing its ensemble-based theatrical techniques with Chicago-area students and teachers through Education and Community Programs. Guided by an artistic vision centered on the core values of collaboration, transformation and invention, Lookingglass seeks to capture audiences' imaginations leaving them changed, charged and empowered. Recipient of the 2011 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre, Lookingglass has built a national reputation for artistic excellence and ensemble-based theatrical innovation. Notable world premieres include Mary Zimmerman's Tony Award-winning Metamorphoses and The Odyssey, J. Nicole Brooks' Her Honor Jane Byrne, David Schwimmer's adaptation of Upton Sinclair's The Jungle and Studs Terkel's Race: How Blacks and Whites Think and Feel about the American Obsession, Matthew C. Yee's Lucy and Charlie's Honeymoon and David Catlin's circus tribute to Lewis Carroll, Lookingglass Alice, which was captured by HMS Media and reached 1.6 million PBS viewers. Lookingglass Alice is now available to more than four million students worldwide through Digital Theatre+. Work created by Lookingglass artists has been produced in Australia, Europe and dozens of cities throughout the United States.
Steppenwolf's cozy downstairs theater provided the ideal setting for an evening of outstanding and expressive dance by the highly acclaimed Season 47 Fall Series by Hubbard Street Dance Company.
The performance began with Aszure Barton's “return to patience,” featuring the entire company uniformly dressed in simple, gray and pale blue loose-fitting attire, defying gravity by leaning into space rather than onto each other. The piece masterfully captures a sense of restless animation striving for contemplative serenity, achieving this balance beautifully. (Set to Caroline Shaw’s “Gustave Le Gray,” an adaptation of Chopin’s gentle “Mazurka in A Minor, Op. 17, No. 4”).
The second piece, a solo performance titled “Show Pony” (2018, HSDC premiere 2023), danced by Shota Miyoshi, stands in stark contrast to “return to patience.” Clad in a formfitting, shiny gold Vegas Elvis jumpsuit, Miyoshi's performance is spectacular. He is literally spotlighted with beautiful lighting by Dan Scully that appears and disappears, as he dominates the stage. The term “Show Pony” perfectly encapsulates Miyoshi's confident and explosive dancing.
Lar Lubovitch’s “Prelude to a Kiss” (2005, HSDC 2023) is a romantic delight, danced superbly by Alexandria Best and Elliot Hammans with palpable chemistry. The couple's dance and flirtation are mesmerizing, with Best sometimes hanging from Hammans' arms like an exquisite butterfly. Their duet is mesmerizing and romantic, culminating in a breathtaking moment as Hammans gently removes the shoulder straps from Best's gown, one at a time, and plants a single, masterful kiss on the exposed nape of her neck.
In “Sweet Gwen Suite”, Cyrie Topete, Dominick Brown, and Aaron Choate dazzle in wildly sexy, bedazzled leather and Mexican-style form-fitting pants and bolero jackets, with costumes designed by Bobby Pearce. This number by Bob Fosse and Gwen Verdon exudes sass, flair, and self-confidence. Brown and Choate support lead dancer Cyrie Topete, who shines in what feels like a near-solo performance. Topete makes every gesture count, from smoking and extinguishing her cigarette with a sexy twist of her leather boot toe, to the defiant lift of her chin and single smile at the end, like a victorious matador. The act was set to Herb Alpert & Tijuana Brass’ “Mexican Shuffle,” Lola Schiffrin’s “Cool Hand Luke,’ and “Mexican Breakfast” by Johnny Mandel.
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in 'BUSK' by Aszure Barton.
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s opening night of the company’s Season 47 Fall Series was graced by the presence of Nicole, the daughter of Bob Fosse and Gwen Verdon. HSDC proudly became the first company to collaborate with the Verdon/Fosse Legacy to showcase Fosse's work. As a longtime admirer of Verdon/Fosse-inspired dance, this collaboration brought their iconic style to life in a thrilling and deeply satisfying way.
In the show’s final act, “Busk” by Aszure Barton opens with Elliot Hammans sleeping on the street, transforming into a character reminiscent of Buster Keaton, complete with hat and cane. Hammans' wonderfully expressive face enhances his dance performance, as he is joined by a cast of street people. Their movements range from defiant leaps to huddled masses, pleading for help with outstretched arms, their faces conveying profound sadness, struggle, and desperation. Random vocalizations are also used by the dancers, which really add to the already stunning piece. The entire dance company is involved in what is the perfect finale.
I highly recommend this incredible and passionate selection of dance performances, including the collaboration with the Gwen Verdon Bob Fosse Legacy, for audiences of all ages. The Hubbard Street Dance Chicago dancers are uniquely gifted and each piece so mesmerizing, making it difficult to pick a favorite number. The company’s Season 47 Fall Series, beautifully staged at Steppenwolf’s Downstairs Theatre, was truly a night of dance you and your family and friends will never forget.
For more information on Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s current and upcoming performances, visit https://www.hubbardstreetdance.com/.
(*Dancers alternate roles in performaces depending on select dates. This review reflects the dancers performing for the specific performance reviewed.)
I arrived at the Goodman Theatre for the opening of its 47th annual production of A Christmas Carol, directed by Jessica Thebus, like many of us—not really feeling the upcoming holidays. I’m usually a real Pollyanna, trying to put on the happy face. I’m usually Bob Cratchit, the good soldier. I’m Tiny Tim Cratchit, even, throwing around “God bless us, everyone” like it’s tinsel. But not this year. This year, I got to the Goodman feeling like a regular Scrooge. And then I walked into the lobby and the whole thing hit me like a series of middle-of-the-night spectral visits upon a four-poster bed. It changed me.
From the balcony above we were greeted by Benet Academy’s Madrigal Singers, sprinkling down on us carol after carol. Seated next to a large, unlit Christmas tree was William Buchholtz, a Native American flautist and a haunting caroler himself. Thebus, back for her fourth Goodman production of this holiday favorite, addressed the audience, lighting the tree and spreading some cheer—and we hadn’t even found our seats yet.
Once the show began, the sets by Todd Rosenthal transported us back to a different beautiful but bleak era—Dickensian England. All of the trappings one expects of A Christmas Carol are there. Muffed carolers, chestnut peddlers and poultry peddlers, and Scrooge & Marley’s beckoning lending house. There we meet Christopher Donahue’s Ebenezer Scrooge—mutton-chopped and hunched and as unhappy as we expect Scrooge to be. But that darkness, very real and very dark, is constantly counteracted by the radiance of the rest of the cast. Anthony Irons’ Bob Cratchit, cheerful charity collectors played by Penelope Walker and Wai Kim, and Dee Dee Batteast’s ever-loving niece all fend off Scrooge’s glare and gruffness by not even acknowledging his grinchiness—their world, while perhaps less financially happy than Scrooge’s, is a completely separate and better world emotionally than his, down to the vibrant colors of their costumes.
(L-R) Anthony Irons, Christopher Donahue, Ava Rose Doty, Xavier Irons, Henry Lombardo, Isabel Ackerman, Viva Boresi, Tafadzwa Diener and Susaan Jamshidi.
Once back at Scrooge’s house (whose ghastly door knocker made both me and my young daughter jump, even though I knew what was coming) we are surrounded by this bleak world this miserable old miser’s made for himself. It’s drafty and dark and dusty and the perfect place for the jarring arrival of Scrooge’s long-dead partner, Jacob Marley, played by William Dick.
The sights and sounds of Marley’s visit are frightening, even when expected, but they contrast the joy and light spread by the first two spirits who visit Scrooge once Marley departs. Lucky Stiff’s Ghost of Christmas Past is buoyant and bright and over the top—meant to get Scrooge’s attention and ours. The spirit transports us all back in time where our hearts break along with a young Ebenezer Scrooge, portrayed brilliantly by Henry Lombardo, and then leap across the hardwood of Fezziwig’s warehouse-turned-dancehall, only to be broken again by Scrooge’s interaction with his true love played charmingly by Amira Danan. We see all the light Scrooge has lost—and it only makes him and the world he’s created that much darker.
Scrooge’s present is as sad as the present world around him is resolutely jolly, made all the more so by Bri Sudia’s Ghost of Christmas Present. The Cratchit children—Isabel Ackerman, Viva Boresi, Xavier Irons, Tafradzwa Diener, and Ava Rose Doty as Tiny Tim—counter Susaan Jamshidi’s tired and realistic Mrs. Cratchit, just as Batteast does at an evening party attended by other folks who are over it.
While Marley’s ghost was truly terrifying, this Ghost of Christmas Future was less scary and sadder—a dead flower, a faded dowager. But, of course, it’s the specter of a sad future that finally snaps Scrooge out of his life of being a scrooge.
And Donahue’s transformation is very real. We’re all used to a claw-handed and clench-jawed Scrooge from film after film. And we know the change to come—to that of a heel-clicking distributor of charity and cheer. But seeing it happen right there, before our eyes, was as magical an effect as any of the magic on display. A real Christmas miracle.
Now, I have no clue if transforming a Scrooge-like audience was Thebus’ intent (or Dickens’), although I’m sure that’s what both were aiming for. But just like the Victorians who Dickens was addressing, our world today could use some hope and some cheer. And just as Donahue’s Scrooge did onstage, I found myself leaving the Goodman Theatre a little more hopeful and a little more cheerful. I have no idea if you’ll experience the same transformation as I did, but I can promise you that this production of A Christmas Carol, at the Goodman Theatre from now through December 30, will at the very least entertain you and warm your heart this holiday season.
If you’re looking for a way to entertain the children (or grandchildren) this holiday season that doesn’t involve long lines, icy cold temps or going to the mall, look no further than the Greenhouse Theatre Center’s production of Mo Williams’ smash hit musical, “Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus.”
After two years of successful productions aimed largely at school groups, the Young People’s Theatre of Chicago is transitioning from an intermural Greenhouse Theatre Center project to a stand-alone, professional children’s theatre. And just in time for the Thanksgiving Day weekend, the YPT is kicking off its inaugural season with the return of William’s beloved and beleaguered Pigeon, in his own adaptation of his best-selling Caldecott Honor Award-winning book bearing the same name.
This high-energy hourlong offering of pure silliness and joy is the perfect way to introduce the younger crowd to the magic of live theatre. From the very beginning, as the woebegone Pigeon pops out from the windows of the cleverly engineered and colorful set to lament over his tedious days, kids are immediately engaged in the unfolding story.
Pigeon is skillfully brought to life by YPT veteran Brade Bradshaw as a hand-and-rod styled puppet in the technique first showcased in the Broadway hit Avenue Q. In fact, all the puppets were built and designed by Rick Lyon, the puppeteer designer for Avenue Q. The combination of performer and puppet are so seamless that at some point you forget that Pigeon is a puppet.
Bradshaw is joined onstage by another YPT veteran, Karla Seretto, who shines as the indomitable bus-driving Bus Driver. With her “officially official” cap and dedication to her job, you never doubt that her main passion in life is to drive her bus and never be late. Also returning to the YPT stage are the talented Tamsen Glaser as the Duckling and Bus Engine, and Marquis Bundy as Teenage. They are joined by experienced Chicago actors Jake Elkins as the Hot Dog Vendor and Businessman, and the hilarious Dakota Hughes as the Little Old Lady.
As his young fans well know, Pigeon never gets to do anything he wants to do. And that’s where the fun begins. In the opening number, Pigeon laments that he never gets to do anything, not even eat a hot dog – which, he claims, is all he really wants to do. Even a visiting Duckling gets a hot dog, but not Pigeon. He’s just told by everyone to “fly away, bird.” What’s a hot-dog loving, adventure-seeking Pigeon to do?
Life changes dramatically for Pigeon when a new bus line opens near Pigeon’s hangout, and he encounters Bus Driver and her brand-new bus. Pigeon is immediately entranced and now the only thing he wants to do is drive the bus! Working up his courage, Pigeon approaches the Bus Driver and sings, “Can I drive the bus?” to which the Bus Driver and all her passengers chorus, “No! Don’t let the pigeon drive the bus.” But when the bus breaks down and the Bus Driver has to find a way to alert the people along the route the bus is running behind, she turns to Pigeon to help her out. Together, Bus Driver helps Pigeon discover his true purpose and dream.
The Greenhouse Theatre is the perfect venue for a younger audience to watch the performance. It’s compact, and with the front row right on the stage, it provides an intimate interaction with the actors. To the absolute delight of the audience, Pigeon goes “flying” through the theatre to alert them that the bus will be late, and they become part of the show as well.
The show got two-thumbs up by my grandchildren, ages 8 and 6, who loved the antics of the Pigeon as he tried his very best to fulfill his dream to drive the bus. But they especially loved the ending when, even after Pigeon discovers his true purpose in life, he spies a plane in the sky and suddenly all he wants to do is “fly the plane.” The entire audience joins in with the cast in the chorus and shout, “No! Don’t let the pigeon fly the airplane!”
There’s something for everyone in the show. I particularly loved Dakota Hughes as the Little Old Lady, who continually threw birdfeed at Pigeon in a well-meaning attempt to give him a treat. (“What is this stuff?” Pigeon indignantly wants to know.) And Tamsen Glaser made a hilarious bus engine with her sputtering and spattering noises as the bus breaks down.
Under Randy White’s astute direction, the action never stops, and the music, composed by Deborah Wicks a Puma, an acclaimed artist in Theatre for Young Audiences, keeps the story moving along, making for a manageable and totally enjoyable theatre experience for children of all ages.
You can catch “Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus” at Lincoln Park’s historic Greenhouse Theatre Center (2257 N. Lincoln Ave.) from Nov. 23-Dec. 22. For ticket information and performance times, visit ytpchi.org.
In 1997, Disney came out with the most magnificent adaptation of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella that has ever been made. With talent like Brandy, Whitney Houston, Bernadette Peters, Jason Alexander, and Paolo Montalban, the rendition of the classic fairytale lives rent free in the minds of most millennials and their parents who endured countless rewatches of the film on The Disney Channel. With the resurgence and fascination of all things 90s, the musical will no doubt be a successful streaming event. The 1997 film managed to do something previous adaptations of the fairytale could not. It captured pure magic. The charm, the wonder, the beauty and enchantment, it was all perfect. Twenty-seven years later, that same charm and enchantment can be found at Marriott Theatre as they perform Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella.
Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella celebrates the timeless enchantment of the magical fairy tale. It tells the story of a young woman named Cinderella, mistreated by her cruel stepmother and stepsisters, who dreams of a better life and is granted a magical night at a royal ball by her Fairy Godmother, where she falls in love with the Prince, ultimately escaping her harsh reality and finding happiness through a glass slipper left behind at the ball. The classic story of Cinderella at Marriott Theatre follows her quest to attend the Prince’s Ball with a twist of originality, charm and elegance. With a magical, minimalist 360-degree stage, the musical transports a new generation to a miraculous kingdom of dreams-come-true. With great warmth and more than a touch of hilarity, this enthralling fairy tale still warms the hearts of children and adults alike.
Though Cinderella’s story has been told thousands of times over in every conceivable style, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella has something special. The musical was originally written for television with music by Richard Rodgers and a book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. It aired in 1957 with the incomparable Julie Andrews playing the title role. The broadcast was viewed by more than 100 million people, the 1997 adaptation boasted an impressive 60 million. While Marriott Theatre cannot accommodate those numbers, the show continues to entertain sold out crowds. Princes and princesses of all ages gather at the Lincolnshire homestead to hear familiar numbers such as Impossible/It’s Possible, Ten Minutes Ago, and A Lovely Night. Jaeda Lavonne absolutely dazzles as Cinderella, accompanied by a remarkably talented cast to include Marriott darlings Lillian Castillo as the Fairy Godmother and Lorezno Rush Jr. as the King.
Marriott Theatre rounds out their season with this enchanting production, reviving the magic and charm of the musical just in time for the holiday season. Be sure to take your princes and princesses to see it before the stroke of midnight and the end of 2024. Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella is now playing at The Marriott Theatre (10 Marriott Dr, Lincolnshire) through December 29, 2024, a finer night you know you’ll never see. Tickets are available at www.marriotttheatre.com.
What the hell is pantomime anyway? Will I be reviewing a game of Charades?
Google to the rescue! But I searched in vain for a definition:
PrideArts mounting a silent production? Um …. I find that unlikely in the extreme
Has PrideArts become a children’s theatre? A venue for family entertainment?! Oi! Tell me ain’t so!
Aha! That’s more like it!
Put ‘em together and whaddaya got? Bibbity Bobbity Boo!
But we can’t expect the internet to do all our work for us. It was time for field research. So I pulled up my socks and set out for PrideArts Theatre, wherein I found:
All of the above, sans kids. What I was not expecting was the phenomenon of the SLAPSTICK DAME. Wikipedia helped me there: a British pantomime dame involves portrayal of female characters by male actors in drag, often in an extremely camp style with heavy makeup and big hair, exaggerated physical features [c’mon Wiki, just say ‘big tits’], performing in an over-the-top style.
Oh yeah! NOW we’re on the same page!
OK, are we good with the definitions now? Let’s get to the freakin’ play!
Nanny Fanny (Neill Kelly), despite appearing in none of the fables, had a lead role in THROBBIN’ WOOD, along with her son Silly Willy (Freddy Mauricio). Every time N.F. came on stage [erm… I mean she mounted … erm …entered the stage] we were expected to.…
… Oh yeah! Forgot to mention – pantomime also requires audience participation. We were instructed to yell: “Spank me, Nanny!” each time Nanny Fanny came on stage [oh dear. I did it again!]. Other characters/situations provoked divers reactions.
There. See? That’s the sort of humor you’ll find in THROBBIN’ WOOD.
Pantomime is a Brit thing, and you know those Brits and their idea of humor: vulgar puns, dirty double entendre, indecent innuendo, and other forms of vulgar waggery and unseemly buffoonery. But pantomime requires a bit more than indecorous dialogue, and that’s where the acting comes in! Neill Kelly’s Nanny Fanny was outrageously OTT; her son Willy (Freddie Mauricio) was demonstrably Silly. Bryan Fowler’s Throbbin’ Wood was extremely debonair (though not too bright; but obstetrics was dodgier back then). Kyle Johnson was a perfectly glorious Anal-A-Dale, while Jack Gordon disseminated ecclesiastical good cheer and spiritous libations. I’d sure like to be a fly on the wall during his Confession!
Don’t forget the Villain: Ryder Dean McDaniel had the perfect eyebrows for the job, and he employed them masterfully, the nefarious rapscallion!
Which brings me to the final Merry Man, Little Jonny (Jackson Anderson). Little Jonny was such a disappointment to me: a damp squid; a flash in the pan; a lead balloon. Mind you don’t misconstrue my meaning here! Jackson Anderson was superb, his character indispensable, and his appearance … mm mm mm. Finger-lickin’ good. BUT he never, not ever, no way, no how, NEVER authenticated his name! We were told the appellation was chosen due to his extreme modesty, but still I left PrideArts without being allowed to appraise this crucial nominative characteristic personally.
I won’t go into details about the plot, partly to avoid spoilers but primarily because I’m not certain there was one. But here’s the layout:
Silly Willy (Freddy Mauricio) is telling his mum [Spank me!] about joining the Merry Men with Throbbin’ Wood (Bryan Fowler) — quite understandable, for Throbbin’ is tall, handsome, noble, and possesses … well, THROBBIN’ WOOD! What more couldja want???
If this enticement is insufficient, consider his Merry Men: religieux Triar Fuck (Jack Gordon), renowned archer Anal-a-Dale (Kyle Johnson), and Little Jonnie (Jackson Anderson), of whom we’ve already spoken. See, THROBBIN’ WOOD is kinda like Lord of the Rings in that it features a bountiful cast of strong, handsome, heroic men but is bereft of females … and they consider this a problem!? Go figure….
One imaginational figment was Fairy Glitterous (Danielle Bahn), who periodically appeared onstage for little apparent reason but to bring glitter, bling, and pink tulle into an otherwise fairly monochromatic set. But that’s OK! Everybody needs a little glitter, bling and pink tulle in their lives.
[NOTE TO DIRECTOR: give F.G. a bag of glitter with which to shower the audience …yeah? ….no? just sayin’]
Where was I? ah, the exiguousness of women in THROBBIN’WOOD. So let’s proceed to Maid Marion (Emma Robie), who is a pulchritudinous [isn’t that just the BEST word?!] maiden madly in love with THROBBIN’ WOOD.
Now I just know I’m forgetting someone …. Oh yeah – we need a villain! The Sherriff is flawlessly depicted by Ryder Dean McDaniel [Boooooooo], who is ardently dedicated to, not solely the despoliation of our hero THROBBIN’ WOOD, but also to the inveiglement of Maid Marion. To this end he consigns her to a dungeon for no more malfeasance than rebuffing his advancements.
[REVIEWER’S NOTE] I’m unfamiliar with this style of blandishment … unless M.M.is a rope bunny? …
OK, that’s the cast. Let’s slip backstage to congratulate Director Taylor Pasche and Assistant Caitlin Preuss on how skillfully they herded this bagful of cats. The ambience of many a scene was fomented by music (Music Director Chad Gearig) to provoke an appropriate response to each character: e.g. yelling Spank Me! for Nanny Fanny and Boooooo for the Sheriff. The spiritus mundi of the different scenes and characters is likewise imputable to Scenic Designer Hayley Wallenfeldt. The props were managed by Annaleigh Stone; Jen Cupani and Caitlin Preuss directed Choreography, and Costume Director Victoria Jablonski showcased an abundance of Men in Tights for our delectation.
I close this review with: I once asked a dramaturgic friend: “WTF does a Stage Manager actually do?”, to which they responded “Everything”. Corbin Paulino did everything.
THROBBIN’ WOOD is playing at PrideArts THeatre through December 15.
I RECOMMEND you check it out!
Overall Citadel Theatre’s ‘Dames at Sea’ has a smashingly great cast of singers and dancers, perfect for a musical comedy satirizing the over-the-top 1930s movies and Broadway revues that were light on plot and heavy on costumes, dance routine, and ostrich-feathered pageantry.
That’s exactly what ‘Dames at Sea’ pokes fun at, but lovingly. It originated in 1966 as an Off-Broadway show that ran for 575 performances, and became the launching vehicle for Bernadette Peters. Set in the early 1930s, its book and lyrics by George Haimsohn and Robin Miller, fittingly for a satire, embody every theater cliche imaginable: A Midwestern chorus girl steps off the bus in Manhattan, falls into a Broadway lead, and rockets to stardom. Plot points are near memes harvested from musical extravaganzas of that decade: The star is sick! What are we gonna do?! The show must go on! Well kid, think you can do it?! What choice does any trouper have?!
Melody Rowland as Ruby and Beck Hockason as Dick in "Dames at Sea."
Six decades later, it’s still totally fun, the comedy broad, the exposition minimal, because we already know the story. Choreography is great, though heavy on the tap shoes, and lilting, lovely choral singing, to boot.
The melodious score by Jim Wise pairs beautifully with Haimsohn and Miller’s lyrics— every song is original, but they all sound like something you’ve heard before. Conjuring up Cole Porter’s 1935 “When They Begin the Beguine“ is Wise’s “The Beguine,” a deft reflection of the original, played with exaggerated passion in a singing-dancing duet by Mona (Ciara Jarvis) and Captain (Steve McDonagh). Or “That Mister Man of Mine,” which, though different and original, is reminiscent of “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man of Mine” from “Show Boat.”
Ciara Jarvis as Mona in "Dames at Sea."
There are some very good voices in this show: Beck Hockason in the role of sailor Dick; Melody Rowland as Ruby, that Midwestern chorus girl; and McDonagh as Captain. Very much in the Benadette Peters mold is Ciara Jarvis as Mona. Jarvis’s acting chops shows she gets it, and she plays the inside joke to the audience effectively. Jarvis also has a wonderful, rich stage soprano,liltingly beautiful and “she’as easy on the eyes,” as a gaffer might have remarked backstage.
All this is quite wonderful, and we could call the show a great success save for one horrible aspect: sound and music. The cast was well miked, and their voices were great—when we could hear them. Unfortunately the prerecorded orchestration was played at too loud a level, at least on opening night. Rarely could singers get above and beyond it. Even so, a couple numbers succeeded, “The Beguine,” and in Act II, “Raining in My Heart,” featuring restrained musical accompaniment that for the moment was closer to balance with the live singing.
The recording of the accompanying music was also lacking—just simply unpleasant arrangements. Combined with being too loud, it was not good. Hopefully, sound adjustments are made for future performances. And as to stage and sets, perhaps Citadel will consider relocating to a more accommodating stage. One with a true backstage, or at least the possibility of actual sets. This is merely a high school auditorium, and a wall-sized LED screen is all they’ve got for background.
Were that sound tuned, this show could be somewhat recommended. It seems a shame, with such a professional cast and the investment in licensing of a strong property. “Dames at Sea” plays through December 15, 2024 at Citadel Theatre in Lake Forest, IL.
When Francesca Zambello, director of The Glimmerglass Festival, commissioned an opera about race in America, the country was reeling from a spate of police shootings of young African-American men in Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, and South Carolina. By the time the commissioned work Blue premiered at The Glimmerglass Festival in 2019, police killings of unarmed African-American men and women had soared to nearly 135.
While Blue holds up an often times uncomfortable mirror to racism in America, it is much more than a “protest opera” or an opera about police violence. In the words of director and librettist Tazewell Thompson, an internationally acclaimed director for opera and theatre, “I wrote [Blue] from an obsessive need and responsibility to tell an intimate story behind the numbing numbers of boys and men who are killed.”
And that is exactly the powerful appeal of Blue, which recently premiered at the Lyric Opera. Through Thompson’s intense and profound libretto and the soaring score composed by Tony-Award winner Jeanine Tesori, Blue draws us in beyond the names and the headlines to the unimaginable suffering of the families who have been torn apart by these tragic and senseless deaths.
Blue is a powerful, passionate, and yes, painful depiction of a family and community coming together in crisis and faith. Hailed by critics as a “new American classic,” it was named the Best New Opera of 2019 by the Music Critics Association of North America. Tesori, who won recent Tony Awards for the music to Kimberly Akimbo and Fun House, brought her considerable talent and success as a Broadway composer to create a score that is both contemporaneous and timeless. Thompson drew on a canon of African-American literary greats, including James Baldwin, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Claude Brown, to write a libretto that is passionate and unapologetic.
The story centers on a Black middle-class couple living in Harlem, whose lives are shattered when their teenage son is shot and killed by a white police officer. Compounding the tragedy is the fact that the Father himself is a so-called “Black in Blue” – a member of the very same police force.
The two-act opera opens with the Mother performed by Lyric favorite Zoie Reams, who has gathered her girlfriends to share her wonderful news of her pregnancy. As her girlfriends, a charismatic trio led by Ariana Wehr in her Lyric debut and Lyric veterans Adia Evans and Krysty Swann, titter and exclaim over the Mother’s husband (“Damn girl,” they sing), the mood shifts suddenly as they learn her child is a boy. Oh no, no, no, they lament, reminding Mother that she is breaking the cardinal rule – “You shall not bring a black baby boy into the world.” Through a poignantly performed plea, Mother prevails upon her girlfriends to bless her child, whom she vows to bring into this world with love and hope.
The scene segues to Father, expertly performed by bassist Kenneth Kellogg in a role written specifically for him, as he reveals the news of his pending fatherhood with his three fellow police buddies (Terrence Chin-Loy, Jonathan Pierce Rhodes, and Christopher Humbert, Jr.) at the local watering hole, who can barely tear their eyes from watching the football game. Yet, they share in Father’s joy, peppering him with lighthearted advice and warnings about being a dad.
The first act concludes sixteen years later, when the Son, performed magnificently by tenor Travon D. Walker, and the Father engage in a bitter argument. The father confronts his son, who has been frequently at odds with the law for his involvement with non-violent political protests. “Look at yourself,” the Father intones. “Pull up your pants. Take off that hoodie.” The son pushes back, derisively accusing the Father of being “a cop,” “A clown in a blue suit,” upholding an oppressive system. Act 1 concludes with the Father, despite his son’s bitter words, offering an emotion-filled pledge to love and hold his son always.
As the second act opens, we discover that the Son has been shot and killed by a white police officer at a protest. The heartbroken Father meets with the Reverend, powerfully performed by Lyric veteran baritone Norman Garrett, who attempts to console him and encourages him to forgive. But the Father, in an ironic twist, adopts much of his son’s attitude and words, angrily lashing out at the Reverend. “I’m not here for redemption,” the Father says, “I’m here to confess” the revenge he plans to exact against the white officer. Yet, the Reverend continues to console the Father, and in a groundswell of pain, the two perform the beautiful heartrending duet “Lay my burden down.”
Meanwhile, the grief-stricken mother is attended once again by her girlfriends, to support her as she buries her son. In a particularly heartbreaking moment, Mother falls to her knees and begs God to return her son to her. “I don’t care if he’s blind; if he has no hands or feet. Just that he is alive,” she laments. But then, she bitterly remembers that “We are not God’s favorites.”
At the funeral, Father and Mother together wrestle with their grief. But with the prayers and support of the congregation, as the theme of “lay my burden down” is reprised, the two find consolation in their faith and community. The opera concludes with a flashback to the Son’s last night at the dinner table with his father and mother, pledging that this will be his last protest and promising that “nothing will happen. Nothing.”
Blue is an important, relevant opera, touching on themes and issues in a way that is not confrontational but heartfelt and profound. You may feel uncomfortable, but you will not walk away from this performance untouched and hoping for a better world.
Blue is in a limited engagement at the Lyric, with performances on Nov. 20, 22, 26 and December 1. For ticket information, visit Lyricopera.org.
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