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Displaying items by tag: Rashada Dawan

New York City’s Hell’s Kitchen has birthed countless New Yorkers, none more recognized than 15-time Grammy Award winner Alicia Keys. Her life and artistry is now on display in  Hell’s Kitchen, the 2024 Tony award winning musical that arrived at Chicago’s Nederlander Theatre with a pulse as electric as the city it portrays. This is not your traditional jukebox musical. Hell’s Kitchen is a vibrant coming-of-age story where Keys’ music and Kristoffer Diaz’s book blend into a dramatically coherent whole.

The show’s beauty lies in its simplicity. Keys’ songs—familiar, melodic, emotionally direct—gain new shape and meaning when reframed for the Broadway stage. Unlike many jukebox musicals that force a narrative between pre-existing hits, Hell’s Kitchen succeeds because the music is truly part of the storytelling. Songs burst forward from moments of conflict, hope, and self-realization.

Hell’s Kitchen grounds its coming-of-age story in a web of relationships that shape and challenge young Ali, played with vivid intensity by Mya Drake. Questions of identity, belonging, and the messy beauty of adolescence come alive through her interactions with the adults and peers orbiting her turbulent world. Kennedy Caughell, as Jersey, embodies the protective-but-exasperated single mother whose love is both a shield and a boundary Ali keeps trying to outgrow. Ali’s tentative steps into first love—with JonAvery Worrell’s tender, conflicted Knuck—reflect the musical’s exploration of risk, desire, and the thrill of discovering your own heart for the first time. Mentorship emerges through the luminous presence of Roz White’s Miss Liza Jane, whose soulful, heartbreaking performance of “Perfect Way to Die” becomes a moment of clarity and grounding for Ali, reminding her that art can be both refuge and truth.

Family fracture, forgiveness, and urban resilience—are sharpened by the presence of Desmond Sean Ellington as Davis, Ali’s charismatic yet unreliable father. His complicated reentry into her life forces Ali to confront the emotional cracks she’d rather outrun. Chicago’s own Rashada Dawan brings strength and warmth to Crystal, adding texture to the story’s portrait of a community that raises, corrects, and ultimately protects its young people.

Hell’s Kitchen illustrates that growing up is rarely linear; it’s a dizzying blend of rebellion, discovery, heartbreak, and hope. Each character becomes a catalyst on Ali’s path toward finding her voice—both literally and spiritually, making the musical not just a story of one girl’s awakening, but a testament to the many hands it takes to shape a life.

The production’s physical world is equally alive. Scenic designer Robert Brill constructs a shifting jungle of steel girders and moving balconies that evoke a city in constant motion and perpetual construction. The set rises, retracts, and reconfigures like the city breathing. Lighting designer Natasha Katz amplifies this effect, creating a cityscape that refuses to sleep. Peter Nigrini’s projection design layers in close-up neighborhood imagery—street signs, building façades, glimpses of densely packed blocks—giving the illusion of living within a compact, ever-changing metropolis.

Choreographer Camille A. Brown infuses the show with organic motion, ensuring dance erupts naturally from each scene. Her work is sharp, grounded, and filled with communal energy, yet always tethered to character and environment rather than spectacle for spectacle’s sake. The costumes, period-specific, complement the choreography’s sense of youthful turbulence.

What ultimately makes Hell’s Kitchen resonate is its emotional clarity. It is a musical about becoming—about the messy, joyous, painful years when identity is still elastic and the world feels both infinite and suffocating. Keys’ music underscores these feelings with sincerity, and Chicago’s production honors that sincerity with a heartfelt, high-voltage performance.

Hell’s Kitchen is not just a tribute to a neighborhood or an artist; it is a celebration of the resilient young people who learn to sing above the city’s roar.

Highly Recommended
When: Through November 30
Where: James M. Nederlander Theatre 24 W. Randolph Chicago
Tickets: $50 - $149
Info: www.broadwayinchicago.com/shows/hells-kitchen/

Published in Theatre in Review

Rhythm is an essential part of life. We wouldn’t exist without it. It all starts with your heart beat. That is the origin of rhythm really. And Djembe! The Show at Apollo Theater is all about the rhythm – and it’s informative. I really enjoyed learning how the djembe was used throughout musical history.

Djembe! was almost like a workshop at times. Drums are located at each audience member’s seat. The show was emceed by Ben Hope. Hope, along with the rest of the ensemble, taught the audience about the rich history djembe drumming. I didn’t realize this was actually a touring road show until yesterday. I can just imagine packing all those drums away after every show! Hopefully, Djembe! sticks around for a while because it is truly worthy of a long run.

The band in this show was fantastic. Fode Lavia Camara was the Djembe Fola, or “master”. He led the drumming for the most part although all were involved. The band was rounded out with bass guitar, keys and drums. All were musicians are very talented players.

Rashada Dawan handled most of the lead vocals. She wore a variety of costumes to illustrate the influence of djembe rhythms through musical history. Her voice was amazing. She also helped emcee the show.

When it all is said and done, we learn that a lot of the rhythm we take for granted in music is African in origin. It is interesting to see the influence of these rhythms on everything from Pop to Classical Music. This was all about the Djembe, but it translates to other instruments and even voices, and a show like this is great mind food for musicians. Us musicians need to constantly feed our minds with information. But it is the entertainment value in Djembe! that makes it fun!

This is a show one could see again and again. In fact, I am tempted to take a friend there who I know would really like it. You would too. Nothing makes you feel better than beating a drum. Bring a friend. Make a friend. It’s a celebration of life. This would be a great show to take your kids along. It’s a lot of fun.

Djembe! The Show is currently being performed at Apollo Theater.

For more information on this unique experience, visit www.djembetheshow.com.

Published in Theatre in Review
Monday, 06 March 2017 19:22

On the Run with Marriott's Madagascar

Charming, colorful and inventive, the Marriot Theater’s Madagascar – A Musical Adventure, for young audiences, is a fun-filled ride with themes that will surely resonate with both kids and adults.

 

Based on the popular 2005 film by DreamWorks Animation, Madagascar centers around four main characters from the Central Park Zoo: Alex the Lion (Russell Mernagh), Marty the Zebra (James Earl Jones II), Melman the Giraffe (Stephen Schellhardt), and Gloria the Hippo (Rashada Dawan).

 

At first glance this fun-loving group seems happy enough to perform for park visitors, especially the king of the jungle, Alex the Lion, who is in his element prancing around the stage, showing off his perfected “roar”. But when presented with the idea of freedom by a cadre of hilarious and enterprising penguins who say “it’s not natural to be in a zoo,” Marty the Zebra, to the surprise of his friends, makes a run for it.

 

Having lived their entire lives in captivity, Alex, Melman and Gloria are shocked that Marty would even consider leaving the comfortable life of the Central Park Zoo. But in the spirit of true friendship, they push their misgivings aside and embark on a rip-roaring adventure that eventually lands them in the exotic wilds of Madagascar.

 

The quirky and pompous lemur King Julien (wonderfully played by Jonathan Butler-Duplessis) is a joy to watch as he tries to incorporate Alex, Marty, Melman and Gloria, in his masterplan to rid the island of the fossa who hunt and attack his fellow lemurs. However, this plan goes awry as Alex, who now has to fend for himself in the wild, can’t contain his animal instincts and attacks Marty.

 

Directed and choreographed by Matt Raftery, Madagascar – A Musical Adventure, hits all the right notes in “crack-a-lackin’” style as Mernagh and Jones also shine in their roles with both chemistry and good-natured fun, as they show that in the end true friendship can overcome even the “laws of nature”.

 

Perhaps of the best moment of the production is the high-energy rendition of “Move It, Move It!” which gets the crowd clapping and kids, as well as adults, up on their feet.

 

Colorful costume and props really enhance the performance, bringing this animated favorite vividly to life. “Madagascar is already an established idea,” said Jesus Perez, costume designer and assistant director, “but since this is a live production and not a movie, it has opened up a world of creativity for us. This is the perfect vehicle for me as a designer to bring this fantastical world to life.”

 

The talented cast, which also includes: Leah Morrow as “Skipper,” Liam Quealy as “Kowalski,” Laura Savage as “Mort and Private,” Elena Romanowski as “Rico,” Samantha Pauly as “Maurice,” and Jed Feder as “Mason,” won’t disappoint as they sing and dance to some of your favorite tunes from the movie.

 

Recommended

 

All performances are followed by a question and answer session with the cast.

 

Madagascar – A Musical Adventure, playing at the Marriott Theater located in the Lincolnshire Marriott Resort, runs through April 15 Tuesdays through Sundays at 10 a.m. with certain performances at 12:30 p.m. For more information and tickets, visit www.marriotttheatre.com.

 

Published in Theatre in Review

 

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