Theatre

Displaying items by tag: on stage

Her Story Theatre has announced the World Premiere of Kurt McGinnis Brown's two-hander THE OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHY, to play March 28 – April 19 at The Den Theatre in Chicago. When young black journalist Xan Smith is assigned to interview the once successful, now aging white novelist, Henry Percival, the two form an unlikely bond during their contentious meetings. After Henry reveals something unexpected about his past, the two writers must consider the uncertain relationship of truth to storytelling in general, and specifically to the story of Henry's life. THE OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHY will keep audiences guessing as they follow its plot twists, surprises, and suspect decisions. The drama, which was workshopped at Chicago Dramatists in 2017 and Art Lit Lab in Madison, Wisconsin in 2016, is the work of prolific playwright Kurt McGinnis Brown, who has had plays produced across the country, including in Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. The Jeff Award-winner and former Artistic Director of Strawdog Theatre Richard Shavzin will direct. Press opening is Wednesday, April 1 at 7:30 pm in the Upstairs Main Stage of The Den Theatre, following previews on March 28, 29 and 31. It will play through April 19.

Veteran Chicago actor and Actors Equity member Gary Houston, whose many credits include GEM OF THE OCEAN and JOE TURNER'S COME AND GONE at the Goodman Theatre, will play the septuagenarian novelist Henry Percival. Shelby Marie Edwards, seen most recently in Pegasus Players' YOUNG PLAYWRIGHTS FESTIVAL and RABBITS IN THEIR POCKETS at Lifeline Theatre, has been cast as the young journalist Xan Smith.
 
The production team includes Garrett Bell (Set Design), Sam Bessler (Lighting Design), Mary Bonnett (Costume Design), George Zahora (Sound Design), Wendye Clarendon (Actors Equity member, Stage Manager), Morgan Watkinson and Josh Hogan (Assistant Stage Managers), Steve Kruse (Technical Director), Tristan Predmore (Lighting Technician), Nora Brooks (Scenic Painter), Lucas Holeman (Carpenter), and Kaitlyn Hettinger (Carpenter, Scenic Painter).

Tickets to THE OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHY are $40 for General Admission and $30 for Seniors plus taxes and fees) for regular performances; and $35 General Admission for previews. Students and industry members are $20 all performances, and group prices are $30 per person for all performances. Tickets are on sale now at www.thedenthreatre.comand The Den Theatre Box Office 773-697-3830.

Her Story Theatre

THE OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHY

WORLD PREMIERE

By Kurt McGinnis Brown

Directed by Richard Shavzin

Featuring Gary Houston and  Shelby Marie Edwards

March 28 – April 19, 2026

Previews Saturday, March 28 at 7:30 pm, Sunday, March 29 at 3:00 pm, and Tuesday, March 31 at 7:30 pm

Thursdays – Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm (No performance Easter Sunday, April 5)

The Den Theatre Upstairs Main Stage, 1331 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago 60622

Ticket Prices: Previews – General Admission $35.00, plus taxes and fees. Regular performances - General Admission - $40.00, Seniors - $35.00. Students and industry $20.00 all performances. Groups $30.00 per person all performances.
Tickets on sale now at www.thedentheatre.com and The Den Theatre Box Office 773-697-3830
Info: www.HerStoryTheater.org
 
When young black journalist Xan Smith is assigned to interview the once successful, now aging, white novelist, Henry Percival, her mission is clear. She is prepared to dismantle his career with a scathing expose that will cement her own reputation as a fearless cultural critic. But during their contentious meetings, Henry reveals something unexpected about his past. As she digs deeper, the story she uncovers changes the one she came to write. Xan must decide what she's willing to tell, because in this game of perception and power, the biggest revelation may be about herself. 

Published in Upcoming Theatre

TimeLine Theatre Company is thrilled to announce its 2026–27 Inaugural Season in the company’s first permanent home at 5035 N. Broadway in Uptown. This long‑awaited milestone launches a bold new era for TimeLine, inviting audiences to experience the company’s work in a dynamic, state‑of‑the‑art facility designed to enhance artistic possibilities and deepen community engagement for years to come. 

Coinciding with the company’s 30th Anniversary, this inaugural season in Uptown showcases four extraordinary productions that span continents, generations, and pivotal historical moments. Together, they invite audiences not only to engage with TimeLine’s signature mission—presenting plays that explore today’s social and political issues through the lens of the past—but to be among the very first to experience that mission come to life in TimeLine’s new home and see it for yourself.

TimeLine’s 2026–27 Subscription Season includes:

  • The world premiere of The Birth of the Pill by Jessica Huang, based on the book by Pulitzer Prize-winning Chicago author Jonathan Eig, directed by Sandra Marquez—a bold and eye‑opening story about the controversial creation that reshaped women’s lives.
  • The Chicago premiere of the Olivier Award-winning Home, I’m Darling by Laura Wade, directed by TimeLine Company Member Mechelle Moe—a sharp, dark comedy examining nostalgia, marriage, and the seductive fantasy of a “simpler” past.
  • The Chicago premiere of The Far Country by Lloyd Suh, directed by TimeLine Company Member Helen Young—a sweeping immigration epic and 2023 Pulitzer Prize finalist exploring identity, sacrifice, and generational resilience in the shadow of exclusionary U.S. policy.
  • Merrily We Roll Along, music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by George Furth, based on the original play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, directed by TimeLine Associate Artistic Director Nick Bowling—a Tony Award–winning musical unfolding in reverse, tracing the shifting relationships and ambitions of three friends over two decades.

“I am thrilled beyond words to announce the first full season in our new home in Uptown,” said Artistic Director PJ Powers. “The fulfillment of a long-held dream, this dynamic new venue will elevate the work on stage, while also offering audiences the opportunity to engage further in our exhibit galleries and bar/café, to foster conversation, and to dig deeper into the timely issues explored in each of these plays.”

Powers continued: “This collection of plays and a musical, selected by TimeLine’s Company Members, exemplifies the enhanced artistic possibilities that our new home provides, allowing us to bring to life the remarkable musical Merrily We Roll Along, alongside three incredible new plays that probe history while provoking discussion, laughter, compassion, and curiosity. Welcoming award-winning, renowned artists, this inaugural season will further what’s distinguished TimeLine for the past 30 years, while ushering in a new era of theatre-making, community engagement, and conversations about the connections between past, present and future. We can’t wait to share these productions and start making new history together in Uptown.”

See it for yourself … from the best seats in the house! Save up to 25% off regular ticket prices and enjoy ultimate flexibility, priority access, and preferred reserved seating with a TimeLine FlexPass. Four options, priced from $189 to $389, are now on sale. MyLine FlexPasses (exclusively for patrons age 18-35) are also available for $85 (after enrolling in our free MyLine program). For more information and to purchase, call (773) 281-8463 x6 or visit timelinetheatre.com.

ABOUT TIMELINE THEATRE’S  2026–27 SUBSCRIPTION SEASON:

World Premiere

THE BIRTH OF THE PILL

by Jessica Huang

based on the book by Jonathan Eig

directed by Sandra Marquez

September – October 2026

The origin story of the birth control pill and an eye-opening world premiere about science, power, and the women who paid the price for progress.

In the mid‑20th century, a radical dream begins to take shape: a simple pill that would give women full control over their reproductive futures. Championing this groundbreaking idea are feminist activist Margaret Sanger, scientist Gregory Pincus, gynecologist John Rock, and philanthropist Katharine McCormick—visionaries working under intense secrecy amid legal, scientific, and religious roadblocks. Meanwhile, in Puerto Rico, clinical trials place the burden of experimentation on women like Ramona Delgado, whose lives and bodies become entangled in the quest for scientific advancement.

Commissioned and developed by TimeLine and based on the book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jonathan Eig (King: A Life), this world premiere brings an untold chapter of global history to the stage, probing urgent questions about consent, sacrifice, and the complicated cost of social change.

The commission and development of The Birth of the Pill was supported in part by the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation.

Chicago Premiere

HOME, I’M DARLING

by Laura Wade

directed by Mechelle Moe

November – December 2026

A darkly funny exploration of marriage, nostalgia, and the allure—and delusion—of the “perfect” past.

Judy and Johnny are living their dream: the idealized 1950s suburban life. As Judy doubles down on her fully immersive retro domestic fantasy, the seams of their hyper-curated life begin to fray. What begins as a lifestyle choice becomes a revealing—and unsettling—interrogation of gender roles, identity, and what it costs to perform happiness.

A smash hit on the West End and winner of the 2019 Olivier Award for Best New Comedy, Home, I’m Darling is a razor‑sharp satire that feels both timely and timeless.

Chicago Premiere

THE FAR COUNTRY

by Lloyd Suh

directed by Helen Young

February – March 2027

A sweeping, urgent, and deeply human epic about immigration, identity, and carving out a future in America.

In the wake of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, Moon Gyet leaves his village in Taishan, China and travels to America, hoping to build a better life for his family. At San Francisco’s Angel Island immigration station, he enters a labyrinth of interrogation—where every answer, every detail, and every story could mean the difference between entry and deportation.

A 2023 Pulitzer Prize finalist, The Far Country is a strikingly intimate and expansive examination of survival, displacement, and the fragile lineage of memory passed from one generation to the next.

MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG

music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim

book by George Furth

based on the original play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart

directed by Nick Bowling

April – May 2027

A bittersweet, Tony Award–winning musical about friendship, ambition, and the choices that shape a life—told entirely in reverse.

Spanning 20 years and moving backward through time, Merrily We Roll Along traces the unraveling of a once inseparable trio of friends and creative collaborators: composer Franklin Shepard, writer Charley Kringas, and novelist Mary Flynn. Beginning at the height of Franklin’s fame—wealthy, celebrated, and isolated—this innovative musical journeys back to the hopeful early days of their artistic dreams.

Featuring some of Stephen Sondheim’s most iconic songs, this cult favorite serves as a resonant capstone to TimeLine’s 30th Anniversary, echoing the company’s own origins as a group of passionate young theatre-makers asking: How did we get to be here?

Merrily We Roll Along received the 2024 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical. It first premiered on Broadway in 1981. Featuring orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick, it was originally directed on Broadway by Harold Prince and originally produced on Broadway by Lord Grade, Martin Starger, Robert Fryer, and Harold Prince in association with Ruth Mitchell and Howard Haines.

IT’S TIME: ABOUT TIMELINE’S NEW HOME

For nearly 30 years, TimeLine Theatre Company has been a vital force in Chicago’s arts scene, producing socially and politically relevant work inspired by history that engages audiences across the region. Building on this legacy, TimeLine has reimagined a former warehouse, converting it into a vibrant cultural destination that honors Uptown’s rich theatrical heritage while meeting modern performance needs. 

TimeLine will celebrate the Grand Opening of its new home at 5035 N. Broadway with its inaugural production, An Enemy of the People, May 6 – June 7, 2026. The new TimeLine Theatre more than doubles the company’s previous seating capacity, fosters community engagement, and creates spaces for both performances and public enjoyment.

Project highlights include:

  • Total facility spanning 33,600 square feet, combining new construction and adaptive reuse
  • 21,000 square feet of new construction along North Broadway
  • 12,600 square feet of adaptive reuse of a 1920s Reebie Bros. warehouse for production support and offices
  • Flexible 250-seat black box theater with seven stage configurations and advanced acoustic and staging systems
  • Street-level bar and café with patio, exhibit galleries, and education/community room
  • Publicly visible fourth-floor rehearsal and event space
  • Back-of-house spaces organized around a central Green Room intended as a living room for staff, artists, and collaborators
  • Located steps away from the newly renovated Argyle CTA Red Line station
  • Adjacent space available for future expansion

Since launching It’s Time: The Campaign for TimeLine’s New Home, TimeLine has successfully raised more than $42.9 million toward the approximately $46 million project cost, including $12.9 million in public support ($2.9 million from the State of Illinois, $10 million from the City of Chicago), and funds from more than 200 generous individual donors.

ABOUT TIMELINE THEATRE COMPANY

TimeLine Theatre Company, recipient of the 2016 MacArthur Award for Creative and Effective Institutions, was founded in 1997 with a mission to present stories inspired by history that connect to today’s social and political issues. Now celebrating its 29th Anniversary Season, TimeLine has presented 97 productions, including 16 world premieres and 44 Chicago premieres, and launched the Living History Education Program, which brings the company's mission to life for students in Chicago Public Schools. Recipient of the Alford-Axelson Award for Nonprofit Managerial Excellence and the Richard Goodman Strategic Planning Award from the Association for Strategic Planning, TimeLine has received 62 Jeff Awards, including an award for Outstanding Production 11 times.

TimeLine is led by Artistic Director PJ Powers, Executive Director Mica Cole, and Board President Thaddeus J. Malik. TimeLine Company members are Will Allan, Nick Bowling, Janet Ulrich Brooks, Behzad Dabu, Charles Andrew Gardner, Lara Goetsch, Juliet Hart, Anish Jethmalani, Mildred Marie Langford, Mechelle Moe, David Parkes, Ron OJ Parson, PJ Powers, Maren Robinson, and Helen Young.

Major corporate, government and foundation donors providing season support via TimeLine’s Annual Fund include Abe and Ida Cooper Foundation, Bayless Family Foundation, Bulley & Andrews LLC, Crown Family Philanthropies, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Joseph & Bessie Feinberg Foundation, Laughing Acres Family Foundation, Lloyd A. Fry Foundation, Paul M. Angell Family Foundation, Polk Bros. Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, and Walder Foundation. TimeLine also acknowledges support from the Illinois Arts Council Agency and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.

For more information, visit timelinetheatre.com, or Facebook or Instagram (@TimeLineTheatre on both platforms).

Published in Theatre Buzz

Based on the novel by Junot Díaz, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao follows neurodivergent and perpetually lovelorn college student Oscar as he fixates on the fukú – a generational curse he believes has haunted his family’s love lives for decades. Oscar’s college roommate and his sister Lola by his side, the trio journeys to Santo Domingo, uncovering more about Oscar and Lola’s family history and the fukú than none of them bargained for.

At the heart of the story is the trio of Oscar (Lenin D’Anthony Izquierdo), Yunior (Kelvin Grullon), and Lola (Julissa Calderon), who are as messy, spirited, and loving as three college kids can be. Their chemistry feels genuinely lived-in: the easy humor, the sharp edges, the quiet loyalties. Their dynamic perfectly captures the complexities of chosen family, blurred boundaries, and sibling devotion, all while keeping the audience constantly laughing. 

While often sharp and funny, Oscar and Lola’s mother, Beli (Yohanna Florentino), delivers the production’s most devastating performance. She embodies the tension of someone trying – fiercely, desperately – to do right by her children, yet repeatedly falling short. Florentino’s performance is astonishingly intimate; even in a full theatre, she makes it feel as though her pain is being shared one-on-one with each audience member.

The show – especially in its first act – is funny, self-aware, and unabashedly camp. Although set among college-aged characters in the 1990s, Director Wendy Mateo has made the show feel timeless and accessible to audiences of all ages. The script incorporates a significant amount of Spanish, most often through colloquial phrases and biting insults, yet the cast’s physicality and clarity ensure that no translation is required to follow the emotional stakes. It’s a compelling reminder that audiences don’t need to speak Spanish to fully appreciate bilingual storytelling when the performances are this grounded.

Where the production occasionally stumbles is in its visual storytelling, particularly once the setting shifts to Santo Domingo. The scenic design’s abstract, college-forward aesthetic serves the first half well, but meshes less cohesively with the production’s second act shift into heightened spiritual and video game-inspired imagery. This evolution also introduces more disruptive set transitions – unlike the fluid, almost invisible shifts of Act One, several Act Two changes require full stops in the action, interrupting momentum and dampening the pacing. At its best, the projections and gaming motifs cleverly mirror Oscar’s inner grasp of reality and the story’s mythic foundation. At their weakest, however, they overtake the truly human stakes at the center of the narrative.

One moment in particular – a key story from Beli’s past – is partially rendered through animation and projection rather than live performance. Given the emotional precision already established onstage, the stylistic shift feels jarring and unintentionally distances the audience from what should be an intimate revelation. The production’s reliance on heightened, game-like aesthetics resurfaces in later confrontations as well, occasionally pushing character choices toward exaggeration at moments that call for gravity. The result is a tonal imbalance that slightly undercuts the weight of the story’s final turns.

While the stage adaptation diverges in notable ways from the novel, the production stands strongest when viewed as its own interpretation rather than a strict retelling. That said, the emotional core of Oscar’s story remains intact and, by the final moments, the theatre is silent enough to hear a pin drop – a testament to the emotional weight the cast ultimately earns.

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is running in The Goodman’s Owen Theatre through April 12th. Tickets are available at https://www.goodmantheatre.org/show/the-brief-wondrous-life-of-oscar-wao/.

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

Published in Theatre in Review

Chicago theatre‑goers have one of those rare, golden weekends where three very different companies are all firing at full power—each offering a production that hits a different part of the theatrical appetite: the intimate and unsettling, the bold and idea‑driven, and the emotionally classic. Together, Morning, Noon & Night, Pot Girls, and Come Back, Little Sheba create a kind of unofficial citywide festival of what Chicago does best: fearless storytelling, muscular performances, and theatre that actually has something to say.

Shattered Globe’s Morning, Noon & Night at Theater Wit

Shattered Globe has a knack for plays that sit right on the fault line between the personal and the political, and Morning, Noon & Night is exactly that kind of pressure cooker. It’s a story about a family unraveling in real time—funny, raw, and painfully recognizable. What makes it worth your weekend:

  • Shattered Globe’s ensemble brings a lived‑in authenticity that makes the play’s emotional turns land with force.
  • Theater Wit’s intimacy means you’re close enough to feel every shift in temperature between characters.
  • The play’s themes—identity, addiction, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive—hit with contemporary urgency.

If you want theatre that feels like eavesdropping on a family at the exact moment everything changes, this is the one.

The Story Theatre’s Pot Girls at Raven Theatre

Directed by Ayanna Bria Bakari and written by Paul Michael Thomson, Pot Girls is the kind of world premiere Chicago audiences love to claim before it blows up elsewhere. It’s smart, messy, feminist, stoned, and deeply theatrical—an intertextual riff on Top Girls that stands entirely on its own.

Why it’s essential this weekend:

  • It’s a Chicago world premiere—the kind of bold, idea‑driven new work our storefront scene is known for.
  • The ensemble is electric, with performances that swing from hilarious to gut‑punching without losing momentum.
  • It’s in conversation with Raven’s Top Girls, making it a rare chance to see two plays talk to each other across stages, eras, and feminist generations.
  • Ayanna Bria Bakari’s direction keeps the play sharp, surprising, and emotionally alive.

If you want theatre that’s playful, political, and buzzing with creative energy, Pot Girls is the weekend’s must‑see.

American Blues Theater’s Come Back, Little Sheba

American Blues excels at reviving American classics with a clarity and compassion that makes them feel startlingly present. Come Back, Little Sheba is no museum piece—it’s a bruising, beautifully observed portrait of longing, regret, and the fragile hope that life might still change.

Reasons to go now:

  • American Blues’ signature naturalism gives the play a heartbreaking immediacy.
  • The production highlights the emotional intelligence of William Inge’s writing, revealing layers often lost in more traditional stagings.
  • It’s a rare chance to see a mid‑century classic performed with the nuance and psychological depth it deserves.

If you’re craving a production that’s emotionally rich and quietly devastating, this is the one that will stay with you long after curtain.

It’s a weekend that shows the full spectrum of what this city’s stages can do—new work, re‑examined classics, and intimate ensemble‑driven storytelling. If you’re the kind of theatre‑goer who likes to feel plugged into the pulse of the city, this is the weekend to lean in.

Published in Now Playing

Tin Drum Theatre Company is proud to announce the cast and creative team for the Chicago premiere of Southern Rapture at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont Ave., June 11 - 28, written by Eric Coble and directed by Jason Palmer. The preview for Southern Rapture is Thursday, June 11 at 7:30 p.m. and the opening night performance is Friday, June 12 at 7:30 p.m. The performance schedule is Thursdays - Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. Tickets are $30 with $15 student tickets and may be purchased at TinDrumTheatre.com

In the heart of the Bible Belt, a local theatre company announces it will stage a play called Rapture in America—complete with seven seconds of male nudity—sending the city into a frenzy. Based on actual events, Eric Coble's Southern Rapture turns this civic eruption into a wickedly funny satire about artistic freedom, arts funding, the weaponization of civic institutions and what happens when conviction outruns common sense.

Originally commissioned by Actor's Theatre of Charlotte, Southern Rapture draws directly from one of the city’s most explosive cultural battles. In 1996, Charlotte Repertory Theatre announced a production of Angels in America.. The district attorney attempted to bring criminal charges, however, emergency court injunctions required the show to open. “Good Morning America” broadcast a train-wreck debate, turning a local arts dispute into a national spectacle.

Eighteen months later, county commissioners retaliated by slashing $2.5 million in arts funding, destabilizing organizations across the city. Although much of that funding was later restored, the interruption sent lasting ripples through Charlotte’s artistic landscape. Charlotte Rep won the Angels battle, but the controversy produced long-term consequences that cost it the war. Amid donor fatigue, mounting financial strain and leadership turnover, the company closed permanently in 2005.

The Southern Rapture ensemble cast includes Teddy Boone (he/him, Mayor Winston Paxton), Shannon Leigh Webber (she/her, Marjorie Winthrop), Michael Stejskal (he/him, Donald Sherman), Mary Anne Bowman (she/her, Allissa Marquand, Nyla-Jean Geisy, Julia Overmyer), Jenny Hoppes (she/her, Laverne Jackson, Pam, Clarice Paxton, Tina), Jordan Gleaves (he/him, Simon Larisher, Emmett Whipple, Nightline Host, Franklin McManus) and Andrew Bosworth (he/him, Mickey Stedman, Reverend Dupree, Anton Finewitz). 

The creative team includes Steve Needham (he/him, producer), Jason Palmer (he/him, director), Teddy Boone (he/him, casting director), Emily Nicholas (she/her, stage manager), Sil Rivera (they/them, asst. stage manager/scenic asst.), Kaitlyn Hettinger (she/her, technical director/scenic designer), Kasey Wolfgang (she/her, costume designer), Ellie Fey (she/her, lighting designer/master electrician), Zach Stinnett (he/him, sound designer) and Erin Alys (she/her, intimacy/movement director).

Content notice: Southern Rapture includes a brief nude scene.

ABOUT ERIC COBLE, playwright

Eric Coble is an award-winning American playwright whose work spans sharply drawn dramas, audacious comedies, and incisive social satire. Born in Edinburgh and raised on the Navajo and Ute reservations of the American Southwest, Coble brings a distinctive blend of wit, empathy and theatrical boldness to the stage.

His plays have been produced across the United States and internationally, including on Broadway, Off-Broadway and at major regional theatres. His Broadway debut—The Velocity of Autumn, starring Estelle Parsons and Stephen Spinella—earned Parsons a Tony Award nomination. Other widely produced works include The Giver (stage adaptation), Bright IdeasMy Barking DogFairfieldThe Dead GuyNatural Selection and Southern Rapture, among many others.

Coble’s scripts have received a Jeff Award, the ATCA Steinberg New Play Award citation, the Governor’s Award for the Arts (Ohio) and multiple Edgerton New Play Awards. His work has been developed or produced by The Kennedy Center, Playwrights Horizons, Manhattan Class Company, Denver Center Theatre Company, Cleveland Play House, Alliance Theatre, Arena Stage and Actors Theatre of Louisville, among others.

Known for his sharp comic voice and his ability to illuminate the tensions and absurdities of contemporary American life, Coble continues to be a vital and provocative presence in the new-play landscape. He is a member of the Playwrights’ Center and a graduate of Ohio University’s MFA program.

ABOUT JASON PALMER, director

Jason Palmer is the co-founder and co–artistic director of Tin Drum Theatre Company, where he helps shape bold, conversation-driven work in Chicago’s storefront scene. He recently directed the 2024 world premiere of Winter Garden by Steve Needham and the 2025 Chicago premiere of Nick Payne’s Incognito.

A multi-disciplinary theatre-maker with over 30 years of experience, Palmer’s work spans directing, producing, performance, dramaturgy and design across New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Ireland. Early in his career he served as literary manager and assistant director at Gilgamesh Theater Group and assistant directed Keith Reddin’s Off-Broadway premiere of Black Snow. In Chicago, his long association with the erstwhile Bailiwick Repertory Theatre included performing, stage management and coordinating several seasons of the Bailiwick Directors’ Festival. His performance in Nicholas Patricca’s Oh Holy Allen Ginsberg at the 2006 International Dublin Gay Theatre Festival earned a Best Actor nomination and an Honorable Mention.

Palmer has also worked with the Western Region of Actors’ Equity Association and the Directors Guild of America, giving him a strong grounding in theatrical and labor structures. His technical experience includes lighting design, set construction and stage management, and he is a multiple-time Irene Ryan nominee.

As co–artistic director of Tin Drum Theatre Company, Palmer is committed to developing new work and supporting Chicago’s next generation of storefront artists.

ABOUT TIN DRUM THEATRE COMPANY

Tin Drum Theatre Company exists to disrupt complacency and reassert theatre’s civic purpose. Creating theatre that asks something of its audience, moving beyond comfort to provoke conversation and critical engagement. Tin Drum believes community begins where audiences and ideas collide, and where dramatic disturbances are created.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

Teamwork, bravery and fun are at the forefront of Splish Splash: A Day on the Lake, The Goodman's latest Theater for the Very Young (TVY) offering for theatergoers 0-5 and their adult friends and family.  Co-directed by Jamal Howard (The Lizard y El Sol) and Ellie Levine (Threshold's RAIN at Filament Theatre), this nautical adventure—recently extended through March 22—was developed in collaboration with Northwestern undergraduate students and 2- to 5-year-olds from Total Child Preschool in Evanston. Splish Splash: A Day on the Lake appears in The Goodman's Alice Center in an extended run over two more weekends: March 7, 8, 21 and 22. Splish Splash also appears at three Chicago Public Schools—Talcott Fine Arts and Museum Academy, Gregory Academy and Ruth Bader Ginsburg Elementary School—March 9-13.  For tickets ($13 adults 18+; $18 kids 12 months-17 years; under 12 months free), visit the Box Office (170 N. Dearborn), call 312.443.3800 or purchase at GoodmanTheatre.org/Splash. The Goodman is grateful for the support of Wintrust Commercial Bank (Community Programs Sponsor) and Kirkland & Ellis, LLP (Arts in Community Sponsor).

When the moon tumbles into the lake and breaks into pieces, it's up to a brave crew of young sailors to help the Great Blue Heron and their friends—Crayfish, Beaver, Turtle and Yellow Perch—put it back together again. Through songs, puppetry and joyful hands-on play, little ones and their grown-ups will dive into an underwater world of wildlife, wonder and waves. The cast includes Kylie Anderson (BOOK UP!), Sonia Goldberg (Kokandy Productions' Amélie), Tina Muñoz Pandya (The Matchbox Magic Flute) and Michael-Forest (Mikey) Walden (Refracted Theatre Company's Tambo & Bones).

Previous Goodman Theatre Theater for the Very Young productions include BOOK UP! (2025), The Lizard Y El Sol (2024) and In My Granny's Garden (2023).

Full company of Splish Splash: A Day on the Lake (in alphabetical order)

Developed in collaboration with Northwestern University's Imagine U

Co-directed by Jamal Howard and Ellie Levine

Kylie Anderson...Splash/Teaching Artist
Sonia Goldberg...Splish/Teaching Artist
Tina Muñoz Pandya...Blue Heron
Michael-Forest (Mikey) Walden...Sailor

CREATIVE TEAM

Set/Props/Costume Designer...Jillian Gryzlak 
Sound Designer...Stephen Moore 
Line Producer...Jared Bellot 
Production Associate...Jojo Wallenberg 
Production Assistant...Lauren Westfahl
Build Assistant...Ellie Terrell
Build Assistant...Kevin Rieg

Devised in collaboration with Madelyn Cantzler, Laura Fajardo-Riascos, Grace Hall, Ani Lawit, Andrew McCarthy, Kennedy Naseem, Sophie Pong, Ajayla Self and Ella Waffner.

Casting is by Lauren Port, CSA. 

ABOUT THE GOODMAN

Since 1925, The Goodman has been more than a stage. A theatrical home for artists and a gathering space for community, it's where stories come to life—bold in artistry and rich in history, deeply rooted in the city it serves.

Led by Walter Artistic Director Susan V. Booth and Executive Director John Collins, The Goodman sparks conversation, connection and change through new plays, reimagined classics and large-scale musicals. With distinctions including nearly 200 world or American premieres, two Pulitzer Prizes, 22 Tony Awards and nearly 200 Joseph Jefferson Awards, The Goodman is proud to be the first theater to produce all 10 plays of August Wilson's "American Century Cycle." In addition, the theater frequently serves as a production partner—with national and international companies to Chicago's Off-Loop theaters—to help amplify theatrical voices.

But The Goodman believes a more empathetic, more connected Chicago is created one story at a time, and counts as its greatest legacy the community it's built. Generation-spanning productions and programs offer theater for a lifetime; from Theater for the Very Young (plays designed for ages 0-5) to the long-running annual A Christmas Carol, which has introduced new generations to theater over five decades, The Goodman is committed to being an asset for all of Chicago. Education and Engagement programs led by Clifford Director of Education and Engagement Jared Bellot and housed in the Alice Rapoport Center use the tools of theater to spark imagination, reflection and belonging. Each year, these programs reach thousands of people (85% from underserved communities) as well as educators, artists and lifelong learners across the city.

The Goodman stands on the unceded homelands of the Council of the Three Fires—the Ojibwe, Odawa, and Potawatomi Nations—and acknowledges the many other Nations for whom this land now called Chicago has long been home, including the Myaamia, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Sac and Fox, Peoria, Kaskaskia, Wea, Kickapoo, and Mascouten. The Goodman is proud to partner with the Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum (Gichigamiin-Museum.org) and the Center for Native Futures (CenterForNativeFutures.org)—organizations devoted to honoring Indigenous stories, preserving cultural memory, and deepening public understanding.

The Goodman was founded by William O. Goodman and his family to honor the memory of Kenneth Sawyer Goodman—a visionary playwright whose bold ideas helped shape Chicago's early cultural renaissance. That spirit of creativity and generosity endures today. In 2000, through the commitment of Mr. Goodman's descendants—Albert Ivar Goodman and his late mother, Edith-Marie Appleton—The Goodman opened the doors to its current home in the heart of the Loop.

Marsha Cruzan is Chair of the Goodman Theatre Board of Trustees; Diane Landgren is Women's Board President; and Kelli Garcia is president of the Scenemakers Board for Young Professionals. 

TICKETS HERE

Published in Now Playing

With spot-on performances across a large cast, William Inge’s 1949 script for “Come Back, Little Sheba” is receiving a definitive production at American Blues Theater’s intimate Studio Theater. Those of us of a certain age had this work buried deep into our cultural formation by the searing film version starring Shirley Booth, who won the 1952 Oscar and a Tony for her earlier Broadway performance as Lola. 

This was my first time to see the stage version, and director Elyse Dolan goes back to Inge’s original script, which fits beautifully into this captivating 90 minute show (no intermission). The set by Shayna Patel closely tracks Inge’s intentions, right down to the telephone at the base of the stairs. Lighting by Brendan Marble and Sound Design by Thomas Dixon couple especially well in high throttle jazz interludes signaling scene changes or turning points in the plot. And those costumes (Lily Walls) were just what the playwright envisioned, right out of the end of the 1940s.

SHEBA G. Whiteside Cisco Lopez by Michael Brosilow

Cisco Lopez as the Milkman with Gwendolyn Whiteside as Lola.

Contemporary audiences may see ‘Come Back, Little Sheba” as a showcase of the reduced role of women in post-WWII society, their lives centered on homemaking and “keeping their man happy.” But it is something more, too - a portrait of two diametrically opposite personalities - Lola (Gwendolyn Whiteside is remarkable) and her husband Doc (Philip Earl Johnson is a portrait of seething restraint) - locked together in an unbalanced relationship. Inge subtly laces in the clues to their unhappiness. Doc’s ambition to complete medical school was cut short when he felt compelled to marry Lola at 18 after getting her pregnant. Her pregnancy didn’t come to term, and he quit his medical studies. Instead of a doctor he became a chiropractor, and took to the bottle.

Lola, who was a high school beauty queen, has given up caring about her looks under the withering abuse she suffered during his drinking days. But he joined AA, and has eleven months sober - but lives with an internalized rigidity while presenting a caring face to the world around him. Underneath it all, he is filled with resentment.

SHEBA Ethan Serpan Philip Earl Johnson Maya Lou Hlava G. Whiteside by Michael Brosilow

On the couch, Ethan Surpan as Turk and Maya Lou Hlava as Marie.

A shift has entered this couple's fragile homelife with the arrival of the sprightly Marie (Maya Lou Hlava is perfect in the role). This comely coed is boarding with them, studying art at the university. She has a hot jock boyfriend, Turk (Ethan Surpan is a study in self-assured youthful machismo). Marie also has another boyfriend back home, Bruce (Justin Banks), a well-paid young businessman on his way up.

Inge sends the clues through the behavior of Johnson’s Doc that he is crushing on Marie, and quite jealous of Turk. Eventually his sober resolve crumbles under his longstanding unresolved resentment - that he is not an MD, this new jealousy, and that he is stuck with Lola, who smothers him with attention and coaches him somewhat intrusively on his AA practices. It is also an early serious treatment of the AA 12-step recovery program, founded ion the 1930s. Doc's involvement in it is core the the plot and character motivation. 

Lola, for her part, expresses her longing for better days gone by with a fixation on her runaway pup Sheba. Though Sheba went missing quite a while back, Lola still dreams of her return, and periodically calls for her puppy from the porch. An eternal optimist, she is ultimately the likeable center of the action. Marie and Turk love her. To show Lola through others’ eyes, Inge gives us two other characters, Elmo the Postman (William Anthony Sebastian Rose) and Milkman (Cisco Lopez). Whiteside’s Lola is so lonely she tries almost too hard to engage them, but nevertheless, her open heart compels their empathy and she wins them over. Everyone seems to love Lola except the next door neighbor Mrs. Coffman (Joslyn Jones), who derides Lola over her unkempt house.

In the last third of the play, mayhem breaks loose, and you will be stunned, shocked and glued to your seat by the culmination of this stunning drama. As Tolstoy put it, “All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” And “Come Back, Little Sheba” shows how true this is. Highly recommended. 

“Come Back, Little Sheba” runs through March 22 at American Blues Theater in Chicago.

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

Published in Theatre in Review

FULLY COMMITTED, the one-actor tour de force comedy by Becky Mode, will play The Den Theatre March 13-28, 2026. It will be performed by Chicago actor Mike Newquist, playing nearly forty different characters. Newquist's many roles in Chicago theater include GOD OF CARNAGE with AstonRep, DESIGN FOR LIVING with Pride Films and Plays, and NICE GIRL for Raven Theatre. Derek Bertelsen, founder/artistic director of The Comrades and company member and co-artistic director for AstonRep Theatre Company, is producing and directing.

FULLY COMMITTED is a fast-paced, hilarious one-person comedy that takes audiences behind the scenes of New York's hottest restaurant. One actor brings to life nearly 40 characters—from desperate celebrities and ruthless socialites to frazzled staff —and at the center of it all, one very overworked reservationist. It's a razor-sharp satire of status, ambition, and customer service madness. This is the first time FULLY COMMITTED has been seen in Chicago in more 25 years.

FULLY COMMITTED is based on characters Becky Mode developed with actor Mark Setlock from their experiences working in New York's restaurant scene. The play was developed at the Adirondack Theatre Festival in 1998 and received its world premiere in September 1999 at the Vineyard Theatre, NYC. The production then moved to the Cherry Lane Theatre where it enjoyed a long Off-Broadway run.  In 2016, FULLY COMMITTED made its Broadway debut starring Jesse Tyler Ferguson. This production at the Den is the first time FULLY COMMITTED has been seen in Chicago in more than 25 years.
The production team for FULLY COMMITTED includes Shane Hogan (Stage Manager), Bethany Hart (Dialect and Vocal Coach), and Jeremiah Barr (Technical Director).

FULLY COMMITTED will be performed at The Den Theatre, 1331 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago, from March 13-28, 2026, with performances Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm. Tickets are $26.00 (including fees) and are on sale now at https://tickets.thedentheatre.com/event/fully-committed-7sf8qi and The Den Box Office.

LISTING INFORMATION

FULLY COMMITTED
By Becky Mode
Directed by Derek Bertelsen
March 13-28
Friday and Saturday evenings at 7:30PM
Press Opening Friday, March 13 at 7:30 pm.
The Den Theatre
1331 N Milwaukee Ave, Chicago, IL 60622
Tickets $26.00 (including fees)
Den Ticket Link: https://tickets.thedentheatre.com/event/fully-committed-7sf8qi
Website: https://www.derekbertelsen.com/fullycommitted


BIOS

Mike Newquist (Sam, all roles) is a Chicago-based actor, improvisor and cartoonist. Previously co-founder/director of communications of The Comrades (2016-2020). Theatre credits include GOD OF CARNAGE (Aston Rep), TANGO, DESIGN FOR LIVING (Pride Arts), DEAD MAN'S CELL PHONE, the world premiere of ROAST, IN THE WAKE, PRELUDE TO A KISS, Chicago premiere of MARY-KATE OLSEN IS IN LOVE (The Comrades),

(Photo by Lindsay Chan. Click on image to access high res file)

Chicago premiere of NICE GIRL (Raven Theatre), THE BRIG (Mary Arrchie), SIC TRANSIT MUNDI (Jackalope Theatre), THE MANDRAKE (Commedia Beauregard), THE WIND AND THE WILLOWS, WIZARD OF OZ, WEREWOLF'S CURSE (Theatre-Hikes). Webseries: BRUJOS, DUDES, COFFEE TALK, THE DREAMERS, ASHTRAY. Commercial: "Night Ledge" Illinois Tourism. Training: Columbia College Chicago, The Second City's Comedy Studies Program, The Green Room Studio. Check out his artwork on Instagram @newqcartoons

Becky Mode (Playwright) is a playwright, screenwriter, and television producer. Her TV work includes writing and producing on acclaimed series such as UNBELIEVABLE, FLEISHMAN IS IN TROUBLE, SMASH, GEORGE & TAMMY, and PALM ROYALE. She has also developed pilots for multiple networks and contributed to projects for Netflix, Hulu, Showtime, and Apple TV+.

Derek Bertelsen (Producer/Director) is a Chicago-based theater kid. Previously co-founder/artistic director of The Comrades (2016-2020); member and co-artistic director for AstonRep Theatre Company (2012-2023); and a founding member / artistic associate with Pride Films & Plays (2012-2015). Recent directing credits include THE PILLOWMAN, BURIED CHILD (Best Play Jeff nomination), EQUUS, THE LIEUTENANT OF INISHMORE, GOD OF CARNAGE, DOUBT, and many more with AstonRep. With The Comrades, the world premiere of ROAST, PRELUDE TO A KISS, Chicago premiere of MARY-KATE OLSEN IS IN LOVE. Also DESIGN FOR LIVING and THE CHILDREN'S HOUR with PFP. Asst. directed at Goodman Theater, Steppenwolf, and Bailiwick. Training: Second City, Chicago Filmmakers, BFA Millikin University. Regional: Festival 56 in Princeton IL; Timber Lake Playhouse in Mt Carroll IL; and Shawnee Theatre in Bloomfield IN. Short Film: Rusty Pipe.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

Lyric Opera of Chicago continues its commitment to bold, new work with the world premiere of safronia, a landmark musical composition commissioned from Chicago’s first Poet Laureate, the interdisciplinary artist avery r. young. Presented for two performances, April 17 & 18, 2026, at the Lyric Opera House, safronia is an American story told through blues, gospel, and funk that places the Great Migration centerstage.

Part family saga, part American reckoning, safronia follows the booker family as they journey from the North back to their Mississippi hometown to lay their father’s ashes on land they were forced from. What begins as a burial ignites a volatile confrontation with memory, inheritance, and the unfinished business of history. Blending folklore, poetry, and gospel-rooted sound with Lyric's orchestral sweep, young crafts a work at once intimate and seismic. It is a Chicago-born story that speaks to the nation.

A Chicago story. An American reckoning.

Between 1910 and 1970, millions of Black families left the South in the Great Migration, reshaping cities like Chicago and redefining the nation’s cultural and political landscape. In safronia, that history is not the backdrop — it is the heartbeat.

The booker family once built something of their own. When that foundation is stripped away from under their feet, they join the tide of those heading North. Years later, they return to Mississippi not only to bury patriarch baar jacob booker, but to face the forces that drove them away.

At the center stands safronia booker, baar’s youngest daughter — fiercely loyal, sharp-witted, and unwilling to surrender what her father fought to claim. Around her gather magnolia, the family’s steady matriarch; king willie tate, determined to secure dignity in the North; and the town that has never forgotten the bookers’ claim to the land.

Through pride, humor, anger, faith, and music, safronia asks: What does it mean to return home? What is owed? And who decides what belongs?

A new opera with Sunday service energy

From the beginning, young set out to expand the definition of classical music.  

"This would not be ‘chocolate-covered Mozart,’" says young.

"The music Black people made in this country is American classical music," says young. "In safronia, those traditions — gospel hymns, blues progressions, funk rhythms, and the layered call-and-response of the Black church — are not softened or translated. They are the foundation."

With safronia, young reshapes the operatic experience and expands the operatic vocabulary, positioning Black musical traditions not at the margins of the art form, but at its core.

Clapping, snapping, percussive movement, and rhythmic vocal textures are embedded into the score and built into the performance. The energy of a Sunday service informs the structure of the work. The opera house becomes a participatory space. Audiences do not simply observe and witness; they move with the story.

avery r. young: An artist expanding what American opera can be

Selected in 2023 as Chicago’s first Poet Laureate from more than 1,300 applicants, avery r. young is a 3Arts Awardee — a distinction recognizing significant contributions to Chicago’s cultural life — and a Cave Canem Fellow, part of the nationally respected organization supporting Black poets. A composer, producer, educator, and co-director of the interdisciplinary arts collective Floating Museum, young works across poetry, music, performance, visual art, and sound design. His writing appears in The BreakBeat PoetsPoetry magazine, and alongside Cecil McDonald Jr.’s photography in In the Company of Black. He tours nationally with his band, de deacon board.

young first collaborated with Lyric in 2021 on Twilight: Gods (2020/21), a drive-through reimagining of Wagner’s Ring cycle conceived and directed by Yuval Sharon. For this ambitious, pandemic-era production staged in a Chicago parking garage, young wrote and performed poetic transitions that reframed Wagner’s epic through a distinctly Chicago lens. Following that project’s success, Lyric invited young to imagine a work of his own for the stage.

With safronia, young returns as composer, librettist, and performer in his first full-length operatic creation. Drawing on his own family’s Great Migration story and the musical traditions of Chicago’s West Side, young delivers a work that speaks locally and nationally at once.

The voices that bring safronia to life: a cast of national distinction

Composer and librettist avery r. young performs the role of baar jacob booker, the family patriarch whose presence anchors the work both in life and in memory.

Chicago-born singer-songwriter Meagan McNeal makes her Lyric debut in the title role of safronia booker. Known for collaborations with Makaya McCraven, Common, The O’Jays, Eminem, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, McNeal reached national audiences on NBC’s The Voice, where she worked alongside Jennifer Hudson.

Award-winning vocalist and actor Maiesha McQueen makes her Lyric debut as magnolia booker, the family’s regal matriarch. Her career spans Broadway and major regional theaters, including Waitress on Broadway and the national tour of Come From Away. Regionally, she portrayed Celie in The Color Purple at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts and Mahalia Jackson in Mahalia!.

Joseph Jefferson Award-winning performer Lorenzo Rush, Jr. appears as king willie tate, safronia’s husband and a man determined to build stability and dignity for his family in the North. A familiar presence on Chicago stages, Rush has performed at Marriott Theatre, Paramount Theatre, Porchlight Music Theatre, Drury Lane Theatre, Goodman Theatre, and Court Theatre. He is a Jeff Award recipient for Ain’t Misbehavin’Five Guys Named Moe, and Sophisticated Ladies. His television credits include Chicago Fire and Fargo.

Jeff Parker returns to Lyric as bossman. Parker previously appeared at Lyric as Arne Duncan in The Walkers from Proximity (2022/23) and has performed at nearly every major Chicago theater, including Goodman, Steppenwolf, and Chicago Shakespeare Theater.

Grammy Award–winning bass-baritone Zachary James makes his Lyric debut as cholly, following performances with the Metropolitan Opera, English National Opera, and major houses across Europe and the United States. He was also recently seen in Jesus Christ Superstar at the Hollywood Bowl. James brings formidable presence to this layered role.

The ensemble includes Jessica SealsSydney CharlesMiciah LathanKendal Marie WilsonMaxel McCloud Schingen, and Bailey Haynes, all making their Lyric debuts, alongside Eric Andrew Lewis, who returns to Lyric after appearing in Jesus Christ Superstar (2017/18).

Musically, safronia brings together the Lyric Opera Orchestra with members of avery r. young’s blues and funk ensemble, de deacon board. In addition to strings, winds, and brass, the score incorporates electric bass, organ, and harmonica — performed by three-time Grammy nominee and Blues Hall of Fame inductee Billy Branch — as well as keyboards by Chicago jazz pianist Theodis Rodgers Jr., who served as music director for Curtis Mayfield. The result is a sound that moves fluidly between operatic writing and the pulse of the Black church and juke joint.

A creative team built for new work

For a world premiere of this magnitude, safronia brings together a creative team fluent in new work, fearless storytelling, and music that lives at the crossroads of tradition and innovation.

safronia is directed by Timothy Douglas in his Lyric debut following more than 150 productions nationwide, including the world premiere of Jasmine Barnes and Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton’s She Who Dared at Chicago Opera Theater. Douglas has created new productions for companies including Boston Lyric Opera and New Orleans Opera. Widely respected for staging works that fuse intimacy with scale, he is known for excavating the emotional core of new pieces and shaping them into theatrically urgent events.

Conductor Paul Byssainthe, Jr., in his Lyric debut, bridges sacred, classical, and theatrical traditions with uncommon authority. He currently serves as Associate Music Director for the Broadway revival of Ragtime at Lincoln Center Theater and previously led Goddess, the Kenya-set Afro-jazz musical at The Public Theater, as well as the Broadway revival of The Wiz.

The creative team includes costume designer Jessica Jahn, returning to Lyric following Blue (2024/25) and West Side Story (productions in 2019 and 2023); lighting designer Jason Lynch; video designer VAM Studio, an award-winning Chicago-based collective known for community-centered visual storytelling; and choreographer Kia Smith, founder of South Chicago Dance Theatre — all making their Lyric debuts.

Together, this team does more than mount a premiere — they build a world.

Continuing Lyric’s investment in the future of opera

With safronia, Lyric makes a bold statement about the future of the art form. These two performances represent a five-year investment in the development of a new American work — commissioned by Lyric, conceived in conversation, cultivated through collaboration, and brought to the mainstage with the full force of the company behind it.

In recent seasons, Lyric has accelerated its commitment to expanding the canon through ambitious contemporary projects including Proximity (2022/23) — featuring The Walkers by Daniel Bernard Roumain and Anna Deavere Smith, Four Portraits by Caroline Shaw and Jocelyn Clarke, and Night by John Luther Adams and John Haines — as well as Will Liverman and DJ King Rico’s The Factotum (2022/23), a reinvention of Rossini set on Chicago’s South Side, and the site-specific Twilight: Gods (2020/21). Each signaled a company willing to challenge assumptions about what opera is, who it serves, and whose stories command its grandest stages.

safronia builds on that momentum at an even greater scale. Developed over half a decade, the work reflects Lyric’s long-term strategy to commission, nurture, and premiere operas that speak directly to the American experience. By investing deeply — artistically, financially, and institutionally — in new voices and new forms, Lyric positions itself not simply as a presenter of the repertoire, but as an architect of its future.

In bringing safronia to life, Lyric asserts that American opera is not a distant tradition to be inherited. It is a living form to be shaped — here, now, and on its mainstage.

Two performances only:

  • Friday, April 17, 2026 at 7:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, April 18, 2026 at 7:30 p.m.


Language: Sung in English, with projected English titles above the stage.

Running time: Approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes, including one intermission.

Exhibition: The Art of CulturePresented March 2 – April 18, 2026 in Lyric’s Grand Foyer and Mezzanine, in celebration of Lyric's performances of Madama ButterflyEl último sueño de Frida y Diego, and safronia, this six-week exhibition highlights the traditions and artistic legacies of Japanese, Mexican, and African American cultures. The Art of Culture features an exploration of Japan’s historic Geisha culture, visual artwork by Mexican American artists, and selections from Vanessa Charlot’s Down in the Delta, a photographic journey through the Deep South inspired by the Great Migration. Community partners include the Japanese Cultural Center, the National Museum of Mexican Art, and photographer, filmmaker, and scholar Vanessa Charlot. The exhibition is free to all ticketholders.

Pre-performance talks: Ticketholders are invited to a free pre-opera talk presented by Vanessa Charlot, 2025 Crossroads Arts Fellow and faculty member at the University of Mississippi, whose work is also featured in The Art of Culture. Talks begin one hour before each performance in the theater’s Steiner Parquet (main floor).

Accessibility: Braille and large-print programs, high-powered opera glasses, assistive listening devices, and booster seats are available from the theater’s Steiner Parquet coat checks at all performances. For more information on accessibility services, visit lyricopera.org/accessibility.

Location: Lyric Opera House, 20 N. Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois.

For more information and tickets, visit lyricopera.org/safronia or call 312.827.5600.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

The Auditorium (Chicago's landmark stage at 50 E. Ida B. Wells Drive) presents Bat Out Of Hell – The Musical direct from London's West End. Featuring the timeless music of Jim Steinman and Meat Loaf, this electrifying production is full of rock 'n' roll favorites. The one night only presentation is Thursday, April 9, 2026 at 7:30 PM at The Auditorium, 50 E Ia B Wells Dr. Tickets go on sale on Friday, January 30 at 9:00 AM and will be available at auditoriumtheatre.org or by calling The Auditorium's Ticket Service Center at 312.341.2300.

Featuring some of the most iconic rock songs ever recorded, Bat Out Of Hell – The Musical boasts an epic world class cast of singers, dancers, actors, accompanied by a dynamic eight-piece rock band. As the Lost boys and girls flee into the tunnels below the city from its ruler Falco, his teenage daughter Raven locks eyes with fearless leader of the Lost, the immortal Strat, and the immensity of their love-at-first-sight-obsessions threaten to destroy both of their families.

Bat Out Of Hell became one of the best-selling albums in history, selling over 68 million copies worldwide. 16 years after the release of the original album, Steinman scored again with Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell, which contained the massive hit I Would Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That). For the stage musical, the legendary and award-winning Jim Steinman incorporated iconic songs from the Bat Out of Hell albums, including You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth, Bat Out of Hell, I Would Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That), It's All Coming Back to Me, and Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad, as well as the previously unreleased song What Part of My Body Hurts the Most.

Bat Out Of Hell - The Musical has book, music and lyrics by Jim Steinman, direction by Jay Scheib, with musical supervision and additional arrangements by Michael Reed, additional choreography by Xena Gusthart, set and costume design by Jon Bausor, original wig designs by Linda McKnight, video design by Finn Ross, lighting design by Patrick Woodroffe, sound design by Gareth Owen, orchestrations by Steve Sidwell, original casting by David Grindrod CDG, North American Tour Casting by Kinlore Casting – Kate Lumpkin, CSA, Associate Director Alli Coyne, and General Management by Evan Bernardin Productions – Jenna Lazar. Bat Out of Hell – The Musical won the UK'S Radio 2 Audience Award for Best Musical at the Evening Standard Awards and was nominated for 8 LONDON WhatsOnStage Awards, including Best New Musical. Loved by audiences and critics alike, it garnered 5 stars from the UK's The IndependentDaily MirrorDaily ExpressManchester Evening NewsMetro, while the New York Times called it 'extravagant, absurd, compulsively hummable." Bat Out Of Hell -The Musical has played limited seasons at Manchester Opera House, London Coliseum, London's Dominion Theatre, Toronto's CAA Ed Mirvish Theatre and New York City Center with successful runs in Canada, Germany, a residency in Las Vegas and the international tour which took the show to the UK, Ireland, Germany, Australia and New Zealand.

The Canadian and US dates of Bat Out Of Hell – The Musical, are produced by Emmy and Tony Award winner Michael Cohl, CEO of S2BN Entertainment and the former Chairman of Live Nation, Tony Smith & David Sonenberg with executive producers Glenn Orsher and Julian Stoneman. For more information about the show, visit BatOutOfHellMusical.com.

About The Auditorium

The Auditorium, located at 50 E. Ida B. Wells Drive in Chicago, is an Illinois not-for-profit organization committed to presenting the finest in international, cultural, community, and educational programming to all of Chicago and beyond as The Theatre for the People. The organization also is committed to the continued restoration and preservation of this National Historic Landmark that originally opened in 1889. The Auditorium's 2025-26 performance season features a dynamic mix of cultural events from ballet to rock and roll and everything in between. For more information on The Auditorium and a complete listing of events at The Auditorium please visit AuditoriumTheatre.org.

Published in Upcoming Theatre
Page 1 of 4

 

         20 Years and counting!

Register

     

Latest Articles

Guests Online

We have 990 guests and no members online

Buzz Chicago on Facebook Buzz Chicago on Twitter 

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

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