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Displaying items by tag: Greenhouse Theatre

When the days are short, and an east coast rodent tries to convince the US they can predict the weather, it’s easy to succumb to the winter blues. The winter season is long, and couple it with bouts of snow and ICE it’s no wonder Chicagoans look for levity and comfort to get them through the darkest of days. Fortunately, Chicago Theatre Week is here to offer a reprieve from the cold and drudgery of the season, and there’s no better way for you to push away those seasonal blues than with a modern spin on an old and familiar classic: Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors is a Bram-new comedy that’s perfect for audiences of all blood types.

In the treacherous mountains of Transylvania, a meek English real estate agent takes a harrowing journey to meet a new and mysterious client, who also just happens to be the most terrifying and ferocious monster the world has ever known: Count Dracula! As famed female vampire hunter Jean Van Helsing and company chase Drac from Transylvania to the British countryside to London and back, their antics are guaranteed to increase your pulse and cause bloodcurdling screams—of laughter.

Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors is refreshingly unserious. While it is loosely based on the classic novel Dracula by Bram Stoker, you have to squint in this production to see the parallels. It’s neither a retelling nor a reimagining. Rather, it’s a light, frothy, funny, and completely hilarious story dripping with as many sexual innuendos and double entendres as high-brow puns. “Since he first appeared on the page, Dracula has embodied a culture panicking about sex, desire, and what the unknown might bring,” says Director Matthew Masino. “As we look at our world today, we see familiar anxieties resurfacing. Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors meets this moment not with solemnity, but with laughter.” You won’t find deep truths about the human condition or delve into the dichotomy of mortality and immortality, but it doesn’t strive to do so. What if Dracula were bi-curious? What if he sought an eternal love while also seeking to diversify his portfolio with real estate? Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors won’t answer those questions or anything of the sort. Instead, the small but mighty ensemble cast of The Lazy Susan Theatre Co ask you to suspend your disbelief and your gravitas at the door and invite you to sip a boozy Capri Sun through a blood bag and enjoy a completely hilarious story, exceptionally well-acted and well-staged. Is there really anything else you need to enjoy an evening of theatre?

Sometimes we need to be reminded that not everything needs to be taken so seriously. No, you don’t have to answer that email after hours. And no, you don’t have to stay woke all the time. Though I did learn it’s a good thing to know your blood type, if only to know what to write on the blood bag you will be sipping from. That’s a seriously unserious thing to do. And so is seeing this play. Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors runs through February 22nd, Thursday through Saturday at The Greenhouse Theatre Center (2257 N Lincoln Ave, Lincoln Park, Chicago). The show runs for 1.5 hours with no intermission. Tickets are available at www.lazysusantheatreco.com.

Published in Theatre
Monday, 09 May 2016 13:40

Little Shop of Horrors Makes You Feel Good

Once in awhile a musical comes around so weird that you have to see it to understand it. Based on a 1960 b-movie of the same name, "Little Shop or Horrors" tells the story of a man-eating plant raised by a nerdy guy working in a flower shop. Legendary composers Alan Menken and Howard Ashman collaborated on a musical version of it as a tribute to 60s rock 'n roll and drive-in movies. It started as an Off-Off Broadway show in 1982 and then transitioned to the Off-Broadway Orpheum Theatre, where it ran for five years.  The film version followed in 1986 and is considered one of the best movie musicals ever made.

 

It's no surprise American Blues Theater had to extend their production by popular demand. Jonathan Berry directs an excellent "Little Shop of Horrors" for American Blues Theater with musical direction by Austin Cook. From the get-go, audiences will find themselves caught in the tentacles of this plant tale. Real-life married couple Michael Mahler and Dara Cameron play Seymour and Audrey. Both have incredible voices and make these characters their own. The result is very charming. The stoop urchins: Chiffon, Ronette and Crystal (aptly named after the girl groups they sing in the style of) are so good they may even outshine the plant. Camille Robinson, Jasondra Johnson and Eunice Woods crush their roles as the doo-wop Greek chorus. It seems like these three fantastic voices are having a blast working together. That said, the voice of the man-eating plant, Audrey II, provided by Lorenzo Rush Jr is really powerful, with a contagious evil laugh.

 

Despite the strong talent on the stage and in the pit, this "Little Shop of Horrors" further succeeds in its well designed set by Grant Sabin. This show requires a good puppet master. Sarah E Ross' Audrey II puppets are awesome. The puppet creates some of the best laughs of the evening, especially in the finale.

 

Like "Rocky Horror", and "Grease" - the music of "Little Shop of Horrors" makes you feel good. The team behind this musical was also responsible for Disney's string of critically acclaimed animated musicals like "The Little Mermaid" and "Beauty and the Beast."  "Little Shop of Horrors" at America Blues Theater is a show you'd have to be a mean, green, mother not to enjoy. (John Accrocco)

 

Through June 26th at The Greenhouse Theatre. 2257 N Lincoln Ave. 773-404-7336

Published in Theatre in Review

“Picasso at the Lapin Agile” is a charming “what if” story that has twentieth century groundbreakers Albert Einstein and Pablo Picasso unexpectedly meeting at a bar in 1904. Set in Paris, France at the Lapin Agile, both men are on the brink of remarkable ideas – Picasso just a few years away from his famous Les Demoiselles d’Avignon and Einstein months away from publishing his revolutionary theory of relativity. Both men are also very confident in their genius and competitive in gathering attention for their intellect.  

Written by Steve Martin in 1993, “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” debuted at Chicago’s Steppenwolf on October 13th of the same year following a brief workshop of the play in Melbourne, Australia. There are plenty of laughs as Einstein tries to impress the bar patrons with his wayward predictions of the future such as the automobile being a fad, or France becoming the superpower of the twentieth century while Germany becomes the voice for peace.

At one point, Picasso, quite the ladies’ man and not one to be pushed out of the spotlight - especially in front of one of his lovers, challenges Einstein to a drawing duel, creating a scene that is preposterously funny and really shows the boyish competitiveness in each of them. It takes many an intriguing debate or perceptive musing before the two fianlly realize that their contributions to the human race are equally valuable. Interestingly enough, Martin makes a weighty statement on how the contributions of these great difference makers of the twentieth century are remembered by most as Einstein and Picasso meet Elvis towards the end. As the three look to the heavens and see their names in the stars, Elvis points out, “There’s my name. Above both of yours and three times as big.”

The play is filled with interesting characters. Outside of Einstein and Picasso, we have a bartender, Freddy, who now and then surprises all with a profound statement of his own. We also have an idealistic barmaid, Germaine, Picasso’s art dealer, an inventor and a few regular patrons at the bar to which Einstein is often found attempting to break down his theories in a much simpler language in order for them to understand.

Superbly directed by Josh Anderson, the Organic Theatre Company’s current production of “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” at Greenhouse Theatre is an insightful piece that is both imaginative and funny. Joel Moses is wonderful as Einstein and Anthony Perrella Jr. is equal to the task as Picasso, together providing just the right touch of parodic humor to each character while keeping an appropriate tribute in place.      

The highly amusing “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” is being performed at Greenhouse Theatre through June 26th.  For tickets and/or more show information visit www.greenhousetheatre.org.   

Published in Theatre in Review

 

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