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  • Review , Stages , Theater

David Cale at Goodman Theatre: Lyrical Storytelling and Songs That Feel Like Poetry

Writer/composer/performer David Cale spent a great deal of his childhood looking for places to escape to, which was not always easy since he rarely left the his family’s modest property […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • September 26, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    White Rabbits and Purple Lines: Upended Productions’ Inventive Alice Turns Evanston into Wonderland

    This remount of Upended’s multi-disciplinary “walking tour” takes audiences on a 90-minute adventure throughout the Main-Dempster neighborhood of Evanston, and recreates various moments from Lewis Carroll’s beloved Alice stories. Fusing […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • September 26, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Review: These Shining Lives Gets Lost in the Moment at Three Crows Theatre

    I love fantasy worlds, fairy tales and impossible things coming to life in the media I consume. I’m a fan of exploring worlds unlike our own, where magical things can take […]

  • Marielle Bokor
  • September 23, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Pirandello’s Naked at Trap Door: The Tragedy of a Woman Whose Fate Is in Her Own Hands

    It’s Rome in 1922. In his play Naked, Luigi Pirandello, the Nobel Prize-winning author, concocts a puzzling tangle of death and passion. Directed by Kay Martinovich, Naked is now on stage […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • September 22, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Shaw’s Wit Shines Through the Silliness in City Lit’s Arms and the Man

    City Lit Theater’s new production of George Bernard Shaw’s 1894 play, Arms and the Man, takes full advantage of its broad humor. Perhaps Shaw’s most frothy script, director Brian Pastor directs […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • September 19, 2018
    • Classical , Music , Review

    Review: Music of the Baroque Wowed on Saturday Night

    Leave it to Jane Glover and her fairly small orchestra and chorus to give a gargantuan performance of a classical music leviathan to a sold out crowd on Saturday night. […]

  • Louis Harris
  • September 18, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Persuasive Xenophobia Finds Voice in BigMouth at Chicago Shakes

    Critics Kimzyn Campbell and Karin McKie jointly review BigMouth, running at Chicago Shakespeare Theater through September 22. Ticket discounts are available when two or more “Big in Belgium” shows are […]

  • Karin McKie
  • September 15, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Review: Tres Bandidos Reaches for the Sky and Hits the Mark

    If you’re familiar with the concept of a bottle episode of a TV show, you might also know how notoriously difficult they can be for writers. Bottle episodes keep a […]

  • Marielle Bokor
  • September 5, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    A Shayna Maidel at Timeline Theatre: A Timely History Play Full of Ghosts and Terrors

    The Holocaust. Armenia. Cambodia. Darfur. Bosnia. Rwanda. South Sudan. Native Americans. Rohingya. Whether or not you had family or ancestors in those hellish genocides, you may find it hard to […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • August 31, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Stage Shorts: Four Plays About the AIDS Crisis, Greek Tragedy, Missionaries and Swordplay in Skirts

    Holding the Man Dramatizes True Story of Australian Actor’s Life With HIV Holding the Man, based on Timothy Conigrave’s memoir of the same name, tells the heartbreaking life story of the Australian […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • August 13, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Review: Manual Cinema Creates The End of TV, a Magical Performance with Actors, Puppets and Retro Tech

    Every once in a while you get to see a work of theater that seems as if it could reinvent the form. Manual Cinema is a Chicago-based company that has […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • July 27, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Bus Stop at Eclipse Theatre: William Inge’s Road Story Lacks Energy

    Playwright William Inge is considered a quintessential midwestern writer. Born in Kansas, he worked in Kansas and Missouri, and died (by suicide) in Hollywood. His 1955 play Bus Stop is one […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • July 22, 2018
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