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  • Review , Stages , Theater

Mercury Theater’s Avenue Q Remount a Welcome Return for 2018

Since it first premiered in 2003, the hot-button topics of the puppet-based musical, Avenue Q, seem to have only become hotter and hotter. Racism, homophobia, even post-graduate, millennial strife seem […]

  • Brent Eickhoff
  • July 4, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Stage Shorts: Four Plays About Memory, Love and Disaster at Eclectic, Cuckoo’s and Pride

    Welcome to Stage Shorts, our feature that highlights current plays at Chicago’s storefront theaters. It’s our way of covering more of Chicago’s theatrical productions and giving you more choices in […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • June 24, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Monty Cole’s Direction of Hamlet at the Gift Theatre Focuses on the Power of Language

    Sometimes you see a familiar play, one that you’ve seen many times, and it gains new power because of the casting and staging or the mood created by the director. […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • June 20, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Goodman Theatre’s Father Comes Home from the Wars: an American Epic

    Inspired by the tales of Homer, Suzan-Lori Parks’ Father Comes Home from the Wars (Parts 1, 2, and 3) explores issues of loyalty and freedom during the Civil War. The […]

  • Brent Eickhoff
  • June 18, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    AstonRep’s The Laramie Project Is a Stirring 20th Anniversary of Matthew Shepard’s Death

    This is the 20th anniversary of Matthew Shepard’s death at the hands of two young thugs in Laramie, Wyoming. There was a great outpouring of sympathy and support for Shepard […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • June 17, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Guards at the Taj Remounts Acclaimed New York Production for Steppenwolf Theatre

    Amy Morton, the legendary Steppenwolf Ensemble member known for her work as both actor and director, brings her staging of Rajiv Joseph’s off-Broadway smash hit to Chicago, complete with original […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • June 15, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    20,000 Leagues Under the Seas Adapts the Classic Tale for the Lookingglass Stage

    Professor Arronax (Kasey Foster), expert of all things oceanic, has been brought aboard a US Naval Vessel to aide in the search for an elusive killer of ships– is it […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • June 12, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Review: Burnham’s Dream Never Takes Flight at Theater Wit

    Burnham’s Dream by Lost and Found Productions is a musical about one of the most iconic times in Chicago history. Only 22 years after the Chicago Fire, the city was on […]

  • Marielle Bokor
  • June 11, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    At Victory Gardens, Mies Julie Scorches With the Tensions of Another Racist Culture

    Mies Julie is a scorchingly sexy, shockingly violent adaptation of August Strindberg’s Miss Julie, transported from 1888 Sweden to 2012 South Africa. Incidents that may or may not happen offstage […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • June 5, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    The Wizard of Oz at Chicago Theatre Can’t Quite Catch Movie Magic

    Based on the 1939 MGM Classic of the same name, The Wizard of Oz attempts to adapt the tale of one Kansas kid’s quest to find the titular mage for the […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • May 11, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    Chicago Shakespeare Brings Proper Prestidigitation to Macbeth

    J.R.R. Tolkien often railed against the supernatural in Shakespeare despite appropriating many of the tropes in his own work (the Lord of the Rings’ Ents were a counterpunch referencing Birnam […]

  • Karin McKie
  • May 9, 2018
    • Review , Stages , Theater

    In Wake of Recent Tragedies, The Yard Shines With Brutal, Brilliant Columbinus

    Columbinus, directed by Mechelle Moe as part of Steppenwolf’s LookOut series, is a must-see production, insomuch as words on the internet cannot do it justice. I read this script a […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • May 8, 2018
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