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Lawrence Bommer
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Theater Review: WHISPER HOUSE (Black Button Eyes Productions at The Athenaeum Theatre)
A LIGHTHOUSE SPILLS ITS SECRETS Isolation forces intimacy on its inhabitants, if only by its process of elimination. It can also foster secrets: Scattered souls protect their privacy by keeping stuff to themselves. In The Secret Garden or The Turn of the Screw what’s hidden must out — to respectively good and evil ends. This strategic formula works in Whisper…
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Theater Review: DANCE NATION (Steppenwolf)
DANCING AROUND ADOLESCENCE It happened with You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown, that peculiar, often cloying, problem of adult actors playing unfledged kids. There’s an unavoidable condescension that’s not lost on grown-ups — even less so with young folks — when performers stoop to be small. But sometimes, as with Clare Barron’s 2017 Dance Nation (a Pulitzer…
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Theater Review: BURNING BLUEBEARD (The Ruffians at Ruth Page Center for the Arts)
ASHES TO THEATER It’s the spectacle that keeps on giving: No longer sprawling the width of the Neo Futurarium’s stretched-out stage or concentrated in Theater Wit’s proscenium hall, The Ruffians’ superb 100-minute Burning Bluebeard has now taken its glorious, dream-like make-believe and contagious magic realism to the Ruth Page Center for the Arts — in…
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Theater Review: IRVING BERLIN’S WHITE CHRISTMAS (National Tour)
LET THEM SING AND WE’RE HAPPY Given the daylight deprivation that comes with December, music works like light to dispel the darkness. This musical couldn’t be brighter: White Christmas, of course, salutes the similarly named 1954 film that itself builds on the 1944 delight Holiday Inn, the film that in the middle of a war premiered the…
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Theater Review: THE CHRISTMAS FOUNDLING (Pride Films and Plays in Chicago)
A GOLD RUSH NATIVITY You could call it a second coming of Christmas from our Golden West. Delivered with the grit and gusto of 19th century raconteur Bret Harte, The Christmas Foundling is a likable tale from the California Gold Rush, specifically a late-blooming nativity on Christmas Eve. Norman Allen’s 2001 period piece, now warmed up by directors…
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Theater Review: AN UNFORGETTABLE NAT KING COLE CHRISTMAS (Mercury Theater Chicago)
A MELLOW YULE Back in the day velvet-toned Nat King Cole practically owned Christmas. His TV specials were characterized by what his recreator Evan Tyrone Martin calls “bold simplicity.” His trademark was his famously smoky voice (ironic because he died at 45 of lung cancer). Nat King Cole made inroads where mainly white performers had…
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Theater Review: COLD TOWN/HOTLINE: A CHICAGO HOLIDAY STORY (Raven Theatre)
A WELL-MEANING YULE CONFECTION THAT’S A BIT DIFFICULT TO SWALLOW For dogged seekers of sentimentality for whom The Gift of the Magi or It’s A Wonderful Life are insufficient tinsel treacle, help is on the way! You will love Raven Theatre’s unashamedly heartwarming, aggressively feel-good Cold Town/Hotline: A Chicago Holiday Story. An 80-minute world premiere written and directed by Eli Newell, this…
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Theater Review: AMERICA’S BEST OUTCAST TOY (Pride Films & Plays)
ODDBALL OUTCASTS It pays homage to the goofy compassion exhibited by claymation holiday specials, especially the iconic classic where the inhabitants of the Island of Misfit Toys are rescued by Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Now a world premiere musical by Pride Films and Plays staged by director/choreographer Donterrio Johnson, America’s Best Outcast Toy — An…
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Theater Review: ‘TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE (Cirque du Soleil in Chicago and New York)
CHRISTMAS AS A CIRCUS There’s a beloved poem behind these multiple circus acts in one act: Clement Moore was never that fond of his famous 1837 poem A Visit from Saint Nicholas (better known as ’Twas the Night Before Christmas). Written in a jog-trotting anapestic tetrameter, the now-treasured verse was for its author a mere…
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Theater Review: A CHRISTMAS CAROL (Goodman)
REAPPRAISING A CASH COW Consider this a kind of conditional mea culpa: In past reviews of Goodman Theatre’s A Christmas Carol, I’ve faulted the production’s trivialization of Charles Dickens’ 1847 ghost story, a tale intended to scare Victorian readers into avoiding the ugly life and dire fate of Ebenezer Scrooge. Rather than deal with a contemptible,…
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Theater Review: LINDIWE (Steppenwolf)
THE PLOT THIN-ENS Can lightning strike thrice? Over two decades later, it’s happened again — a third collaboration between author/director Eric Simonson and the world-famous, nine-member Ladysmith Black Mambazo. Like The Song of Jacob Zulu in 1992 and Nomathemba in 1996, Steppenwolf Theatre Company’s world premiere Lindiwe, co-directed with Jonathan Berry, is imbued with the ensemble’s seamless a…
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Theater Review: WAITING FOR GODOT (Dennis ZaÄek Productions at Victory Gardens in Chicago)
DÉJí€ VU MEETS GROUNDHOG DAY “Birth was the death of him”: Terse to the point of cruelty, Samuel Beckett devours the human experience in six words, repeatedly juxtaposing graves with cradles. Waiting for Godot, his minimalist masterpiece, takes nearly three hours for the same result. But Beckett succeeds in his life-long task — to “find the…
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Opera Review: EVEREST & ALEKO (Chicago Opera Theater at the Harris Theater)
CHICAGO OPERA THEATER UPS THE ANTE AND PUSHES THE LIMITS The bad news: Everest and Aleko, Chicago Opera Theater’s engrossing double bill at Millennium Park’s Harris Theatre, closes this weekend. The good news: This dynamic duo more than earns a review of record. Enterprisingly mounted by a boundary-breaching company and featuring a massive chorus and orchestra and eight soaring…
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Theater Review: RUTHERFORD AND SON (TimeLine)
AN EDWARDIAN WAKE-UP CALL You can’t keep a good play down. Produced under the pseudonym of K.G. Sowerby, the Edwardian drama Rutherford and Son was a huge hit in 1912 — until the playwright was later revealed as a woman, Githa Sowerby. Perhaps due to male resentment of the play’s depiction of a brutish dad, it disappeared…
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Theater Review: PACKING (About Face Theatre at Theater Wit in Chicago)
PICKED, PECKED, AND PACKED Some solo shows can be valued simply for their superb simulations of someone else’s story. Others succeed because we pay extra special attention when the chronicler actually experienced what they’re sharing. Packing, an About Face Theatre world premiere by and from Chicago theater artist Scott Bradley, has the best of both…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE STEADFAST TIN SOLDIER (Lookingglass)
HE’S BACK ON DUTY It’s now become a holiday classic, Mary Zimmerman’s gorgeous The Steadfast Tin Soldier at Lookingglass Theatre. It was glorious last year. It’s lost no luster since. In only one fantasy-rich hour this superb illusionist, the toast of Lookingglass and Goodman theaters and the Metropolitan Opera, distills all the warm worth out…
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Theater Review: HOODOO LOVE (Raven Theatre in Chicago)
A SHOW THAT CASTS A SPELL Whether it really works or it’s just self-fulfilling wishful thinking, magic can misfire. Detailing a downhome tragedy set in Memphis during the Depression, Hoodoo Love, Katori Hall’s 2007 musical drama tells a sad and simple story of thwarted and twisted passion so strong it needs the blues to chronicle…
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Theater Review: THE OTHER CINDERELLA (Black Ensemble Theater in Chicago)
IT WOULD BE A CIN TO MISS THIS Forty-three years ago, the Black Ensemble Theater produced their first and most definitive musical, a promissory note that’s been richly redeemed over five decades. Just as The Wiz opened up a childhood classic to even more make-believe, in 1976 –and now–The Other Cinderella represented playful revisionism in action. Created, composed…
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Theater Review: N (Greenhouse Theatre Center & GLP Productions in Chicago)
THE HURT OF HATE Dirty laundry demands an airing. Given the disunion afflicting our republic, a play like N (short for the “N word”) has healing to share. A provocative world premiere by Chicago writer David Alex at the Greenhouse Theater Center, this 100-minute character piece stirs up the sometimes static tale of an evolving relationship between…
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Theater Review: THE MERCHANT OF VENICE (Invictus Theatre Co. in Chicago)
HATE CRIMES ROCK A SUBVERSIVE COMEDY This show can never be nice: Along with The Taming of the Shrew, a comedy built squarely on misogyny, The Merchant of Venice, a tragicomedy festering with anti-Semitism, remains the Bard’s most problematic play. But Shakespeare wrote it. Felt from all sides, there’s humanity to spare. Truth overcomes prejudice as an…
Concert Review: AN EVENING WITH LAURA BENANTI (Kaufmann Concert Hall, 92NY)
by Rob Lester | February 5, 2026
in Concerts / Events, New YorkTheater Review: CONFEDERATES (Redtwist Theatre)
by Croydon Fernandes | February 5, 2026
in Chicago, TheaterTheater Review: DESCRIBE THE NIGHT (Austin Playhouse West Campus)
by Leo Weiser | February 4, 2026
in Texas, TheaterChicago Opera Review: COSÌ FAN TUTTE (Lyric Opera)
by Barnaby Hughes | February 4, 2026
in Chicago, TheaterTheater Review: RISING WATER (Theatre L’Acadie)
by Croydon Fernandes | February 4, 2026
in Chicago, TheaterTheater Review: STEREOPHONIC (National Tour, CIBC Theatre Chicago)
by Croydon Fernandes | February 3, 2026
in Chicago, Theater, ToursOff-Broadway Review: ULYSSES (Elevator Repair Service at The Public Theater)
by Paola Bellu | February 2, 2026
in New York, TheaterTheater Review: PUNISH ME: A PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER (Hudson Backstage Theatre)
by Nick McCall | February 2, 2026
in Los Angeles, Theater



















