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Lawrence Bommer

  • Chicago Opera Review: THE LOVE POTION [LE VIN HERBÉ] (Chicago Opera Theater at the Music Box)

    LIEBESTOD WAS NEVER DARKER For three performances only, a beloved Chicago movie palace becomes  an opera house. Acoustically accurate but with sight lines that worsen toward the back, the Music Box Theatre, a Spanish Rococo treasure, is currently hosting Chicago Opera Theater’s local premiere of Swiss composer Frank Martin’s The Love Potion (Le Vin Herbé). Dissonant…

  • Chicago Theater Review: TONY N’ TINA’S WEDDING (Chicago Theater Works at Resurrection Church)

    T&T&T&T&T&T… There’s a reason why Tony n’ Tina’s Wedding, newly revived by the original New York producers, was a 16-year Chicago hit. Throughout the last century this fake pageant with real fun played to a million not so innocent bystanders. A huge hit showcased in three venues (a bar, chapel and reception room) in Pipers…

  • Chicago Theater Review: FLY BY NIGHT (Theo Ubique)

    BLACKOUT LOVE Winsome and warm-hearted, Fly by Night is an affecting chamber musical which premiered in 2014 at Playwrights Horizon. The two-act labor of love by Will Connolly, Michael Mitnick and Kim Rosenstock celebrates human connectedness, most pointedly in love. In their tender-hearted, tough-minded work’”an Our Town where the place is NYC–the connections are also…

  • Chicago Theater Review: TUG OF WAR: CIVIL STRIFE (Chicago Shakespeare Theater)

    KILLER ROSES AND A HUNCHBACK HORROR As disease follows famine, the 100 Years War succumbed to the War of the Roses. It makes sense that the titles of the two parts of Barbara Gaines’ massive compilation  Tug of War are “Foreign Fire” and, now, “Civil Strife.” Whether a ground-grabbing feud between 15th-century England and France or…

  • Chicago Theater Review: VISITING EDNA (Steppenwolf)

    LETTING GO, NOT GIVING UP This is a long and leisurely play that generically examines the leaving of life–as in how, when, why and where to say goodbye. Steppenwolf Theatre Company’s world premiere Visiting Edna, by Tony-winning David Rabe (author of the Vietnam War saga  Streamers), is a major debut for the Tony-winning troupe to launch…

  • Chicago Theater Review: HAND TO GOD (Victory Gardens Biograph Theater)

    FIVE FINGERS, ONE JOKE Unholy rolling, Hand To God is a one-joke coming-of-age comedy, a Twilight Zone episode on steroids. Robert Askins’ two-act 2011 travesty treats demonic possession as a schizophrenic rite of passage: A twisted teenager suddenly takes orders from the hand puppet at the end of his arm. Hell breaks loose. A Victory…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE HAPPIEST PLACE ON EARTH (Greenhouse Theater Center)

    WHEN YOU WISH UPON A THEME PARK You just know that the title The Happiest Place on Earth is ironic–or, like Ringling Brothers’ “greatest show on earth,” bombastic. How could it not be, given the subject? Over the last 66 years, Disneyland, Walt’s first conceptual amusement park, has become a byword for bourgeois escapism from…

  • Chicago Theater Review: WONDERFUL TOWN (Goodman Theatre)

    GOODMAN GIVES GOTHAM GLORY Wonderful indeed. Wonderful Town, Leonard Bernstein’s 1952 tribute to the ever juicy Big Apple, has been wrongly overshadowed by the other N.Y.C. musicals he wrote before and after’”On The Town and West Side Story. It more than holds its own. With captivating lyrics by the wizard team of Betty Comden and…

  • Chicago Theater Review: IN THE HEIGHTS (Porchlight Music Theatre at Stage 773)

    LIGHTS OFF BUT LIVING LARGE In The Heights, a two-time Tony-winning 2008 musical, celebrates a place that doesn’t quite reward the torrid devotion of its likable characters. They both delight in and want to depart from Washington Heights in Manhattan’s Upper West Side, a close-knit neighborhood populated by Hispanics from Puerto Rico, Cuba and the…

  • Chicago Theater Review: LIFE SUCKS (Lookingglass)

    DEATH BY COMMENTARY Glib, pat, and smug, Aaron Posner’s Stupid Fucking Bird disrupted and deconstructed Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull. Audiences loved it for its bratty, “in-your-face” 21st century bravado. Now a Midwest premiere by Lookingglasss Theatre Company, Posner’s latest updating (downdating is a better term), Life Sucks is not to be confused with Mel Brooks’…

  • Chicago Theater Review: JULIUS CAESAR (Writers Theatre in Glencoe)

    MAKE ROME GREAT AGAIN Julius Caesar:  It’s a strong choice for an election year, a timely reminder of why we prefer peaceful changes of power to assassinations and their inevitable knee-jerk revenge. It’s unsurprising that Shakespeare’s most political play centers on a political murder, the ultimate act of censorship, whether done in togas or, as in…

  • Chicago Theater Review: HELLDRIVERS OF DAYTONA (Pre-Broadway Tryout at The Royal George Theatre)

    HELL IS THIS MUSICAL An achingly forgettable world premiere, Helldrivers of Daytona is a nasty piece of art. Flagrantly referencing those dreadful Elvis movie musicals (thus lowering the bar from the start), this tale of hotrod racers in 1965 perpetrates bikini-beach-musical clichés and an I.Q.-shrinking pandering to teenage trivia and spring-break fantasies. But, unlike intelligent…

  • Chicago Theater Review: SCARCITY (Redtwist)

    WHITE TRASH DIRTY LAUNDRY Scarcity is a fine title for a play that lacks a lot. Ugly is as ugly does: Lucy Thurber’s bottom-feeding modern melodrama, a Redtwist Theatre Chicago premiere, works overtime to dumb down characters who, to start with, were ingrown, missing-link, birdbrained stereotypes. Like the Showtime series Shameless, the movie Deliverance, or…

  • Chicago Theater Review: ULTRA AMERICAN: A PATRIOT ACT (Silk Road Rising)

    SELF-RACIAL PROFILING FOR FUN AND PROFIT Reviewing stand-up comedy, as opposed to dramatic monologues or one-man shows, is not my forte. But occasionally a mind-opener like Ultra American: A Patriot Act, an 80-minute world premiere hosted by Silk Road Rising at the Chicago Temple, deserves to be dealt with as drama. In this not at…

  • Chicago Theater Review: NAPERVILLE (Theater Wit)

    A PLACE CALLED CARIBOU COFFEE INHABITED BY  A HUMAN HERD In Mat Smart’s decisively named Naperville the setting is the story. We’re eavesdroppers, listening in Joe Schermoly’s awesomely accurate Caribou Coffee outlet in “downtown” Naperville, a burg that’s the seat for DuPage County, just west of Chicago. A 100-minute, 2014 one-act by a former resident, Naperville…

  • National Tour Theater Review: KINKY BOOTS (Oriental Theatre in Chicago)

    THESE BOOTS ARE MEANT FOR WALKING Oscar Wilde supposedly said, “Be yourself. All the other lives are taken.” That’s defiantly the gospel credo of Kinky Boots, a musical movie spin-off that played Chicago four years ago en route to Broadway fame. It’s returned for a one-week touring engagement at the Oriental Theatre, having garnered a…

  • Chicago Theater Review: OH, COWARD! (Dead Writers Theatre Collective at the Athenaeum Theatre)

    THE FIRST’”AND BEST’”NOí‹L A bravely Noël Coward musical retrospective set in an intimate Art Deco cabaret’”what could be more intrinsically suave and sophisticated, equally knowing and feeling? A first musical comedy revue from Dead Writers Theatre Collective and the second installment in their “Mad About the Boy” season, Oh, Coward!  (originally  devised by Roderick Cook in 1972)…

  • Chicago Theater Review: BAKERSFIELD MIST (TimeLine Theatre Company at Stage 773)

    THE PRICE OF EVERYTHING AND THE VALUE OF NOTHING Given the amount of sheer transience in 2016, authenticity (as in a lack of fakery) has never seemed more needed–or endangered. Ever seeking to “keep it real,” our quest for bedrock values, genuine feeling and awesome actuality seems a natural reaction to (or, more accurately, against)…

  • Chicago Theater Review: ROSE (Greenhouse Theater)

    ROSE KENNEDY: A PROFILE IN MOTHER COURAGE A catholic confession (in the larger sense), Laurence Leamer’s Rose portrays the matriarch of America’s most political dynasty’”a family as cursed as Aeschylus’ House of Atreus’”as a tough-loving protector. Over 90 minutes we meet a resilient and formidable lady, enduring but regretting the sacrifices she made for three  dead…

  • Chicago Theater Review: MAME (Light Opera Works)

    TAME MAME STILL GETS ACCLAIM Few nicknames carry the impact of “Mame,” the free-spirited super-aunt. Appearing first in gay author Patrick Dennis’s best-selling 1954 novel, she’s become synonymous with bourgeois-baiting artistic license par excellence. What endears this ex-flapper as much as her vicarious outspokenness (“Life is a banquet and most poor sons of bitches are…

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