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Lawrence Bommer
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Theater Review: THE SOUND OF MUSIC (National Tour)
EV’RY MOUNTAIN GETS CLIMBED AGAIN It’s fitting that Rodgers and Hammerstein’s final collaboration is a tribute to the art and craft they served so well’”music and singing. Like Mary Poppins, convent girl Maria Rainer is a very nice nanny (minus umbrella) who teaches by example and uses play to build courage and confidence. Fraulein Rainer…
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Chicago Theater Review: HAUPTMANN (City Lit)
THE LONE EAGLE VERSUS THE LONE WOLF 81 years ago, everything conspired to make the “trial of the century” engrossing entertainment. (Actually, it was the second trial of the century–after the Leopold and Loeb murder tribunal–but who’s counting?) There was the horror of the kidnapping and killing of the 20-month-old baby of American idols Charles…
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Chicago Theater Review: MY FAIR LADY (Light Opera Works in Evanston)
LOVERLY The most insidiously satirical moment in Gilbert and Sullivan’s H.M.S. Pinafore comes when a lowly sailor and his captain must instantly switch places when we learn that the latter was born nobly and not nastily. (Nautical expertise be damned; birth will out!) Thanks to George Bernard Shaw’s brilliant book, the same subversion occurs throughout…
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Chicago Theater Review: CAUGHT (Sideshow Theatre Company at Victory Gardens)
SUBVERSION, DISRUPTION’”AND PRETENSION Caught is just what Gertrude Stein said of Oakland: “When you get there, there’s no there there.” A series of metaphysical jokes played on the audience, this self-indulgent tripe purports and provokes where other shows present and persuade. It delivers layer upon layer of theatrical deception till it becomes The Play That…
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Chicago Theater Review: CONSTELLATIONS (Steppenwolf Theatre Company)
CAPTIVATING VARIATIONS ON A THEME OF LOVE What a feat happens seven times a week in Steppenwolf’s upstairs theater! Usually critics tell you to take their words for what they saw–but this show must be seen to be believed. In only 75 minutes British playwright Nick Payne’s Constellations explores a myriad of possibilities between two…
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Chicago Theater Review: SOUPS, STEWS, AND CASSEROLES: 1976 (Goodman Theatre)
A RECIPE FOR BETTER THEATER It’s no accident that this bold play, the latest offering from Northwestern University professor Rebecca Gilman, happens in Wisconsin circa 1976. The story of a corporate takeover of a small-town cheese company, Gilman’s civic-minded drama doesn’t play out in the present. But the 40-year-old anger and displacement it depicts is thrust…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE NORTH POOL (Interrobang Theatre Project at The Athenaeum Theatre)
INTERROGATING AN AUDIENCE It’s the afterschool special from hell: The North Pool is that rare you-can-hear-a-pin-drop play. In a mere 80 minutes, playwright Rajiv Joseph shrewdly and sharply changes the terms and tones in a purportedly ordinary conference between a vice principal and a graduating senior. James Yost’s engrossing, entangling staging, a Midwest premiere from…
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Chicago Theater Review: TUG OF WAR: FOREIGN FIRE (Chicago Shakespeare Theater)
BINGEWATCHING THE BARD “Tug of war”–a child’s game that mutates into an adult’s nightmare; it’s an apt title for Chicago Shakespeare Theater’s marathon of Bard history plays. Tug of War: Foreign Fire revisits the lowlights from the Hundred Years War between England and France. We see’”and feel–strife from both sides and at all levels, a harrowing chronicle…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE BOYS UPSTAIRS (Pride Films and Plays at Mary’s Attic)
AN UNCRITICAL MATING COMEDY Familiar gay fare, The Boys Upstairs, a 2009 rouser by Jason Mitchell, revels in industrial-strength crowd-pleasing. Pride Films and Plays’ two-hour funfest is crammed with catty-more-than-witty banter, salacious-to-graphic sexual situations, bitchy byplay, lifestyle branding, eroticized objectification, italicized zingers, shameless doubles entendres, and a feel-good happy ending. Not that these are bad…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE BODY OF AN AMERICAN (Stage Left Theatre at Theater Wit)
A DOCUMENTARY DRAMA DELIVERS Chicago is currently witnessing two productions about photojournalists haunted by their work. TimeLine Theatre’s Chimerica offers a flawed but fascinating 180-minute look at a fateful historical “shot”: the “tank man” from Beijing’s 1989 demonstrations at Tiananmen Square. Delivering a more potent work in much less time, Stage Left Theatre’s 95-minute The…
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Chicago Theater Review: DISENCHANTED! (Broadway in Chicago at the Broadway Playhouse)
GIRL-POWER PRINCESSES TAKE ON TROPES, BUT THIS REVUE COULD USE MORE WIT AND MAGIC If you were a mean girl, you might call Disenchanted! a feel-good pity party. More compassionate souls will see this 95-minute 2011 musical, created by former history teacher Dennis T. Giacino, as a pushback protest. In any case it definitely counts…
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Chicago Theater Review: CHIMERICA (TimeLine)
A SEARCH FOR DOUBT BOTH TANTALIZES AND ENERVATES Speculation is just as tricky on the stage as on the stock market. Winner of the 2014 Laurence Olivier Award, Chimerica (its title suggesting a distinction without a difference between America and China) is British playwright Lucy Kirkwood’s wildly imaginative depiction of one reporter’s search for a…
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Chicago Dance Review: CINDERELLA (Joffrey Ballet)
A FAIRY TALE LEAPS INTO LOVE Rossini, Walt Disney, Rodgers and Hammerstein’”they all wanted a piece of Perrault’s fairy tale. Cinderella has become Cendrillon, Cenerentola, and, by Jerry Lewis’ sex change, Cinderfella. In any incarnation the 17th-century source is an irresistible feel-good parable of purity that prospers. It remains the ultimate rags-to-riches story, patient virtue…
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Theater Review: CHICAGO (National Tour at Cadillac Palace Theatre in Chicago)
CORRUPTION: MORE FUN WHEN CHOREOGRAPHED Now in its twentieth year, this slimmed-down, near-concert version of Kander and Ebb’s cynical and enthralling musical features, as the smoothly lying lawyer Billy Flynn, John O’Hurley (J. Peterman in Seinfeld and a fixture on Dancing with the Stars. (He last appeared in the show in the 2011 tour which…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE SIGN IN SIDNEY BRUSTEIN’S WINDOW (Goodman Theatre)
LORRAINE HANSBERRY’S OTHER PLAY Written five years after Raisin in the Sun and just before her early death at 34, Lorraine Hansberry’s last work is a challenging’”as in problematic’”play. The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window (deservedly or not, forever in the shadow of its predecessor) is a 1964 depiction of bohemian Gothamites caught in the…
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Chicago Theater Review: NICE WORK IF YOU CAN GET IT (Theatre at the Center in Munster, IN)
LET’S NOT CALL THE WHOLE THING OFF George Gershwin died no older than the equally immortal Mozart’”and, well, we can’t make or get enough of a Broadway blessing’s too-brief talent for tunes. The sturdy songs from his silly shows have been recently repurposed in Crazy for You, My One and Only, An American in Paris…
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Chicago Theater Review: LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (American Blues Theater)
KILLER CHLOROPHYLL HATCHES A HIT American Blues Theatre seldom does musicals (the last was the wonderful Hank Williams: Lost Highway). Happily, their current triumphLittle Shop of Horrors literally roots their mission’”blue-collar sagas that question and redefine the American dream’”in a perfect choice, an incisive, hilarious rock sermon on the perils of selling out. Its source,…
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Chicago Theater Review: ONCE IN A LIFETIME (Strawdog Theatre Company)
A CRASH COUSE IN ‘LA LA LAND’ LUNACY Once in a Lifetime, the first triumph of George S Kaufman and Moss Hart (You Can’t Take It With You, The Man Who Came to Dinner, The Royal Family), is a mostly hilarious 1930 “coming of age” comedy. It centers on three Hollywood hopefuls who slam against…
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Chicago Theater Review: A RED LINE RUNS THROUGH IT (The Second City e.t.c.’s 40th Revue at Piper’s Alley)
SCATTERSHOT SPOOFERY THROWS A LARGE NET OVER A LITTLE SATIRE Alluding to the elevated Chicago subway that courses through the North Side, A Red Line Runs Through It proves a theme as much as wordplay in this 40th revue from The Second City e.t.c. Our evening of comedy sketches begins and ends with passengers in a…
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Chicago Theater Review: IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (Shattered Globe Theatre at Theater Wit)
IN THE HEAT OF THE STORY “They call me Mister Tibbs.” That’s the signature catchphrase from the celebrated 1967 film starring Sidney Poitier (the first African-American male Oscar winner) and rough-riding Rod Steiger, like George C. Scott, as visceral an actor as the screen could contain. Ebony and ivory, against their natures, these seeming stereotypes work…
Theater Review: (RE)DRESSING MISS HAVISHAM (Boston Playwrights’ Theatre)
by Lynne Weiss | May 20, 2026
in Boston, TheaterTheater Review: BRIGADOON (Pasadena Playhouse)
by Michael Landman-Karney | May 18, 2026
in Los Angeles, TheaterTheater Review: OEDIPUS EL REY (Huntington Theatre Company / Boston)
by Lynne Weiss | May 18, 2026
in BostonTheater Review: EXIT THE KING (A Noise Within / Pasadena)
by Ernest Kearney | May 17, 2026
in Los Angeles, Theater



















