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Lawrence Bommer

  • Chicago Theater Review: REST (Victory Gardens)

    SUNSET ASSISTED DYING Samuel D. Hunter, Victory Gardens Theater ensemble playwright and recent recipient of a MacArthur “genius” award, specializes in tender tales of gutsy outsiders, spunky survivors who use their pain to feel that of others. Produced by V.G. in 2013, his The Whale celebrated the humanity of a terminally obese man (the wonderful…

  • Chicago Dance Review: STORIES IN MOTION (The Joffrey Ballet at the Auditorium Theatre)

    TALESPINNING AT ITS MOST LITERAL Running only through this weekend, Joffrey Ballet’s captivating evening, Stories in Motion, delivers three richly imagined dance narratives, complete with storybook sets, exotic and erotic costumes, and supple choreography to fully explore cunningly contrasted music played by an unimprovable orchestra. The result is unadulterated delight, enriched by the emotions that…

  • Chicago Theater Review: KING LEAR (Chicago Shakespeare Theater)

    A FORCED FRENZY Some well-meant productions make you feel bad because you care so little. That’s perilously close to what transpires in Chicago Shakespeare Theater’s louder-than-life revival of King Lear. No question, the drama already detonates on the page. Shakespeare presents a searing ancient-to-present plight: An arrogant monarch mistakenly confuses his daughters’ love for lip…

  • Chicago Theater Review: DEATH TAX (Lookingglass)

    REALITY THEFT Twisting a devious course over a mere 80 minutes and across Lookingglass Theatre’s nearly barebones thrust stage, this puzzle play by Lucas Hnath (whose equally treacherous Isaac’s Eye just opened at Writers Theatre) throws us onto a roller coaster ride of shifting sympathies and strategic lies. One mistaken assumption’”a rich mother is certain…

  • Chicago Opera Review: MACBETH (Chicago Opera Theater at the Harris)

    VIDEO WILL OUT Shakespeare’s shortest tragedy becomes, appropriately, a 115-minute, one-act opera by Ernest Bloch, a dour offering first produced in 1910 at the Opera-Comique in Paris. An inventive local premiere by Chicago Opera Theater at the Harris Theatre in Millennium Park, this “lyric drama in seven scenes,” which employs Bloch’s English translation from Edmond…

  • Chicago Theater Review: ISAAC’S EYE (Writers Theatre)

    GROUNDING GENIUS IN LIFE Lucas Hnath is a curious writer who likes to pit truth against fantasy to see which captures the most actuality. His Isaac’s Eye, now in an enthralling Midwest premiere at Writers Theatre, plays fast and loose with the facts behind two seminal 17th century scientists, Robert Hooke and Isaac Newton (what…

  • Chicago Theater Review: MIRACLES IN THE FALL (Polarity Ensemble Theatre at Greenhouse Theater)

    PRAY FOR MIRACLES The “fall” in the title doesn’t mean the season. Miracles in the Fall refers to the expulsion from Paradise, the epic fall that supposedly created original sin. Pursuing the hope of redemption, Chuck O’Connor’s flawed 100-minute new work puts forgiveness over judgment as it depicts a fractured family trying to fix their…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE WHALESHIP ESSEX (Shattered Globe Theatre at Theater Wit)

    THE BACK STORY BEHIND MOBY DICK A thrilling feat that reclaims the past, The Whaleship Essex is sailor-playwright Joe Forbrich’s detailed and driving reimagining of an 1820 tragedy that, 30 years later, inspired Herman Meville to write Moby Dick. A superb achievement by the 15-member ensemble, Shattered Globe Theatre’s Midwest premiere is a richly textured…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE GAME’S AFOOT (Drury Lane Theatre in Oakbrook Terrace)

    ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, MY DEAR WATSON A cardinal rule gets broken here: You can be funny or you can be scary–but try to be both and you’re neither. You’ll be this show. Deft at farce in Lend Me a Tenor, inept at plotting in Moon Over Buffalo, apt at gags in Crazy for You, Ken Ludwig…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE COWARD (Stage Left Theatre at Theater Wit)

    DUEL NATURE In Trevor, recently produced by A Red Orchid Theatre, playwright Nick Jones delivered a sardonic and heavy-handed attack on dangerous animals kept as domestic pets. He wastes no more subtlety on Stage Left Theatre’s suitably stylized Midwest premiere of his 2010 offering The Coward. Set in 1790, this precious and overly insistent two-hour…

  • Chicago Theater Review: MY NAME IS ASHER LEV (TimeLine Theatre Company)

    YOU CAN NEVER GO HOME’”AGAIN Chaim Potok’s 1972 novel My Name is Asher Lev is a coming-of-age story that pits one passion against another. It depicts the declaration of independence by a young Jewish artist from his rigid Hasidic childhood and a family where obedience is prized over self-expression. Aaron Posner’s successful, 90-minute stage adaptation,…

  • Chicago Theater Review: ECSTASY (Cole Theatre Company at A Red Orchid Theatre)

    A POWERFUL PLAY EVEN WITH A PLOT AS POINTLESS AS ITS PEOPLE With Ecstasy, now being revived at A Red Orchid Theatre, a new Chicago theater succeeds at first: Cole Theatre Company establishes its roots in realism with a play that’s older than most of the actors. Made famous in 1997 by Roadworks Productions’ trenchant…

  • Chicago Theater Review: METHTACULAR! (About Face Theatre at Theater Wit)

    BREAKING BETTER He who laughs last laughs best’”especially when you overcome an addiction to methamphetamine. So, after recovery, what do you do next? (And I don’t mean Disneyland.) You turn pain into gain. You write and act out Methtacular!, a strategically comic postcard from the edge. In a manic, memorable 90 minutes, thirtysomething Steven Strafford…

  • Chicago Theater Review: STUPID FUCKING BIRD (Sideshow Theatre Company at Victory Gardens)

    THE SEAGULL AS AN ALBATROSS At over two hours, it’s almost as long as its source. So it’s a good thing that Stupid Fucking Bird is more than a parody or it would soon lose its welcome. Aaron Posner’s reductionist, presentational semi-musical and meta-theatrical updating of Chekhov’s The Seagull, a drama where one generation frustrates…

  • Chicago Theater Review: SOME MEN (Pride Films and Plays at Rivendell Theatre)

    THE GREAT GAY IMPROVISERS You could call it an action meditation on marriage. As if to sum up his own theatrical legacy, as well as 70 years of gay life and love, Terrence McNally’s valedictory drama Some Men is a collage that merrily defies chronology. The reason: To prevent us from confusing the challenges of…

  • Chicago Theater Review: FIDDLER ON THE ROOF (Light Opera Works in Evanston)

    A REVIVAL WHICH ISN’T FIDDLING AROUND “To Life” indeed. There’s a ton of it, not to mention heartbreak and wisdom, in Rudy Hogenmiller’s warmly wise revival, Light Opera Works’ second coming in 11 years. The universality of this nearly flawless, 50-year-old musical comes from its spontaneous specifics, the story of a scripture-citing, God-fearless milkman who’s…

  • Tour Theater Review: HAMLET (Shakespeare’s Globe World Tour Production at Chicago Shakespeare)

    GLOBE THEATRE EARNS ITS NAME This play really is the thing. Audaciously assuming that all’s well that ends well, the Globe Theatre is celebrating both Shakespeare’s 450th birthday and the 400th anniversary of his death by touring the world for the next two years and playing in every country of the world. Talk about proselytizing…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE MARVELOUS MARVELETTES (Black Ensemble Theater)

    THE  OTHER  DREAMGIRLS Black Ensemble Theater’s latest summer-long tribute is to a girls group who never quite achieved escape velocity to lasting fame. Reginald Williams’ faithful chronicle of the rise and fall of the marvelous Marvelettes is a happy excuse to revisit a jukebox full of sassy songs, perfectly reinvented by director Rueben D. Echoles. It also…

  • Chicago Theater Review: HELLISH HALF-LIGHT: Shorter Plays of Samuel Beckett (Mary-Arrchie)

    SAMUEL BECKETT: MINIMALISM IN EXTREMIS Dark doings on a claustrophobic stage. These are the 80+ minutes at Mary-Arrchie Theatre’s Angel Island. Six short but not sweet offerings by the late Samuel Beckett create their own Hellish Half-Light. Audience members are scattered about the appropriately minimalist playground, a stark home for Jennifer Markowitz’ awesomely disciplined and…

  • Theater Review: INTIMATE APPAREL (Eclipse Theatre)

    THE THREADS THAT BREAK There’s no doubt why Lynn Nottage’s drama won five national awards for best play, including the Drama Critics’ Circle Award and American Theatre Critics Association’s Primus Award. Nine years ago we saw the cause in Jessica Thebus’ Steppenwolf staging, a perfect marriage of inspired script and elegant production. Eclipse Theatre Company,…

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