Areas We Cover
Categories
Lawrence Bommer
-
Chicago Theater Review: THE NORTH CHINA LOVER (Lookingglass Theatre Company)
THE TALE OF A LOVE THAT LINGERS TOO LONG Freud said that an unfinished task is never forgotten. But the inability to forget is nothing to the life-long longing of an aborted romance. For novelist Marguerite Duras, a love affair cut short in 1930 fueled her masterpiece Hiroshima Mon Amour, as well as the novels The Lover and The…
-
Chicago Dance Review: THE SLEEPING BEAUTY (Ballet West at the Auditorium Theatre)
A REAL BEAUTY Reality T.V. meets classical ballet and the latter wins: The stars of the CW’s Breaking Pointe have teamed up at Chicago’s Auditorium Theatre through Oct. 6 to produce a dazzling and faithful version of Tchaikovsky’s sweeping and soaring three-act ballet. Adam Sklute’s staging honors the gorgeous fairy tale and even more sumptuous…
-
Chicago Theater Review: CYRANO DE BERGERAC (Chicago Shakespeare Theater)
PANACHE, YES’”PASSION, LESS If a story’s strong enough, you just need to rekindle the plot. Edmond Rostand’s timeless love story celebrates the one-sided love between the famous 17th century swordsman-poet disfigured with a humongous schnoz and Roxane, his beautiful cousin. Roxane is initially infatuated with Christian, her younger, handsome suitor who nonetheless can’t win her without…
-
Chicago Theater Review: PULLMAN PORTER BLUES (Goodman Theatre)
CHANGE ON A TRAIN Schematic, predetermined and sometimes improbable, Cheryl L. West’s ambitious family saga Pullman Porter Blues blends blues ballads with convenient confessions in order to richly portray three generations of a family who are literally on the rails. As capacious as a documentary and as focused as a family album, this sprawling domestic…
-
Chicago Opera Review: JOAN OF ARC (Chicago Opera Theater)
VERDI UNLEASHED A DOMESTIC TERRORIST Written in 1845 and seldom seen since, this early opera by Giuseppe Verdi (whose centenary we celebrate) was a promissory note to be redeemed over and over before 1901. Based on an obscure play by Schiller, the somewhat preposterous plot (with libretto by Temistocle Solera) imagines “Giovanna d’Arco,” but not…
-
Chicago Theater Review: THE WHEEL (Steppenwolf)
A TRAIN TO NOWHERE It’s not enough reason for Joan Allen’s Chicago comeback. She returns to her ensemble-thick roots on the Steppenwolf stage after a 22-year absence during which, among other cinema roles, she three times pursued Jason Bourne. Now the screen star finds herself in The Wheel, a vehicle that’s both sprawling and stunted. Zinnie…
-
Chicago Dance Review: RUSSIAN MASTERS (Joffrey Ballet)
A SMOKING SAMOVAR It’s a different kind of “spring fling,” much m0re fitting for September when the season has faded fast. The latest installment in the Joffrey Ballet’s “Masters of Dance” season is a revival of their 1987 and 2009 recreations of the seminal and controversial, century-old Sacre du Printemps–a labor of the future by…
-
Chicago Theater Review: TO MASTER THE ART (Broadway Playhouse)
BON APPETIT! A welcome return engagement (which is now part of the prestigious Broadway in Chicago subscription lineup), TimeLine Theatre Company’s revival of its 2010 original work To Master the Art remains, even in a much less intimate space and with a higher ticket price, a delicious passion play. As delightfully developed by authors William…
-
Chicago Theater Review: THE KILLER ANGELS (Lifeline Theatre)
KILLER THEATER Recreating in part the pivotal Civil War battle fought 150 years ago this July, Lifeline Theatre’s labor of hate, powerfully staged by Matt Miller, is as cinematic as theater can get in three dimensions. Commissioned for the company, Karen Tarjan’s 2004 adaptation of Michael Shaara’s much-praised novel (made into the 1993 film Gettysburg)…
-
Chicago Theater Review: 9 CIRCLES (Sideshow Theatre Company)
WAR IS CONCENTRIC SLICES OF HELL Just as America seems to be expanding rather than concluding our deal with the Devil in the Middle East, Sideshow Theatre Company’s Chicago premiere–a valuable, 100-minute drama–seems all the more topical, valuable and non-negotiable. In the spirit of A Few Good Men, Bill Cain’s pile-driving play 9 Circles exposes…
-
Chicago Theater Review: DOUBLE TROUBLE (Porchlight Music Theatre)
LOONY TUNES IN EVERY WAY You could call this two-act, two-actor, two-hour romp Irma Vep meets Singing in the Rain. A charming trifle that’s also a stunning tour-de-deuce, Porchlight Music Theatre’s local premiere features two ostentatiously talented and handsome brothers, Adrian and Alexander Aguilar. They star in a madcap revue created by two very showbiz brothers,…
-
Chicago Theater Review: CONVERSATIONS ON A HOMECOMING (Strawdog Theatre Company)
WHERE BLARNEY GOES TO DIE Who’d have guessed that a 90-minute Irish play would be set in a bar where everyone gets sozzled and crocked much sooner that an hour and a half could ever allow? But in his 1985 exercise in forensic disillusionment, acclaimed Irish author Tom Murphy wants to subvert stereotypes as much…
-
Chicago Theater Review: PINK MILK (Oracle Theatre and White Elephant)
HEROISM AND ESTROGEN Well worth seeing, this stylized 100-minute tour de theatre nonetheless requires’”and rewards’”an informed audience: It needs eager theatergoers already aware of the story it tells so well. Despite depicting the same tragic tale, Pink Milk is not to be confused with Breaking the Code, Hugh Whitemore’s superb 1986 drama and acclaimed 1996…
-
Chicago Theater Review: INVASION! (Silk Road Rising)
AN ARAB ZELIG Supple, swift and slippery, this 80-minute, four-character satire by Jonas Hassen Khemiri (translated by Rachel Wilson-Broyles) skewers Islamophobia and its many mutations. Its trick is to center our self-terrorism on an exotic name borrowed from an old play. Meaning everything and nothing, the fake persona “Abulkasem” takes on as many protean forms…
-
Chicago Theater Review: BELLEVILLE (Steppenwolf)
ISOLATION AND INSANITY There’s a good reason for no intermission in this devilishly deceptive Belleville. It’s taut to a torque as it depicts a young American couple’s disintegration in an elegant one-bedroom apartment in a cosmopolitan quartier of Paris. Amy Herzog’s 2011 thriller is as powerful in its silences as its speech. Once the laughter…
-
Chicago Theater Review: SIMPATICO (A Red Orchid Theatre)
THE ENSEMBLE IS HOT, THE PLOT IS NOT Sam Shepard loves to level, if not to topple, his characters. In the treacherous course of True West, two brothers exchange identities: The Hollywood hotshot falls into the bottle and his inarticulate loser of a brother gets good fortune from his sibling’s bad karma. (Harold Pinter also…
-
Chicago Theater Review: THE JUNGLE BOOK (Goodman Theatre)
FIRST DISNEYFIED AND NOW ZIMMERMANNED, THIS MUSICAL CAN’T SEE THE JUNGLE FOR THE TREES Not one of the great animations to grace the Disney studio, 1967’s The Jungle Book was certainly a product of its time. Rudyard Kipling’s 1894 collection of quasi-folk tales set in the rain forests of India became a very Americanized adventure…
-
Chicago Theater Review: BIG LAKE BIG CITY (Lookingglass)
BIG LAKE BIG CITY BIG TURKEY Chicago to the broken bricks and bone, playwright Keith Huff was at his storytelling best in A Steady Rain, a big hit about a conflicted cop and his crooked crony at Chicago Dramatists (and a lesser one on Broadway). In Huff’’s taut mix of interrogations turned confessionals, two policemen…
-
Chicago Theater Review: TARTUFFE (Court Theatre)
THE IMPOSTER HITS HYDE PARK HARD Because religious hypocrisy — specifically “affected zeal and pious knavery” — never goes out of fashion, Tartuffe is forever. Continuing and completing its Moliere Festival (which ends on Bastille Day), Court Theatre’s second offering is the master’s perennially popular “home invasion” comedy. In this domestic dust-up, the title fraud…
-
Chicago Theater Review: SHAKESPEARE’S CYMBELINE: A FOLK TALE WITH MUSIC (First Folio)
A LONG HIKE IN THE THEM THAR HILLS OF SHAKESPEARE Along with its companion piece The Winter’s Tale, Shakespeare’s late-blooming “romance” Cymbeline is usually treated as a fairy tale. Rightly so, as it abounds in surprises, reversals and restorations. Minus any realistic causation and motivation, their pell-mell plots are packed with improbable events — inexplicable…
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

















