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  • 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…

  • Los Angeles Theater Preview: LI’L ABNER (Musical Theatre West in Long Beach)

    DIAMOND LI’L Musical Theatre West’s Reiner Reading Series wraps up its amazing season with a musical from smack dab in the middle of Broadway’s golden age.  Given the terrific score (music by Gene De Paul, and lyrics by Johnny Mercer) and deliciously satiric book (Norman Panama and Melvin Frank), it’s no surprise that Li’l Abner brought…

  • 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…

  • Chicago Dance Review: DANCE FOR LIFE 25TH ANNIVERSARY (Chicago Dancers United)

    DANCERS DO GOOD BY MAKING ART For a quarter century’”since 1991’”one summer night of nights in Chicago has raised funds to fight HIV, assist the AIDS Foundation of Chicago and 30 other service organizations, as well as provide for the health emergencies of countless dancers. True to its mission, on Saturday night  Dance For Life raised…

  • Chicago Theater Review: BLOODSHOT (Greenhouse Theater Center)

    THEATER NOIR EXPOSES A COLLABORATIVE CRIME WAVE Making its U.S. debut at the Greenhouse Theater Center, the solo saga Bloodshot, by Chicago native Douglas Post, feels as world weary and viscerally violent as its supple title. A superb vehicle for British dynamo Simon Slater that’s been touring the UK and Europe since 2011, the taut…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE GOOD PERSON OF SZECHWAN (Cor Theatre)

    BRECHT FORCES YIN ONTO YANG A strong, often infuriating, truth about the protest plays of Bertolt Brecht is how much the socialist playwright pushes the plot beyond the ending: He ends up accusing the audience of failing to finish the tale. It’s not really over, he cajoles or threatens, until we furnish the future. How…

  • Los Angeles Theater Review: MAESTRO: A PLAY WITH MUSIC (The Wallis in Beverly Hills)

    BRINGING BERNSTEIN TO LIFE Older spectators will remember Leonard Bernstein not just as a conductor, composer, and pianist, but as one of the most vivid personalities and astonishingly effective communicators in the history of American classical music. His life may have ended on notes of regret and frustration, but he was a one-of-a-kind phenomenon, and…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE JACKIE WILSON STORY (Black Ensemble Theater)

    HIS HEART IS CRYING, CRYING The latest rouser in Black Ensemble Theater’s 40th anniversary celebration/season, The Jackie Wilson Story, a retrospective on an R&B Legend, showcases terrific talent. It also revives a 2000 hit that went on to a 2002 national tour, culminating in a record run at Harlem’s Apollo Theater. The blast from the…

  • Tour Review: THE MERCHANT OF VENICE (Shakespeare’s Globe)

    THE GLOBE’S  STUNNING PRODUCTION HIGHLIGHTS  SHAKESPEARE’S PLEA FOR DIGNITY  AS MUCH AS MERCY A decade ago a Chicago critic notoriously concluded his review of The Merchant of Venice by offering a rather perverse take on Shakespeare’s supposedly anti-Semitic play. In a case of devil’s advocacy he argued that Shylock’s punishment (for trying to cancel a debt by killing…

  • Tour Review: TORUK – THE FIRST FLIGHT (Cirque du Soleil, North American Tour)

    JAMES CAMERON MEETS CIRQUE DU SOLEIL Cirque du Soleil writes a new chapter in make-believe with Toruk – The First Flight, a not so typical two-hour fantasy inspired (but not based on) James Cameron’s sci-fi epic Avatar. For one thing, there are no clowns (a happy relief for those who found them irritating and obnoxious);…

  • Los Angeles Dance Preview: ADAMIANA (American Contemporary Ballet)

    NEW BALLET PREMIERES IN L.A. It is said that American novelist James T. Farrell regretted writing the Studs Lonigan trilogy, novels that were so iconic that fellow Chicagoan “Studs†Terkel adopted the hero’s name for a pseudonym. Farrell always believed he’d written better books but they suffered because of Studs’ popularity. We don’t know if…

  • Film Review: THE TENTH MAN (written and directed by Daniel Burman)

    ONE IN A MINYAN In Daniel Burman’s brisk and sharp human comedy The Tenth Man, Ariel (Alan Sabbagh) returns to Once, the Jewish neighborhood in Buenos Aires where he grew up, to visit his father Usher for Purim. A 30-something irreligious Jew who resides in Manhattan and has a dancer girlfriend, Ariel left his home…

  • Los Angeles Theater Preview: TWELFTH NIGHT (The Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles in Santa Monica)

    SHAKESPEARE UNDER ATTACK A comedy’s brewing up in Santa Monica. Soon, winds will whip, distressed voices will call out and a ship’s timbers will be shivering, cracking, and smashing against a coastline in Shakespeare’s play about the confusion caused at Countess Olivia’s court by a set of identical brother and sister twins. Two castaways’”the lady…

  • San Diego Theater Review: GYPSY (Cygnet Theatre)

    A SCALED-DOWN GYPSY NONETHELESS GOES  OFF THE SCALE Gypsy, the musical theater biography of striptease performer Gypsy Rose Lee, is really about Gypsy’s mother, Mama Rose, immortalized by Ethel Merman in the original 1959 production. Not just a chronicle of the superstar ecdysiast’s checkered childhood, Gypsy is a celebration of the addictive insanity of show business….

  • Chicago Theater Review: BYHALIA, MISSISSIPPI (Steppenwolf’s 1700 Theatre)

    A MASON/DIXON CATHARSIS REPRISES ITS SUCCESS Can white trash/peckerwood/country cracker/Dixie doodles rise above their rotten roots? Byhalia, Mississippi is not just a place or a title but a condition’”a backwater hamlet with none of the sophistication, joie de vivre or cosmopolitan culture of Jackson, the nearby dumbass state capital. A 2015 Jefferson Award-winning world premiere…

  • Chicago Theater Review: DOUGLASS (the american vicarious at Theater Wit)

    AN EX-SLAVE BREAKS NEW CHAINS Eager to be relevant but not quite succeeding, Thomas Klingenstein’s Douglass, a world premiere by the american vicarious at Theater Wit, is nonetheless a valuable historical allegory. An exercise in irony as much as reclamation, it depicts the struggle of a 19th-century American emancipator, not just to find freedom from…

  • Chicago Theater Review: WAR PAINT (World Premiere Musical at the Goodman)

    A FAR FROM COSMETIC MUSICAL MAKEOVER In the late James Kirkwood’s Legends!,  two feuding divas–played on a 1986 national tour by theatrical goddesses Carol Channing and Mary Martin–reach a reconciliation before death divides them forever. In War Paint, a vehicular musical trying out at Chicago’s Goodman Theatre, the rags-to-riches rivals are historical personages: Helena Rubinstein and…

  • Concert Review: WEST SIDE STORY (Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl)

    HERE’S A PLACE FOR US When I first heard West Side Story, it was the original Broadway cast recording on my parents’ mono Magnavox console. Without the Jerome Robbins’ direction and choreography, without the sets and costumes, and without the dialogue, I was transfixed over and over by the 1957 trailblazing musical, an updating of…

  • Chicago Theater Review: EROICA (Azuza Productions at Redtwist Theatre)

    HYPOCRISY BEGINS AT HOME In theater revenge is best served quickly. That’s a virtue in David Alex’s 80-minute family drama, now detonating four times a week at Chicago’s Redtwist Theatre. A world premiere from Asuza Productions, Maggie Speer’s intense (as in loud) staging drives home the rifts and grudges that ravaged loved ones during the…

  • San Diego Theater Preview: AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ (North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach)

    IN HARLEM’S WAY “One never knows, do one?” That’s the favorite catchphrase of Fats Waller (1904-1943), an irrepressible master of music. The 285-pound, cherubic-cheeked jokester genius is the powerhouse presence and driving dreamer behind Ain’t Misbehavin’, the still irresistible 1978 tribute revue from Murray Horwitz and Richard Maltby Jr. In this happy case, well, one…

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