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Chicago Theater Review: AT LAST: A TRIBUTE TO ETTA JAMES (Black Ensemble Theater)
AN ALL YOU CAN ETTA BUFFET A Black Ensemble Theater hit in 2005, At Last: A Tribute to Etta James is back in (the pleasure of) business. It’s also updated to reflect the last decade of “The Matriarch of R&B,” who died in 2012 at the age of 73. Known affectionately as “Miss Peaches,” this…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE CRYPTOGRAM (Profiles)
PUZZLING THROUGH THE CRYPTOGRAM IS WORTH THE EFFORT The title alone should have been clue enough that this was going to be a difficult play, but nothing could have prepared me for the lack of perspicacity. I felt just like the lost young boy at the center of David Mamet’s The Cryptogram. Unlike the kid,…
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Chicago Theater Review: OWNERS (Interrobang Theatre Project at The Athenaeum Theatre)
WINNING SMALL Still potent after 42 years, Caryl Churchill’s corrosive class comedy Owners pits two outlooks on life against each other. In one corner you have Churchill’s now-patented “top girl,” the protagonist and anti-heroine Marion. She’s a predatory user/owner who can never get enough. But for all her snarling self-entitlement Marion is lonely at the…
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Chicago Dance Review: ABT’S ALL-AMERICAN CELEBRATION (Auditorium Theatre)
RED, WHITE AND PAS DE BLEU Marking the 125th anniversary of Chicago’s glorious and historic Auditorium Theatre, American Ballet Theatre, which used to come here every season, is all too briefly making a rare, weekend-only return engagement. They come bearing great gifts: an All-American Celebration of the New York company’s best known works, signature pieces…
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Chicago Theater Review: SMOKEFALL (Goodman)
SMOKEFALL GETS IN YOUR EYES It opened a year ago in Goodman’s smaller Owen Theatre. Due to rave reviews and popular demand, it’s now the fall opener in the larger Albert enclave. Clearly, Noah Haidle’s Smokefall struck a lot of nerves and vital organs. Its funky fame can put a critic who missed its 2013…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE VANDAL (Steep Theatre)
A VANDAL OF AN ENDING Thirty-something actor and writer Hamish Linklater’s The Vandal is one of those plays that starts well and ends poorly. It begins with a middle-aged woman waiting at a bus stop in Kingston, New York. She’s soon joined by a teenaged boy who engages her in conversation. The realism of the…
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Chicago Theater Review: DANNY CASOLARO DIED FOR YOU (TimeLine Theatre Company)
A WHISTLEBLOWER’S CONVENIENT SUICIDE Urgent, cinematic, and breathlessly intense in everything but its intermission, TimeLine Theatre Company’s true-life exposé of a truth-teller and his martyrdom delivers a heavy dose of thinking theater. Its rather un-ironic title accuses the audience as much as the authorities. Soon to become a feature film, Danny Casolaro Died for You…
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Los Angeles Theater Preview: MORE! MORE! MORE! (An Evening with Joey Arias, Justin Vivian Bond & Taylor Mac at the Hammer)
A TRANS-PORTIVE EXPERIENCE AWAITS YOU When I saw the trio of headliners who will be performing for one night only at the Hammer Museum in Westwood, I had to do a Little Rascals double-take. I have considered myself lucky to have seen each one separately, but to have all three together is a confluence of…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE CLEAN HOUSE (Bluebird Arts at the Athenaeum Theatre)
LAUGHTER IS THE WORST MEDICINE Humor and hygiene play off each other in Sarah Ruhl’s much-praised but not altogether satisfying 2004 romantic comedy. Now fitfully revived by the new Bluebird Arts troupe, Luda Lopatina Solomon’s staging feels no less half-hearted than this mood-shifting script deserves. Bluebird’s two-act domestic drama is a strange amalgam of magic…
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Regional Music Review: PACIFIC SYMPHONY WITH JOSHUA BELL (Segerstrom Concert Hall)
A DAZZLING EXPERIENCE Sound the bells, for Pacific Symphony’s 36th season opener with Joshua Bell was a resounding success. There was much ado about Music Director Carl St.Clair beginning his 25th-anniversary season, including a short documentary film about the man from rustic Hochheim, Texas who went on to become the assistant conductor of the Boston…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE MONEY SHOT (MCC Theatre at Lucille Lortel)
SHOW ME THE MONEY Two couples are having aperitifs at a luxurious home in the Hollywood Hills (sexy stylish set by Derek McLane). They are Steve (Fred Weller), an aging action superstar; Missy (Gia Crovatin), his very young and ditsy wife of one year; Karen (Elizabeth Reaser), a movie star who’s quickly approaching middle-age and…
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Los Angeles Music Preview: SŠŒ PERCUSSION & THE LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC (Disney Hall)
LANG, A BANG, AND THE SŠŒ PERCUSSION GANG They call themselves “musical innovators, collaborators: Brooklyn-bred and globally minded.” Eric Cha-Beach, Josh Quillen, Adam Sliwinski, and Jason Treuting, the endlessly inventive quartet which constitute SŠ Percussion, will be joining the Los Angeles Philharmonic for its season opener, which plays Oct. 2-5. The indefatigable group’”which has an…
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Chicago Opera Review: DON GIOVANNI (Lyric Opera)
THE MANY LOVE(S OF) DON GIOVANNI Why does Chicago love Mozart’s Don Giovanni so much? Well-received as Lyric Opera’s first production back in 1954, and revived many times over the ensuing decades, including the company’s fiftieth anniversary in 2004, Don Giovanni just won’t go away, despite the titular character’s climactic comeuppance and ignominious death. The…
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San Francisco Music Review: MUSIC FROM 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (San Francisco Symphony)
JOURNEY BEYOND THE STARS Stanley Kubrick’s decision to use the first section of Richard Strauss’s exquisite Also Sprach Zarathustra, Opus 30 (1896) to underscore the opening sequence of his classic 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey may have been a master stroke; but the average moviegoer was, and still is, unfamiliar with the entire symphonic…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE NIGHT ALIVE (Steppenwolf Theatre Company)
LOVE AS A MOVEABLE FEAST Conor McPherson’s plays are so rooted in the characters that plot is really revelation. With unforced warmth, he captures loneliness in the act of self-effacement and love as the best way to prove we’re really here. Steppenwolf Theatre’s fall offering The Night Alive is no nocturne’”it’s typically gritty, with self-inventing…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE DOWNPOUR (Route 66 Theatre Company at Greenhouse Theater Center)
A BEDTIME STORY FOR EVERY ADULT With a justifiably extended run, Route 66 Theatre Company’s richly rewarding world premiere of Caitlin (A Twist of Water) Parrish’s The Downpour is a story as sweet as it is scary’”no easy feat in writing or staging. But director Erica Weiss has a Midas touch, and Parrish’s tantalizingly twisting…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: CHINESE COFFEE (Roy Arias Theater; directed by Louise Lasser; starring Austin Pendleton)
WHEN BEING A STARVING WRITER IS NO LONGER ROMANTIC Austin Pendleton’s breathtaking performance and Ira Lewis’s penetrating script make Chinese Coffee, with all its flaws, a most worthwhile outing. In fact, at $18 a ticket, this show, directed by Louise Lasser, is all but mandatory viewing for lovers of personal, intimate theater, as well as…
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Chicago / Tour Theater Review: THE MAGIC FLUTE (Isango Ensemble at Chicago Shakespeare)
THIS MAGIC FLUTE IS ALL TOO ORDINARY South Africa’s Isango Ensemble is undoubtedly full of talented actors, singers, and musicians, but doesn’t quite have the specialized skills required to pull of Mozart’s masterful The Magic Flute (Impempe Yomlingo). While the production doesn’t aim for a straightforward rendering of the original, it does retain much of…
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Chicago Theater Review: JOHN DOE (Trap Door)
MAD ABOUT JOHN DOE Trap Door Theatre is entered via a long narrow gap between two Bucktown restaurants. Upon arrival, Artistic Director Beata Pilch assigns audience members a number and Mike Steele seats them. Already in costume for their roles as madhouse attendants, Pilch and Steele look suitably frightening and forbidding. This disquieting introduction sets…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: CHOIR BOY (Geffen)
SWEET SONGS UNSUPPORTED Tarell Alvin McCraney’s 2012 Choir Boy is a tantalizing, underdeveloped play-with-music not entirely improved by Trip Cullman’s direction, now at the Geffen a year after the production’s Manhattan Theater Club bow. Jason Michael Webb’s tasteful vocal arrangements sound terrific via Fitz Patton’s crisp sound design, but the very assurance and gravity of…
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