Chicago Theatre Review

Chicago Theatre Review

I’m Not a Comedian…I’m Lenny Bruce

March 16, 2024 Reviews No Comments

Written by and Starring Ronnie Marmo, Directed by Joe Mantegna

Ronnie Marmo is the perfect vessel for the betrayal of Lenny Bruce (Leonard Alfred Schneider) and this show feels like you are witnessing Lenny himself, a true privilege!

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Magician Andi Gladwin Presents Shuffled at Chicago’s Rhapsody Theater

March 16, 2024 Reviews No Comments

The two-year-old Rhapsody Theater’s unique, versatile space provided a wonderful backdrop for English Magician Andi Gladwin’s first-ever solo show, Shuffled. The already intimate, 200 seat theater was reconfigured for only 44 audience members in order to showcase Mr. Gladwin. The set felt like an homage to a game room, with cards, family pictures and games on display on shelves and bits of furniture. Gladwin’s unassuming air made it easy for audience members to feel like they were part of the magic, rather than simply viewers. What he created was a special, interactive experience, and a casual, welcoming atmosphere: much like a game night with friends or family might feel.

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The Culture Vulture Angel

March 16, 2024 Reviews No Comments

The Big Gay Cabaret

Jai Rodriguez may not be familiar to some people, but to certain populations he’s known as that handsome, youthful, multi-talented actor/singer who’s earned fame working very hard in all of the arts. As a result, Mr. Rodriguez has become a household name. In a cabaret show filled with biographical tidbits, personal confessions, celebrity gossip, songs from Broadway and the pop charts and a whole lot of laughs and charm, Jai Rodriguez tells all.

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The Good Wife

March 13, 2024 Reviews No Comments

The Penelopiad

In Greek mythology, Penelope was the Queen, the devoted spouse and the good wife of King Odysseus. When her valiant husband is called to fight in the Trojan War, the loving and devoted Penelope struggles against all odds, including hundreds of persistent suitors, to remain faithful to her husband for the next 20 years. Comforted and aided by her 12 faithful maids, Penelope struggles to remain a loyal, loving wife to Odysseus, to singlehandedly raise their defiant son Telemachus and to fend off the persistent advances of an army of admirers and wooers. In this new play, based upon the novella by the distinguished Canadian author, Margaret Atwood, we experience the trials and tribulations of Penelope, all presented from the woman’s point of view.

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How Do You Spell W-i-n-n-e-r?

March 12, 2024 Reviews No Comments

The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

Bravo to Music Theater Works and, especially, to Guest Director Christopher Pazdernik, for the talent and artistry of the Skokie company’s latest production. Chris, his talented cast and all the many gifted theatrical creatives connected with this heartwarming and hilarious musical, bring a fresh, exciting vision and energy to this show. Each member of the cast is filled with brilliance, ingenuity and creates a truthful, realistic character. The risky element inherent in this musical is having to add four unknown, unrehearsed amateurs from your audience to the cast at every performance. It works very well here. I suspect that’s due to the excellent direction and preparation provided by the company, the production and stage manager, as well as by Pazdernik’s dynamic cast of actors. Everyone has anticipated any possible situation that might occur, and the show rolls along smoothly.

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Love Beyond the Grave

March 11, 2024 Reviews No Comments

Proof

The dictionary defines proof as an argument or evidence establishing a fact or the truth of a a statement. But in Math, a proof is what lets mathematics work. Without proofs, every mathematical statement would be purely hypothetical. There’d be no absolute truths without them. A proof is the machinery that allows mathematicians to demonstrate, without any question or shadow of a doubt, that a statement is a fact.

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More Comic Than Macabre

March 9, 2024 Reviews No Comments

Deathtrap

Receiving rave reviews when it opened back in 1978, DEATHTRAP played on Broadway for four years and was nominated for 4 Tony Awards. A few years later it was adapted into a successful film starring Michael Caine, Christopher Reeve and Dyan Cannon. For a while it was a staple of educational, regional and community theatre, but it’s been a while since this play was produced in Chicagoland. For his 2023-24 Season of Passion, Artistic Director Jeffrey Cass asked guest director Jason Harrington (director of last season’s THE ODD COUPLE) to dust off this clever thriller by Ira Levin. If his name sounds familiar, he’s the author of such popular works as Rosemary’s Baby, The Stepford Wives and The Boys From Brazil. Judging from the gasps and guffaws during the opening night performance, for many theatergoers this play was a brand new thriller. 

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Catching a Wave

March 8, 2024 Reviews No Comments

Wipeout

Three feisty, independent women-of-a-certain-age are bobbing around on surfboards in the Pacific Ocean, just off the coast of Santa Cruz. Why? Well, Claudia has arranged something special and unique to share with her two closest friends on her birthday. It’s an event that all three ladies have always fantasized about, so why not? You see, at 60-something they’re about to take their first surfing lessons! Joining Claudia are her lifelong friends Wynn and Margaret, who’s been nicknamed “Gary.” As we meet the ladies they’re casually floating in the water, hoping to catch a wave, while awaiting the arrival of Blaze, their hunky young surfing instructor.

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What a Feeling!

March 4, 2024 Reviews No Comments

The Time Machine: A Tribute to the ’80’s

The joyful music of the 1980’s was vast, vibrant and valiant. So many different song styles were embodied by the talents of hundreds of groundbreaking singers and musicians. It must’ve been a daunting task for Daryl D. Brooks, BET playwright and director, to decide which of the multitude of great songs and performers from the ’80’s to include in this retrospective revue. But theatergoers who take this musical and historical journey through the Decade of Decadence at Black Ensemble Theater will be rewarded with two-and-a-half hours of total reminiscence and rapture. All I can is, “What a Feeling!”

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Writing to Shake Off My Cares

March 4, 2024 Reviews No Comments

The Diary of Anne Frank

When the audience enters the second floor of the Greenhouse Theater Center, they’ll find a huge display of materials that provide a background that will enhance the audience’s enjoyment and understanding of this new production. Arrive early enough to be able to learn more about WWII in Europe and the rise of the notorious Nazi Party. A prolific playwright and multi award-winning writer, Wendy Kesselman’s one-act adaptation of “The Diary of Anne Frank” is making its Chicago premiere in Lincoln Park. First produced last season at Nashville Children’s Theatre, this 75-minute version is designed to introduce to families the true story of a very brave, real young girl, her family and friends. Bringing this 13-year-old to life puts a face on the horrors of the nightmare called the Holocaust. The fascinating exhibit, on loan from the Anne Frank Center, provides a wealth of additional information that will make this presentation even more poignant.

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