Chicago Theatre Review

Chicago Theatre Review

All For One and One For All

March 30, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Three Musketeers

Transporting both the audience and the artists from the real world to another time and place has always been the intent of the Idle Muse Theatre Company. The theatre is known for interpreting the classics, both novels and theatrical dramas, and presenting them from a new, unique point of view. Over their twenty year history, the company has presented new stage adaptations of such familiar literary works as Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere and Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey. Idle Muse has also offered their own unique perspective of well-known theatrical works, such as “Macbeth,” retold as WHAT THE WEIRD SISTERS SAW; “L’Morte D’Arthur,” reinterpreted from the villain’s perspective as THE LAST QUEEN OF CAMELOT; and an historically-based play that probably inspired “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” called THE BLOOD COUNTESS. 

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Theater of the Mind carries perception from outwards in at the Goodman Theater.

March 29, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Memory Palace, known in Roman times as the method of loci, is a concept used for organizing and recalling information. It involves mentally associating pieces of information with specific locations in a familiar environment, like rooms in a house, or drawers in a cabinet.  The user visualizes these locations in sequence and imagines placing the concepts to be remembered at specific points within the house (or cabinet, or whatever).  Recall is achieved by mentally retracing the path and using the imagined places to retrieve the associated information. Co-Creators David Byrnes and Mala Gaonkar have taken this concept out of the mind and into a tangible experience at the Goodman Theater. It is an immersive blend of your childhood local science museum, a one person show, and a meditation on the nature of memory – and how it shapes who we are.

Tours of only 16 people at a time are taken on a 75-minutes journey through the memory palace of a character named David. The different rooms each have meaning for him, and the friends he has brought along. Each room provides an experience that plays with perception and examines how perception can alter any moment profoundly. Part of the joy of this experience is not knowing what each room will present, so I won’t get into details, but be prepared for all of your senses to be piqued.

Multiple shows go on each night, spaced out 15 minutes apart. Director Andrew Scoville has orchestrated a cast of eleven different actors of various ages, sexes and ethnicities to guide their audiences through the program with a playful yet clock-like efficiency.  Our David was the warm, engaging, Shariba Rivers. The choice to cast based on vibes, rather than any physical qualities, gives the whole evening a philosophical air – it’s about David, and Shariba, and you and me and anyone else in the room. It’s about our minds and our hearts, and what they can do, and how we can choose to engage with the world around us. Participating in this multi-media, technology heavy and yet deeply personal work reminded me of Arthur C. Clarke’s famous statement that magic is just science we don’t understand yet. Or perhaps, that the blend of art and science is the true definition of magic.

Shariba Rivers as David_Photo by Todd Rosenberg

Despite the fact that all of the illusions in the program can be explained, in fact, at the end of the program audiences are even given a list of explanations and further reading, one can’t help but be slightly dissatisfied with the idea that science is nothing but facts. The ability of our minds to be fooled, of our senses to be mistaken, and of our memories to be imperfect requires a certain flexibility in thought and a steadiness of heart that goes beyond algorithms. In one room, there is a very technology-driven, futuristic experience and yet, that experience happens surrounded by expressive, strange and striking paintings made by a real person, conveying real and mysterious thoughts and feelings that inform the moment profoundly.

In dark times this evening is a return to wonder, a reminder that life, and the universe are filled with mysteries and seeking knowledge can be a joyful, illuminating experience, if you can let go and allow new perspectives to expand your understanding, rather than limit it. Perhaps this description of the show says it best:

Caution: Side effects may include a distrust of your own senses, a disorientation of self, and a mild to severely good time. You may not be who you think you are. But we’re all in it together.

Highly Recommended

Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia

Theater of the Mind, recommended for ages 10+, appears now through July 12, 2026, at the Reid Murdoch Building (333 N. LaSalle). Tickets ($69-$99, subject to change) are available at the Goodman Theatre Box Office (170 N. Dearborn), by calling 312.443.3800 or by purchasing online at TheaterOfTheMindChicago.com.

Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.


A Saucy Trans Rom Com

March 29, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Modern Gentleman

Lily, Adam’s attractive and strong-willed fiancee, has just broken off their engagement of five years. Adam’s heartbroken and kind of lost and emotionally shattered. Lily says she still loves Adam and the feeling is mutual. But the problem stems from the fact that Lily, a sharp-as-tacks schoolteacher, is a proud lesbian. When she first met Adam, he was still physically a woman, just beginning his transition to becoming a man. But over the years, as their ardent love for each other flourished, Adam no longer enjoyed the physical expression. Since he was just beginning his transition, Adam always enjoyed giving pleasure to Lily, but he wasn’t comfortable yet with being on the receiving end. And thus begins the conflict in this saucy trans rom com.

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Back On Stage Again

March 22, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Jackie Wilson Story

Just as she did in 2000, Jackie Taylor, the gifted Founder and Executive Director of Black Ensemble Theater, has brought back her production of THE JACKIE WILSON STORY. Twenty-six years ago Ms. Taylor wrote this show, and is once again directing her loving loving tribute to the talented international singer/songwriter. Today, the critically acclaimed, mega-popular biographic musical is kicking off the theater’s exciting 50th Anniversary Season. Appropriately, back in 2012, Ms. Taylor’s engaging and fact-filled musical began a popular and critically acclaimed National Tour that culminated in a record-breaking run at New York’s famous Apollo Theater. And now Jackie Wilson, one of the world’s greatest entertainers, is back on stage once again in Chicago.

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Chasing Away the Blues

March 17, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Drowsy Chaperone

Renowned for its loving and affectionate satire of the theatre, fast-paced comedy, screwball characters, rousing musical numbers and exciting and original choreography, THE DROWSY CHAPERONE is the quintessential show for a delightful evening in the theatre. Now, this musical may not be familiar to every theatergoer. But for those of us who are musical theatre fanatics, or aficionados of full-tilt comedies, this clever show-within-a-show is a not-to-be-missed hit for the Spring season!

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The Strange Things We Inherit

March 16, 2026 Reviews No Comments

White Rooster

Drawing from a Chinese legend told by family during the early 1900’s, multitalented Lookingglass Ensemble member, Matthew Yee, has written, composed the music and directed this strange and fascinating tale. It’s a story filled with fantasy and folklore. Mr. Yee’s play is an original, incredibly inventive saga that weaves together ghosts, puppets, movement and music. And at its core, Mathew Yee’s two-act drama, liberally laced with plenty of dark humor, is a tale of love, loss and the strange things we inherit.

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Hungry For More

March 9, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Two Sisters and a Piano

The year is 1991. The setting is Havana, Cuba under strict Communist rule. Maria Celia, a famous revolutionary writer and outspoken author, along with her younger pianist sister, Sofia, are currently living under house arrest. The stifling situation is almost a welcome respite for the two sisters, after having shared a tiny prison cell for the past two years. Both Maria Celia and Sofia were arrested and imprisoned for their shared political views, but now they’re confined to the family home. The women aren’t allowed outside their house, except by a circular staircase that leads to the roof. The heat is omnipresent, as is their loneliness and boredom. The only pleasure for these two artistic young women comes from the battered, out-of-tune piano that still remains. And the only other human contact for the two women is a visit each day by a charismatic Cuban military officer, charged with monitoring the sisters. Lieutenant Portuondo is ordered to check in on the women and interrogate them. But eventually the Lieutenant’s visitations become more social and something much more.

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A Purr-fect Production

March 8, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Cats

Based upon T.S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats,  a book written to entertain the poet’s grandchildren, one of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s best known musicals is primarily a song and dance concert. Without any deeper meaning, the show only seeks to entertain and introduce the audience to a variety of feline characters. Through all their dances and songs, the cats’ only goal is  to be chosen by their leader, Old Deuteronomy, to journey to the Heavyside Layer, a kind of reincarnation. 

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Back In the Room Where It Happens

March 7, 2026 Reviews No Comments

Hamilton

Can anyone recall a Broadway musical that’s had as significant a cultural impact as HAMILTON? Who would’ve thought that a musical telling the story of one of America’s most important, but little understood, founding fathers would become an international phenomenon? And other than Broadway musical aficionados, was anyone else familiar with the name Lin Manuel Miranda before this musical took Broadway by storm? But now, ten years later, HAMILTON has not only been seen and adored by millions of avid theatergoers, it’s achieved what many thought was impossible: the show has brought scores of young people into theaters who had never set foot there before. And now, for only a few weeks in early Spring, HAMILTON is back in “The Room Where It Happens.”

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Fantasy Films and Falling in Love

March 4, 2026 Reviews No Comments

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

In 2007, Dominican American author, Junot Diaz wrote an incredible, multi-award-winning  novel that was especially unique. He lovingly gave his fellow Dominicanos a story with which they could truly relate. Through the character of Oscar de Leon, a young, overweight teenager living in New Jersey, the Dominican community could finally see themselves as a part of the American story, vividly alive on each and every page. Now, in enjoying its World Premiere in English, this new stage adaptation by Marco Antonio Rodriguez offers Chicago audiences an opportunity to experience Diaz’s book as it roars to life.

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