Chicago Theatre Review
A Sweeping Epic
Leopoldstadt
Before his death, theatre critic Dominic Cavendish called the late playwright Sir Tom Stoppard, “Britain’s greatest living dramatist.” He burst onto the theatre scene in 1966 with his daring and hilarious spin-off of HAMLET, entitled ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD. Known for his razor-sharp wit, deep intellectual curiosity and playful exploration of language, Stoppard went on to write for film, radio, television as well as for the theatre.

Over his lifetime Tom Stoppard penned more than 30 tragicomedies. They include TRAVESTIES, THE INVENTION OF LOVE, JUMPERS, THE REAL THING, ARCADIA, ROCK N’ ROLL and THE COAST OF UTOPIA. Reviewing LEOPOLDSTADT, his last play, Greg Evans called Stoppard’s final work “a late career masterpiece.” He went on to wisely comment about this sweeping epic that “any summary of the scenes and timeline descriptions of LEOPOLDSTADT can’t begin to convey the richness of Stoppard’s work.” And I absolutely agree.
LEOPOLDSTADT premiered in 2020 in London’s West End, but was forced to close due to the Covid pandemic. It returned again when the theaters were reopened, and then transferred to Broadway two years later. In New York, Stoppard’s three-hour masterpiece won four Tony Awards, including Best Play. However, the presentation at Writers Theatre features a few cuts and script revisions made by Stoppard and his frequent collaborator and friend, Carey Perloff, who also brilliantly directed this production. There could not have been a more perfect choice as guest director. The Glencoe theatre’s incredibly intimate presentation marks the largest production in the theatre’s history, as well as a beautiful rendition of the final play by one of our greatest playwrights.
LEOPOLDSTADT is Stoppard’s most personal, elaborate and semi-biographical play. It follows the lives of four generations of a large Jewish family. The story is set in the luxurious drawing room of their family home in Vienna, Austria. The clan’s complicated history spans from 1899 to 1955. In two-acts, Stoppard’s saga recounts the intricate journey of an affluent, assimilated family as their enjoyment of prosperity is taken for granted, and until the family’s good fortune descends into the perils of the Great War and the ravaging realities of the Holocaust. Stoppard based many of the characters in this play on the stories he remembered about his family relatives. As the epic narrative continues, the playwright comes to explore the painful and lingering guilt of those few family members who survived.
It’s imperative that every theatergoer has a printed program in his hands throughout the performance, in order to follow along and thoroughly understand the relationships of each character. The characters are featured in three ways. There’s a nicely illustrated family tree, and the clan is also listed by the various eras. Then there are the headshot photos of the entire cast, so that the audience can match faces to the character names.

Although there are many newcomers treading the boards in this production, the cast is led by some of Chicago’s finest, best-known and well-loved actors. They include Barbara E. Robertson, (THE DETECTIVE’S WIFE, Writers Theatre), Kate Fry (WIFE OF A SALESMAN, Writers Theatre), Emma Rosenthal (THE FLYING LOVERS OF VITEBSK, at Northlight), Hannah Dworkin (PICNIC, Writers Theatre), Jessie Fisher (EVERY BRILLIANT THING, Writers Theatre), Sarah Coakley Price (EURYDICE, Writers Theatre), Ian Barford (Salieri in Steppenwolf’s AMADEUS), Sean Fortunato (Malvolio in TWELFTH NIGHT, Writers Theatre), Joey Slotnick (AMADEUS, Steppenwolf), Erik Hellman (TRANSLATIONS, Writers Theatre) and Andrew Mueller (TRANSLATIONS, Writers Theatre). The actors range in ages, from children to adult. Many are making their Writers Theatre and/or professional debut. They include Justin Albinder, Sam Bell-Gurwitz, Ella Boparai, Levi Charnay, Asha Dale Hopman, Rachel J Jones, Theo Clark Leber, Morgan Medina, Grainne Ortlieb, Adeline Rosenthal, Sebastian Rus, Caleb Scherr and Brenann Stacker. An award for Best Ensemble was created for such a talented, multi-generational cast as this!
In addition to a large, gifted cast and the brilliant guidance and staging by director Carey Perloff, a few members of the artistic technical team must be acknowledged for their superlative contributions to production. Ken MacDonald’s gorgeous and detailed scenic design is absolutely jaw-dropping. Keith Parham’s exquisite lighting design adds color, depth and mood to each chapter of the story. The sumptuous, multi-piece costume design by Alex Jaeger spans an amazing 56 years of political and cultural change in Vienna, and must be seen to be fully appreciated. The period look for each character is further enhanced by Tom Watson’s excellent hair, wig and makeup design. And Jane Shaw’s spot-on sound design and original music gives an additional layer of realism to this magnificent production. With this breathtaking, must-see presentation of Tom Stoppard’s sweeping epic tragicomedy, Writers Theatre once again shows why it’s consistently regarded as one of the brightest jewels in Chicago’s theatrical crown.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Colin Douglas
Presented June 4-August 9 by Writers Theatre, 325 Tudor Court, Glencoe, Illinois.
Tickets are available in person at the box office, by calling 847-242-6000 or by going to www.writerstheatre.org.
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Photos by Michael Brosilow
The High Price for Art
Southern Rapture
Tin Drum Theatre is a relatively young Chicago company who, I predict, is about to have a huge hit on their hands. Their mission statement perfectly prepares the audience for the play they’re about to enjoy. It states that the company “exists to disrupt complacency and reassert theatre’s civic purpose.” It goes on to tell us that in “moving beyond comfort to provoke conversation and critical engagement,” the company believes that “community begins where audience and ideas collide, and dramatic disturbances are created.” It’s as if their goal was directly inspired from Tin Drum’s latest production. The somewhat familiar plot of Eric Coble’s comedy, SOUTHERN RAPTURE, is unfortunately based upon true events. Through razor-sharp dialogue, fast-paced biting humor and scathing archetype character portrayals, the company demonstrates to the audience that, quite often, there’s a high price for art.

In 1996, the Charlotte Repertory Theater of North Carolina was fortunate to be one of only six American performing companies to be granted the production rights to present Tony Kushner’s ANGELS IN AMERICA. This epic play, which is subtitled “A Gay Fantasia on National Themes,” is presented in two parts. The critically acclaimed drama had earned every major accolade that existed, including both the 1993 and 1994 Tony Awards for Best Play, the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, the Drama Desk, and many others.
Kushner’s intense look at homosexuality and the 1980’s AIDS epidemic is an unflinching examination of how America faced this devastating disease, nicknamed “the gay plague.” The play primarily focuses on two couples, one straight and one gay. It features a mixture of real people, historical figures and a number of fictional characters, including supernatural beings like ghosts, dream characters and an angel. Many of the eight cast members play multiple roles, much as they do in this play. ANGELS IN AMERICA, which earned seven Jeff Awards for Chicago’s Invictus Theatre’s recent production, is widely regarded as one of the greatest plays of the 20th century. So for this reason, and many others, what happens in SOUTHERN RAPTURE isn’t just farcical and funny, it’s also deeply heartbreaking.
Beautifully directed with sensitivity by Jason Palmer, Tin Drum’s cofounder and co-artistic director, his talent and vast experience is put to the test. And, I must say, he definitely succeeds. Eric Coble’s comedy is given a sharp, energized production that emphasizes strong characterizations, wickedly dark satire and the narrow-minded censorship and prejudice that we continually see resurfacing even today. The controversy in SOUTHERN RAPTURE erupts when the local theatre produces a production of a play modeled after ANGELS IN AMERICA, which Eric Coble has retitled “Rapture in America.” The citizens objecting to the play have a threefold complaint. They disapprove because they claim that the play is all about gay men having sex; they protest that it contains an abundance of disgusting profanity; and—even worse—the play features full-frontal male nudity. Oh, my goodness!
Mr. Palmer stages and guides an incredibly gifted and versatile Chicago cast, particularly the four actors who play multiple roles. The three leading actors who hold the entire play together do so through their strong performances and contagious chemistry. As Majorie Winthrop, lovely Shannon Leigh Webber (INCOGNITO, Tin Drum; BOTTLE FLY, Red Twist) is a dynamo, a tower of strength filled with determination and imaginative ingenuity. She portrays the theatre’s producing artistic director who, years ago, left her hometown with her brother, when he was tormented for being gay. Now Marjorie’s returned home to take charge of the town’s theatre and to direct “Rapture in America.” In doing so, Marjorie is not only supporting freedom of speech, guaranteed by the Constitution, but she’s taking a stand to validate her brother’s lifestyle.
Talented Teddy Boone (WINTER GARDEN; INCOGNITO, Tin Drum), in playing conservative town Mayor Winston Paxton, he walks a thin line between honest characterization and cartoonish caricature. With high political aspirations that include luring the upcoming Olympics to his city, Paxton is planning to get reelected as Mayor, but he may also run for state Governor, or state Senator and possibly eventually President. Watching
Mr. Boone’s Mayor waffling between his support of every constituent and quashing the theatre’s controversial production, is like viewing a frenzied tennis match. The nickname “Wishy-washy” constantly comes to mind.
Michael Stejskal is the third actor portraying a single character with special panache. Making his Tin Drum debut as theatrical producer, Donald Sherman, he creates an edgy young divorced dad who’s saddled with child support obligations and dental distress. The talented actor, who plays Majorie’s flamboyant right-hand man, is nothing if not aggressively animated. He was seen in THE WINTER’S TALE at Invictus Theatre and in FOUR PLACES at Four Chairs Theatre. Sherman’s catty relationship with Jordan Gleaves, in the role of Simon Larisher, the wonderfully sleazy and gossiping theatre critic, is pretty hilarious. And the manner in which he interacts with the gifted Mr. Gleaves playing insecure actor Emmett Whipple, is pure genius. Jordan Gleaves, I might add, is one of the most versatile and charming actors in this production. He’s also spot-on playing Franklin McManus, the theatre’s lawyer, who continually spouts confusing mixed metaphors; and he also digs deep down into his James Earl Jones lower register to portray the Host of television’s Nightline.
Also making her Tin Drum debut is talented Jenny Hoppes, who is a stitch as Pam, the theatre’s no-nonsense stage manager, who is hilariously invisible to everyone else in the play. She doubles as the very funny, Bible-thumping concerned citizen, Laverne Jackson; and she plays a seductive Lady Macbeth-like Clarice Paxton, the Mayor’s conniving wife. Mary Anne Bowman also plays multiple memorable characters well. She portrays Allissa Marquand, the theatre’s most vocal board member and a concerned mother; stalwart District Attorney Julia Overmyer; and Nyla-Jean Geisy, an actress easily given to hysterics, who plays the molting Angel in “Rapture in America.”
And, as Mickey Stedman, the devoted actor who has to appear completely naked in the play-within-the-play, Andrew Bosworth is outstanding. He’s been enjoyed in productions at City Lit, Redtwist, The Factory, and other Chicago theaters. His character has absolutely no qualms about being naked in front of an audience, and he’s in complete support of doing the play, as it was written by fictional playwright, Anton Finewitz, who Mr. Bosworth also plays with relish. Sometimes bordering on cartoonish, Andrew is also the wild, fire-and-brimstone, evangelical preacher, Reverend DuPree, who’s hellbent on shutting down the production.

One of the most impressive aspects of this production is how each of the actors who play numerous characters, not only become completely different personalities in an instant, but also switch costumes so quickly. Kudos to Kasey Wolfgang for creating their 1990’s wardrobe that not only looks appropriate but allows for quick changes. Tech director, Kaitlyn Hettinger’s artistic scenic design is dominated by all kinds of windows, possibly a metaphor indicating that everyone in this town always has his eyes focused on everyone else’s business. And Ellie Fey’s brilliant lighting design plays an important role in this production.
Tin Drum’s Chicago premiere of Eric Coble’s comedy, SOUTHERN RAPTURE, is sure to be a hit with audiences. With its hilarious dialogue, comedic characters, breakneck pacing and seven seconds of full frontal male nudity, both the serious theatre aficionados and the curious will be lining up for tickets to this entertaining and enlightening farce. Get ready for a smart, yet comical portrayal of how we often have to cope with the high price for art in America.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Colin Douglas
Presented June 11-28 by Tin Drum Theatre Company at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont Ave.
Tickets are available in person at the box office, by calling 773-975-8150 or by going to www.theaterwit.org.
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by going to www.theatreinchicago.com
Photos by Lance Sorenson
Always Something There to Remind Me
Going Bacharach: The Songs of an Icon
One of the finest, most polished, sophisticated and magnificently performed musical revues is now playing for a limited time in the Windy City. The beautiful Apollo Theater Chicago presents an extraordinary concert of gorgeous song and instrumental, which has been playing to enthusiastic music lovers for months now. I’m late to the party, and unfortunately the production is coming to a close this Sunday. But please—do yourself a big favor and hurry over to the classy Lincoln Avenue venue near the L tracks, for a truly memorable entertainment event that will evoke fond memories of the past. Because, as GOING BACHARACH proves, “There’s Always Something There to Remind Me.”
Read MoreIt’s a Whole New World
Smiley
Dating has never been easy for anyone. In the old days, we used to meet possible dates in person, whether at school, the library, at church or maybe in the park. You might even strike up a conversation with someone special at a restaurant or bar. But it’s a whole new world. Nowadays everyone—straight, gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender—whatever—will search differently for romance. Today, a horny 21st century person will troll the Internet looking for love, or whatever passes for love these days.
Read MoreThe Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name
Brokeback Mountain
The first thing that must be said about this production is that, contrary to rumors, this is not a musical. It’s also not a carbon copy of Ang Lee’s critically acclaimed film from 2005, that starred the late Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal. It’s a unique, 90-minute one-act play with music. The tiny onstage house band, led by music director, conductor and pianist Jacob Yates, is tucked into a shadowy corner of the playing area, but is always present and in view of the audience. The musical quartet provides a soulful, country-flavored soundtrack that beautifully enhances the mood and atmosphere of the story. Dan Gillespie Sells’ score also features songs that Kat Eggleston performs as the Balladeer. As such, she becomes a kind of one-person Greek chorus, whose poetic commentary resonates as the story unfolds. But there’s no uptempo, over-sung pop hits or a cute chorine chorus tap dancing across the windswept Wyoming prairie. This is a drama, with a few moments of humor, that’s agreeably embellished by a subtle, country/western soundtrack.
Read MoreCompañia de Teatro Físico’s LOS REGALOS at the Dance Center and Physical Theater Festival Chicago.

Physical Theater Festival Chicago is curated collection of live performances from around the world, meant to inspire theatergoers and local artists to reimagine what a live theater experience can be and do across cultures, languages, and genres. Now in its 13th year, the festival was founded to introduce a more progressive, physical approach to theater-making in Chicago. The festival showcases award-winning, ensemble-created works spanning traditions such as clown, mime, improv, puppetry, object theater, circus, dance, and street performance, while also highlighting outstanding artists and companies from Chicago.
Last Night, I was lucky to catch COMPAÑIA DE TEATRO’S (The Physical Theater Company) LOS REGALOS (The Gifts). The company is from Peru, where it was founded in 2014 with the goal to create stage works using languages that speak from the body and for the body.
LOS REGALOS tells the story of a family. A single father and his two sons grow up, grow apart, and grow old together. All the performers wore masks reminiscent of Commedia del arte or Japanese Noh, leaving them to emote, express and communicate only through their bodies. It’s a powerful, visceral experience, to follow a story filled with passion in which no one has a face.
It is a cast of three: Miquel De La Rocha plays the Father with an easy grace. His thoughts play out over his body so expressively, I soon forgot his mask. Diego Sakuray plays the Youngest Son with an explosive, physically stunning performance including pratfalls so realistic, I found myself wondering how they were achieved without special affects (virtuosity is the answer). Sakuray whips seamlessly from frantic child, to toddling babe, to family dog with an effortlessness that must be seen to be believed. Eduardo Cardozo, one of the founders of the company along with Diego Sakuray and Director Fernando Castro, plays the Oldest Son. Cardozo’s Son is a frustrated, solid sort. You get the impression that he is always straining for attention, meaning, and love.
A special mention must also be made of the beautiful set and media component of the experience. The stage is draped in huge, linen swaths; props are carried on and off by the actors. Chalk-like line drawings build and change behind them, reflecting their home, their hearth, or telling part of their story. The drawings are as minimalistic and expressive as the actors are in their simple, beige linen. The muted color and soft, yellow light create an atmosphere of emotional expression that is wholly engrossing and carried the audience with them on their journey through life.
The summary of the show in English is:
“A father and his two sons live in a house. The most routine tasks, such as preparing breakfast, bathing or housework t urn into real adventures when tackled by three inexperienced men and their fear of not knowing what they are doing. The journey that. The elder brothers needs to make in order to leave home, and the fear of saying goodbye to the ones we love, will be the starting point of our story.” The Spanish description suggests that when the elder brother prepares to leave home, his younger brother and father need to learn to communicate.
Neither summary reflects the performance I attended. This is the story of a family over time, told in tight little chapters that jump through time. In each vignette, they argue, play, battle and come to solutions. Circumstances change, sometimes, they even flip completely, as each individual takes a turn as a caregiver, protector, antagonizer or ally. They are always communicating with their bodies, both to each other and to the audience. This performance is wholly in keeping with the goal of the theater festival. It tells a story, through live theater, in a way that is unique, compelling and powerful. Be sure to check it out.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
LOS REGALOS is at The Dance Center at Columbia College Friday, June 5 at 8:00pm, and Saturday, June 6 at 2:00pm and 6:00pm. Run time is 60 minutes. Tickets for LOS REGALOS and the rest of the Physical Theater Festival can be found at: https://www.theaterwit.org/tickets/productions/box_office
To learn more about Physical Theater Festival Chicago, click here: https://www.physicalfestival.com/about
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Miles and Miles of Heart
Damn Yankees
To paraphrase the pullout hit song from this charming and moving musical comedy, world famous actors we haven’t got; loads of splashy scenery, we haven’t got; dazzling special effects, we haven’t got. What’ve we got? We’ve got heart! Miles and miles ’n miles o’ heart! Because, while there’s so much to recommend in this tuneful finale of Theo Ubique’s 29th season, it’s the heart of this production—miles and miles and miles of Heart—that is the super power and the secret sauce behind this pleasurable production.
Read MoreTuta Theatre’s Crime and Punishment seeks resurrection from the dirt.
TUTA Theatre, ever fearless and resourceful, went with a particularly topical play this summer: an adaptation of Dostoevsky’s CRIME AND PUNISHMENT by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus. This adaptation premiered at Writers Theater in 2003 and has enjoyed over 100 productions across the country and internationally from Europe to Australia and Indonesia.
You may be asking yourself why a 160+ year old story of impoverished student Raskolnikov and his twisted, grandiose theories of life and morality could still be so compelling to so many audiences around the world. The answer is, as with all the classics, the questions Raskolnikov is asking and trying to answer, are still being asked and answered today. Even more chilling, Imperialist Russia does not seem so different from 2026 America – rising prices, a poor job market and unsustainable rents sound familiar?

Raskolnikov is an intelligent, sensitive, down on his luck student. He came to the capital riding on the hopes and dreams of his family to make something of himself, but soon found law school unaffordable, and has since been sinking ever deeper into poverty and debt, paralyzed and horrified at the thought of admitting his failures. He’s also the sort of kid who is often the smartest in the room, and, after one too many days alone with his own thoughts, has developed a theory that humans can be categorized into two types: the ordinary and the extraordinary. If someone is extraordinary, then the usual things like law and order, or morality, don’t apply to them. It’s no surprise really, that he finds himself to be in that second group. After talking himself up, and skipping one too many meals, Raskolnikov decides to put his theory to the test, you know, to help mankind by removing an “obstacle” (in the form of a nasty old lady). The reality of his actions quickly leaves him horrified, and he is ushered along his desperate descent into misery by Inspector Porfiry, who decides to play a little with him, to see if he can get a confession.

The cast is made up of three actors: Associated Company Members Clifton Frei as Raskolnikov and Felix as Sonia, and Company Member Huy Nguyen as Porfiry. Frei spends the majority of the play front and center, unravelling in the literal muck as the minutes tick by. Nguyen and Felix weave in and out of his misery, sometimes playing other, minor characters. All of the actors are admirably focused and present, given the tiny theater and minimalist staging. Frei is appropriately haunted, leaning into Raskolnikov’s desperation and misery with all he has. Nguyen, as a deceptively friendly Porfiry gives the impression of a spider encircling its prey, and as Sonia’s drunken father, a broken hearted, beaten man. Felix plays all the female characters, each markedly different. Her turn as Sonia strikes a cool note every time she comes onstage, with an otherworldly, soft voice that changes the atmosphere the minute she opens her mouth.
TUTA Co-Artistic Director, and Director of this production, Jacqueline Stone, made the wise choice to strip the atmosphere as efficiently and powerfully as the adaptors did the novel. The staging itself, is in fact, one of the most powerful aspects of this production. The production team of Set Designers Tatiana Kahvegian and Keith Parham (who also doubles on light design) and Sound Designer Stefanie Senior have created a set that seems to be an outward expression of a devolving mind. The stage is a raised bed of dirt, the walls around it draped in plastic sheeting with the occasional violent looking slit, that fades off into a hallway. Frei spends the brisk, 90 minutes barefoot, groveling in the dirt and growing increasingly filthy, while Nguyen and Felix walk gently across it, supporting, supplicating or goading Raskolnikov as their characters demand. The sound does a lot of the heavy lifting too, taking the audience in and out of rooms and conversations, while the stage never changes – and Raskolnikov never escapes it, one cannot escape one’s own mind, after all.

Most unsettling of all was the creeping sensation, as the story unfolds, that nearly everything the audience witnesses could happen, even is happening, today. Unfortunately for most of us, the types who are currently acting on their ideas of superiority have significantly more resources and power than poor Raskolnikov. Ultimately though, the story of Crime and Punishment is one of the inevitability of morality. No matter how hard we may try to talk ourselves out of our basic humanity, this production seems to say, it never leaves us. It can be a thorn in our sides, causing pain till it is recognized, or in the case of Sonia, a solid foundation that keeps us grounded in the nuanced reality of existence, and in the belief that we are all capable of change, remorse and even resurrection.
Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT is at Tuta Theatre, 4670 N Manor Ave in Chicago. May 11 – June 28, 2026 Thursdays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, and Sundays at 3:00 pm
Pay-what-you-choose reservations available for $20, $45, $60, $100, available at
https://www.tutatheatre.org/crime-punishment-reservations Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
A Swashbuckling Musical
Scaramouche
Quite likely the only recollection anyone has today of the name Scaramouche is from the 1975 song, “Bohemian Rhapsody,” by the British rock band, Queen. And for a minute there was Anthony Scaramucci, the White House communications director during Trump’s first term. But Scaramouche has a much longer history. He was one of several recognized, archetypical masked characters found in 16th-18th century comic theatrical productions. This stylized form of improvised professional theatre was called commedia dell’arte. Similar to Pierrot, Colombine and Harlequin, Scaramouche was a cunning, roguish servant character, usually costumed all in black with a white ruff. The actor portraying Scaramouche was often skilled in swordplay, which inspires this show’s description “a swashbuckling musical.”
Read MoreAlways Look on the Bright Side of Life
Monty Python’s Spamalot
Hilarious, goofy, nonstop mindless adult humor! Fantastic performances by a cast of gifted actors, singers and dancers all blessed with excellent comic timing, tireless energy and contagious enthusiasm! A musical stuffed with beautiful, catchy songs, wild choreography, gorgeous sets embellished with colorful lighting and imaginative projections, props and costumes! And, after two-and-a-half hours of giddy glee, the audience leaves the theatre with huge smiles on their faces. What’s not to like? It’s Monty Python’s SPAMALOT!
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