Chicago Theatre Review

Monthly Archives: September 2014

Poi Dog Pondering

September 18, 2014 Comments Off on Poi Dog Pondering

Poi Dog Pondering  – Ravinia

Despite record low temperatures and rain falling on and off throughout the evening, the fifteen member band known as Poi

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A Thunderstorm of Emotions

September 18, 2014 Comments Off on A Thunderstorm of Emotions

The Downpour – Route 66 Theatre

 

Sadly, there are many people with health concerns. Some are physical but many are mental. The wide range of mental health

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Now and Forever

September 15, 2014 Comments Off on Now and Forever

Cats – Paramount Theatre

 

What makes Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical, which opened in London’s West End back in 1981 and on Broadway the

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What a Tangled Web We Weave…

September 15, 2014 Comments Off on What a Tangled Web We Weave…

Death Tax – Lookingglass Theatre

Maxine, a smart, articulate, well-to-do elderly woman, lies in her hospital bed awaiting death. Maxine’s not concerned by

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In Adam’s Fall We Sinned All

September 14, 2014 Comments Off on In Adam’s Fall We Sinned All

Miracles in the Fall – Polarity Ensemble Theatre

Bravo to this marvelous theatre company for being one of Chicago’s foremost advocates of original works by local playwrights. It’s important to showcase the work of a fresh, innovative new writer for so many reasons. By premiering his play for Chicago audiences, a playwright has the opportunity to learn from their response. Often he’s finally able to see and hear his work come to life on a stage for the first time, as it was intended, which is quite different from merely hearing it read aloud. By observing an audience a playwright can determine whether laughs are landing correctly or if the drama is truly hitting home. Reading critics‘ reviews is another way in which to monitor the success of his play, for it’s a whole other audience’s responses to the production, as a whole.

Chuck O’Connor’s play is obviously a very personal work set in 1968 Detroit during the World Series and following the city’s turbulent racial riots. It lives and breathes within a nation divided by the politics of the Vietnamese War and is stoked by the controversy created by Vatican Two’s modernization of the Catholic service. Into this world he brings four characters and their intertwining story.

Clare Connelly is a nun who teaches biology at a parochial school. While challenged by her students, Clare must care for and do battle with Jimmy, her alcoholic Irish widower father. Charlie, Clare’s younger brother, who’s been off fighting in the war, suddenly returns one day unannounced. During the time he was away their mother died and his father began spiraling into an abyss of self-destruction. Clare’s been doing everything possible to maintain balance and still keep her father on the straight and narrow. However Jimmy Connelly’s cantankerous nature, his mysterious bitterness toward his wife’s memory, JimChar1his all-encompassing racial hatred and his condemnation of changes in the Catholic Church are defeating Clare’s efforts. Amid her family’s turmoil Clare eventually finds the courage to confess her anger, her own needs and her self doubts about the path she’s chosen that even young Father Lentine can’t assuage.

O’Connor’s play is a battleground fueled by unanswered questions and filled with unrelenting hatred and shouting. Rare is the moment when poor Sister Clare ever stops wringing her hands and cracks a smile. The woman desperately clings to her faith like it’s a life raft caught in a maelstrom. It almost becomes too much for even the audience to endure. Act I eventually ends on a promising note, but after first witnessing so much frustration and anguish the audience’s ready to join Jimmy for a much-needed drink. Act II is better-written and offers more emotional variety and, despite one more tragedy, a feeling that all the previous darkness will someday be rewarded in a bright, new dawn.

This is ultimately Sister Clare’s story, and Laura Berner Taylor plays the nun with strength and determination. The problem is that audiences only ever see that one side of this character; there are very few constrasting moments showing her as vulnerable, joyous or anything other than angry and defeated. Audiences will certainly sympathize with the character (and possibly the actress), but mostly because her portrayal is all one level. This character is obviously the glue that binds this story together, but it would be nice to find some quieter times, just for variety. When Ms. Taylor momentarily drops her guard and shares a few private thoughts with handsome, charismatic Father Lentine, the play and this character finally becomes three-dimensional. Until that time it’s just one constant barrage of rancor and shouting.

Rian Jairell brings a quirky, youthful approach to Father Lentine. He delivers the most honest performance of the production and, as such, is a much-welcome presence in every scene he’s in. Mr. Jairell provides a realistic, priestly balance of wisdom and empathy with the other characters, yet he makes Father Lentine’s own backstory just as interesting as the Connelly drama. Mickey O’Sullivan has some genuine, realistic moments as young Charlie, but his sudden explosion of anger near the end of the play seems incongruous and to erupt out of nowhere. Mr. O’Sullivan’s best scenes are during a tumultuous family dinner in which he tries to keep the peace. Fred A. Wellisch, however, plays Irish patriarch Jimmy Connelly in all one key: loud. While his dialect isn’t always consistent, it’s enough for this role. What is most annoying is the ClareHandsactor’s choice (and partly the playwright’s decision) to make Jimmy so flat and limiting. Without any contrast or diversity, the audience can’t establish any kind of emotional relationship with this character and he becomes merely a symbol of antagonism, instead of a real person. Ironically, Mr. Wellisch’s best moment is his final, silent entrance in the last scene.

Richard Shavzin does what he can in staging this play, especially considering the limited space allotted him in this tiny space. Charles C. Palia somewhat meets the script’s demands creating several different locales using furniture repositioning, but perhaps a more open space with simple shifts in lighting would’ve afforded Mr. Shavzin more room for his characters to live. The dinner table is particularly confining and provides a very limited acting opportunities for that scene.

Liv Morris wrote in Adam’s Fall that “hate is a disease, but love is its only cure.” This may well be the promise that finally saves Sister Clare and Father Lentine from their own personal hell and delivers the audience from all the despair found within the play’s two hour running time. While Chuck O’Connor’s drama has considerable merit it would benefit from a few minutes of happiness and an injection of some much-needed humor in which to balance all the anger and misery. That would be the miracle required in this Fall.

Somewhat Recommended

Reviewed by Colin Douglas

 

Presented September 3-October 5 by Polarity Ensemble Theatre at the Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago.

Tickets are available by calling the box office at 773-404-7336 or by going to www.petheatre.com.

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


Tony and Stan Say Goodbye

September 11, 2014 Comments Off on Tony and Stan Say Goodbye

The Midnight City – Firecat Projects

 

Two longtime middle-aged friends tease and torment each other while reminiscing about what made growing up and living in Chicago special for so many years. Tony’s a big, brash, no-nonsense kind of guy who likes eating meat and loves his beer. An unlikely birding enthusiast, he collects realistically detailed models of songbirds and creates cartoon-like paintings of them. Stan, a slighter, less vocal man, reinvents himself with every new job, sometimes employed by his beloved Cubbies and at times also simply being an artist himself.

Despite their many ups and downs throughout the decades, both men have enjoyed their relationship with this City of Big Shoulders and with each other. They’ve watched their city and each other grow and change, but each man responds differently to that inevitable parade of progress. Tony has begun taking stock of his life and has decided that he doesn’t want to shovel snow any more or scrape any more ice off a windshield. In his declining years, Tony feels he’s earned the time to Unknown(8)fully enjoy every single moment of his life and he’s about to move to a warmer climate. Stan doesn’t want his friend to leave, nor does he think it’s even the right solution; but Tony has chosen to relocate to New Orleans.

In a series of monologues and dialogues interspersed with mood-enhancing songs and musical interludes provided by talented songstress Anna Fermin and terrific guitarist John Rice (alone worth the admission price), and backed by Kristin Reeves’ interesting film & video artwork, this hour and forty-five minute riff on reevaluating your life, facing your mortality and making changes is both thought-provoking and inspiring. Stan Klein and, especially, Tony Fitzpatrick are both the authors and stars of this meditative entertainment. To call it a play would be misleading; yet it offers the kind of recollection and advice found in a good motivational speaker, without ever being didactic. While Stan is a funny, skinny little man with sudden outbursts of brilliance and a bizarre sense of himself, Tony’s a bigger, more verbal guy who’d be great to share a drink with and listen to his stories from the past. Both men offer philosophies and, while Stan sometimes seems a little unsure of his lines at times, Tony delivers his musings and meditations with the authority and conviction of a blue Unknown-1(6)collar motivational speaker. He is a delightful man to know and it’s a shame (according to the story) that he’s leaving Chicago.

Aimed at audiences who’ve survived into their middle years and are wondering, like Peggy Lee, “Is That All There Is?” this entertainment travels life’s highway. It takes theatergoers through two men’s laughter and sorrow, their dreams and disappointments, while touching on current events as well as private moments. While it best speaks to lifelong Chicagoans, much of what Tony and Stan have to share is universal. It’s in this global appeal that cause these two to men sparkle.

Recommended

 

Reviewed by Colin Douglas

 

Presented September 6-October 19 by Firecat Projects at the Steppenwolf Garage, 1624 N. Halsted, Chicago.

Tickets are availbable at the Steppenwolf box office, by calling 312-335-1650 or by going to www.steppenwolf.org.

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


Toto and Michael McDonald – A Night to Remember

September 8, 2014 Comments Off on Toto and Michael McDonald – A Night to Remember

Like a fine wine and cheese it was the perfect pairing of great artists, Toto and Michael McDonald. Throw in a beautiful

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Playwrighting Can Be Murder

September 6, 2014 Comments Off on Playwrighting Can Be Murder

Deathtrap – Citadel Theatre

 

Sidney Bruhl is a once successful, middle-aged playwright who used to be the toast of Broadway. Specializing in mysteries and thrillers,

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Holmes for the Holidays

September 6, 2014 Comments Off on Holmes for the Holidays

The Game’s Afoot – Drury Lane Oakbrook

 

It’s a snowy Christmas Eve in 1936. William Gillette, an actor famous for playing Sherlock Holmes, has invited the cast of his play and one

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The Story That Inspired a Literary Classic

September 5, 2014 Comments Off on The Story That Inspired a Literary Classic

The Whaleship Essex – Shattered Globe Theatre

 

Most great literature is the result of an author’s own experiences or, at the very least, based upon a real event he’s heard about. Young

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