Chicago Theatre Review

Chicago Theatre Review

Immersive meets the absurd in The Terror Cotta’s THE OSTRICH

May 4, 2025 Reviews No Comments
Shellie DiSalvo as “Incandescence Groane”
Photo by Steve Townshend | Distant Era

The Terror Cottas is an experimental playwright-driven theatre group, and the historic North Mansion in Berger Park serves as an experimental theater for playwright Wendy A. Schmidt’s The Ostrich. The play is an absurdist, immersive experience that involves the Wright Brothers’ inexplicably living out of time and their collision with a small town called Ostrich, that has, perhaps unsurprisingly, a collective love of ostriches.

It opens on the front stoop of the mansion, where the mayor, Incandescence Groane, played with warmth by Shellie DiSalvo, announces that her beloved town of Ostrich, Indiana has been chosen by none other than the Wright Brothers to be the site of a new airstrip. The townspeople are all delighted at this sign of Progress, and even more delighted when the Wright Brothers themselves (Pete Wood and Donaldson Cardenas) arrive to give a speech, as if they’d just walked out of 1915 and onto the stage. Wood and Cardenas do a great turn as old-timey gentlemen. Wood is grandiose and cheerful, sporting an “evil” curled mustache, and Cardenas is a deceptively gentle mastermind. Once the announcement is made, the audience is invited into the house. The action unfolds mostly in the three main rooms of the home. The front room is appropriately covered in kitschy ostrich-themed art, as it is The Ostrich Feather, a bed and breakfast run by the mayor, while the other rooms serve as whatever the scene calls for, be it an airplane, a park, a beach or a front porch.

(L to R): Donaldson Cardenas as “Wilbur Wright” and Pete Wood as “Orville Wright”
Photo by Steve Townshend | Distant Era

Each scene takes place in a different room – the audience is directed to each new scene by a tour guide. This makes for a new meaning to the term theater in the round, since every scene is viewed from a different angle, and the actors walk in and out, and even occasionally interact with the audience as if they are fellow townspeople. The plot is relatively straightforward, once you grasp that the Wright Brothers somehow exist as men of the early 19th century in a town that has Amazon, HBO and woman-owned businesses. The Wright Brothers have been given carte blanche by the residents of Ostrich to choose land for their airfield – a thing everyone is convinced will put sleepy, quaint little Ostrich on the map. The brothers choose a back field belonging to Chuck (Jorge Salas), the brother of Incandescence and an unflappably cheerful guy. Unfortunately for Chuck, he had plans for that field – and it holds a tree shaped like an ostrich, the town’s pride and joy.

The misfortune doesn’t stop there. This play is about the destructive power of blind faith in progress. Each town member pays an increasing cost to welcome the Wright Brothers in and in the end, all they do is lose. There are some unexpected twists and turns as the story gets darker, with one huge, hilarious departure near the middle when the townspeople put on a play about Thanksgiving that somehow becomes a gun fight between Christopher Columbus and two self-important eagles (played by the very game ensemble members Ellen Adalaide and Jonathan Crabtree). After an evening of increasing silliness and a mounting feeling of unease regarding the Brother’s motives, the ending is a little abrupt – in fact, applause in the outer room was how we knew the show had ended at all. This led to a feeling of discomfort that I suspect was the playwright’s goal all along.

(L to R) Jonathan Crabtree, Jorge Salas and Ellen Adalaide
Photo by Steve Townshend | Distant Era

The combination of absurdity, surrealism and walking from room to room makes for a memorable evening. Experimental theater, according to the Terror Cottas, should: challenge audiences to think about life and themselves in a different way, expand the possibilities of the medium to keep it fresh and effective, speak to audiences of their particular moment in time in a way that artistic work from the past cannot, and nurture the audience’s ability to experience their present reality aesthetically, as opposed to experiences approved for inclusion in museums or histories. Frankly, The Ostrich does just that. If you’re looking for an evening of experimental theater that doesn’t involve sitting still for a few hours, this show is a great place to start.

Somewhat Recommended

Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia

May 2 – 17 at the Berger Park’s North Mansion, 6205 N.Sheridan. Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:00pm. Run time is 100 minutes with no intermission. There is an Industry performance on Monday, May 12 at 7 p.m. Tickets are on sale for $5 – $10 at www.TheTerrorCottas.org

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


0 comments


Leave a Reply