Chicago Theatre Review
White Rabbit Red Rabbit by Nassim Soleimanpour presented by TUTA THEATRE

In 2010, 29-year-old playwright Nassim Soleimanpour could not acquire a visa to leave his native country of Iran. He wrote White Rabbit Red Rabbit that year, an entreaty to the rest of the world, or perhaps a lifeline, thrown into the dark. The world has been responding since its premiere at the Edinburgh and Summerworks festival in 2011. Since its debut, White Rabbit Red Rabbit has been translated into more than 30 different languages and been performed over 3000 times by some of the best and brightest actors of stage and screen.
Part confessional, part Animal Farm, part cry into the dark, White Rabbit Red Rabbit is like nothing I’ve ever seen, and I’m sorry to inform you, you won’t see it either. That’s because it’s an “experimental” play. It is performed cold, by a different actor each night, who opens an envelope containing the script onstage before the audience. There are no rehearsals, no director and no set to speak of (though a few props). Because of this, each night is utterly unique, and I hesitate to give much away in terms of what happens. The audience participates to a degree – you might want to wear comfortable clothing.

The actor serves as the conduit between the writer, Soleimanpour, and the audience. Sometimes the actor serves as a literal voice for the playwright, sometimes as a character in a story, sometimes as themselves, sometimes as a director.
This sort of experience would only attract a certain kind of actor: one who is comfortable in their own skin, one who can improvise and react on a dime, one who can access a deep, emotional well without any preparation. Tuta theatre company member Huy Nguyen was our conduit, and he performed with a self-effacing charm that was inviting and light-hearted at times, and movingly still at others. Nguyen embraced the uncertainty with a sense of humor and invited the audience to participate with him fully at every moment. We were all on the ride together. There were moments of silliness, catharsis and retrospection. Nguyen willingly opened his heart and his soul to the audience, and we were all rewarded as a result.
Because of its ephemeral nature, written to be interpreted by each actor in each city or language they perform in, White Rabbit Red Rabbit is as universal as it is specific. It explores power dynamics, the need for connection, the undeniable human desire for freedom, and a supplication for altruism. In the world of the play, and perhaps in the real world, when we witness death, suffering or tragedy we become complicit in it. Yet, like in life, it is hard to find examples of any choice that is definitely the right one, hard to know what an outcome will be. This experience is like life, in that sense. No one, not even the actor, knows how it will end, and no one knows if their choice is the right one.
This uncertainty creates a tension and vulnerability that is tangible: the woman seated next to me was squirming in her seat at one point, so frightened she was, of the choices we needed to make. To ask a roomful of strangers to trust each other, to ask the actor to trust an audience with this kind of blind faith, is a transformative experience. It’s one you shouldn’t miss.
TUTA Theatre’s line up for the rest of the run is below:
Sunday, July 13 at 7:30pm: Amy Gorelow
Monday, July 14 at 7:30pm: Joan Merlo
Sunday, July 20 at 7:30pm: Aziza Macklin
Monday, July 21 at 7:30pm: Alice Wedoff
Sunday, July 27 at 2:00pm: Wain Parham
Monday, July 28 at 7:30pm: Seoyoung Park
Sunday, August 3 at 7:30pm: Felix Mayes
Monday, August 4 at 7:30pm: Clifton Frei
Sunday, August 10 at 7:30pm: August Forman
Monday, August 11 at 7:30pm: Austin Ryan Hunt
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
Presented at the Tuta Theatre, 4670 N Manor Ave in Chicago. July 7 – August 11, 2025. Performance are Sundays and Mondays at 7:30pm. Run time is 90 minutes with no intermission.
Tickets run from $20 – $65 and can be purchased at tutatheatre.org
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.

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