Monthly Archives: August 2025
Welcome to the Rock
Come From Away
Once you’ve seen this extraordinary, exhilarating and life-affirming musical, now playing in a gorgeous production at the Paramount Theatre through October 12, you’ll be forever changed. First of all, this musical is not, as many have labeled it, about the 9/11 tragedy. Yes, the story is based upon how that horrific Islamist Al-Qaeda terrorist attack in 2001 affected so many lives, other than the almost 3,000 who died. But the musical isn’t about the actual tragedy. It’s a transforming, uplifting and brilliantly written and performed show that’s inspired by the appalling events of that day. COME FROM AWAY is a truly cathartic experience about the triumph of humanity over hatred. It’s an inspiring, joyful, sometimes funny and often heartbreaking true story that celebrates the goodness that lives within each of us. It reminds us what can happen when people put aside their fears, prejudices and hostility to embrace what it means to be human. So, as the cast sings, “Welcome to the Rock.”
Read MoreThe UnSanctioned Obama Musical Revue
44—The Musical
Do you remember Joy? Do you remember feeling safe and proud about living in the United States of America? Can you recall what it was like waking up and not reading about some outrageous, late night revengeful rant from an immature, egotistical Chief of State, aimed at anyone who actually has the wellbeing of our country at heart? Remember when it was a pleasure to listen to the intelligent and empathetic voice of a Commander in Chief we actually admired and respected? When hate and anger wasn’t the climate of the sycophants in charge of running this country (into the ground), and the Presidency wasn’t considered a “regime of doom”?
Read MoreThe Healing Power of Art
A New Brain
Not long after he won two Tony Awards for his 1992 groundbreaking production of FALSETTOS, composer and lyricist William Finn suddenly became ill. At first he was misdiagnosed with a brain tumor. Then later Finn learned that he was suffering from a disease called arteriovenous malformation. Following an extremely risky brain surgery that could’ve either killed him or destroyed his creative talents, Finn not only survived the ordeal but celebrated his survival with creativity. Joining forces with co-book writer, James Lapine, Finn created an autobiographical musical in 1998 entitled A NEW BRAIN. It’s an ode to defeating death, re-evaluating life choices and a glorification of the healing power that art provides.
Read MoreComposer, Conductor and Pianist
Rachmaninoff and the Tsar
Sergei Rachmaninoff was an unbelievably creative genius. Seldom does an artist achieve the kind of popularity that Rachmaninoff enjoyed during his own lifetime. In addition to his renowned talent as a composer of Romantic classical music, as well as his brilliance as an accomplished concert pianist, Rachmaninoff became the highly-respected Conductor of Russia’s Bolshoi Theater. However, political turmoil in Russia prompted Rachmaninoff and his family to leave Moscow for Germany and other countries, but he often returned to his homeland again and again. However, following the 1917 Russian Revolution, Rachmaninoff reluctantly decided to leave his homeland for good. He and his family emigrated to America, where they lived on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. There, among his many other achievements, the gifted composer arranged The Star-Spangled Banner to mark the 200th anniversary of Francis Scott Key’s piece that became America’s National Anthem.
Read MorePolyamory, Pythagoras and Pistachios
How To Transcend a Happy Marriage
Where to begin? There’s just so much to unpack in this play that it’s difficult to know where to start. I don’t want to give away any of the delectable morsels of the plot, but suffice it to say that Sarah Ruhl’s two-hour, two-act play features a lot, including polyamory, Pythagoras and some pistachios. But there’s much, much more.
Read MoreGame Play meets Media meets Live Theater for Dungeons & Dragons: The Twenty-Sided Tavern

Dungeons & Dragons, invented by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson, was first released as a table top role-playing game in 1974. In what could be described as the ultimate slow burn, in the last fifty years it has grown from a niche game of “nerds” to a cultural powerhouse with multiple editions, books, homages in hit tv shows like Big Bang Theory, Community and Stranger Things, a major motion picture and, since 2024, an off-Broadway show. The latest iteration is the National Tour: DUNGEONS & DRAGONS The Twenty-Sided Tavern.
The show, a combination of improv comedy, immersive theater, audience participation and actual game play, is set in the Forgotten Realms, an official Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting. The set looks like a cross between a tavern and a frat-house, with large screens along the back that display the backdrop of any given scene, or display information for the audience. The cast includes the Dungeon Master (Conner Marx) and the Tavern Keeper (Alex Stompoly), running an adventure for a small cast of improv actors. The night I attended, original cast members Madelyn Murphy and Diego Salinas were joined by special guest Anjali Bhimani.
D&D is inherently a game that requires quick thinking and community involvement. For most of its history, that community would have been the players at the table and the Dungeon Master (the person running the game). What was once an intimate experience in someone’s living room or den changed when live-streaming video became popular – especially during Covid lockdown. In the live stage show, the audience not only watches the cast play the game and act out scenes but also gets to dictate some of the player’s choices. In that way, it’s a lot like a Choose Your Own Adventure book from the 90’s, except there’s a theater full of enthusiastic game players shouting out advice and voting on their smart phones through an interactive web page. The combination of tech, performance and audience engagement makes each night a unique experience.
And what an experience it is: it was up to the charming Conner Marx to explain the ins and outs of the game, as well as fill in as non-player characters (NPCs) while Alex Stompoly ran the tech, made sly comments and generally kept things moving along. Madelyn Murphy has a physical, infectious cheerfulness that worked perfectly for her character, a fearsome warrior-bird (with a lot of love to give). Diego Salinas brought a quick-witted goofiness to his magician-cowboy-undead skeleton character that was unexpectedly loveable. Anjali Bhimani rounded out the threesome as a coy cat-burglar who was of course, actually a cat. As complicated as the game play may seem, the premise was simple and open-ended enough to leave plenty of room for the unexpected, and to be understood by non-game players like myself and my companion. Last night’s story required our merry band to go on a quest to find six magical objects in order to save their world from a demon who’d slipped out of a hole in the dimension, and included a talking Chicago style hot dog who taught Bhimani’s character how to love, Murphy’s character adopting a 47th child, Salinas saving young people with classic literature and an epic battle that involved both swords and catnip.

Aside from the voting and other phone-related participation, a few audience members were also brought on stage to help move things along or even step in as a character. One wonderful moment was the inspired line-readings of a ten-year-old boy, assisted by the cast. Another was when an audience member reminded Bhimani of an option she had when taking a turn. Because many outcomes depended quite literally on the role of a dice or an audience directive, there were several genuine surprises for everyone. This show is perfect for family groups, regardless of their familiarity with the game itself. Special guests will be appearing throughout the Chicago run, including Damien Haas, Erika Ishii, Aabria Iyengar and Jack Lepiarz. If you’re looking for a fun night out that is as unique as it is entertaining, you can’t go wrong with The Twenty-Sided Tavern.
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS The Twenty-Sided Tavern can be seen at Chicago’s Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place (175 E. Chestnut St., Chicago) for a limited seven-week engagement, August 12 – September 28. Performances are Tuesday through Thursday at 7:00 p.m., Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 2:00 p.m. & 7:30 p.m., and Sundays at 1:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Individual tickets are on sale now and range from $50.00 – $70.00 with a select number of premium tickets available. Additional fees apply for online purchases. For more information, visit www.BroadwayInChicago.com.
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Explore real-life trauma with dream logic in FEMALE, ASHKENAZI WITH A SEWING MACHINE

Set Designer Viscaya Wilson tells the audience nearly everything they need to know when they walk into the Berger Park Coach House for FEMALE, ASHKENAZI WITH A SEWING MACHINE, written by Jamie Greenblatt, with music by Richard Jennings and directed by Izadorius Tortuga. Dream-like, blue waves cover two walls. An antique Singer sewing machine sits on a small table, a spare, leafless tree, hung with folded paper on strings, frames a bench in the back. This lovely staging continued with an excellent use of space, for example, Anna’s (an expressive Haley Basil) hospital room was effectively created with two hooks and a blanket.
Anna is a young textile artist who was adopted at birth. Her only connection to her biological past is that Singer sewing machine, which is also her best friend and confidant. Then, she meets Benjamin (Keith Surney) a devout Jewish man, who tells her he’s certain she must be Ashkenazi. Margot Chervony rounds out the rest of the cast, playing side characters, an ominous narrator of sorts and various ancestors of Anna’s.
The story centers around Anna’s experiences falling in love, marrying and then being diagnosed with ovarian cancer – a result of the BRCA gene that she didn’t know she carried. A DNA test reveals she is a woman of Ashkenazi decent and therefore had a 1 in 40 chance of developing breast or ovarian cancer, due to a genetic bottleneck traced to the Middle Ages. The facts are woven in and out of the narrative, while Anna at first seems resistant to learning about her heritage, and then accepts it.
There are moments of song, dance and violin music (played well by Venus Fu) weaving in and out of the narrative. Much of the language is poetic and stylized. A semi-finalist in the Jewish Plays Project’s 11th Jewish Playwriting contest of 2022, one can see why the readers found the creative and ambitious attempt to dramatize the rather dire medical history and dark subject matter compelling. However, once produced, the blend of music, dance, monologues and dream-like scenes come across as rather heavy handed. Chervony plays so many characters, it is also sometimes difficult to know who is who, and whether or not she and Basil are in the real world, or a dream one.

A lighter touch might have made this sorrowful, dramatic story easier to digest. While no laughing matter, many survivors of cancer point to gallows humor as one of their most valuable survival techniques. There were glimmers of what that could look like: the removal of Anna’s organs involved Chervony’s doctor character pulling a long, growling puppet from a zipper in Anna’s hospital gown, and a repeated refrain that began to take on a tinge of the ridiculous as each character said it. As it was, the moments of levity seemed accidental. Also, unfortunately for the actors, the theater was also stifling hot to the point of distraction, especially given that they were all in winter clothing at some point – if you go, bring a fan and wear light clothing.
Somewhat Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
FEMALE, ASHKENAZI WITH A SEWING MACHINE runs August 7-23rd on Thursdays and Fridays at 7:30, and Saturdays at 3:00 pm. Berger Park Coach House, 6205 N. Sheridan. Tickets: $25 general, seniors/students $20 on sale at https://www.zeffy.com/en-US/ticketing/female-ashkenazi-with-a-sweing-machine.
Visit www.artsjudaica.com for more information. Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
Time-Honored Traditions
Fiddler on the Roof
We all could use an evening in the theatre to be entertained, inspired and to escape the merciless heat we’re currently experiencing. And given the current climate of this nation, both politically and meteorologically, a good production of FIDDLER ON THE ROOF is exactly what we need right now. And what we have at Music Theater Works is a great production, filled with new innovations and time-honored Traditions.
Read MoreA Fanciful Feel-Good Charmer
Amelie
The walls of Joe Allen’s, one of my favorite restaurants in New York City, are adorned with theatre posters. That’s not unusual for a Broadway eatery, except that the window cards are all from musicals that flopped. If the poster for AMELIE is hanging there it’s because, when it premiered on Broadway five years ago, the musical didn’t do very well. The show only racked up 83 performances before the producers eventually pulled the plug. That’s not what you’d call a smash hit.
Read MoreFlyover in Chicago at Navy Pier
They say the third time is a charm. In this case it’s much more than that.

I spent a beautiful Monday afternoon at Navy Pier with my three grandchildren. We walked around enjoying the summer weather and then headed over to the Flyover. I took my grandson last year when he came to visit and it was one of the most memorable parts of his trip. This time it was his sisters that got to experience the fun.
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