Monthly Archives: February 2026
Gender Bias and Racism
The Confederates
Throughout this mesmerizing, award-winning one-act by Dominique Morisseau (AIN’T TOO PROUD, SUNSET BABY, SKELETON CREW), now playing appropriately during Black History Month, we find that time is fluid. As the play unfolds, we discover ourselves immersed in two gripping stories that focus on gender bias and racism. And this riveting play, set both during the Civil War and in modern day Academia, often defies categorization by genre. In Ms. Morisseau’s play, there are equal elements of comedy and satire balanced by drama and pure surprise.
Read MoreBonded Over Birding
Birds of North America
Anna Ouyang Moench’s powerful one-act play is being given a beautiful production by A Red Orchid Theatre. This is a quietly sweet and reflective story about family relationships. It’s about two generations, a father and an adult daughter, who have bonded over birding through the years. Set in the backyard of John’s longtime, rural Maryland home, the leaves have turned color and, with each scene, time passes and the falling leaves accumulate on the lawn. As the years pass, Caitlyn and her father spend quality time together at home, searching for birds while also searching for a deeper appreciation and understanding of each another.
Read MorePatti LuPone Made the World Go Round
Matters of the Heart
After the frigid temperatures and an awful lot of snow, January in Chicago has thankfully come to a bone-chilling end. But in a magnificent, mellifluous concert performance that warmed the soul, thousands of Windy City music and theatre aficionados were treated by a special performance by the Queen of Broadway. The one and only Diva Divine, Ms. Patti LuPone took to the stage for almost two hours of melodious magic. And for that brief couple of hours, Patti LuPone cranked up the temperature with her astounding, almost acrobatic vocals, and for this audience, Made the World go Round.
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