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33 posts categorized "Writers' Theatre"

June 02, 2011

'Detective's Wife' to Landmark Project: Now onstage and set in Chicago

Northwest Highway 
“Northwest Highway” is a new play by William Nedved set in Jefferson Park, opening soon at the Gift Theatre
.

There have been plays about Chicago as long as there has been a Chicago theater. Indeed, I've long thought that one way of understanding the best early work of David Mamet, arguably the greatest of the Chicago scribes, is to think in terms of Lincoln Avenue.

Mamet set “Sexuality Perversity in Chicago” near where that street starts, in Old Town, where Mamet was living at the time. He set “American Buffalo” in the Lakeview and North Center neighborhoods, and there is some evidence to suggest “Glengarry Glen Ross” takes place in Lincoln Square.

But I don't think there has ever been quite so many plays about this city as are rushing our way.

Let's review. You can read my new review of Keith Huff's “The Detective's Wife,” which is a drama set in Edgebrook on the Northwest Side. This weekend, Theatre Seven will open The Chicago Landmark Project, a two-part program of a dozen short plays, all set in Chicago. Theatre Seven is listing them by intersection: State and Madison; Lincoln and Webster; Garfield and State; Division and California; 63rd and Woodlawn; and so on.

Continue reading "'Detective's Wife' to Landmark Project: Now onstage and set in Chicago" »

'The Detective's Wife' at Writers' Theatre: Probing the limits of protection

Detectives Wife 
THEATER REVIEW: "The Detective's Wife" ★★★ Through July 31 at Writers' Theatre in Books On Vernon, 664 Vernon Ave., Glencoe; Tickets: $50-60 at 847-242-6000 or writerstheatre.org

At a pivotal point in the latest play from Keith Huff, the restless, grief-stricken wife of a very complicated and very dead Chicago detective arrives at an interesting question: “Was he good,” Barbara Robertson's Edgebrook widow half-asks, half-confesses to her audience, “because he took good care of us?”

Ay, as Hamlet once said, there's the rub. There's the rub for a Chicago cop. An enforcement officer of any stripe. It's a distillation of that tricky question as to whether the ends justify the means, whether the messy world of crime and criminals inevitably requires practicality before procedure, heart before rules, and a family, both personal and professional, that understands not to ask too many questions. Depending on your point of view, your answer could be defining the very soul of effective police work or providing another layer of cover for dirty Chicago cops, brutalizing in the name of serving and protecting.

Continue reading "'The Detective's Wife' at Writers' Theatre: Probing the limits of protection" »

May 28, 2011

Nina Metz talks to playwright Keith Huff

Keith Huff Keith Huff, the man behind "A Steady Rain," a 2007 Chicago cop drama that later starred Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman on Broadway, is premiering a new play this week. "The Detective's Wife" opens Wednesday at Writers' Theatre in Glencoe.

Huff recently spoke with the Tribune's Nina Metz.

May 09, 2011

Hartford Stage has a new artistic director; Writers' Theatre has Lincoln Center success

Darko Tresnjak, a director who has worked frequently at Chicago Shakespeare Theater and other Chicago theaters, is the new artistic director of Hartford Stage, the theater announced Monday.

Tresnjak's work was seen most recently in Chicago at the Bank of America Theatre, a stop for the brief tour of Tresnjak's production of "The Merchant of Venice," starring F. Murray Abraham.

Meanwhile, Michael Halbertstam's production of "A Minister's Wife" opened Sunday night at the Lincoln Center to mostly favorable reviews. The show, a musical version of George Bernard Shaw's "Candida" with book by Austin Pendleton and music by Josh Schmidt, began life in Glencoe.

Its star, Kate Fry, is making her New York debut.

April 29, 2011

'Heartbreak House' at Writers' Theatre: This play is Shaw at his most moralizing

Heartbreak House - John Reeger (from left) Atra Asdou and Tiffany Scott 
THEATER REVIEW: "Heartbreak House"
★★½ Through June 26 at Writers’ Theatre, 325 Tudor Court, Glencoe; Running time: 2 hours, 50 minutes; Tickets: $45-65 at 847-242-6000 or writerstheatre.org

Of the Shavian masterworks, few are as challenging to stage as “Heartbreak House,” surely George Bernard Shaw's least characteristic work and a 1919 piece that requires us to spend three hours in the company of self-indulgent people, all in service of a metaphor that lets Shaw point out what he saw as the European chattering classes' multifarious failures in the era leading up to World War I, most notably a tendency to keep on fiddling, indifferently, while the countryside around them bursts into flames.

Most Shaw plays are debates. This one is a parable. And Writers' Theatre in Glencoe is the current pulpit, with William Brown directing the sermon.

That's not to say “Heartbreak House” is without vivid characterizations. On the contrary, Shaw gathered a clutch of fascinating figures at the country estate of Captain Shotover (played by John Reeger). There's the eccentric old salt himself — a wacky inventor but no fool — and his two dangerously Bohemian daughters, Hesione Hushabye (Karen Janes Woditsch) and Lady Ariadne Utterword (Tiffany Scott), who entertain themselves with various men, including Hesione's hubby Hector Hushabye (Martin Yurek), a shallow fellow of broad appeal.

The main order of business here, though, concerns a young visitor from the less-monied class named Ellie Dunn (Atra Asdou), who arrives with her decent-but-struggling father Mazzini (Kareem Bandealy) and must decide whether or not to marry the rather brutish industrialist Boss Mangan (John Lister), a man whom she does not love but will (she thinks) offer her money and security.

This play has a great deal to say, of course, and I've long been compelled by Shaw's career-long fascination with the relationship between morality and power; more specifically, his basic contention that's there's not much use spending your life doing the right thing if what you are doing has little influence on the world at large. Progressives have long had a complicated relationship with the acquisition of power. Nobody understood that better than Shaw.

In Brown's production, the Dunns are re-cast as from India, replete with saris and accents. That's an interesting choice, although it does make some of the lines in the play sound strange — the people who gather at the Shotover home are, you might say, a gently racist lot, making several derogatory references to persons of other races. You have to wonder why they appear not even to notice the ethnicity of their guests. Still, I think that choice would be fine if the Dunns had retained their place within the all-important class structure of the play. But they don't. Asdou, who plays Ellie as a rather elegant and refined young woman, seems to miss her penniless gal's humble origins, which means that the stakes that surround her big decision don't rise as they should. You feel that this Ellie would be fine either way, frankly, and thus may as well have a husband she loves.

You don't fully see the argument (timely, given the Royal Wedding) that Boss Mangan is her one chance to both assert and take of herself.

This is certainly a visually gorgeous and exceedingly articulate production. Keith Pitts' spectacular set transforms the Women's Library Club into a verdant garden, and it avoids the trap of reaching for too many visual metaphors. Rachel Anne Healy's costumes are beautiful. And indeed, as a study of individuals, Brown's production is very successful. Woditsch, an actress whom Brown invariably uses to spectacular effect, provides the zest and energy of this production through her truly luminous Hesione, a portrait of an unrepentant sentimentalist. There is also a very wry performance from Scott. Reeger is in top form, approaching a point in his career where he really could take on some of the great senior roles (Lear, Prospero and the like), and his Shotover is a fine prequel of what he could do.

But when it comes to seeing this crew as a group who march together into the Apocalypse, and when it comes to seeing the Shavian woods rather than just the idle trees, the production is somewhat less convincing.

The cast does not fully cohere and sometimes looks more comfortable in the individual frames that Brown provides. And although Lister does take some real risks, the show otherwise lacks personal revelation. In the best, shiver-inducing productions of “Heartbreak House,” you always sense that Hermione and her lovely, sensualist crew suspect that the sand on which they fiddle is shifting. They just prefer to delude themselves. And who does not?

February 09, 2011

Kate Fry to make off-Broadway debut in 'A Minister's Wife'

Kate Fry - Ministers Wife Kate Fry at Candida and Alan Schmuckler as Eugene in "A Minister's Wife" at Writers' Theatre in Glencoe in 2009.

Casting has been announced for the New York transfer of Michael Halberstam's Writers' Theatre production of "A Minister's Wife," the new musical based on George Bernard Shaw's "Candida." Penned by Austin Pendleton, Joshua Schmidt and Jan Tranen, the show is slated to open at the Lincoln Center in April.

Two members of the Chicago cast are going with the show: Liz Baltes and, in the lead role of "Candida," Kate Fry. New cast member include Marc Kudisch, Bobby Steggert and Drew Gehling.

February 08, 2011

'Do the Hustle' at Writers' Theatre: The con game gets personal in Neveu's 'Hustle'

Do the Hustle Guinan-Andrews 
THEATER REVIEW: "Do the Hustle" ★★½ Through March 20 at Writers' Theatre, 325 Tudor Court, Glencoe; Running time: 1 hour, 25 minutes; Tickets: $46-$65 at 847-242-6000 or www.writerstheatre.org

On one level, “Do the Hustle,” the latest play from Brett Neveu, is a typically sparse and elliptical drama about a father-and-son team of Chicago con men. Small-time grifters who knock off convenience stores and library patrons for a few bucks, Eddie (Francis Guinan) and Sam (Patrick Andrews) are also engaged in an increasingly desperate battle for power and control, meaning they need to con each other as much as their marks.

But this 85-minute play, premiering at Writers' Theatre under the sympathetic direction of William Brown, is no mere crime procedural. It's a lot more personal than that.

“Hey, some of that s--- you said before,” says Eddie, critiquing his 18-year-old kid after the first con we see, “didn't sound like part of the play.”

And at another, even more telling moment, Sam fights back against his dad's telling him what to say: “I'm gonna do it in my own form and function, depending on how I feel,” the young hustler says, defiantly. “Once I get out from under.”

I'm not inside Neveu's head, and all decent playwrights (a category that includes Neveu) must put themselves in their writing. But it surely feels like “Do the Hustle” is really about a talented and restless writer, probing his own creative and professional state and firing off a few shots at the critics and industry types who have sometimes suggested that Neveu's love of the dramatic withholding of information holds him back — making his plays inaccessible and insufficiently clear.

Continue reading "'Do the Hustle' at Writers' Theatre: The con game gets personal in Neveu's 'Hustle'" »

December 01, 2010

'Travels With My Aunt' at Writers' Theatre: Fine actors are our companions on this long journey

Travels With My Aunt - John Hoogenakker, LaShawn Banks and Sean Fortunato 
THEATER REVIEW: "Travels With My Aunt"
★★★ Through March 27 at Writers' Theatre, 664 Vernon Ave., Glencoe; Running time: 2 hours, 20 minutes; Tickets: $45-$60 at 847-242-6000 and www.writerstheatre.org

The late English novelist Graham Greene — whose Hollywood-friendly works include “The Quiet American” and “The End of the Affair” — occupies quite a tricky spot in the literary culture of the 20th century. His stories are both quaintly picaresque — the kind of thing you might expect to see at Christmas in the back room of a North Shore bookstore — and surprisingly racy. It's reductive, I guess, but you might usefully think of Greene as P.G. Wodehouse meets “Mad Men.”

Anyway, that's the vibe at “Travels With My Aunt,” Greene's sophisticated and wry, but also gently scandalous, 1969 tale of a recently retired chap with the most colorful of maiden aunts. In its uber-intimate second stage behind Books on Vernon, Writers' Theatre is reviving the arch Giles Havergal adaptation that was all the trans-Atlantic rage in the early 1990s and was first seen in Chicago at Court Theatre in 1996. The gimmick here is that four male actors not only play all of the parts (there are around 25, ranging from fortune tellers to police officers) in Greene's story, but keep switching back and forth so that we get several different takes on the central character.

Continue reading "'Travels With My Aunt' at Writers' Theatre: Fine actors are our companions on this long journey" »

October 08, 2010

Michael Halberstam gets SDC award; David Cromer will present

Michael Halberstam 

Michael Halberstam, artistic director of Writers’ Theatre. Read Writers' Theatre and Glencoe ready to take the next step (posted Sept. 2009)

Michael Halberstam, the artistic director of Writers' Theatre in Glencoe, has been awarded the 2010 Fichandler Award by the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society.

This regional award goes to different areas of the country on a rotating basis. There will be a free public event 6 p.m. Oct. 18 at the Steppenwolf Theatre, during which the director David Cromer will present Halberstam with his prize.

There will also be a panel of local directors discussing  Chicago-style stage direction, including Seth Bockley, Timothy Douglas, Gary Griffin, Kimberly Senior  and Dennis Zacek. Sheldon Patinkin moderates.

September 26, 2010

'She Loves Me' at Writers Theatre: Romantic and intimate, though it's hard to root for this couple

Loves me 

THEATER REVIEW: "She Loves Me" ★★★ Through Nov. 21 at Writers’ Theatre, 325 Tudor Court, Glencoe; Running Time: 2 hours, 25 minutes; Tickets: 847-242-600 or www.writerstheatre.org

You might not know Hungarian-American playwright Miklos Laszlo or his play “Parfumerie,” but you've likely seen one of its descendents. Even though it's a simple tale of, well, retail love blossoming among scent, cold cream and cigarette boxes in Budapest, this remarkably pliable play was variously adapted into the movies “The Shop Around the Corner” (with Jimmy Stewart), “In the Good Old Summertime” (with Judy Garland), “You've Got Mail” (with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan) and the 1963 musical “She Loves Me” (book by Joe Masteroff, music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick).

Laszlo hit the jackpot with that one big and simple idea that we all wish we'd had: two feisty singles send passionate love letters to an unknown suitor only to discover that the object of their epistolary affections is a colleague they know, and don't much like, in real life. Ka-ching for Mikos! You can switch the era, the medium and the technology, and you've still got both built-in conflict and a romantic finish. In “She Loves Me,” you've also got some delightful tunes. And a deceptively tricky style.

Continue reading "'She Loves Me' at Writers Theatre: Romantic and intimate, though it's hard to root for this couple" »

The Theater Loop RSS Rssfeed News. Criticism. Gossip. The shows not
to be missed — and the shows to avoid at all costs. The Theater Loop is hosted by Chris Jones, chief theater critic for the Chicago Tribune. We're the online destination for breaking news and reviews of Chicago-area theater, from the downtown shows to suburban theaters to the off-Loop scene. Stop here often to feel the pulse of America’s most vibrant theater city. Plus coverage of Broadway and beyond, and reviews from Tribune writer Nina Metz and contributor Kerry Reid.

CONTACT Tribune theater editor Doug George

Get the latest Chicago theater news and reviews delivered to your mailbox weekly. REGISTER HERE. Or SIGN IN to view your member profile and add or remove newsletters. SUMMER STAGE GUIDE:
Chris Jones picks his Top 10 most anticipated theater productions.
• Plus a TRIBUNE CHART of dozens more shows for the season.
TOP 5 BEST shows of the year so far.

ARTS LEADERS SPEAK UP — IS RAHM LISTENING? Chicago's cultural leaders tell the Tribune what should happen in the Emanuel era.

TRIBUNE STAGE GUIDE: Reviews and photos for theater in Chicago and suburbs, including critic's picks from Chris Jones, Nina Metz and Kerry Reid.
Left, Norm Woodel in "Festen"
at Steep Theatre


Shows are rated on a ★★★★ scale

"Blue Man Group" ★★★★
Open run at the Briar Street Theatre

"Broadway Bound" ★★★
Through July 31 at Drury Lane Theatre

"Bug" ★★★
Through July 31 at Redtwist Theatre

"The Chicago Landmark Project" ★★★
Through July 10 at Greenhouse Theatre Center

"Chinglish" ★★★★
Through July 24 at the Goodman Theatre

"The Detective's Wife" ★★★
Through Aug. 7 at Writers' Theatre in Books On Vernon

"Festen" ★★★★
Through July 10 at Steep Theatre Company

"The Front Page" ★★★
Through July 17 at TimeLine Theatre

"The Homosexuals" ★★★
Through July 24 by About Face in the Biograph

"Middletown" ★★★
Through Aug. 14 at Steppenwolf Theatre

"Million Dollar Quartet" ★ ★ ★½
Open run at the Apollo Theater

"Northwest Highway" ★★★½
Through Sept. 11 at Gift Theatre

"The Original Grease" ★★★½
Through Aug. 21 at American Theater Company

"The Outgoing Tide" ★★★ ½
Through July 3 at Northlight Theatre, Skokie

Cirque du Soleil's "Ovo" ★★★ ½
Through Aug. 21 at the United Center

"Porgy and Bess" ★★★½
Through July 3 at Court Theatre

"Some Enchanted Evening" ★★★½
Through July 3 by Theo Ubique at No Exit Cafe

"South Side of Heaven" ★★★½
Open run at Second City

"Yellow Face" ★★★
Through July 17 by Silk Road Theatre Company




"Marisol" at The Artistic Home

"Educating Rita" by Shattered Globe Theatre

"5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche" and "Radio Goggles"

"Henry IV" by Oak Park Festival Theatre

"Jesus Camp: The Musical" and "Violence of My Affection"

"Shout!" at the Marriott Theatre, Lincolnshire

"That's Not Funny" and "Lighthousekeeping"

"The Last Act of Lilka Kadison" at Lookingglass Theatre

"15 Minutes" and "Waiting for Drew Peterson"

"Trogg! A Musical" by Hell in a Handbag at the Chopin

"Murder for Two: A Killer Musical" upstairs at Chicago Shakespeare Theater

"Down & Dirty Romeo and Juliet"

"Peter Pan" at the Tribune's Freedom Center

"All in Love Is Fair" at Black Ensemble Theater

"The Addams Family" at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre
"American Idiot" at the St. James Theatre
"Avenue Q" at the Golden Theatre
"Baby It's You" at the Broadhurst Theatre
"Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo"
at the Richard Rodgers Theatre
"Billy Elliot" at the Imperial Theatre
"The Book of Mormon" at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre
"Catch Me If You Can" at the Neil Simon Theatre
"House of Blue Leaves" at the Walter Kerr Theatre
"How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying"
at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre
"Memphis" at the Shubert Theatre
"Million Dollar Quartet" at the Nederlander Theatre
"The Motherf*ker with the Hat"
at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre
"Next to Normal" at Booth Theatre
"Priscilla Queen of the Desert" at the Palace Theatre
"Rock of Ages" at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre
"Sister Act" at the Broadway Theatre
"Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark" the Foxwoods Theatre
"Time Stands Still" at the Friedman Theatre
"War Horse" at the Vivian Beaumont Theater

•  'Detective's Wife' to Landmark Project: Now onstage and set in Chicago
•  'The Detective's Wife' at Writers' Theatre: Probing the limits of protection
•  Nina Metz talks to playwright Keith Huff
•  Hartford Stage has a new artistic director; Writers' Theatre has Lincoln Center success
•  'Heartbreak House' at Writers' Theatre: This play is Shaw at his most moralizing
•  Kate Fry to make off-Broadway debut in 'A Minister's Wife'
•  'Do the Hustle' at Writers' Theatre: The con game gets personal in Neveu's 'Hustle'
•  'Travels With My Aunt' at Writers' Theatre: Fine actors are our companions on this long journey
•  Michael Halberstam gets SDC award; David Cromer will present
•  'She Loves Me' at Writers Theatre: Romantic and intimate, though it's hard to root for this couple


• "August: Osage County"
• "Billy Elliot the Musical"
• "Million Dollar Quartet"
• "White Noise"
• 16th Street Theatre
• 500 Clown
• A Red Orchid Theatre
• About Face Theatre
• Actors Theatre Company
• Albany Park Theatre Project
• American Blues Theater
• American Musical Theatre Project
• American Players Theatre
• American Theater Company
• Annoyance Theatre
• Arie Crown Theatre
• Artistic Home
• Athenaeum Theatre
• Auditorium Theatre
• BackStage Theatre Company
• Bailiwick Chicago
• Black Ensemble Theatre
• Blair Thomas & Co.
• Blue Man Group
• Bohemian Theatre Ensemble
• Broadway
• Broadway in Chicago
• Broadway Playhouse
• Building Stage
• Chicago Children's Theatre
• Chicago Dramatists
• Chicago Muse
• Chicago Shakespeare Theater
• Chicago Theatre
• Circle Theatre
• Cirque du Soleil
• City Lit Theater
• Collaboraction
• Congo Square Theatre Company
• Court Theatre
• Dog & Pony Theatre Company
• Drury Lane Theatre
• Eclipse Theatre
• Elephant Eye Theatricals
• Emerald City Theatre Company
• eta Creative Arts
• Factory Theater
• First Folio Theatre
• Gift Theatre
• Goodman Theatre
• Greenhouse Theater Center
• Griffin Theatre
• Hell in a Handbag Productions
• Hoover-Leppen Theater
• House Theatre of Chicago
• Hypocrites
• Infamous Commonwealth
• iO Theater
• Joseph Jefferson Awards
• Just For Laughs Festival
• Lifeline Theatre
• Light Opera Works
• Live Bait Theater
• Lookingglass Theatre Company
• Marriott Theatre
• Mary Arrchie Theatre
• Mercury Theatre
• MPAACT
• Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
• Neo-Futurists
• New Colony
• Next Theatre
• North Shore Center for the Performing Arts
• Northlight Theatre
• Oak Park Festival Theatre
• Obituaries
• Paramount Theatre
• Pegasus Players
• Piven Theatre Workshop
• Porchlight Music Theatre Chicago
• Profiles Theatre
• Provision Theatre
• Raven Theatre
• Ravinia Festival
• Red Tape Theatre
• Redmoon Theater
• Redtwist Theatre
• Remy Bumppo Theatre Company
• Rivendell Theatre Ensemble
• Rosemont Theatre
• Route 66 Theatre Company
• Royal George Theatre
• Seanachai Theatre Company
• Second City
• Shattered Globe
• Side Project
• Sideshow Theatre
• Signal Ensemble Theatre
• Silk Road Theatre Project
• Stage 773
• Stage Left Theatre
• StarKid Productions
• Steep Theatre
• Steppenwolf Theatre Company
• Strange Tree Group
• Stratford Festival
• Strawdog Theatre
• Teatro Vista
• Teatro ZinZanni
• Theater Oobleck
• Theater Wit
• Theatre at the Center
• Theatre Seven
• Theatre-Hikes
• Theo Ubique Cabaret Theatre
• TimeLine Theatre
• Tony Awards
• Trap Door Theatre
• TUTA Theatre
• Uptown Theatre
• UrbanTheater Company
• Victory Gardens
• Writers' Theatre
• XIII Pocket
• Zanies

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