The Second City e.t.c.’s 46th Revue Great Altercations
I always enjoy seeing Alex Bellisle and Mark Campbell on stage. Bellisle and Campbell are amazing at sketch comedy and improv, and their facial expressions only will have you in stitches. Campbell's bed bug and Old West(-ern suburbs) performance was one of my favorites, and Bellisle is seamless in improvisation.
Failure: A Love Story
Kendal Romero was outstanding, playing the role of all three sisters (Nelly, Gerty, and Jenny June). Trevor Earley performed the role of Mortimer, Mortimer to perfection and made you genuinely believe the love and grief he felt for all three sisters. And Van Ferro is comical as the short-wit John N.
Priscilla Queen Of The Desert - The Musical
From the book by Stephan Elliot and Allan Scott and based on the film, "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Mercury Theater Chicago brings this cult classic to the stage that is incredibly witty and hilarious. The story about Tick's ambivalence over his life decisions and crossing the Desert for the love of seeing a child has a warm feeling that will bring a tear to your eyes. These will be tears of sadness and complete joy as this production is 100% a blast.
Jesus Christ Superstar
The high notes in the resurrection scene vividly show Jesus hanging from the cross and when Jesus's apostles arranged themselves to display Da Vinci's The Last Supper painting. Also, having the orchestra planned in the center of the stage was a nice touch, but it looked a little congested.
Dear Jack, Dear Louise
This superb narration of Ludwig's parents' courtship during World War II brings back the beauty of long-distance romance and the intimacy of writing letters to someone you love during war-time — this is a phenomenal production.
ENDS
Winner of the African-American Theatre Program of the University of Lousiville, Joseph Jefferson Committee member Alex, and Director Davette J. Franklin, socio-political drama is thoroughly engaging.
FENCES
The play's tragedy shows the oppression of stripping a man's dignity and labeling him inferior, lacking intelligence that that racist environment can destroy his will and cause uncompromising and unmovable barriers which can separate him from his friends and family.
Marie Antoinette and the Magical Negroes
The cast were very enthusiastic in their roles. And the play does provide some accurate historical events. Still, its disjointed narrative will cause season theater audiences to leave wondering what message it was trying to provide.
Pearl’s Rollin’ With The Blues
In Pearl's Rollin' With The Blues, singing the Blues is what Pearl was born to do. As musicians swap stories and belt out the Blues, they provide the audience with 90 minutes of joyful blues, sharing how it has shaped her life. Fields playfully collaborate with the guest, and if you are fortunate enough to get a table seat, get ready to be a part of the show.
It Came From Outer Space
If you like Spaceballs, Mars Attacks, or Conehead or television shows like Third Rock from the Sun, then, It Came From Outer Space is the play for you. This wacky, witty, and comical new musical will grow on you to where you can't help but laugh.
My Fair Lady
Once in a while, you get a theatrical production so enchanting and capturing that you leave the theater wanting more. In My Fair Lady at the Cadillac Palace, audiences receive such a treat in this delightful performance. It's theater at its finest.
cullud Wattah
The powerful graphic scenic design by Sydney Lynne is a story within itself. Throughout, bottles with contaminated water and empty plastic bottles symbolize how the need for clean, uncontaminated water was like air itself. The cast counts and provide the date and year of contaminated water; they even have to remember how much water they need to drink, cook and bathe. Even the silence in this play is mesmerizing.
Life After
Life After powerful production at Goodman Theater narrating how a 16-year-old girl named Alice faces grief after losing her father, will invoke impactful and profound emotional introspections of delight and despair within those who have lost or are losing a loved one.
Steel Magnolias
This delightful play will warm your heart with its magnetism wit about how friendship endures the test of life challenges. The camaraderie of the ladies is very entertaining. In addition, the play brought awareness to the issue of organ donation, reproducing against medical advice and suffering the terrible consequences.
Skates - A New Musical
This nostalgic joyride begins with Jacqueline Miller, a rock star who had a lot of success but is concerned with her manager's direction for her career and her funds. So, with the help of 12-year-old Jackie Miller, her retrospective journey back to 1977, reliving her past, she hopes to find herself again. Skates is a refreshing blast from the past and a groovy way to spend an evening.
THE MAGNOLIA BALLET
THE MAGNOLIA BALLET's spellbinding message is provocatively candid and exhilaratingly refreshing. It not only opens the doors to the truth of our hatred but reminds us it's still alive and needs to be eradicated through understanding and love.
The Little Mermaid
MTW's The Little Mermaid was one of the best Disney productions I've seen in years. MTW aims to present a full spectrum of musical theater, creating a bridge for all audiences from classic works to the present. And based on the outstanding interpretation we saw from the cast of the Little Mermaid, Music Theater Works is the theatrical gem you want to add to your theater agenda.
Grandma’s Jukebox
Paying homage to her grandmother, Bester's story message about family, love, and overcoming generational curses through healing will have you joyously in tears as you sing and dance to the music.
Ain't Too Proud – The Life and Times of The Temptations
Broadway In Chicago's first National Tour of Ain't Too Proud – The Life and Times of The Temptations is here, and its show-stopping thrilling performance brings that Motown magic you don't want to miss! It's magnificent! This Tony-winning Broadway musical, now playing at the Broadway Cadillac Palace Theatre, is an exhilarating blast from the past that will have you dancing in your seat.
Two Trains Running
This is Wilson's sixth in his ten-part series, The Pittsburgh Cycle, which embodies psychological trauma and changing perspectives regarding race through the eyes of African-American characters. Wilson masterfully manipulates and alters his characters' vocabulary, body language, and phrasing of words to intensify their meaning in each scene.