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Goodman Theatre celebrates 100 years and looks to the future with the opening of Chicago’s newest cultural attraction, Theater of the Mind—a one-of-a-kind theatrical immersive experience by Academy, Grammy, and Tony Award-winning artist David Byrne with writer Mala Gaonkar. Today, director Andrew Scoville proudly announces the 11-member, all-Chicago cast who will steward the 75-minute journey of self-reflection, discovery and imagination: James Earl Jones  II (Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and Come from Away national tours), Elizabeth Laidlaw (Goodman’s The Penelopiad, The Rose Tattoo) Helen Joo Lee (Goodman’s A Christmas Carol), Em Modaff (Paramount Theatre’s Fun Home, School of Rock), Victor Musoni (Chicago Shakespeare’s Rome Sweet Home, Definition Theatre and Goodman’s Fat Ham), AJ Paramo (Goodman’s Revolution(s)), Shariba Rivers (American Players Theatre’s The Barber and the Untamed Prince, A Midsummer Night’s Dream), Kelli Simpkins (MCC’s Charm), Lucky Stiff (Goodman’s A Christmas Carol)and understudies Maidenwena Alba (Albany Park Theater Project’s Port of Entry) and Emily Zhang (Strawdog Theatre’s The F*ck House).  Theater of the Mind appears March 11 – May 31, 2026, at the Reid Murdoch Building (333 N. LaSalle). Tickets ($66-$96, subject to change) are available at the Goodman Theatre Box Office (170 N. Dearborn), by calling 312.443.3800 or by purchasing online at TheaterOfTheMindChicago.com.

"We are so proud to welcome Theater of the Mind with its fantastic company of Chicago’s boldest actors to the heart of downtown this Spring,” said Goodman Theatre Walter Artistic Director Susan V. Booth. “In planning our Centennial Season, it felt essential to go big—to offer something courageous, wildly creative and new—and double down on what it means to be Chicago’s flagship theater. Unprecedented in size and scope, this is exactly the kind of envelope-pushing project that has long been a hallmark of a theater that has continued to reinvent itself over the past century. We’re grateful to David, Mala and Andrew for this unique collaboration—as well as to those who have shown early support and look forward to sharing Theater of the Mind with our city next month.”

“This city has a wild amount of talent, and I feel so lucky to have this extraordinary group of actors joining Theater of the Mind. Our Guides play such an important role, stewarding each group of audience members through this intimate experience that challenges our perception of reality. I can't wait for this group to lead the way,” said director Andrew Scoville

The Goodman is grateful for the support of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Illinois Office of Tourism, Northern Trust and Friedman Properties. Theater of the Mind is produced here in special arrangement with Arbutus, a not-for-profit founded by David Byrne to celebrate, re-present, and amplify ideas found in surprising places.

Company of Theater of the Mind

Co-created by David Byrne and Mala Gaonkar

Directed by Andrew Scoville

Guides: James Earl Jones II, Elizabeth Laidlaw, Helen Joo Lee, Em Modaff, Victor Musoni, AJ Paramo, Shariba Rivers, Kelli Simpkins, and Lucky Stiff

Understudy: Emily Zhang

Assistant Director/Understudy: Maidenwena Alba

Creative Team

Technology Director: Heidi Boisvert, PhD

Technology Producer: LeeAnn Rossi

Scenic Designer: Neil Patel

Costume Designer: Sarita Fellows

Lighting Designer: Jeannette Oi-Suk Yew

Sound Designer: Cody Spencer

Associate Scenic Designer: Lisa Orzolek

Associate Costume Designer: Caryn Klein

Associate Lighting Designer: Brian Elston

Associate Sound Designer: Forrest Gregor

Local Assistant Scenic Designer: Ryan Emmens

Assistant Directors: Maidenwena AlbaBetty Hart, and Amanda Berg Wilson

Production Manager: Matt Marsden

Technical Director: Brian Claggett

Props Department Head: Adam Weiss-Halliwell

General Manager: Karen Berry

Casting is by:  Lauren Port, CSA

Performance Schedule

Starting March 11, Theater of the Mind will be staged Tuesday evenings starting at 6 pm; Wednesdays starting at 2 pm; Thursday evenings starting at 6 pm; Friday evenings starting at 5 pm; Saturdays starting at noon; and Sunday afternoons starting at 12:30 pm. Performances begin every 15 minutes, and each includes 16 audience members. A complete schedule can be found at theaterofthemindchicago.com

About Goodman Theatre

Theater of the Mind makes its Midwest debut during The Goodman’s Centennial 25/26 Season. Since 1925, The Goodman has been a theatrical home for artists and a gathering space for community. It’s where stories come to life—bold in artistry and rich in history, deeply rooted in the city it serves. Led by Walter Artistic Director Susan V. Booth and Executive Director John Collins, The Goodman sparks conversation, connection, and change through new plays, reimagined classics, and large-scale musicals. With distinctions including world and American premieres, Pulitzer Prizes, Tony Awards, and Joseph Jefferson Awards, The Goodman is proud to be the first theater to produce all 10 plays of August Wilson’s “American Century Cycle.” But The Goodman believes a more empathetic, more connected Chicago is created one story at a time and counts as its greatest legacy the community it’s built. The Goodman was founded by William O. Goodman and his family to honor the memory of Kenneth Sawyer Goodman—a visionary playwright whose bold ideas helped shape Chicago’s early cultural renaissance. That spirit of creativity and generosity endures today.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

As a longtime comedy fan, seeing a show at Second City has been on my bucket list for years, so when the opportunity to attend Black and Highly Flavored came up, I jumped at it. That excitement, however, was paired with some hesitation: I questioned whether I was the right person to review a show rooted in experiences I do not personally share. By the end of the night, after laughing until I cried, those concerns were completely put to rest.

At a time when diversity in comedy too often comes at the expense of BIPOC performers rather than celebrating their lived experiences, Black and Highly Flavored stands out as a rare gem. Now in its fourth year as Second City’s Black Excellence Revue, the show is a sharp and joyful two-act performance that blends sketch comedy, improv, music, and dance to uplift Black artists while remaining accessible, engaging, and enjoyable – and even relatable – for everyone in the audience.

Jam-packed from start to finish, this comedy show includes upwards of 20 sketches, ranging in length from a few minutes to as short as 15 seconds. The content of the skits is just as wide-ranging, pulling from everything from 70s laugh-track sitcoms to ChatGPT, and from John Steinbeck to Janet Jackson. With such varied material, it’s inevitable that not every joke lands with every audience member; however, the lightning-fast pacing of the show means that even if a joke doesn’t land for you, the show has already moved on to its next laugh.

Not only are the scripted parts of the show hilarious, but it also features improvisation at many points throughout the night. Black and Highly Flavored is particularly smart about how and where improv is incorporated, utilizing the famously divisive style of comedy to connect with the audience through tailored, rapid-fire one-liners, maintaining the polish of the longer, scripted skits.

Under the direction of Julia Morales, the six-person cast is stellar, and each actor truly brought their own distinct charm to the show. Tyler Vanduvall delivers off-the-charts physical comedy to the stage, throwing himself – sometimes literally – into every role, human or not. Kimberly Michelle Vaughn wears her heart on her sleeve on stage, exuding talent and joy, as she sings, dances, and laughs like no one is watching. Lauren Walker’s characterization is unmatched, making every one of her (many, many) roles just as animated and memorable as the last. EJ Cameron engages with the audience like no other, skyrocketing the intimacy of the show through his charisma alone. Jillian Banks is spunky and larger-than-life, adding both laughs and layers to any scene she’s in. Last, but certainly not least, is Jason Tolliver: the improv king of the night. Tolliver is sharply funny – and he knows it – allowing his genuine self-amusement to shine through on stage, making you laugh first at the joke, and then again at his reaction to himself.

Although not technically complicated, Black and Highly Flavored’s production was incredibly well planned and curated. Every lighting cue, sound effect, prop, and costume felt perfectly curated to the skit without overwhelming the show. The use of screens on stage was balanced well to be additive, rather than taking away from the joys of real-life theatre by being overbearing. The production from start to end was incredibly well-paced, void of any painful transitions or dead moments. This is undoubtedly a team effort but could not have been accomplished without Music Director and live musical performer Cesar Romero, who both beautifully and comedically underscored the whole evening. Add to that an in-your-seat food and drink menu, and Second City’s UP Comedy Club might just have it all!

Black and Highly Flavored is running at Second City’s UP Comedy Club on Thursdays and Fridays through March 20th. Tickets are available at www.secondcity.com/shows/chicago/the-second-city-black-excellence-revue-chi.

Published in Theatre in Review

Collaboraction  Theatre Company could not have chosen a more resonant inaugural production for its new House of Belonging than Trial in the Delta: The Murder of Emmett Till. In this sleek, in-the-round studio in Humboldt Park, the company inaugurates its new home by opening an old wound—one that America has never fully allowed to heal. The result is not merely a staging of history, but an act of communal witnessing, one that insists the past is not past.

Co-adapted by G. Riley Mills and Willie Round and co-directed by Anthony Moseley and Dana N. Anderson, Trial in the Delta transforms the 1955 courtroom proceedings in Sumner, Mississippi, into a visceral live docudrama. Actors emerge, take the stand, and deliver testimony drawn from the long-buried trial transcript of Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, the men who kidnapped and murdered 14-year-old Emmett Till. In this immersive setting, spectators are not allowed the comfort of distance. You are seated inside the machinery of injustice.

The production’s most devastating power lies in its restraint. This is not melodrama; it is documentation made theatrical. When NK Gutiérrez steps forward as Mamie Till-Bradley, the room seems to recalibrate its breathing. Her presence is not performative grief but moral force. Mamie’s insistence on truth—her refusal to look away, her demand that the world see what was done to her son—becomes the spiritual engine of the evening. Darren Jones’s Mose Wright, Mysun Aja Wade’s Willie Reed and Donald Fitzdarryl’s Chester Miller, embody the perilous bravery of Black witnesses testifying in a Jim Crow courtroom, where truth itself was an act of defiance.

The ensemble functions as a grim chorus of American roles: judges, clerks, journalists, sheriffs, defendants, and bystanders. Richard Alan Baiker’s Judge Curtis Swango carries the chilly authority of a system that pretends neutrality while protecting white supremacy. Tyler Burke and Matt Miles, as Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, avoid caricature; their ordinariness is the horror. Evil here is not monstrous but banal, upheld by procedure and custom. That banality is the production’s sharpest blade.

Prosecutor Gerald Chatham (John Henry Roberts, center) holds a photo of Emmett Till as he asks Till’s murderers Roy Bryant (Tyler Burke, left ) and J.W. Milam (Matt Miles, right) if they recognize their victim, as Till’s mother Mamie Bradley (NK Gutiérrez) looks on, in Collaboraction's Trial in the Delta: The Murder of Emmett Till. 

Emmy Weldon’s set and Levi Wilkins’s lighting make elegant use of Collaboraction’s new 99-seat flexible studio, shaping the room into a courtroom that feels both provisional and eternal—anywhere, anytime. Shawn Wallace’s original music hums beneath the proceedings like a low current of grief and warning, while Warren Levon’s sound design places the audience inside a sonic environment of testimony, tension, and aftermath. The design team’s work never distracts; it quietly conspires with the text to tighten the emotional vise.

What distinguishes this staging from earlier iterations is how fully the new space is activated as a moral arena. The reserved jury seating—occupied by audience members—does more than gesture at interactivity. It implicates. You are reminded, without theatrical gimmickry, that verdicts are rendered not only in courtrooms but in communities, institutions, and histories. The post-show “Crucial Conversation” deepens that charge, extending the production beyond performance into dialogue—an extension of Collaboraction’s KEDA methodology in action.
KEDA—Knowledge, Empathy, Dialogue, and Action—frames the company’s belief that theatre should not end with reflection, but move audiences toward change.

Opening the House of Belonging with Trial in the Delta is a statement of values. This is not a theater christened with spectacle or escapism, but with reckoning. In a cultural moment eager to repackage or blunt the edges of history, Collaboraction insists on confrontation. The question the production leaves behind is not simply what happened in 1955, but what we have allowed to keep happening since.

Trial in the Delta: The Murder of Emmett Till does not offer catharsis. It offers clarity. It reminds us that justice delayed is not just justice denied—it is justice rehearsed in different forms, across different bodies, in different decades. In Collaboraction’s new home, the walls are fresh, the tech is state-of-the-art, and the future feels open. But the story told on opening night is a reminder that belonging, in America, has always been contested—and that the work of making it real is unfinished.Top of Form

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

When: Extended through March 29th!

Where: Kimball Arts Center, 1757 N. Kimball Ave

Running time: under two hours, including a short Crucial Conversation after every performance

Tickets: $25 - $55.00 (10% discount for groups of 10 or more)

Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

(312) 226-9633

Published in Theatre in Review

Patti LuPone’s long-running concert piece Matters of the Heart unfolded on the stage of the National Historic Landmark The Auditorium Theatre not as a greatest-hits parade, but as a seasoned artist’s intimate conversation with her own past. Premiering some 25 years ago at Lincoln Center’s Vivian Beaumont Theater in New York City, the show has aged not into nostalgia, but into something more textured: a living scrapbook of memory, mischief, heartbreak, and hard-won grace.

LuPone has always commanded a fiercely loyal LGBTQ following, and the sold-out house in Chicago testified to that enduring bond. The atmosphere felt at times like a cabaret. You could sense an audience primed not merely to applaud, but to commune. There was something for everyone here—Broadway diehards, pop romantics, and those who come for the diva energy and stay for the vulnerability.

Accompanied by a pianist and a string quartet, LuPone curated a program that balanced theatrical bravura with intimate confession. Her Broadway selections landed with the authority of a performer who has lived inside these songs. “I’m In Love with a Wonderful Guy” from South Pacific sparkled; “Not a Day Goes By” from Merrily We Roll Along unfurled in aching, mature regret. “Being Alive” from Company—the great anthem of ambivalent longing—rang with the clarity of someone who has wrestled with love and come back wiser, if not unscarred. “Back to Before” from Ragtime surged with emotional velocity, while her unexpected, intriguingly restrained take on “Easy to Be Hard” from Hair reframed youthful protest as weary, rueful remembrance.

LuPone’s comic timing remains lethal. Her wry humor bubbled up in “Shattered Illusions,” “Better Off Dead,” and “I Never Do Anything Twice,” songs that let her weaponize self-awareness and mischief in equal measure. She skewers romance and ego with relish, but never without implicating herself in the joke. This is the diva who knows her myth and plays with it. And the surprises. “God Only Knows” by The Beach Boys arrived like a soft confession, stripped of pop gloss and steeped in tenderness. “Time After Time” by Cyndi Lauper was rendered not as a radio staple but as a promise dedicated to her family. These choices reveal LuPone’s instinct for emotional translation, taking familiar songs and making them speak in a new dialect.

Most affecting were the quieter moments, where LuPone let her guard down. In “Unexpressed,” “Alone Again (Naturally),” “The Air That I Breathe,” “Sand and Water,” “My Father,” and “Look Mummy, No Hands,” she showed a softer, contemplative side—less brassy legend, more vulnerable human being. These songs felt like pages torn from a private journal, offered up without ornament. It was here that Matters of the Heart earned its title.

LuPone, being the diva that she be, did get into a little kerfuffle this past summer with the theatre community. She apologized, took responsibility and, as these things tend to go in a resilient artistic ecosystem, everyone seems to have moved on. There are bigger issues pressing on the country today, and this evening reminded us that art’s role is not to litigate old wounds, but to open space for empathy.

In a moment when America feels increasingly brittle, Matters of the Heart lands as a small act of emotional repair. We could all use more love in this country right now—more listening, more generosity of spirit, more room for contradiction. LuPone, in all her fire and fragility, offered exactly that: a reminder that hearts break, heal, and, if we’re lucky, learn to sing again.

National Historic Landmark

The Auditorium

50 E Ida B Wells Dr, Chicago, IL 60605

312.341.2300

Published in Theatre in Review

At the Auditorium Theatre, a building that itself carries the muscle memory of American performance history, the Martha Graham Dance Company marked its 100th anniversary with an evening that felt less like a retrospective than a living argument for why Graham still matters. This was not modern dance preserved in amber. It was modern dance breathing—angular, emotional, political, and insistently present.

Artistic Director Janet Eilber framed the evening with contextual remarks that were both generous and incisive, situating each work within Graham’s evolving artistic philosophy while emphasizing the company’s commitment to keeping these dances alive rather than embalmed. Founded in 1926, the Martha Graham Dance Company stands as the oldest modern dance company in the world, and its influence is nearly impossible to overstate. Graham shattered ballet’s decorative restraint, replacing it with contraction and release, emotional excavation, and a radical insistence that the body could think, rage, mourn, and remember. Entire generations of choreographers—from Merce Cunningham to Paul Taylor to Alvin Ailey—emerged from her orbit.

The first half of the program traced an emotional arc from love to grief to collective urgency. Diversion of Angels opened the evening with its luminous exploration of love’s many incarnations. Structured lyrically rather than narratively, the ballet presents three couples—youthful, mature, and seasoned—each embodying a different phase of intimacy. Norman Dello Joio’s undulating score supports movement that is buoyant yet grounded, joyful without sentimentality. The work’s Chicago roots add a quiet historical resonance: it premiered here 77 years ago under its current title, having debuted the year before as Wilderness Stair. Seen now, it feels ageless, its athletic lyricism and emotional clarity undimmed.

If Diversion of Angels celebrates connection, Lamentation confronts isolation and loss with ferocious simplicity. Premiered in 1930, the solo remains one of the most iconic works in modern dance. The dancer, seated and encased in a tube of purple jersey, becomes a living sculpture of grief. The fabric stretches, strains, and reshapes under the pressure of the body, creating stark diagonals and suspended tensions. The figure is deliberately abstract—neither gendered nor humanized—grief made manifest. The anecdote Graham often shared, of a woman who found permission to grieve after witnessing the work, still echoes here. Nearly a century later, Lamentation retains its power to dignify sorrow without theatrical excess.

The first half concluded with En Masse, choreographed by Hope Boykin, an Alvin Ailey alum, and receiving its Chicago premiere during this centennial engagement. Built around a rediscovered shard of Leonard Bernstein’s music—sketches believed to have been composed for Graham and later shaped by composer Christopher Rountree—the work bridges generations. Boykin’s choreography channels Graham’s collective intensity while speaking in a contemporary vocabulary. The dancers move as a charged unit, bodies surging and fragmenting, suggesting both solidarity and strain. It is a smart, muscular addition to the repertory, affirming that Graham’s legacy is not static but generative.

The second half belonged entirely to Chronicle, one of Graham’s rare openly political works and a striking reminder of her moral clarity. Created in response to her refusal to participate in the 1936 Olympics in Nazi Germany, the work is performed by an all-women cast and pulses with defiance. Its three movements confront war, nationalism, and resistance not through literal narrative but through embodied protest—sharp footwork, grounded stances, and unyielding group formations. In today’s political climate, Chronicle feels unsettlingly current, its urgency undiminished.

What made this anniversary evening resonate was not nostalgia but conviction. The Martha Graham Dance Company did not ask the audience to admire history; it demanded that we feel it—in our bodies, in our grief, in our collective responsibility. At 100 years old, Graham’s work remains unapologetically modern, and this performance made clear that her revolutionary spirit is still very much in motion.

Celebrating Women Leaders in Dance

25-26 Season

The Auditorium
50 E Ida B Wells Dr, Chicago, IL 60605
312.341.2300

Published in Dance in Review

The Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation (GDDF) is pleased to announce it awarded more than $1.76 million in grants to 66 of Chicago's small arts organizations and arts advocacy organizations in 2025. Twenty-seven Chicago area arts organizations received multiyear grants of $30,000 or more.

Additionally, GDDF granted $725,000 to the Arts Work Fund for Organizational Development last year, joining together with other funders to provide emergency funding and other support in response to recent challenges faced by arts organizations.

"As part of our Chicago Artistic Vitality program, the foundation, along with our arts philanthropy partners, increased our contribution to the funder collaborative Arts Work Fund," said Ellen Placey Wadey, senior program director for Chicago Arts & Collections at GDDF. "With an ability to deploy funds quickly and for immediate capacity needs, Arts Work Fund is a critical partnership in these difficult times for arts organizations."

"This has been a challenging year for many of our grantee partners, including the loss of significant sources of funding," said Arnold Randall, executive director of GDDF. "The Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation remains steadfast in our commitment to our mission, values, and program areas, and in our support for the work of our grantees."

The Chicago arts grantees are a portion of the $7,538,880 in grants that GDDF provided to 128 organizations in the Chicago region and the Lowcountry of South Carolina across the foundation's three program areas in 2025: Artistic Vitality, Broadening Narratives, and Land Conservation. GDDF is currently funding more than 150 small arts organizations in the Chicago region through its multi-year general operating grants.

Among GDDF's 2025 Chicago arts grantees are nonprofit advocacy and support organizations Arts Alliance Illinois ($75,000) and Enrich Chicago ($60,000). Additional Chicago Artistic Vitality grantees receiving $40,500 grants include American Indian Center of Chicago, Black Arts & Culture Alliance of Chicago, Raven Theatre Company, Red Clay Dance Company, Remy Bumppo Theatre Company, Sisters in Cinema, South Chicago Dance Theatre, Theater Wit, and Trickster Cultural Center. Arts organizations receiving grants of $36,000 include Teatro Vista, The Chicago Poetry Center, and Visceral Dance Chicago.

A full list of GDDF's 2025 Chicago Artistic Vitality grantees follows at the end of this release.

"We also strive to offer support in ways grounded in trust and shared values," Randall added. "Most of our grants are multiyear general operating support. Beyond funding, we create opportunities to convene and collaborate, and we connect grantees with training and other capacity-building resources. Now more than ever it is vital to champion the power of art, conserve and protect our land, and share the stories that tell us who we are."

GDDF makes grants twice a year and prioritizes multiyear general operating support. In 2025, more than 68% of grants were for general operating support. GDDF also provides project, planning, technical assistance, and cash reserve funding. Program staff made more than 400 personal connections with grantees this year through calls, meetings, field visits, and attendance at performances.

2025 GDDF Funding by Region and Program

Chicago Region
$4,781,000 to 88 organizations

Artistic Vitality: $2,489,000

Broadening Narratives: $690,000

Land Conservation: $1,602,000

Lowcountry of South Carolina

$2,757,880 to 40 organizations

Artistic Vitality: $707,880.00

Broadening Narratives: $550,000

Land Conservation: $1,500,000

2025 Chicago Artistic Vitality Grantees

Arts Work Fund for Organizational Development ($725,000)

Arts Alliance Illinois ($75,0 00)

Enrich Chicago ($60,000)

American Indian Center of Chicago ($40,500)

Black Arts & Culture Alliance of Chicago ($40,500)

Raven Theatre Company ($40,500)

Red Clay Dance Company ($40,500)

Remy Bumppo Theatre Company ($40,500)

Sisters in Cinema ($40,500)

South Chicago Dance Theatre ($40,500)

Theater Wit ($40,500)

Trickster Cultural Center ($40,500)

Teatro Vista ($36,000)

The Chicago Poetry Center ($36,000)

Visceral Dance Chicago ($36,000)

Chicago Art Department ($30,000)

eta Creative Arts Foundation, Inc. ($30,000)

Free Street Theater ($30,000)

Fulcrum Point New Music Project ($30,000)

Griffin Theatre Company ($30,000)

Joel Hall Dancers and Center ($30,000)

Kalapriya ($30,000)

Korean Performing Arts Institute of Chicago ($30,000)

Latitude Chicago ($30,000)

Praize Productions ($30,000)

PRIDEARTS Center ($30,000)

The Gift Theatre Company ($30,000)

Theatre Y ($30,000)

Lifeline Theatre ($27,000)

Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre ($25,500)

City Lit Theater Company ($25,500)

Jackalope Theatre Company ($25,500)

Oak Park Festival Theatre ($25,500)

Sones de Mexico Ensemble ($25,500)

Trap Door Theatre ($25,500)

Haymarket Opera Company ($25,000)

Oak Park Festival Theatre ($25,000)

Roman Susan Art Foundation ($25,000)

6018North ($22,500)

AAMPA African American Museum of Performing Arts ($22,500)

Aguijon Theater Company ($22,500)

Guild Complex ($22,500)

Khecari ($22,500)

Make-Believe Association ($22,500)

MPAACT ($22,500)

NAJWA Dance Corps ($22,500)

Redtwist Theatre ($22,500)

Rembrandt Chamber Musicians ($22,500)

Riverside Arts Center ($22,500)

Roman Susan Art Foundation ($22,500)

Rough House Theater Company ($22,500)

The Paper Machete ($22,500)

Winifred Haun and Dancers ($22,500)

La Caccina ($18,000)

Mad Shak Dance Company ($18,000)

Zephyr Dance Ensemble ($18,000)

South Side Community Art Center ($15,000)

Full Spectrum Features ($13,500)

Third Coast Percussion ($13,500)

Gender Fucked Productions ($12,000)

Piven Theatre Workshop ($12,000)

Red Theater Chicago ($12,000)

Sixty Inches From Center ($10,000)

DanceWorks Chicago ($8,500)

Heaven Gallery ($8,500)

Pegasus Theatre Chicago ($7,500)

Symphony of Oak Park and River Forest ($7,500)

The Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation supports land conservation, artistic vitality, and regional collections for the people of the Chicago region and the Lowcountry of South Carolina. The Foundation seeks to sustain and build resilient, vital, engaged, and equitable communities in these two regions by supporting conservation, arts, and collecting organizations that broaden narratives. For more information, visit gddf.org.

Published in Theatre Buzz

Let’s face it – in today’s world, “vaccinations” are a hot-button topic. More than ever, anything around health has become highly politicized, and for some, can elicit a deeply emotional reaction. Therefore, consensus is even harder to come by, and for some, even entering the debate feels impossible.

Despite all of that, leave it to Playwright Jonathan Spector to do the impossible and turn a play about vaccinations and consensus into a laugh-out-loud comedy. If you’re anything like this Opening Night audience, you might even find yourself gasping for air as you try to work through the laughter enough to absorb whatever witty one-liner comes next.

Spector’s Eureka Day takes place at a highly progressive private school where all decisions are made by consensus. However, when a mumps outbreak takes over the school, the Executive Board is going to find that artisanal scones are not always going to provide enough band aid for differing opinions.  Chaos ensues as parents clash in opinions over vaccinations and research, leaving the community unsure of how the school will ever recover.

Directed by Lili‑Anne Brown, Eureka Day is a witty, fast‑paced production presented by TimeLine Theatre in partnership with Broadway in Chicago. The work of Brown’s talented creative team immediately transports us into an elementary school library – particularly that of Scenic Designer Collete Pollard. The combination of picture books, colorful bean bags, and small chairs is sure to leave you feeling nostalgic as you think back to a time when you perhaps inhabited spaces like this.

Brown’s production features a strong ensemble with spot-on comedic timing. PJ Powers as Don, Eureka Day’s principal, elicited great laughter at this performance through his deep need to smooth over any debate. With every sigh or pause, he had the audience in the palm of his hand – wondering how he was going to try and navigate that particular rough patch. Jürgen Hooper expertly strikes a delicate balance with his approach to Eli, a character that walks a line as he tries to embody the stereotypical “white, woke man.”  Aurora Adachi-Winter has an authentic, genuine approach to her Meiko – the mom so many of us will recognize as the one who does not want to ruffle feathers, but also only has so much farther she can be pushed before she simply has to let her anger explode.

You might find that part of the cleverness of Spector’s story is its ability to invite an audience to empathize with both sides of the vaccination debate. Much as one might expect – not every parent meets eye to eye. As the school navigates the decision on whether or not to mandate the mumps vaccine for their students, we receive a window into the personal experiences of families on both sides.

In one particular scene, it is only Suzanne (Rebekah Ward) and Carina (Gabrielle Lott-Rogers) on stage. It is clear at this point that while Carina is pro-vaccination requirements, Suzanne is very much against. There is a great deal of silence, and the discomfort can be felt in the audience. While I do not wish to give away all of the details, I can say this – both actors treat their sides of the debate with a delicate grace. There is an openness and generosity from both Lott-Rogers and Ward that allows the audience to understand where they are each coming from. Regardless of which side of the debate on which you fall, you might just find yourself moved by the scene – and the ability for both characters to let down their walls and help each other understand their side of a highly personal topic.

A witty script with a lot of heart makes Eureka Day an absolute must-see. The topic alone is timely, and the ensemble brings it to life in a way that will stick with you for days.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Eureka Day runs through February 22, 2026 at Broadway Playhouse – 175 E. Chestnut Street. For tickets and information, see the Timeline Theatre website.

Published in Theatre in Review

At this time of year, when Christmas lights begin to twinkle and colors of green and red illuminate throughout the city, I am nostalgically drawn to the ballet. To me, there is nothing so quintessentially magical as The Nutcracker ballet at Christmas time. I can hum, and chair compose the entirety of Tchaikovsky’s masterpiece. I can mark every step to every number of the two-act ballet (shout out to Inland Pacific Ballet). I can picture my grandmother sewing the principal dancers into their tutus, and my mother managing ticket sales and donning the mother-ginger costume. For me, the holiday and the ballet are indivisibly interconnected. And now that I’ve lived in Chicagoland for longer than my childhood in Southern California, there is something nostalgically familiar and magical about Christopher Wheeldon's kaleidoscopic reimagining of The Nutcracker, now playing at The Lyric Opera House.

2 The Nutcracker The Joffrey Ballet Ensemble Photo by Cheryl Mann

On a magical Christmas Eve, after awakening to an epic battle between Toy Soldiers and the Rat King, a flurry of snowflakes sweeps Marie away on a whirlwind journey to the dreamlike fairgrounds of the World's Columbian Exposition. Set to Tchaikovsky's classic score, experience sprawling attractions representing countries from around the globe: the dazzling Golden Statue, the mystique of an Arabian enchantress, vibrant Venetian masked dancers, Chinese dragons, and Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. This holiday season, enter the spellbinding world where history and dreams intertwine.

4 The Nutcracker Amanda Assucena and Hyuma Kiyosawa Photo by Cheryl Mann

The Nutcracker Amanda Assucena and Hyuma Kiyosawa in Joffrey Ballet's The Nutcracker at Lyric Opera House.

Wheeldon’s The Nutcracker is set against the majesty of the 1893 World’s Fair of Chicago. Though remnants of the fair can still be found in buildings like The Museum of Science and Industry, the true grandeur and spectacle is lost to photographs, sketches, and our imaginations. The magic and marvel of the fair’s White City is rumored to be the inspiration for the Emerald City in his best-selling children’s book of 1900, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. While there is no solid evidence to support this claim, it would make sense that the fair, where Cracker Jacks, the Ferris wheel, and electricity itself were debuted and displayed, could inspire a magical city of Oz. It’s that same magic that Wheeldon captures in the Joffrey’s production of The Nutcracker. The uniquely Chicago-centric production of the ballet features the familiar storyline of Marie and her family, though it focuses on the love story between The Great Impresario of the Fair, performed by Stefan Gonçalvez, and Marie’s mother, the sculptress for the Fair and The Queen of the Fair, performed by Gayeon Jung. It shows the humble working-class families that built the city itself in the first act, juxtaposed against the vibrant and colorful world of the White City in the second act. The humility and simplicity of one act contrasted with the majesty of the second, coupled with journeys across Lake Michigan, make this production equally familiar and relatable. To date, it’s still one of my favorite productions of the ballet, quintessentially Chicago and absolutely magical.

6 The Nutcracker Gayeon Jung Stefan Gonçalvez Amanda Assucena and Hyuma Kiyosawa Photo by Cheryl Mann

What I wouldn’t give to be a snowflake in the core, a worker at the fair dancing beneath the first Ferris Wheel, or simply a watcher from the wings of this beautiful ballet. At this point, I have seen and reviewed the play more years than I performed in the ballet, and I still get goosebumps when the tree rises, and the snow falls. Whether you are seeing it for the hundredth time, the tenth time, or the first, every Chicagoan should experience the Nutcracker. Experience the magic for yourself. The Nutcracker is playing now through December 28th at The Lyric Opera House (20 N. Wacker Drive, Chicago). Do not overpay for Joffrey tickets! Beware of ticket resellers offering overpriced or invalid tickets. The Joffrey is the only official seller with the best prices, available at www.joffrey.org.

Published in Dance in Review

When the sun plays peek-a-boo and a pre-winter chill settles over Chicagoland, locals inevitably look for ways to warm their hearts as well as their fingers and toes. It’s during this time of year that locals venture indoors and when the Chicago theatre scene offers respite from the bitter cold. Like a favorite holiday treat, there are dozens of choices available to seekers of light and warmth, from recurring favorites and classic retellings to original plays and immersive theatre. There is no better way to celebrate the season and to lighten spirits than a good hearty laugh, or two, or three, or so many your sides hurt the next day. You’ll find no better way of warming up this December than seeing the deliciously dirty fairytale that is Rapornzel now playing at the Hoover-Leppen Theatre.

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Rapornzel (yes, you read that right, it is not a typo) is a panto-style reimagining of the classic fairytale of Rapunzel. Many years ago, the King and Queen of a far-off kingdom were blessed with a baby girl with long, magical, downstairs hair. One day, the jealous witch Mother F**ker kidnapped the child and locked her in a tower, selfishly squandering her merkin magic for herself. With the help of local hairdresser Dame Fanny Follicle, her thick-as-s**t son Pascal, the dashing Prince Ride-her, and the Hairy Fairy, will Rapornzel ever come out?

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If you couldn’t glean it from the title, Rapornzel is a serious-unserious play. Serious in the fact that the cast and crew put on a spellbinding, side-splitting comedic performance, but unserious to ensure the audience was able to escape the bitter cold reality for a few short hours and simply enjoy a hilarious performance. The story is written in the pantomime style or “panto.” Panto is a theatrical performance style dating back to the 1700s, traditionally performed around Christmas time. The popular form incorporates song and dance, exaggeration, and fourth wall breaks to tell a story. It often interchanges slapstick puns heavy with innuendos and groan-worthy dad-jokes to break the monotony of traditional theatre. Critical to the success of these comedic shows is audience participation. It’s highly encouraged to react and respond to the actors on stage, think “booing” the villain, “cheering” the hero, and responsive questioning from the actors such as: “Chicago is so cold…” to which the audience responds: “How cold is it?” wherein the actors then deliver a witty or punny joke in the tale that may or may not make you laugh, guffaw, or simply groan at how bad it is (in a good way). Panto is not for everyone, nor are puns or dad jokes, but in the Vonnegut style approach of moving the story along, it’s difficult not to enjoy, and even an ostrich chuckle at least once.

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But when it comes to Rapornzel, I guarantee you’ll laugh more than once. Rapornzel is what you get if you take a fairytale and remix it with a book of dad-jokes, throw in a general use of 1980s musical bangers, and finish it with the dry wit of 2025. Rapornzel is one of the many bawdy, silly, and immensely entertaining pantomime scripts written by professional performer-writer Tom Whalley. The writer’s works have become a popular holiday season tradition at PrideArts, joining the ranks of Whalley’s other works like Jack Off The Beanstalk, Sleeping with Beauty, and Throbbin Wood. With unimaginable R-rated puns, pop songs, and audience participation, Rapornzel follows a growing holiday tradition within PrideArts. This year’s production is exceptionally acted by Chicago talent like Jeremy Cox, who plays Hairy Fairy Dandruff, Peter Moeller as the local hairdresser Dame Fanny Follicle, and the sexy and incomparable Gina Cioffi as the evil Mother F**ker who kidnaps Rapornzel. For those still tepid about the play or the panto style, don’t worry, the skilled actors utilize their quick wits, improvisation skills, and comedic timing to make this production enjoyable for all, never overstepping where they sense timidity. They read and respond to the audience to both give and get energy to move the story along and draw out a smile from even the most austere theatre goer.

Therein lies the beauty of this type of theatrical play. Whalley’s style of Panto grants permission to the audience to simply lighten up, be silly, and share some laughs. In short, in its seriousness to stage a good production, it masterfully creates a space to be supremely unserious. There aren’t many theatrical stylings that can pull that off these days. 2025 has been wrought with ill humor, tired remakes, and uninspired sequels. It’s refreshing and welcome to see a production that doesn’t take itself too seriously while still representing Chicago theatre, PrideArts, and the theatrical community well. The actors, panto, and Rapornzel itself, beg the attendees to lighten up. It reminds us that we don’t always need to seek hidden meaning between the witty one-liners, and we don’t need to laugh at every joke we’ve heard at countless Thanksgiving tables by distant relatives. We should endeavor to seek out light and warmth as the days grow shorter and the darker nights descend. Rapornzel beckons Chicagoans inside and endeavors to thaw critical hearts this holiday season. It’s a healthy reminder that it’s okay to shout, especially when asked or directed to do so. It’s fine to laugh or simply smile. And it’s encouraged, and I daresay desperately needed, to remember that nothing, including fairy-hairy-overly-share-y-tales, is really that serious. Funny, yes. Serious, no. That in and of itself is a gift.

 Rapornzel is playing for a short while longer through December 14th at the Hoover-Leppen Theatre in Center on Halsted (3656 N. Halsted, Chicago). Grab your winter jacket and your tickets today, available at www.pridearts.org, and warm up with a few hearty belly laughs guaranteed to shake away your winter blues.

Published in Theatre in Review

Christmas cheer is here. Or rather... CHRISTMAS CHEER IS HERE!!!

Based on the 2003 blockbuster hit movie Elf with Will Ferrell and Zooey Deschanel, Elf the Musical is a glittering holiday stage confection that mixes slapstick comedy, heartfelt family drama, and a score full of catchy tunes like “Nobody Cares About Santa,” and “Never Fall in Love with an Elf” (one of the musical’s best song and dance numbers). It’s a show designed to leave audiences laughing, humming, and perhaps even believing in Christmas magic again. The stage adaptation of Elf transforms the beloved film into a glittering Broadway spectacle, guided by the comic touch of Bob Martin and Thomas Meehan’s book.

Buddy the Elf is anything but ordinary - mainly because he isn’t an elf at all. Accidentally tucked into Santa’s sack as a baby and raised among the North Pole’s toy-making crew, Buddy grows up brimming with candy-cane energy and a grin as bright as the Rockefeller Center tree (after all, smiling is his favorite). When the truth of his human identity comes to light, he heads to New York City in search of his real father, Walter Hobbs - a cranky children’s book publisher whose name sits squarely on Santa’s naughty list. What follows is a merry storm of comic misadventures, from Buddy’s chaotic debut at Walter’s office to his glitter-drenched takeover of Macy’s, capped by the showstopping ensemble number “Sparklejollytwinklejingley.”

Buddy’s relentless cheer doesn’t always hit its mark - especially with Jovie, the world-weary Macy’s employee who slowly softens to his quirky charm. At home, Walter’s wife Emily and son Michael yearn for connection, their longing beautifully voiced in the ballad “I’ll Believe in You.” As Buddy’s antics spiral from comic chaos to heartfelt desperation, Walter’s patience frays, setting the stage for a holiday crisis that peaks when Santa’s sleigh sputters to a halt in Central Park.

In true Christmas fashion, it’s Buddy’s infectious joy - and the collective power of a crowd singing together - that rekindles belief in magic. By the final curtain, Walter has embraced Buddy as his son, Jovie has discovered love, and the city itself has been swept up in a wave of rediscovered holiday spirit. The message is simple yet enduring: sometimes it only takes one elf to remind us of the wonder we’ve forgotten.

Currently lighting up Auditorium Theatre in a limited engagement through December 14th, this zany holiday romp delivers a burst of festive cheer guaranteed to lift spirits high enough to send Santa’s sleigh soaring once more.

Jack Ducat slips seamlessly into Buddy the Elf’s candy-cane-striped shoes, radiating a charm that feels tailor-made for the role. His wide-eyed innocence glows like twinkle lights across the stage, a pure embodiment of childlike wonder that never dims. With boundless energy and an infectious grin, Ducat magnifies Buddy’s relentless optimism until it fills the entire theatre, wrapping the audience in holiday warmth. His comedic instincts are razor-sharp, turning even the smallest quip or physical gag into a laugh-out-loud moment, while his musical bursts sparkle with joy. In every scene, Ducat channels the essence of Christmas spirit - reminding us that Buddy isn’t just a character, but a cultural touchstone of holiday cheer, beloved for the way he makes us believe in magic all over again.

The production’s heart is amplified by its supporting cast, each bringing dimension and warmth to Buddy’s journey. Felicia Martis crafts a Jovie with delightful complexity - her initial cynicism and guarded demeanor provide a sharp contrast to Buddy’s boundless optimism, making her eventual embrace of Christmas cheer all the more rewarding. As Walter Hobbs, Buddy’s beleaguered father, Jeff Brooks anchors the story with a commanding presence, capturing both the stern pragmatism of a businessman and the gradual softening of a man rediscovering family and faith. Yara Martin, as stepmother Emily Hobbs, is nothing short of luminous; her nurturing spirit radiates throughout, and she truly dazzles in her duet with son Michael. Camden Kwok, in turn, delivers a wonderfully earnest Michael, whose youthful sincerity makes “There is a Santa Claus” a standout moment along with Martin - an anthem of belief that sparkles with joy and reminds audiences of the magic at the core of the season. (*Ryan Duck alternates performances with Camden Kwok as Michael).

Darius J. Manuel proves to be a dynamic force onstage, stealing scenes with not one but two memorable turns. As the exuberant hotdog vendor, he serves up laughs alongside “The World’s Greatest Hotdog,” infusing the moment with infectious energy. Later, he reappears as the genial store manager whose good intentions lead to comic gold when he assumes Buddy’s elf costume marks him as a holiday department employee. Manuel’s sharp comedic instincts shine in both roles, blending physical humor with a warmth that keeps audiences leaning in. The highlight comes when Buddy nudges him into song, unlocking Manuel’s impressive vocal range.

Katelyn Lauria lights up the stage as Hobb’s office assistant Deb, delivering a performance brimming with comic zest. Her sharp timing and playful wit turn every moment into a laugh, while her buoyant presence injects a spark into the office scenes, ensuring Deb stands out as one of the production’s most memorable delights. Equally compelling is Andrew Kendrick, who demonstrates remarkable versatility in two sharply contrasting roles. As Santa Claus, he radiates warmth and joviality, embodying the very essence of holiday cheer with a twinkle in his eye and a booming laugh that instantly charms the audience. Then, in a striking shift, Kendrick inhabits the stern, impatient Mr. Greenway - Walter Hobbs’ demanding boss - capturing the character’s rigid authority with crisp precision. The contrast between these extremes not only highlights Kendick’s impressive range but also deepens the production’s narrative, balancing the magic of Christmas spirit against the hard edges of corporate life.

Director Philip Wm. McKinley orchestrates this holiday jewel with remarkable finesse, shaping each moment to shimmer with the warmth and sparkle of Christmas spirit. His vision transforms the stage into a living snow globe, where sweeping scenic designs unfold into breathtaking tableaux and glittering special effects ignite a sense of wonder that keeps audiences spellbound. The humor is delivered with impeccable timing, sending waves of laughter through the theatre, while the dance numbers dazzle with precision and exuberance, bursting forth like fireworks of festive joy. At the center of it all is a radiant ensemble whose collective energy and talent elevate the production beyond mere entertainment, crafting instead a jubilant celebration of the season - one that leaves audiences glowing with holiday cheer long after the curtain falls.

Overflowing with laughter and festive cheer, Elf the Musical is the perfect gift to unwrap this season. A joyous addition to any holiday wish list, the production delivers sure-fire fun for audiences of all ages, blending heartwarming spirit with playful humor that keeps the Christmas magic alive from start to finish.

Highly recommended.

Elf the Musical is being preformed at Auditorium Theatre through December 14th. For tickets and/or more show information, visit https://elfmusicaltour.com/.  

 

Published in Theatre in Review
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