Theatre seats play tickets

Theater tickets

Odd  Couple tickets

Wicked tickets

Partner/Investor need for this site. $8500 needed email for Info

Chicago play reviews, theater critic
Chicago Critic theatre reviews Talk Theatre in Chicago Podcast

Go see a play this week!

listenListen to the Talktheatreinchicago.com podcast now

Broadway Tickets on sale for Tarzan, Julia Roberts Three Days of Rain, Elton John inspired Lestat as well as other events in Chicago.

 

Not To Be Missed:

Clash by Night

Urinetown

Dealer’s Choice

Romance

Loose Knit

A Flea in Her Ear

The Sweetest Swing in Baseball

The Glass Menagerie

Voyeurs de Venus

 A Life in the Theatre

Two For the Show

Angels In America

Hizzoner

The Night Heron

Johnny Tremain

Menopause The Musical

Of Mice and Men

By John Steinbeck

Directed by Michael Rice

At Steep Theatre Company

3902 North Sheridan

Chicago, IL

Call 312-458-0722 or Email tickets@steeptheatre.com, tickets $15

Sunday at 3pm

Monday and Tuesday at 8pm

Running time 2 hours with 1 intermission

Through March 31, 2006 ( In repertory with The Night Heron)

Of Mice and Men brings literature to gentle life

The small scale story of people living on the edge of society, first staged in the 1937-38 Broadway season by George Kaufman, is given current Chicago life on the intimate Steep Theatre stage.  The five year old storefront has created an engaging, measured translation of Steinbeck’s Depression era drama. 

Mice and Men.

Director Michael Rice and his production and research team have efficiently created several rural settings in one room, on the way to, way from, and several locations on a working ranch in rural California.  Set pieces are added and subtracted, bunks and other furniture are moved on and off, and our attention remains directly on the varied but moving and focused performances provided in this current production.

Lenny (Brendan Melanson) and George (Anderson Lawfer) rush onto the stage, breathless, thirsty, trudging toward their next ranch job. There is talk of some kind of trouble in the past small town but the wash of character development takes us past that question, until later in the play.  Quickly and simply we are introduced to the fractious but loving relationship between simple minded Lenny and his friend and protector George. The remaining cast members are introduced gradually in the next several scenes once Lenny and George arrive at the ranch: Candy the older maimed farm hand (Peter Esposito), Slim the articulate mule skinner (Alex Gillmore), agitated boss Curley (Andrew Perez) and his misplaced daydreaming wife (Caroline Neff), additional farm hands Whit (Bill Miller) and Carlson (James Allen) and the realistically bitter single black character Crooks (J. J. McCormick).

All the characters dream of small self sufficient lives in which they can call their own shots and “live off the fat of the land”.  No one of the characters achieves those dreams during our time with them and a few have their journeys tragically derailed. 

Pace and timing vary in the performances in this production. Several performances deserve special mention for their nuance and power: Brendan Melanson’s sweet and powerful and tragic Lenny; Peter Esposito’s resigned and temporarily hopeful Candy (note in particular his reaction to the arguments presented by the other farm hands to shoot Candy’s old dog and companion .. the symbolism of the expendability of human life on the edges of society is simple and the reality of this is simply and powerfully played); Gillmore’s even toned and understanding Slim, and Caroline Neff in her touching final scene with consistently powerful Melanson as Lenny.

In this story, love is wherever you find it, dreams can motivate even the most intractable cynic, and tough decisions need to be made. Steinbeck’s characters engage in heroic yet human scale struggles against the limits imposed by life’s rules.  And yet somehow, there is some hope at the play’s end.

Recommended

Martha Wade Steketee

msteketee@post.harvard.edu

Dated reviewed March 6, 2006

 

 

 

[Home] [Chicago Reviews] [Defending The Caveman] [Tommy Guns Garage] [Menopause The Musical] [Wicked] [Bark!] [Macbeth] [Johnny Tremain] [The Way of the Wiseguy] [The Night Heron] [Nina Simone] [Thoroughly Modern Millie] [Crimes of the Heart] [Still Life] [Accelerando] [Hizzoner] [Angels In America Part I] [Of Mice and Men] [The Fourth Sister] [autobahn] [The Skin of Our Teeth] [White Hot Black Comedy] [Killers] [Two For The Show] [A Life in the Theatre] [Feathers In The Wind] [The Pirates of Penzance] [Voyeurs de Venus] [The Glass Menagerie] [The Sweetest Swing in Baseball] [The Clearing] [Barenaked Lads] [A Flea in Her Ear] [Loose Knit] [Romance] [Fighting Words] [Dealer's Choice] [Urinetown The Musical] [The House of Bernarda Alba] [The Chalk Garden] [The Chosen] [Clash by Night] [Stick Fly] [London Reviews] [Book Reviews] [Theatre Companies] [Feature Articles] [Contact Us] [Theatre Links] [About Us] [Advertise with Us]

Site owned by Tom Williams  1-773-293-3298, tom99@chicagocritic.com Copyright, Chicago, IL 2006