Author: Tom Williams

REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Oxford Roof Climber’s Rebellion

This is a welcome engrossing work that vividly depicts the friendship (and possibly more) between T.E. Lawrence and Robert Graves as the two share common adjustment problems after the horrific experiences of both men in 1920. Robert from the trenches of France and Lawrence from his adventures in the Middle East as he led the Arabs against the Turks in World War I. Warriors have always found problems adjusting to ‘civilian life’ after the tribulations of war.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Ten Chimneys

Jeffrey Hatcher gives us a glimpse into the Lunt & Fontanne’s world as we meet the couple at Ten Chimneys. There is Carl (Lance Baker), Alfred’s pool-playing brother; Louise (Janet Ulrich Brooks), Alfred’s sister and Ten Chimney housekeeper. And, of course, there is Alfred’s dominating mother, Hattie (Linda Kimbrough), who both admires and rules Alfred during his time at Ten Chimneys. Alfred built a house on the estate for Harrie. She hated and ridiculed Lynn, Alfred’s wife, at every occasion.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Maids

The two maids (sisters actually) role-play their fantasies concerning The Mistress. These games feature one sister playing The Mistress as the other sister plays herself. The roles then are reversed. We see how the line between admiration, love, contempt and loathing becomes obscured during the role-playing. Playwright Genet gives each of the maids—Rich Logan (Solenge) and her little sister Claire (John Arthur Lewis) long speeches that vividly depict their emotional shifts that become tedious and redundant quickly.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSTheatre Reviews

Riverdance

With only a few performances remaining in this short-run goodbye embrace from these stunning artists, get there now and celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in a fashion that will soon disappear (and how lucky is Chicago that the tour would overlap the holiday?). It may yet return one day in the future, but that’s no excuse to risk not seeing this wonder of the modern cultural landscape.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Fulton Street Sessions

The folks at TUTA, under the creative, support of artistic director Zeljko Djukic, have allowed the cast of Kirk Anderson, Jaimelyn Gray, Stacie Beth Green, Trey Maclin and Jacqueline Stone to use their ingenuity skills that include quirky physical comedy with unique singing to mount a world premiere showcase production of the Fulton Street Sessions that almost defies description.

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