Theatre Reviews

REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Road Show

The main problem is John Weidman’s book. that quite superficially presents the Mizner brothers with a too broad a scope. The brothers, as presented, are two con men out to fleece the public on their way to pursuing the American Dream. Addison is presented, despite terrific work by Michael Aaron Lindner, a weak personality who is a failure as a con man completely subservient to his younger brother.. Wilson, played nicely by Andrew Rothenberg, is presented as a shiftless, ruthless and charming entrepreneurial con man whose addiction to cocaine and gambling made him always in need of cash.

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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat – 2014 National Tour

For 50 years, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat has been rolling through Chicago. My first time seeing it, the Cadillac Palace put on a fun spectacle for the whole family. Directed and Choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler, the show will leave you in awe. A story about always shooting for your dreams, Joseph, his 11 brothers, and the rest of this stellar cast will put you in your own dream.

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God of Isaac – Florida Review

Isaac is not a heroic figure — not Tom from the Glass Menagerie, not the Marlon Brando character from On The Waterfront, not Huck Finn fishing along the Mississippi, not Professor Higgins or Colonel Pickering from My Fair Lady. But all of these (often introspective) persona (and others) interrupt –and yet reinforce — the plot with their famous and familiar lines altered to reflect his struggle (complete with unexpected yet hilarious yiddishisms).

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

American Myth

We see his interview for the lifestyle section of a local newspaper by his former favorite student turned journalist, Peter Finnerty (Jordan Brodess). That interview was quite friendly and it gave the professor a platform to speak about his book, his teaching and his personal life. Finnery never asked Graham about his personal life, the professor volunteered his life story

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Rent – Paramount Theatre

Rent was conceived in the hay day of the prevalence of AIDS, but with the strides made in medicine and now laws regarding Gay marriage, Rent seems a bit outdated. But, today’s audiences may relate to the many similarities seen recently from the “Occupy Wall Street” movement that occurred in September 2011. “Rent’s” opening-night audience responded positively, perhaps because the young people were unaware of the 1980s-1990s when AIDS was at the forefront of political action. Or, they may have enjoyed the shock and novelty found in the play, or they agreed with the references to many political points.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Water by the Spoonful

Interspersed, are the four members of an online support group of crack cocaine addicts as each struggle daily with their addiction. We see Haikumon lead the group and be its censor for foul language. She can lead the group yet she can’t seem to handle her life off line. The Internet becomes a place of safety and understanding for these addicts. We see their struggles for redemption from their constant personal failings due to their drug use.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Chapatti

Dan (John Mahoney) is a senior living alone who consumes his time with his (imaginary) terrier dog, Chapatti. His daily ritual is to make tea, then asking Chapatti if he wants canned or dry dog food-or – a combination? Next, he takes his dog for a long walk often ending up at the local veterinarian for a unneeded checkup. Dan is more than lonely as he is trying to find a home for Chapatti since he has decided to leave Dublin for good

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