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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

West Side Story

let me state that this National Tour is still a most worthy, even breathtaking theatrical event. Bernstein’s music and the Robbins’ inspired dancing are so exquisite that this production is a terrific show to introduce teens to the magic of classical Broadway musicals. West Side Story certainly captures the angry voice of urban youths in the 1950’s. Much of that angst still resonates today. But in this high energy production – dance and a heart-throbbing score dominate. And that is all that is needed sometimes.

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The Crowd You’re In With at 16th Street Theater

Rebecca Gilman set her 2009, The Crowd You’re In With in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood. She uses a July 4 celebration to put three couples and one stray into an agonizing discussion about married couples always wanting and eventually having children. This tightly trimmed and expertly directed (by Anish Jethmalani) 75 minute show is clear than the original Goodman Theatre production.

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The Wiz

When it comes to taking a mediocre or tired shows and giving it new life–director/choreographer Stacey Flaster is the one to call on. She has worked her wonders on the 1975 often misunderstood and often over-hyped African-American version of The Wizard of Oz – Brown & Smalls’ The Wiz. This tuneful show is usually too shrill, too loud and too intense to be cherished. But, with Stacey Flaster’s wizardry it plays with loads of heart; terrific dancing; and with an honesty that gets us to empathize with Dorothy and her three pals.

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The Women

Director Jim Schneider’s cast of 18 women had trouble trying to land the acidic comedy from Luce’s stinging dialogue. The fast talking and over-the-top hyper acting by most of the cast made much of the comedy fall flat. The sameness and high-pitched vocals from many of the cast became tedious very quickly. Lack of comic timing lead to funny lines being thrown away.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Stations Lost

With Stations Lost, as the second part of Fitzpatrick’s trilogy (follows last year’s This Train), Fitzpatrick has written a most compelling and thoroughly engaging performance art piece. Adapted and Directed by Ann Filmer, Stations Lost uses the blend of personal storytelling, video art of Fitzpatrick’s unusual covers and illustration art and bluesy/folk songs (sung by Lynne Jordan to John Rice’s guitar) to express Tony’s impressions about his world.

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The All New Original Tribute to the Blues Brothers

We all know The Blues Brothers, the classic cult hit from 1980 with SNL members John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd, a film that is dear to many people’s hearts, especially, perhaps, here in Chicago, where the film was set. So tampering with something like this, well, it’s sort of like trying to make a Broadway musical out of Pulp Fiction, or remake Casablanca: Bogart and Bergman defined those roles such that anyone else playing them would just be wrong.

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Theo Katzman & (((LOVEMASSIVE))) Live at Schubas

The three of them immediately launched into several new songs, presumably on the debut album Theo’s recording right now, each of them very strong and containing what one has come to expect from Theo: good lyrics, nice hooks, excellent chord progressions. Theo writes like he talks, so the colloquial nature of his lyrics make the songs very approachable while remaining catchy and smart.

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The Underpants

As the play opens, Theo and Louise Maske (Jack Birdwell and Jessica Maynard, a fellow University of Michigan alum) rush into their apartment, scandalized: while they were innocently watching the king’s parade, Louise’s underwear fell to her ankles. She immediately swept them up, she contests, but Theo is concerned that he will lose his job and his reputation because of his wife’s “indiscretion.”

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That Face

That Face, the debut from 19-year-old English playwright Polly Stenham, is impressive in its maturity. It does not come off, at first blush, as something a teenager would write. That said, the teen angst and actions are closer, fresher, more realistic than something written by a significantly older writer. This is very much a teen drama, sort of Skins-meets-Albee.

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