A Map Of Virtue
By Erin Courtney Directed by Tosha Fowler Produced by Cor Theatre At Rivendall Theatre, Chicago Complex and deliberately vague drama
Read MoreBy Erin Courtney Directed by Tosha Fowler Produced by Cor Theatre At Rivendall Theatre, Chicago Complex and deliberately vague drama
Read MoreCould you find a way to present Twelfth Night in a way that is basically true to the story, but comprehensible to kindergarteners? Neither could Lifeline. Robert Kauzlaric’s world premiere adaptation turns its characters into talking animals to make them more fun to children, and labors hard to convince them that love isn’t icky and help keep its eight characters played by four actors straight. But the company’s website recommends the show for ages 5 and up, a demographic also targeted by the poster artwork, and there is just no way to make that work. With older children, perhaps in the 8-11 range, the show might have more success, but that’s not who I saw there, and the plot is simply too complex and outside small children’s areas of interest.
Read MoreBy Steve J. Spencer Directed by Ronan Marra Produced by The Side Project, Chicago Thought provoking dark comedy more of
Read MoreBy Ken Prestininzi Directed by Kate Hendrickson Produced by Trap Door Theatre Cookies Uneven, Need to be Thicker One thing
Read More28th Annual Young Playwrights Festival Produced by Pegasus Theatre Chicago New Talent On Display I must admit I walked into
Read More… no actor would ever say the word Macbeth in a theater – it would bring certain disaster. ….NEVER wish an actor good luck! – tell them to break a leg.
Read MoreTurn off your pagers and/or cell phones BEFORE the show starts. And NO TEXT MESSAGING during the show. And DO NOT CHECK your VOICE MESSAGES and/or TEXT MESSAGES during the show. Maybe we need to do what some London theatre have started doing—making everyone check-in their cell phones upon entering the theatre.
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Read MoreIf three supernatural visitors can turn a man’s life around — as do the visions of Christmas Past, Present, and Future for Ebenezer Scrooge — how much more effective would five magical visitors be? The splendid answer lies in Five Guys Named Moe, where Little Moe (Daryn Stewart), Big Moe (Philip Beltan), 4-eyed Moe (Micah Jeremiah Mims), Eat Moe (Dan Seward) and No Moe (Christopher George Patterson) amazingly appear in the bedroom of drunken, despondent Nomax (Brandon Hanks).
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