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Showing posts with label Guest Critic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Critic. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2025

SAVE THE DATES: City Lit 45th Season to Include Four Premieres by Chicago Playwrights and a 21st Century Classic

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar 

City Lit Season Preview



Exciting things upcoming for City Lit during their big anniversary season! 

By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic

I am the most excited about a brand-new original musical based on Scaramouche. We heard a couple of songs, and it sounds very fresh and fun. This would be a world premiere, a big score (get it?) for the company. 

We also heard an excerpt from a play called Changing Channels which takes place during the era of I Love Lucy in television. The actors who read from the script had hilarious, animated voices. This show sounds really wonderful. 

Another really intriguing new play is an adaptation from a chapter of Dracula called Strange Cargo. The playwright has worked on this script for about twenty years, so he is justifiably excited to finally see his work on the stage. He was also one of the actors reading from the script. 

Sherlock Holmes and the Christmas Clowns will be a limited-run “bonus” show. It is expected to sell out, so subscribers get first dibs at tickets. 

The last show sounds extremely intense and has a cast and director who care passionately about the show, having been involved over ten years ago when it was produced in Chicago before. Set in a prison, Jesus Hopped the A Train involves surviving and redemption. 

Quite a season! Cheers!

Catherine Hellmann is a teacher, theater lover, and resident of Rogers Park near City Lit. 



City Lit’s 2025-26 season to include four premieres by Chicago playwrights and a 21st Century classic

45th season to include Stephen Adly Guirgis’ JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN, new plays by Timothy Griffin, John Reeger, and John Weagly; and a new musical by Kingsley Day and James Glossman

City Lit Theater has announced its programming for the 2025-26 season, the company’s 45th. The season will have a strong focus on new works by Chicago area writers, including a holiday production to be presented in addition to the company’s four-production season. The season’s subject matter will include two plays exploring justice in America alongside classic fantasy thrillers and a Sherlock Holmes mystery. 
 
The season will open in July with Stephen Adly Guirgis’s JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN, an explosive contemporary drama that helped to establish Guirgis as one of the current century’s leading American dramatists. This story of a young, incarcerated Latino charged with murder will be directed by Chicago-based actor and director Esteban Andres Cruz, who won a Jeff Award in 2009 for their portrayal of the play’s leading character. Cruz has a long history with Guirgis, including originating the role of Venus Ramirez in Guirgis’s HALFWAY BITCHES GO STRAIGHT TO HEAVEN at Atlantic Theatre Company in New York City. JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN will open on August 2, 2025, following previews from July 25 and playing through September 7.
 
Following the Guirgis drama, the City Lit season will focus entirely on new plays by Chicago writers, with three world premieres and one Chicago premiere. The company’s 45th season will continue in October with the world premiere of Timothy Griffin’s STRANGE CARGO: THE DOOM OF THE DEMETER, adapted from the seventh chapter of the Bram Stoker novel DRACULA. This gothic horror high seas adventure tells of the shocking events aboard the cargo ship transporting Count Dracula’s belongings from Transylvania to England. It will be a co-production with Black Button Eyes Productions and will be directed by that company’s Producing Artistic Director Ed Rutherford. The thrills will arrive for the Halloween season, with a press opening Saturday, October 18 following previews from October 10, and playing through November 23.
 
The suspense will continue in December with the world premiere production of John Weagly’s SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE CHRISTMAS CLOWNS, a mystery adapted from the short story "The Flying Stars" by G.K. Chesterton and from the works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. This new play will continue City Lit’s 19-year history with the legendary detective, from 2006’s & 2014’s HOLMES AND WATSON, 2015’s THE SEVEN PER-CENT SOLUTION, through 2007’s & 2019’s THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES. Executive Artistic Director Brian Pastor will direct this special holiday production, not included in season subscriptions, but available to subscribers at the reduced price of $20.00. SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE CHRISTMAS CLOWNS CLOWNS will open to the press on Sunday, December 14 following previews on December 13 and 14, and play through January 4, 2026.
 
The 45th season will resume in February with the Chicago premiere of the historical political drama CHANGING CHANNELS by Chicago actor and playwright John Reeger. Based on actual events, CHANGING CHANNELS is set in 1952 during the McCarthy-era “Red Scare “and follows a television comedy actress who is suspected of having ties with the Communist Party. Veteran Chicago actor and freelance director Kevin Theis will helm the production. CHANGING CHANNELS will open on March 7, following previews from February 27, and play through April 12.
 
Closing City Lit’s 45th season will be a world premiere musical adaptation of Rafael Sabatini’s 1921 novel SCARAMOUCHE, with music and lyrics by Kingsley Day and book by Day and James Glossman. This classic adventure follows the exploits of a sardonic provincial lawyer who is radicalized by his friend’s brutal murder on the eve of the French Revolution. He repeatedly evades disaster by taking on a series of new identities—first an insurgent orator, then a traveling comic actor, and finally a master swordsman. Day’s many musical theater works include the one-act musical “Text Me,” produced at City Lit in 2024; and with Philip LaZebnik, the musicals SUMMER STOCK MURDER and AZTEC HUMAN SACRIFICE (the latter produced at City Lit in 2023). Co-bookwriter James Glossman enjoyed a two-decade-long collaboration with author and journalist Jim Lehrer that included the plays KICK THE CAN, THE SPECIAL PRISONER, and FLYING CROWS. More recently, he has been collaborating with actor Tom Hanks, on the plays SAFE HOME and THIS WORLD OF TOMORROW (the latter currently in development). SCARAMOUCHE will be directed by Beth Wolf, two-time Jeff nominee (for OUTSIDE MULLINGAR and SILENT SKY at Citadel Theatre) and Founding Artistic Director of Midsommer Flight. SCARAMOUCHE will open to the press on Saturday, May 9 at 7:30 pm, following previews from May 1 and will play through June 14, 2026.
 
City Lit Season 45 subscriptions are available at $110.00, good for all performances in the regular season, or $85, good for preview performances only. SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE CHRISTMAS CLOWNS may be added to subscriptions for an additional $20 per subscriber. Subscriptions may be ordered online at www.citylit.org or purchased over the phone by calling 773-293-3682. Single tickets for individual Season 45 productions are priced at $30 for previews and $38 for regular performances and will be on sale soon. Senior prices are $5.00 off regular prices. Students and military are $15.00 for all performances.

 
CITY LIT THEATER'S 2025-2026 SEASON

JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN
By Stephen Adly Guirgis
Directed by Esteban Andres Cruz
July 25 - September 7, 2025

Previews: July 25 - August 1
Press Opening: Saturday, August 2 at 7:30 pm
Regular Run: August 2 -September 7
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm
Monday, August 25, at 7:30 pm
Tickets $30 for previews and $38 for regular performances. Senior prices $5.00 off regular prices. Students and military are $15.00 for all performances.
Tickets available online at www.citylit.org or by phone at 773-293-3682.
All performances at City Lit Theater, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr, on the second floor (accessible via elevator) of the Edgewater Presbyterian Church.
 
A cage-rattling prison drama from Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis (BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND CRAZY) that boldly examines faith, dignity, and our system of justice. Angel Cruz is a young Puerto Rican man incarcerated for shooting cult leader Reverend Kim. When the Reverend dies during surgery, Angel suddenly finds himself facing murder charges. His only companions at Rikers Island are Lucius Jenkins, a serial killer turned born-again Christian, and Valdez, a sadistic corrections officer.
 
STRANGE CARGO: THE DOOM OF THE DEMETER
By Timothy Griffin
Adapted from Chapter Seven of the novel DRACULA by Bram Stoker
Directed by Ed Rutherford
A co-production with Black Button Eyes Productions
World Premiere
October 10-November 23, 2025

Previews October 10 - 17
Press Opening Saturday, October 18 at 7:30 pm
Regular run October 18 - November 23
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm
Monday, November 10 at 7:30 pm
Tickets $30 for previews and $38 for regular performances. Senior prices $5.00 off regular prices. Students and military are $15.00 for all performances.
Tickets available online at www.citylit.org or by phone at 773-293-3682.
All performances at City Lit Theater, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr, on the second floor (accessible via elevator) of the Edgewater Presbyterian Church.
 
Based on Chapter Seven of Bram Stoker’s DRACULA, this gothic horror high seas adventure tells the shocking events aboard the cargo ship transporting Count Dracula’s belongings from Transylvania to England. Suspicion, paranoia, and madness infect the crew as the harried sailors disappear one by one. Full of creeping mystery, vibrant language, rich characters, sinister vanishings, violent sea storms, swashbuckling action, monstrous puppetry, and, of course, a boatload of terrors, this is the Dracula tale you’ve never seen.
 
CHANGING CHANNELS
By John Reeger
Directed by Kevin Theis
Chicago Premiere
February 27-April 12, 2026

Previews February 27 – March 6
Press opening Saturday, March 7 at 7:30 pm
Regular run March 7 – April 12
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm
Monday, March 30 at 7:30 pm
Tickets $30 for previews and $38 for regular performances. Senior prices $5.00 off regular prices. Students and military are $15.00 for all performances.
Tickets available online at www.citylit.org or by phone at 773-293-3682.
All performances at City Lit Theater, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr, on the second floor (accessible via elevator) of the Edgewater Presbyterian Church.
 
Based on actual events, CHANGING CHANNELS is set backstage at the DuMont Television Network in New York City in 1952. It is the peak of the “Red Scare” and 151 actors, authors, and journalists are put on the Red Channels list, with alleged ties to communism. As Cold War hysteria sweeps the nation, actress Maggie Carlin finds herself accused just as her hit comedy show is taking off. 

SCARAMOUCHE: A MUSICAL IN TWO ACTS
Music and Lyrics by Kingsley Day
Book by Kingsley Day and James Glossman
Adapted from the novel SCARAMOUCHE by Raphael Sabatini
Directed by Beth Wolf
World Premiere
May 1 – June 14, 2026

Previews May 1 – 8
Press opening Saturday, May 9 at 7:30 pm
Regular run May 9 – June 14
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm
Monday, June 1 at 7:30 pm
Tickets $30 for previews and $38 for regular performances. Senior prices $5.00 off regular prices. Students and military are $15.00 for all performances.
Tickets available online at www.citylit.org or by phone at 773-293-3682.
All performances at City Lit Theater, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr, on the second floor (accessible via elevator) of the Edgewater Presbyterian Church.
 
Based on the rip-roaring novel by Rafael Sabatini. Radicalized by his friend’s brutal murder on the eve of the French Revolution, a sardonic provincial lawyer repeatedly evades disaster by taking on a series of new identities—first an insurgent orator, then a traveling comic actor, and finally a master swordsman.

SPECIAL HOLIDAY PRODUCTION (Not included in season subscriptions)

SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE CHRISTMAS CLOWNS
By John Weagly
Adapted from "The Flying Stars" by G.K. Chesterton and the works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Directed by Artistic Director Brian Pastor
World Premiere
December 12, 2025-January 4, 2026

Press Opening Sunday, December 14 at 3 pm
Regular run December 14, 2025-January 4, 2026
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm, Monday, December 22 at 7:30 pm
Tickets:  $28 for all performances, or $20 for City Lit subscribers; Seniors $23, Students and Military $15.
Tickets available online at www.citylit.org or by phone at 773-293-3682.
All performances at City Lit Theater, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr, on the second floor (accessible via elevator) of the Edgewater Presbyterian Church.
 
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson travel to the country to spend the holidays with an old army comrade of Watson’s. What they don’t know is that one of the other guests at this English manor is a notorious international thief. When a priceless present is stolen during a Christmas pantomime, can Sherlock discover the culprit before the curtain falls?  Carols, courtship and comedy bring cheer to the cold winter in this holiday treat.

PLAYWRIGHT BIOS

Stephen Adly Guirgis (Playwright, JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN) Stephen Adly Guirgis is a Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, screenwriter, director, and actor. He grew up on the Upper West Side of New York City, attending school in Harlem. Guirgis studied at the University of Albany, SUNY, graduating in 1992. Some of his most famous works include JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN (2000), THE LAST DAYS OF JUDAS ISCARIOT (2005), and BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND CRAZY (2015) for which he won the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Guirgis has had his plays be produced both off and on Broadway as well as in the UK. He is also a member and the former co-artistic director of the New York City LAByrinth Theatre Company.
 









Timothy Griffin (Playwright, STRANGE CARGO: THE DOOM OF THE DEMETER) is a Chicago playwright and actor, and an Honors graduate of Illinois State University. His plays, including MURDER IN MIRTHBURG, TICKLEBRAINS, RE: ALICE, and ONCE UPON A TIME… IN DENMARK! have been performed in Chicago, Los Angeles, St. Louis, Kansas City, Miami, and Chagrin Falls (Ohio). He was a four-time finalist in the Deathscribe International Festival of Horror Radio Plays, and his screenwriting work includes the short films THE CELLAR JOB and SNARE, as well as the cult creature feature TAIL STING. Favorite acting work includes the titular roles in HAMLET and RICHARD III, DIAL M FOR MURDER (Tony), BOOTH (Junius Booth), THE BOOK OF WILL (Burbage), and THE LAST DAYS OF JUDAS ISCARIOT (Satan). He is also a writer of novels and short fiction and is an accomplished musician and fight choreographer. He is of indeterminate age and is currently at large.

John Weagly (Playwright, SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE CHRISTMAS CLOWNS) has had over 100 plays receive over 200 productions by theaters on four continents.  A collection of his short sci-fi/fantasy scripts, TINY FLIGHTS OF FANTASY, has been taught at Columbia College.  Other short plays have been collected in THE JUGGLER WHO LOST HIS ARMS IN A RODEO FIRE AND OTHER PLAYS and VAGABOND  PLAYS.  His adaptation SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE CASE OF THE CHRISTMAS GOOSE has been produced around the world. Also a short story writer, LOCUS Magazine once compared his short fiction to the works of Ray Bradbury, and Nina Kiriki Hoffman and called him “a new writer worth reading and following.”  His stories about former pro-wrestler Buster Bash have been nominated for the Derringer Award multiple times and have won the Norumbega Award. You can find more of his stories in the collections THE UNDERTOW OF SMALL TOWN DREAMS and DANCING IN THE KNEE-DEEP MIDNIGHT and in the novella ALLIGATOR AUTOPSY.
 
John Reeger (Playwright, CHANGING CHANNELS) is a Chicago playwright and actor. John and his long-time collaborator, the late composer/lyricist Julie Shannon, received the 1996 After Dark Award for “Outstanding New Work” when their musical THE CHRISTMAS SCHOONER premiered at the Bailiwick Repertory. THE CHRISTMAS SCHOONER is licensed by Music Theatre International and has received more than 200 productions in theatres throughout the country and in the UK. John and Julie previously collaborated on the musical STONES, which premiered in 1989 at the St. Louis Black Repertory. John and Julie’s third collaboration, LET THE EAGLE FLY, THE STORY OF CESAR CHAVEZ, was produced in concert version by Goodman Theatre, as part of the 2004 Latino Theatre Festival. Their most recent collaboration THE MAN WHO MURDERED SHERLOCK HOLMES (with music and lyrics co-authored by Michael Mahler) opened at Mercury Theatre Chicago in 2016 and received the Jeff Award for “New Work.”
 
As an actor, John has appeared in more than 160 productions in Chicago venues including the Goodman, Court, Chicago Shakespeare, Steppenwolf, Writers, Northlight, Marriott and Drury Lane. He has appeared regionally in productions at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Kennedy Center, Goodspeed, Fulton Theatre and at the RSC’s Swan Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, UK. In 2015, the Jeff committee honored John and his wife actress Paula Scrofano with a special Career Achievement Award for their contribution to Chicago theatre.
 
Kingsley Day (Composer/Lyricist and Co-Bookwriter, SCARAMOUCHE) is active in the Chicago area as a composer-lyricist, playwright, musical director, and actor-singer. Most recently, his musical AZTEC HUMAN SACRIFICE (music and lyrics; book with Philip LaZebnik) and his one-act musical TEXT ME (book, music, and lyrics) premiered at Chicago’s City Lit Theater. SUMMER STOCK MURDER (music and lyrics; book with LaZebnik) ran for 18 months at the old Theatre Building and won eight Jeff Awards, including one for New Work; it has since been produced at Drury Lane Oakbrook Terrace and elsewhere. Day and LaZebnik have written a number of other musicals produced successfully in Chicago, including STATE STREET (City Lit), DEAR AMANDA (Pheasant Run Theater), BYRNE, BABY, BYRNE (Zanies), and THE JOY OF SOCKS (Chicago Premiere Society). Their comedy TOUR DE FARCE premiered at Wisdom Bridge Theater with Steve Carell and Hollis Resnik, transferred to the Apollo Theater, and has since been produced around the United States and numerous times in Europe. Day and LaZebnik were twice awarded grants by Sheldon Patinkin’s New Musicals Project, supported by the Paul and Gabriella Rosenbaum Foundation.
 
Day’s new score for Gilbert and Sullivan’s lost operetta THESPIS has been heard in productions at the Theatre Building, the Chicago Gilbert & Sullivan Society, and (twice) the Savoyaires, which more recently produced his one-act SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF GILBERT & SULLIVAN. For City Lit, he has composed incidental music for PROMOTHEUS BOUND (a new translation by Nicholas Rudall), LONDON ASSURANCE, and Patinkin’s productions of THE TEMPEST and VOLPONE.
 
James Glossman (Co-Bookwriter, SCARAMOUCHE) has had a busy summer, fall, and winter. After Portland Stage produced a week-long workshop of his latest play co-written with Tom Hanks (then titled SEE YOU TOMORROW), In November, the new Hanks and Glossman play (now titled THIS WORLD OF TOMORROW) continued its development in a 3-day performance workshop at The Shed at Hudson Yards (NYC), with a cast including Hanks, MaYaa Boateng, Cahill, Sanders, Tracey Conyer Lee, Anna Baryshnikov, Ray Anthony Thomas, and Kristine Neilsen. His previous play co-written with Hanks, SAFE HOME, premiered at Shadowland in 2022, and his music-theatre piece SHOSTAKOVICH AND THE BLACK MONK – co-written with Philip Setzer – was performed in concert halls from Tanglewood to Ravinia to Wolf Trap to LA to Seoul, South Korea by the Grammy-winning Emerson String Quartet and a rotating cast. His two-decade-long collaboration with author & journalist Jim Lehrer produced the plays KICK THE CAN, THE SPECIAL PRISONER, and FLYING CROWS. His adaptation of Suzanne Berne’s A CRIME IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD premiered at City Lit, directed by Terry McCabe. A proud graduate of Northwestern University’s Department of Interpratation, he is equally proud to have gotten his Equity card at Chicago’s Victory Gardens Theatre. He has taught at Johns Hopkins University for over 20 years
 
DIRECTOR BIOS
 
Esteban Andres Cruz (they/them, Director, JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN). Born in Berwyn and raised in Cicero, Esteban is an ensemble member with A Red Orchid Theater, where they will be seen in SIX MEN DRESSED LIKE JOSEPH STALIN this Spring.  Esteban has worked as an actor on many stages in Chicago (Steppenwolf, Writers Theater, Victory Gardens), regionally (La Jolla Playhouse, St Louis Rep, Pasadena Playhouse, Miami New Drama) and with some great directors like David Cromer, Neil Pepe, Chay Yew, Will Davis and John Ortiz.  Off Broadway; HALFWAY BITCHES GO STRAIGHT TO HEAVEN by Stephen Adly Guirgis (Drama Desk Award Nomination), the musical CORNELIA STREET by Tony winner Simon Stephens and the Yale Drama Prize winner BATHHOUSE.PPTx by Jesus I Valles, all three world premieres with Esteban originating the roles.  They have been collaborating with Guirgis on new plays since 2018, currently on a stage adaptation of the Warner Brothers / Al Pacino film DOG DAY AFTERNOON. This Spring, Esteban will be making their Lincoln Center debut in a musical about the Greensboro Massacre called THE POTLUCK.  Select Film: SPA NIGHT (Cassavetes Award), RATTLED, VALLEY OF BONES, A VERY HAROLD & KUMAR 3D XMAS SELECT TV: SOUTH SIDE, EASY, CHICAGO FIRE, IDDIOTSITTER, THE BRIDGE, YOU’RE THE WORST, AWKWARD.  Esteban is a Jeff Award winner for their portrayal of Angel Cruz in JESUS HOPPED THE ‘A’ TRAIN, the 2018 Theatre Communications Group’s prestigious Fox Fellow Award recipient and also won an After Dark Award for Choreography.  Esteban founded the Queer Writers Artistic Collectivé in Chicago and is a member of the Latinx Playwrights Circle in NYC.  
 
Ed Rutherford (he/him, Director, STRANGE CARGO: THE DOOM OF THE DEMETER) is the Producing Artistic Director of Black Button Eyes Productions, where directing credits include GHOST QUARTET (Jeff Nomination: Director of a Musical), EVIL DEAD THE MUSICAL (Jeff Nomination: Director of a Musical), SHOCKHEADED PETER, DR. HORRIBLE'S SING-ALONG BLOG, AMOUR, GOBLIN MARKET, and CORALINE, as well as his scripts NIGHTMARES & NIGHTCAPS, A SHADOW BRIGHT AND BURNING, and MARY ROSE (Jeff Nomination: New Work). Promethean Theatre Ensemble: artistic associate, where he directed THE LIAR, his adaptation of Peter S. Beagle's THE LAST UNICORN, THE CAUCASIAN CHALK CIRCLE and BEYOND THERAPY. Book & Lyrics: the parody musical MURDER, REWROTE and MARY ROSE. As an actor, he's performed with City Lit, Drury Lane Oakbrook, Porchlight, Theater Wit and many others. A graduate of Northwestern's theater program, he also completed his MBA at Kellogg. ed-rutherford.com
 


Brian Pastor (they/them, Executive Artistic Director, Director SHERLOCK HOMES AND THE CHRISTMAS CLOWNS) Brian Pastor is a trans/non-binary producer, director, actor, and playwright in Chicago and the Executive Artistic Director of City Lit Theater. Brian previously spent ten and a half years on staff at City Lit, including nine as Managing Director. From 2019 to 2024, Brian served as City Lit’s Resident Director, where they directed THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER, THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD, George Bernard Shaw’s ARMS AND THE MAN, Archibald MacLeish’s J.B., and their own acclaimed adaptation of Robert Kennedy’s THIRTEEN DAYS. Most recently, Brian directed the Chicago Premiere of Reina Hardy's GLASSHEART. Brian is a founder and Emeritus Artistic Director of Chicago’s Promethean Theatre Ensemble, where they directed THE LION IN WINTER, THE WINTER’S TALE, and GROSS INDECENCY: THE THREE TRIALS OF OSCAR WILDE (all Broadway World Award Nominated- Best Director), as well as HENRY V and THE DARK SIDE OF THE BARD. Brian also directed the world premiere of THE BLACK KNIGHT by Angeli Primlani, the inaugural show for Lifeboat Productions. As an actor, Brian has worked with Strawdog, Raven, WildClaw, Promethean, Accomplice, and City Lit, among others. Brian is the former Executive Director of Sideshow Theatre and the former Executive Director of Raven Theatre. They also served as a board and company member of The Mime Company and as a founding company member of Chicago dell’Arte. A Pittsburgh native, Brian has called Chicago home since their graduation from Northwestern University in 2003.
 
Kevin Theis (Director, CHANGING CHANNELS)  is thrilled to return to City Lit, having directed six previous shows with the company including TARTUFFE, THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST and JEEVES AND THE MATING SEASON (Jeff nomination). Kevin has been a director and actor in Chicago for over thirty years, having staged shows at Lifeline Theatre, CT20 Ensemble, Seanachai Theatre, Oak Park Festival and Timber Lake Playhouse.  Favorite shows include THE FAIR MAID OF THE WEST (CT20), NOISES OFF (Timber Lake) and MONSTROUS REGIMENT (Lifeline).
 







Beth Wolf (Director, SCARAMOUCHE) is delighted to return to City Lit many years after some earlier credits with the company: assistant directing for Mike Nussbaum on DASHIELL HAMLET in 2009, as well as winning first place at the 2012 City Lit Art of Adaptation Festival alongside playwright Jordan Mann. Now, she is a twice Jeff-nominated Chicago theatre director as well as the founder and Producing Artistic Director of Midsommer Flight, where she has directed a dozen Shakespeare plays in Chicago parks since the company’s inception in 2012, including critically acclaimed productions of ROMEO AND JULIET, A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, CYMBELINE, and TWELFTH NIGHT, among others. Recognition for Beth’s work includes Equity Jeff Award Nominations for Best Director for SILENT SKY (2024) and OUTSIDE MULLINGAR (2022) at Citadel Theatre, both of which were also nominated for Best Production. Other recent credits include THE ROOMMATE at Citadel Theatre; NON-PLAYER CHARACTER (Non-Equity Jeff nomination, Projection Co-design) at Red Theater; and THE SUFFRAGE PLAYS at Artemisia. Beth is also a co-founder and the former Artistic Director of Promethean Theatre Ensemble, where she directed ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD, SEASCAPE WITH SHARKS AND DANCER, BURY THE DEAD, THE FANTASTICKS, and multiple EVENINGS OF SHAKESPEARE. She is a proud Northwestern graduate with a double major in theatre and gender studies.
 
ABOUT CITY LIT THEATER COMPANY:
 
City Lit is the eighth oldest continuously-operating theatre company in Chicago, behind only Goodman, Court, Northlight, Oak Park Festival, Black Ensemble Theatre, Steppenwolf, and Pegasus theatres.  It was founded in 1979 with $210 pooled by Arnold Aprill, David Dillon, and Lorell Wyatt.  For its current season, its 44th , it operates with a budget slightly over $200,000.  It was the first theatre in the nation devoted to stage adaptations of literary material.  There were so few theatres in Chicago at the time of its founding that at City Lit’s launch event, the founders were able to read a congratulatory letter they had received from Tennessee Williams.
 
For four decades and counting, City Lit has explored fiction, non-fiction, poetry, memoirs, songs, essays and drama in performance. A theatre that specializes in literary work communicates a commitment to certain civilizing influences—tradition imaginatively explored, a life of the mind, trust in an audience’s intelligence—that not every cultural outlet shares.
 
City Lit is located in the historic Edgewater Presbyterian Church building at 1020 West Bryn Mawr Avenue. Its work is supported in part by the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation, the Illinois Arts Council Agency,  and the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events CityArts program.  An Illinois not-for-profit corporation and a 501(c)(3) federal tax-exempt organization, City Lit keeps ticket prices below the actual cost of producing plays and depends on the support of those who share its belief in the beauty and power of the spoken written word.


Tuesday, October 3, 2023

REVIEW: Lyric Opera's The Flying Dutchman Now Playing Through October 7th, 2023

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

Lyric Opera's The Flying Dutchman 



Review 

By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic 

Two and a half hours for an opera by Richard Wagner? One act? I’m out the door by 10:00? Sign me up! (I already have my Ring Cycle Merit badge, thank you very much.) 

Tamara Wilson as Senta and Tomasz Konieczny as The Dutchman.

All Photos: Todd Rosenberg

“The Flying Dutchman,” sung in German with English subtitles, as conducted by the charismatic Music Director Enrique Mazzola, is a delight. Based on an old myth about a ghost ship that must sail the seven seas forever, the doomed captain made a deal with the devil (hello, Faust?) during a storm. Now he must find true love to lift the burden of this curse. Every seven years, he is able to reappear and try to convince a woman to love him and break the spell. (My date commented, ”He’s in search of True Love.” I replied, “He has to find a sucker to stop the spell.” Hmmm…maybe I need to check my cynicism.) 

The overture was suspenseful and set the stage for events to come. There is drama on the high seas where there is no promise of return. The Dutchman may be lost forever, and his dismal crew (lit underneath the stage in red lights) will be adrift for eternity. 

Tomasz Konieczny as The Dutchman.

The set by Allen Moyer, who also designed the costumes, is on a disorienting tilt to portray the rocking waves of the water. The singers do a great job of lilting to the sides to simulate the turbulence of the sea. The opera chorus is always fabulous. The men portray the sailors and crew of the ghost trip while the women’s chorus represent the weavers working spinning wheels and the monotony of textile factories. 

Tomasz Konieczny as the Dutchman was powerful and mesmerizing. (Although the “Kool Ghoul” makeup was spooky but odd.) Local hometown star Tamara Wilson was incredible as Senta, the woman who yearns to save the doomed Dutchman (“sucka,” I’m thinking…Don’t do it, Senta!!). Not every opera singer is also a convincing actor, but they both were wonderful. I wasn’t wowed by the costumes, and Ms. Wilson was clearly visible but should ask the wardrobe crew about the Bozo wig.  

By the end of the show, I glanced at my watch and was amazed two hours had passed. That’s a very positive sign for a lengthy opera. The music is glorious. 

Wonderful start to the new Lyric Season.

Catherine Hellmann spends her life at school, the theater, and out walking in the city. 


Mika Kares as Daland, Tomasz Konieczny as The Dutchman, 

and the Company of The Flying Dutchman.


What You Need to Know About Wagner’s

The Flying Dutchman

The Chicago cultural season begins with Music Director Enrique Mazzola conducting his first Wagner opera at Lyric

September 23 – October 7, 2023

Wagnerian opera makes a grand return to Chicago whenThe Flying Dutchman docks at Lyric Opera of Chicago from September 23 to October 7, 2023. Considered to be composer Richard Wagner’s first masterpiece,The Flying Dutchman is legendary for its eerie storyline, complex themes of sacrifice and redemption, and soaring melodies. More than 165 musical and dramatic artists — including some of the world’s most sought-after soloists — bring this riveting odyssey to life on Chicago’s biggest stage.

Opera’s most thrilling ghost story sets sail. Not seen at Lyric in more than 20 years, The Flying Dutchman is perhaps Wagner’s most haunting opera. This tempestuous work tells the story of a sailor known as the Dutchman, who is doomed to roam the seas forever. The Dutchman’s only hope to break the curse is (*drumroll please*) true love. Senta, a young Norwegian woman, falls quickly and deeply in love with the Dutchman and, well, the story only sinks from there. Through recurring musical themes (known as leitmotifs) and a rich orchestration, Wagner leaves the audience holding their breath to see what comes next for the love-struck couple. 

Enrique Mazzola kicks off a season of historic "firsts." In his third season as Lyric’s Music Director, Enrique Mazzola leads the esteemed Lyric Opera Orchestra through a series of momentous firsts. This season opener, brought to life with a 72-piece orchestra, will mark Mazzola’s first time conducting Wagner at Lyric. In January, Terence Blanchard and Michael Cristofer’s Champion will mark his first contemporary work at Lyric, and he finishes Lyric’s opera season with his first-ever production of Aida, which also marks the 100th opera of his storied career. In a final "first" of the 2023/24 Season, Mazzola will conduct Mozart’s Requiem, his first foray into Mozart at Lyric. This diverse season allows Mazzola to showcase his broad repertoire and the Orchestra to display its mastery of a variety of musical styles. 

An opera that lets the Chorus shine. Wagner’s score of The Flying Dutchmanhighlights the exceptional Lyric Opera Chorus, with contrasting men’s and women’s (and even ghosts’) choruses throughout the opera. Led by Michael Black, Lyric’s Chorus Director and Head of Music, the powerful 90-member Chorus has a staggering impact on this haunting story. 

A star-studded cast comes aboard. Bass-baritone Tomasz Konieczny and soprano Tamara Wilson give entrancing portrayals of the Dutchman and Senta. Hailed as "The Breakout Star of the Met Opera’s Ring" by The New York Times, Konieczny returns to Lyric following his acclaimed portrayal of the title role inWozzeck in the 2015/16 Season. Wilson, a stand-out Verdian in recent seasons at Lyric — who was also deemed "quite the Wagnerian" by The New York Times — returns following her most recent headlining role as Elvira in Ernani in the 2022/23 Season. With piercing arias, longing duets, and energizing dialogues, this captivating pair and their fiery vocal power make The Flying Dutchman a must-see.

Experienced and emerging artists round out the cast. Renowned bass Mika Kares returns to Lyric as Senta’s father Daland. The cast also features tenorRobert Watson as Erik and mezzo-soprano Melody Wilson as Mary, both in their Lyric debuts. Ryan Capozzo, a third-year member of Lyric’s Ryan Opera Center Ensemble, returns to the mainstage as the Steersman.

Sets, costumes, and lighting combine for a theatrically spellbinding production. Director Christopher Alden’s production creates the illusion of a haunted galleon battling raging waters; it is bold and modern while retaining the authenticity of the story itself. (Wagnerian spectacle must run in the family — Alden’s twin brother and fellow opera director, David Alden, directed a new production of The Flying Dutchman at Sante Fe Opera this past summer). Allen Moyer’s creative sets and costumes combine to create a spooky atmosphere, andAnne Militello’s shadowy lighting design gives the production its eerie finishing touches, in her Lyric debut. 

Wagner returns to Lyric with drama on the high seas. In an intense return to Lyric, Wagner’s first famous opera does what all of Wagner’s operas do: It draws you in with a captivating story, layered musical composition, and soaring vocal lines written for richly drawn characters. (And at just 2 hours and 20 minutes, it does it all in half the usual time for a Wagner opera.)



Ryan Capozzo as Steersman, Tomasz Konieczny as The Dutchman, 

and the Company of The Flying Dutchman.



Important to know

·        Five chances to see The Flying Dutchman: September 23, 27, October 1 matinee, 4 matinee, and 7, 2023.

·        A running time of 2 hours and 20 minutes; performed without intermission.

·        Sung in German, with easy-to-follow English translations projected above the stage.

·        Information and tickets: visit lyricopera.org/dutchman or call 312.827.5600.


Lyric’s presentation of Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman is generously made possible by an Anonymous DonorJosef & Margot Lakonishok, and Bulley & Andrews.

Maestro Enrique Mazzola is generously sponsored by Alice & John ButlerH. Gael NeesonSylvia Neil & Daniel Fischel, and the Robert and Penelope Steiner Family Foundation as members of the Enrique Circle. The Enrique Circle is comprised of Lyric's most dedicated supporters who are committed to championing Maestro Enrique Mazzola's exciting artistic vision and legacy.

Lyric Opera of Chicago thanks its Official Airline, American Airlines, and acknowledges support from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.


About Lyric

Lyric Opera of Chicago is committed to redefining what it means to experience great opera. The company is driven to deliver consistently excellent artistry through innovative, relevant, celebratory programming that engages and energizes new and traditional audiences.

Under the leadership of General Director, President & CEO Anthony Freud and Music Director Enrique Mazzola, Lyric is dedicated to reflecting, and drawing strength from, the diversity of Chicago. Lyric offers, through innovation, collaboration, and evolving learning opportunities, ever-more exciting, accessible, and thought-provoking audience and community experiences. We also stand committed to training the artists of the future, through The Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Opera Center; and to becoming increasingly diverse across our audiences, staff, programming, and artists—magnifying the welcoming pull of our art form, our company, and our city.

Through the timeless power of voice, the splendor of a great orchestra and chorus, theater, dance, design, and truly magnificent stagecraft, Lyric is devoted to immersing audiences in worlds both familiar and unexpected, creating shared experiences that resonate long after the curtain comes down.


Join us @LyricOpera on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Youtube, and Facebook. #LongLivePassion

For more information, visit lyricopera.org.


Wednesday, March 29, 2023

REVIEW: Lyric Opera World Premiere of PROXIMITY On Stage Through April 8, 2023

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

What you need to know about the world premiere of 

Proximity 

at Lyric Opera of Chicago



Chicago takes center stage in this trio of new American works united by the bold vision of director Yuval Sharon's groundbreaking production, March 24 – April 8, 2023


Review of Proximity: A Trio of New North American Operas at Lyric Opera

By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic 

I was a season opera subscriber for over ten years. I never heard an “f bomb” sung on the Lyric stage until the premiere of Proximity last Friday night. The word “bitch,” either. Wow. Contemporary for sure. 

There are three short operas in the cycle: The Walkers (music by Daniel Bernard Roumain and libretto by Anna Deavere Smith), Four Portraits (music and libretto by Caroline Shaw with Jocelyn Clarke also on libretto), and Night (music by John Luther Adams and libretto by John Haines). 

My favorite was The Walkers set in modern day Chicago around gangs. Opera is certainly dramatic, and what could have more drama than the antagonism among gang rivals? The opera examines the likelihood of violence begetting violence. One character has killed a young man at 17; his victim’s family, he notes, looked just like his own. These young people are constantly confronting trauma and trying to survive. (I taught in Englewood for a year; one of my students lifted his shirt to show me his bullet scars. Another young man was shot on his front lawn with his mom watching. Miraculously, after numerous surgeries, he survived.) 

The rival gangs still remember their leaders who went to jail in 1963: Jeff Fort and Larry Hoover. Their hatred against each other’s groups is deep-seated. The Preacher Man, sung by American baritone Gordon Hawkins, urges peace; he reiterates that he’s “got status.” But one of the gang members retorts,” Your theology ain’t my mythology.”  

An unexpected character was Arne Duncan, former CEO of Chicago Public Schools and Secretary of Education (and basketball buddy) under President Barack Obama. (He had a snarky nickname in our household for never calling a snow day when I taught in CPS; I actually snickered when he appeared onstage.) Arne founded CRED (Create Real Economic Destiny) which “provides jobs, counseling, education support, job training, mental health, therapy,” according to librettist Anna Deavere Smith, better known as an actress on The West Wing and Nurse Jackie. Arne, played by Jeff Parker, has a few of the best quotes in the show: “You have to give people a reason to stop shooting…and put the guns down.” He also laments how “nothing gets solved.” 

Another devastating story was sung movingly by Chicago native and soprano Whitney Morrison as Yasmine Miller, a bereaved mother who lost her one-year old baby boy to gun violence. In June 2020, the 22-year-old mom and her toddler were driving home from a laundromat at 60th and Halsted. Shots fired from a nearby car killed Sincere. Ms. Miller delivered a powerful performance that conveyed the young mother’s heartbreak. The audience was very receptive to her compelling rendition. 

Four Portraits had much-needed humor in its storyline, poking fun at the technology in our lives that we now take for granted. One of the characters was named GPS, ably sung by Corrine Wallace-Crane. Yes, she sings the recognizable directions that lead us to work, home, shopping, and everywhere any more. There was laughter over the familiarity of being instructed to turn right, left, how many feet lie ahead, passing streets, etc. There were also chuckles as actors rode the CTA, and “doors closing” was announced. 

The giant screened set and projected graphics really benefited the show’s modern appeal. I liked the giant maps of Chicago expanding into the entire world. They were one of the best parts of the show. (I had wondered how the Lyric would handle having Carmen with its huge sets in the repertory.) Jason H. Thompson and Kaitlyn Pietras are to be commended as Production Designers for their clever, inspired graphics. 

Although the show overall was confusing with how the vastly different storylines jumped around (I would have preferred a more streamlined performance), the Lyric Opera is to be commended for trying to stay relevant with modern audiences. (There were quite a few empty seats after intermission which is a shame.) I admire them for expanding their horizons. Bravo! 

Catherine Hellmann is a teacher, daughter of an educator, and mom of a teacher and a librarian. Education is important in her family. :-)  She loves to explore Chicago neighborhoods, experience theater, try new restaurants, and read lots of books, especially historical fiction.   

Lyric Opera of Chicago presents the second of two Chicago-set world premieres in its season: Proximity, a trio of new American operas that confront head-on some of the greatest challenges affecting modern society: the devastating impact of gun violence on cities and neighborhoods, yearning for connection in a world driven by technology, and the need to respect and protect our natural resources. In an innovative production by director Yuval Sharon that is searing in its intimacy, revolutionary in its structure, and groundbreaking in its technical wizardry, Proximity is on stage at the Lyric Opera House for five performances only, March 24 – April 8, 2023.

Curated since its inception in 2019 by Lyric's Special Projects Advisor Renée Fleming along with Lyric’s General Director Anthony Freud and Sharon, Proximity brings together some of the leading creative thinkers in American culture, all in their Lyric debuts. Daniel Bernard Roumain, the acclaimed Haitian-American composer, and Anna Deavere Smith, the legendary playwright and actress, have written The Walkers, an opera that gives voice to families grappling with gun violence in Chicago. Caroline Shaw, a Pulitzer and Grammy-winning composer, has teamed with writer Jocelyn Clarke for Four Portraits, an opera about the impact of technology on society. And Pulitzer and Grammy-winning composer John Luther Adams has written Night, a short opera on the fragility of the natural world, set to a text by the late poet John Haines. 

The three operas are spliced and shuffled to create an entirely new work that zooms in and out from the scale of the individual to the community to the cosmic. Proximity, the synthesis of these three works, offers a compelling snapshot of 21st century life with all of its complex intersections and reveals our everlasting capacity for hope. 

A daredevil director’s bold vision. Familiar to Lyric audiences from his immersive drive-through production of Twilight: Gods in 2021 and its resulting film, director and Chicago-area native Yuval Sharon provides the unifying vision for Proximity. Sharon is a MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellowship winner who is widely acclaimed for the work of his Los Angeles-based experimental opera company The Industry as well as Detroit Opera, which he has led as Artistic Director since 2020. Sharon is known for his unconventional body of work that seeks to expand the operatic form. “The ultimate irony in working on a project called Proximity is that most of it was made in the era of social distance,” says Sharon. “We chose the name Proximity because it succinctly captured one of the opera’s fundamental ideas: we are closer to our fellow humans than we are often made to feel.”

A creative team that expands what is possible in opera. The sweeping visual ideas of director Sharon are realized by Proximity's pathbreaking design team. Production designers Jason H. Thompson and Kaitlyn Pietras, who worked on Lyric’s Twilight: Gods, have created a stage design on a scale and complexity never before attempted in opera — a curved quarter-pipe video wall, 40 feet wide by 26 feet high, made of 140 LED panels and 240 black marble LED panels. Complemented by a robust on-set system of responsive cameras and other interactive features, the set design for Proximity affords audiences a new immersive way to experience opera.

Proximity also features the costume design of Carlos J. Soto, the sound design of Jody Elff, and the choreography of Rena Butler, all in their Lyric debuts.

Three distinct yet seamlessly woven sound worlds. Leading Proximity's musical forces is conductor Kazem Abdullah in his Lyric debut. Abdullah is a passionate advocate for new music who recently conducted Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels's Omar at LA Opera, where he was a member of its Domingo-Colburn-Stein Young Artist Program. Abdullah will guide the 69 players of the Lyric Opera Orchestra in bringing to life the three unique soundscapes of Proximity's three composers. The 43 members of the Lyric Opera Chorus will be led by chorus master Michael Black.

The Walkers

Music by Daniel Bernard Roumain and libretto by Anna Deavere Smith

Composer Daniel Bernard Roumain is known for his signature violin sounds infused with myriad electronic and African-American musical influences. He is a composer of solo, chamber, orchestral, and operatic works, and has composed an array of film, theater, and dance scores. His previous work in opera includes the interdisciplinary chamber opera We Shall Not Be Moved, written with librettist Marc Bamuthi Joseph, which premiered at Opera Philadelphia in 2017. He has worked with artists from Lady Gaga and Philip Glass to Bill T. Jones and Marin Alsop and has published more than 300 works.

Anna Deavere Smith is an actress, playwright, teacher, and author. She is credited with creating a new form of theater by looking at current events from multiple points of view. Her theater combines the journalistic technique of interviewing her subjects with the art of interpreting their words through performance. Plays include Fires In the Mirror (a runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize), Twilight: Los Angeles (nominated for two Tony Awards), House Arrest, and Let Me Down Easy. In 2012, President Obama awarded her the National Endowment for the Humanities Medal. Like Proximity director Yuval Sharon, she is a recipient of the prestigious MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellowship. The Walkers is her first opera.

After Lyric connected Anna Deavere Smith to Chicago CRED (Creating Real Economic Diversity), an anti-gun-violence organization co-founded by Arne Duncan and Laurene Powell Jobs, Smith created the libretto following a series of interviews with Chicagoans whose families had experienced gun violence. Several of the characters in the opera are people she interviewed, including Arne Duncan, CRED counselor and former gang member Curtis Toler, and Yasmine Miller, the mother of a toddler who was shot and killed only months before the interview took place. Other characters are an amalgam of real people who work as counselors and people who have been helped by the organization. Smith's libretto uses the actual words of people to create monologues and dialogue.

At the start of The Walkers, we hear about the history of Chicago gang violence from Arne Duncan and Curtis Toler and we meet Bilal, who has been released from prison and is experiencing PTSD. We meet the fictional character of Lil’ Bunchy Bates, a child who deflects attempts to be recruited to gangs until he is shot and killed while playing basketball. Violence breaks out at his funeral, targeting the suspected perpetrator. Across the city, Yasmine Miller is shot in a drive-by shooting that kills her toddler. The story ends with a message of cautious hope that the epidemic of gun violence and the related crises of segregation, police abuse, and gang violence will all one day end, and that the community will finally find peace.

Leading the cast of The Walkers are soprano Whitney Morrison as Yasmine Miller and baritone Norman Garrett as Bilal. Morrison is an alumna of The Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Opera Center, Lyric's acclaimed artist-development program. Last season at Lyric, she starred in Terence Blanchard and Kasi Lemmons’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones. Garrett has appeared with Lyric in Fire Shut Up in My Bones and in the recent world premiere of Will Liverman and DJ King Rico’s The Factotum. The cast also features baritone Gordon Hawkins as Preacher Man, tenor Issachah Savage as Curtis Toler, soprano Kearstin Piper Brown as Chief’s Daughter #1, and mezzo-soprano Zoie Reams as Chief’s Daughter #2.

The cast also includes several current members of the Ryan Opera Center Ensemble: bass Ron Dukes is Chief’s Son #1, tenor Martin Luther Clark is Chief’s Son #2, and soprano Lindsey Reynolds is Very Loud Girl. Rounding out the cast are tenor Jamion Cotten as Lil' Bunchy Bates and actor Jeff Parker as Arne Duncan. The children's chorus in The Walkers features 20 members of Uniting Voices Chicago under the direction of Josephine Lee.

Four Portraits

Music by Caroline Shaw and libretto by Caroline Shaw and Jocelyn Clarke

Composer Caroline Shaw is a musician who moves among roles, genres, and mediums; her recent work involves compositions for film, television, dance, and now opera. She was awarded the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Music for Partita for 8 Voices and has received three Grammy Awards. She has written more than 100 works in the last decade, and has worked with artists as diverse as Yo-Yo Ma, Rosalía, Renée Fleming, and Nas. Her work as a vocalist or composer has appeared in the recent film Tár, the Showtime television series Yellowjackets, and the Netflix documentary of Beyonce’s Homecoming. Shaw's co-librettist Jocelyn Clarke is dramaturg at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. and has recently served in the writers room for the Starz television series P-Valley. His work abroad includes time with the Arts Council of Ireland and Dublin’s Abbey Theatre.

The first three of Shaw and Clarke's Four Portraits show a couple grappling with the disconnection of modern life — a fragmented telephone call with a bad connection, a crowded train of strangers, and a nighttime car trip with GPS. In the final scene, which begins with the first face-to-face conversation in the opera, spoken language recedes and acquiesces to the sonic landscape of the forest in a hopeful nod to a future unencumbered by technology.

Four Portraits stars countertenor John Holiday as A and baritone Lucia Lucas as B, both in their Lyric debuts. Holiday, winner of the Kennedy Center’s 2017 Marian Anderson Vocal Award, was recently seen in the Metropolitan Opera’s world premiere of The Hours and gained widespread fame for his appearance in Season 19 of NBC’s popular competition series The Voice. Lucas, an in-demand baritone who has sung at the Met, English National Opera, and across Europe, was featured in the recent documentary The Sound of Identity, which chronicled her journey as the first transgender woman to sing a leading role in a standard work at an American opera company.

Sopranos Kathryn Henry and Lindsey Reynolds, tenors Lunga Eric Hallam and Alejandro Luévanos, and bass Ron Dukes — current members of the Ryan Opera Center Ensemble — co-star as the Passengers, a group that also includes mezzo-sopranos Kathleen Felty (a Ryan Opera Center alumna) and Stephanie Sanchez and baritone Darren Drone. Mezzo-soprano Corinne Wallace-Crane sings the role of the GPS.

Night

Music by John Luther Adams and libretto by John Haines

John Luther Adams began his career as an environmental activist and transitioned into composing upon realizing that music had a better chance of changing the world than politics. Since that time, he has become one of the most widely admired composers in the world, receiving both the 2014 Pulitzer Prize in Music and 2015 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition for Become Ocean, among many other honors.

For his contribution to Proximity, Adams was inspired by the work of his friend and longtime neighbor in Alaska, the late poet John Haines. One of Haines’s very last poems, Night offers a dark and troubling vision of the Earth's future, but Adams was drawn to its ultimate notes of hope and promise in the next generation, a theme that runs throughout each of Proximity's three works.

Night features mezzo-soprano Zoie Reams as an omniscient Greek sybil who launches the work's spiritual interrogations. Reams was seen earlier this season at Lyric as Ragonde in Rossini's Le Comte Ory.

Lyric strongly reinforces its commitment to new work. Following the extraordinary success of the world premiere of The Factotum earlier this season, Proximity continues to push boundaries for what is possible in and for opera. It brings a new kind of musical and theatrical experience to Lyric, to the city of Chicago, and to the world. Experience the world premiere of Proximity — only at Lyric Opera of Chicago.


Important to know

·        Five chances to see Proximity: March 24, 26 (matinee), 29, April 5 (matinee), and 8.

·        A world premiere commissioned by Lyric Opera of Chicago: Proximity includes The Walkers, composed by Daniel Bernard Roumain with libretto by Anna Deavere Smith; Four Portraits, composed by Caroline Shaw with libretto by Caroline Shaw and Jocelyn Clarke; and Night, composed by John Luther Adams with libretto by John Haines.

·        Proximity addresses adult themes and contains some adult language.

·        Sung in English with projected English titles.

·        A total running time of 2 hours and 10 minutes, including one intermission.

·        Tickets and more information: lyricopera.org/proximity.

For updated information about Lyric’s ongoing health and safety protocols, visitlyricopera.org/safety.

Lyric’s world premiere of Proximity is generously made possible by an Anonymous Donor, OPERA America, and support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Lyric Opera of Chicago thanks its Official Airline, American Airlines, and acknowledges support from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.

About Lyric

Lyric Opera of Chicago is committed to redefining what it means to experience great opera. The company is driven to deliver consistently excellent artistry through innovative, relevant, celebratory programming that engages and energizes new and traditional audiences.

Under the leadership of General Director, President & CEO Anthony Freud, Music Director Enrique Mazzola, and Special Projects Advisor Renée Fleming, Lyric is dedicated to reflecting, and drawing strength from, the diversity of Chicago. Lyric offers, through innovation, collaboration, and evolving learning opportunities, ever-more exciting, accessible, and thought-provoking audience and community experiences. We also stand committed to training the artists of the future, through The Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Opera Center; and to becoming increasingly diverse across our audiences, staff, programming, and artists—magnifying the welcoming pull of our art form, our company, and our city.

Through the timeless power of voice, the splendor of a great orchestra and chorus, theater, dance, design, and truly magnificent stagecraft, Lyric is devoted to immersing audiences in worlds both familiar and unexpected, creating shared experiences that resonate long after the curtain comes down.

Join us @LyricOpera on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. #LongLivePassion

For more information, visit lyricopera.org

 

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