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Showing posts with label Playwrights Horizons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Playwrights Horizons. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

World Premiere Co-Production of The Antiquities* On Stage at Goodman Theatre Now Through June 1, 2025

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NINE ACTORS CREATE NEARLY 50 CHARACTERS IN 

THE ANTIQUITIES 

BY PULTIZER PRIZE FINALIST JORDAN HARRISON

**CO-DIRECTED BY DAVID CROMER AND CAITLIN SULLIVAN, THE CAST FEATURES MARCHÁNT DAVIS, LAYAN ELWAZANI, ANDREW GARMAN, HELEN JOO LEE, THOMAS MURPHY MOLONY, ARIA SHAHGHASEMI, KRISTEN SIEH, RYAN SPAHN AND AMELIA WORKMAN**

***THE WORLD-PREMIERE CO-PRO WITH PLAYWRIGHTS HORIZONS AND VINEYARD THEATRE IS NOMINATED FOR LUCILLE LORTEL, DRAMA LEAGUE AND OUTER CRITICS CIRCLE AWARDS FOR BEST NEW PLAY/PRODUCTION, WITH CROMER AND SULLIVAN EARNING DRAMA DESK AWARD NODS FOR BEST DIRECTOR*** 

Next up at Goodman Theatre is “the finest new play of the season” (Wall Street Journal). Pulitzer Prize finalist playwright Jordan Harrison (Marjorie Prime, Maple and Vine)’s newest work, A Tour of the Permanent Collection in the Museum of Late Human Antiquities or, just The Antiquities—a startling and transcendent portrait of the present as seen from the future—is on stage now in preview performances. 

A world-premiere co-production between the Goodman, Playwrights Horizons and Vineyard Theatre, The Antiquities arrives in Chicago on the heels of its extended critically acclaimed Off-Broadway bow—where it earned “Best New Play/Production” nominations by the Lucille Lortel, Drama League and Outer Critics Circle Awards. Co-directors David Cromer (Broadway’s Good Night, and Good Luck with George Clooney and Dead Outlaw, 2025 Tony Award Nomination for Best Director of a Musical) and Caitlin Sullivan (Off-Broadway's Find Me Here and The Keep Going Songs) also earned a Drama Desk Award nod for “Outstanding Direction of a Play.” 

The cast of nine portraying 47 characters across the eras, features Marchánt Davis, Layan Elwazani, Andrew Garman, Helen Joo Lee, Thomas Murphy Molony, Aria Shahghasemi, Kristen Sieh, Ryan Spahn and Amelia Workman. A full cast list appears below, along with the special events around the production. Currently in preview performances, The Antiquities opens May 12 and appears through June 1 in the Goodman’s 350-seat flexible Owen Theatre. Tickets ($20 - $65; subject to change) are available at GoodmanTheatre.org/Antiquities or by phone at 312.443.3800. Goodman Theatre is grateful for the support of Contributing Sponsors Bank of America, Jenner & Block and Russell Reynolds Associates and the Laurents/Hatcher Foundation (Citation of Excellence).

“In a season filled with unprecedented, big-idea-filled works that don’t compare with anything else, it felt essential to produce the newest work by the incomparable Jordan Harrison—one of the most fearless contemporary playwrights and one known for taking on the big stuff,” said Goodman Artistic Director Susan V. Booth. “The Antiquities is nothing less than a treatise on what it means to be human. And, true to form, Jordan is asking giant questions with a kind of bravery and confidence that makes you feel that he’s the right person to join hands with and wade into the really deep waters—together with the estimable directorial duo of Caitlin Sullivan and Chicago’s own David Cromer. We’re proud to collaborate with Playwrights Horizons and Vineyard Theatre to bring this fantastic new play to Chicago.”

Hailed as a “vividly imagined” (Wall Street Journal), “highly provocative and clever examination of humanity” (New York Stage Review), The Antiquities gives “a chilling perspective on where technology may be taking us” (New York Sun). At the Museum of Late Human Antiquities, the curators are fiercely committed to bringing a lost civilization to life again: What were humans really like? What did they wear, what did they eat, how did they die out? Casting the audience into the far future, Harrison’s new play provides an uncanny view of the present moment, which straddles the analog world that was and the post-human world to come.

The nine-member cast assumes multiple characters across the eras—from 19th century writers imagining the unimaginable, to 2010s Silicon Valley innovators, and hard-bitten survivors in the far future—including Marchánt Davis (Broadway: Good Night, Oscar, Ain't No Mo', The Great Society) as Man 2; Layan Elwazani (Broadway: The Band’s Visit; Regional: Noura, We Live in Cairo) as Woman 4; Andrew Garman (Playwrights: The Christians; Off-Broadway: Greater Clements, Admissions) as Man 3; Helen Joo Lee (Goodman: The Penelopiad) as Woman 3; Thomas Murphy Molony (Goodman: Inherit the Wind, Highway Patrol) as Boy; Aria Shahghasemi (Broadway: Prayer for the French Republic; TV: “The Penguin,” “Legacies”) as Man 1, Kristen Sieh (Playwrights: Men on Boats; Vineyard: Scene Partners; Broadway: The Band’s Visit) as Woman 1, Ryan Spahn (Vineyard: Gloria; Off Broadway: Jordans, Merry Me) as Man 4; and Amelia Workman (Broadway: American Son; Off Broadway: Fefu and Her Friends, The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World) as Woman 2.

“This is a 15-year obsession on my part with technology and the way it's changing, and not changing, what it means to be human. For me, it’s always important to challenge my tendency to think, ‘digital = bad,’ and with The Antiquities, that’s meant finding a playfulness and a humanness in the way computers would try to understand us after we’re extinct,” said playwright Jordan Harrison, whose Pulitzer Prize-nominated play Marjorie Prime also probes the limits of memory, identity and progress.

Envisioning, in the Goodman’s 350-seat flexible Owen Theatre, a museum’s attempt “to smoosh our entire civilization into a vitrine,” Harrison describes, the creative team includes Paul Steinberg (Scenic Designer), Brenda Abbandandolo (Costume Designer), Tyler Micoleau (Lighting Designer), Christopher Darbassie (Sound Designer), Leah Loukas (Wig and Hair Designer), Sarah Lunnie (Dramaturg) and Jeremy Chernick (SFX Consultant).

David Cromer said, “We always think we may have lost something as we move ahead, which is true: maybe we've lost not knowing and thus lost innocence. And we always think we might be missing something. But that’s inherently part of our human grasping, it’s why we search: and these other beings are searching as well.”

Caitlin Sullivan said, “Jordan, David, and I are attempting to think about what an emotional and embodied experience might be when we're all gone. When humanity has been reduced to specific artifacts—where snippets and imaginings leave the space to feel our absence, and the impossibility of representing us fully.”


SPECIAL EVENTS FOR THE ANTIQUITIES

Play On Words: A Conversation with Poet Ruben Quesada

Wednesday, May 21 | 6 – 7:15pm; $5 ticket includes light refreshments

Join us for a conversation with lauded poet Ruben Quesada as he guides us through his poem in response to The Antiquities. Reservations are required.


AI: Preserving the Past for the Future

Friday, May 23 | $60 ticket includes the 6pm Reception and 7:30pm Performance

Explore the fascinating intersection of artificial intelligence and history at this Goodman CONTEXT event. Join scholars and artists in an open dialogue about how AI is transforming our futures while discovering new methods to preserve and study our past.


ABOUT THE ARTISTS

Jordan Harrison (he/him) was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for Marjorie Prime, which had its New York premiere at Playwrights Horizons after premiering at the Mark Taper Forum. Other plays include Maple and Vine, Log Cabin, and Doris to Darlene (all at Playwrights Horizons), The Amateurs (Vineyard Theatre), The Grown-Up (Humana Festival), Amazons and their Men (Clubbed Thumb), Futura (NAATCO, Portland Center Stage), Act a Lady (Humana Festival), and Finn in the Underworld (Berkeley Rep). He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Hodder Fellowship, the Kesselring Prize, and the Horton Foote Prize for Best New American Play. TV and Film: Three seasons as writer-producer on the Netflix series “Orange is the New Black,” as well as Netflix’s “GLOW” and AMC’s “Dispatches from Elsewhere.” A film adaptation of Marjorie Prime premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Alfred P. Sloan Feature Prize. Harrison’s debut novel, Miss Archer, will be published by William Morrow/HarperCollins next year, and he is writing the screenplay adaptation for 3000 Pictures.

David Cromer (he/him) directed the world premiere of Prayer for the French Republic Off-Broadway. Also in New York: Camp Siegfried, A Case for the Existence of God, The Sound Inside, The Band’s Visit, The Treasurer, The House of Blue Leaves, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Nikolai and the Others, The Effect, When the Rain Stops Falling, Tribes, Adding Machine, Our Town, and Orson’s Shadow. For his work he has received a Tony Award, a Drama Desk, three Obies, three Lortels, and in 2010 he was named a MacArthur Foundation fellow.

Caitlin Sullivan (she/her) is a director and theater maker based in New York City. Recent work includes Find Me Here (Crystal Finn/Clubbed Thumb), The Keep Going Songs (The Bengsons/LCT3), The Good John Proctor (Talene Monahon/Bedlam), Nova (Obehi Janice/Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh and Pemberley Productions), United States vs Gupta (Deepali Gupta/JACK in collaboration with New Georges), WORK HARD HAVE FUN MAKE HISTORY (reid tang/Clubbed Thumb), Ohio (The Bengsons/Actors Theatre of Louisville and piece by piece productions), and Sanctuary City (Martyna Majok/NYTW). Caitlin co-founded Seattle's critically acclaimed Satori Group. As Artistic Director, she created and/or directed seven original works. Born and raised in Boston (Dorchester!), Caitlin is a graduate of Williams College; an alum of the Drama League Directors Project, the Clubbed Thumb Directing Fellowship and the New Georges Jam; and a New Georges Affiliate Artist.


Full Company of The Antiquities (in alphabetical order)

By Jordan Harrison

Directed by David Cromer and Caitlin Sullivan

Marchánt Davis...Man 2

Layan Elwazani...Woman 4

Andrew Garman...Man 3

Helen Joo Lee...Woman 3

Thomas Murphy Molony...Boy

Aria Shahghasemi...Man 1

Kristen Sieh...Woman 1

Ryan Spahn...Man 4

Amelia Workman...Woman 2

Understudies for this production include Arash Fakhrabadi, Raymond Fox, Jennifer Jelsema, Jaylon Muchison, Dana Saleh Omar, Leighton Tantillo and Emily Tate.


Creative Team

Based on an Original Set Design by…Paul Steinberg

Costume Designer…Brenda Abbandandolo

Lighting Designer…Tyler Micoleau

Sound Designer…Christoher Darbassie

Wig and Hair Design…Lea Loukas

Dramaturgy..Sarah Lunnie

Casting is by Alaine Alldaffer, CSA, Lisa Donadio, CSA and Lauren Port, CSA. Patrick Fries is the Production Stage Manager.


ENHANCED AND ACCESSIBLE PERFORMANCES AT GOODMAN THEATRE

ASL-Interpreted Performance: Friday, May 23 at 7:30pm – Professional ASL interpreter signs the action/text as played.

Touch Tour* and Audio-Described Performance: Saturday, May 24, 12:30pm Touch Tour; 2pm performance – The action/text is audibly enhanced for patrons via headset.

Spanish-Subtitled Performance: Saturday, May 24 at 7:30pm – An LED sign presents Spanish-translated dialogue in sync with the performance.

Open-Captioned Performance: Sunday, May 25 at 2pm – An LED sign presents dialogue in sync with the performance.


Playwrights Horizons is a writer’s theater in New York City committed to the advancement of bold and visionary playwrights, through the development and production of daring new work and the education of future theatermakers. Adam Greenfield has served as Artistic Director since 2020; Casey York became Managing Director in 2024. For over 50 years, the organization has distinguished itself by a steadfast commitment to centering the voice of the playwright. It’s a mission that is always timely, and one that’s necessary in the ongoing evolution of theater in this country. By expanding the U.S. theater canon with a wider range of voices, Playwrights Horizons aims to be a home for the exploration of playwriting and an anti-racist center of curiosity, dialogue, and artistic risk.

Vineyard Theatre (Sarah Stern and Douglas Aibel, Artistic Directors; Moogie Brooks, Managing Producer) is one of the country’s leading theatres for the development and production of new plays and musicals, dedicated to nurturing a community of daring theatremakers whose work expands the form, the field, and the larger culture. From our home in New York City’s Union Square, Vineyard has launched more than 150 new works and has sent eleven shows to Broadway, including the Tony Award-winning musical Avenue Q, Paula Vogel’s Pulitzer Prizewinning How I Learned to Drive, and Tina Satter’s Is This A Room (now HBO’s Reality). The Vineyard produced the acclaimed world-premiere of Jordan Harrison’s The Amateurs in 2016, and previously collaborated with the Goodman on Lucas Hnath’s Dana H. and Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’ Gloria. Vineyard’s work has been recognized with the industry’s highest honors, including special Drama Desk, Obie, and Lucille Lortel Awards for artistic excellence.


Chicago’s theater since 1925, Goodman Theatre is a not-for-profit arts and community organization in the heart of the Loop, distinguished by the excellence and scope of its artistic programming and community engagement. Led by Walter Artistic Director Susan V. Booth and Executive Director John Collins, the theater’s artistic priorities include new play development (more than 150 world or American premieres), large scale musical theater works and reimagined classics. Artists and productions have earned two Pulitzer Prizes, 22 Tony Awards and more than 160 Jeff Awards.

The Goodman is the first theater in the world to produce all 10 plays in August Wilson’s “American Century Cycle.” Its longtime annual holiday tradition A Christmas Carol, now in its fifth decade, has created a new generation of theatergoers in Chicago. The Goodman also frequently serves as a production and program partner with national and international companies and Chicago’s Off-Loop theaters.

Using the tools of theatrical practice, the Goodman’s Education and Engagement programs aim to develop generations of citizens who understand and empathize with cultures and stories of diverse voices. The Goodman’s Alice Rapoport Center for Education and Engagement is the home of these programs, which are offered for Chicago youth—85% of whom come from underserved communities—schools and life-long learners.

Goodman Theatre was built on the unceded homelands of the Council of the Three Fires: the Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi Nations. We recognize that many other Nations consider the area we now call Chicago as their traditional homeland—including the Myaamia, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Sac and Fox, Peoria, Kaskaskia, Wea, Kickapoo and Mascouten and remains home to many Native peoples today. The Goodman is proud to have a relationship with Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum. Located in Evanston, the Museum honors the survival and perseverance of Indigenous communities and promotes a greater understanding of Indigenous peoples: gichigamiin-museum.org.

Goodman Theatre was founded by William O. Goodman and his family in honor of their son Kenneth, an important figure in Chicago’s cultural renaissance in the early 1900s. The Goodman family’s legacy lives on through the continued work and dedication of Kenneth’s family, including Albert Ivar Goodman, who with his late mother, Edith-Marie Appleton, contributed the necessary funds for the creation on the new Goodman center in 2000.

Julie Danis is Chair of Goodman Theatre’s Board of Trustees, Lorrayne Weiss is Women’s Board President and Kelli Garcia is President of the Scenemakers Board for young professionals.

Thursday, May 16, 2024

THE WORLD PREMIERE OF The Antiquities IS SET FOR May 3 – June 1, 2025

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THE WORLD PREMIERE OF 

THE ANTIQUITIES

PULITZER PRIZE FINALIST JORDAN HARRISON’S GROUND-BREAKING POST-MORTEM ON HUMAN HISTORY—AS TOLD BY OUR TECHNOLOGY—IS SET FOR SPRING 2025 

IN A CO-PRODUCTION WITH PLAYWRIGHTS HORIZONS AND VINEYARD THEATER


***IN OTHER 2024/2025 SEASON NEWS, NAMIR SMALLWOOD WILL STAR IN PRIMARY TRUST, 

EBONI BOOTH’S 2024 PULITZER-PRIZE WINNER, IN THE PLAY’S CHICAGO-PREMIERE PRODUCTION THIS FALL***

Goodman Theatre Artistic Director Susan Booth and incoming Executive Director John Collins announce 2024/2025 Season updates to the series in the 350-seat flexible Owen Theatre. The final production in the Owen is Jordan Harrison’s newest play, The Antiquities—a shocking and transcendent portrait of the present, from the vantage point of the future. This world-premiere production appears May 3 – June 1, 2025, co-produced with Playwrights Horizons (where Harrison’s Pulitzer Prize finalist Marjorie Prime debuted) and the Vineyard Theater. In addition, casting for the previously announced Primary Trust is set as the Goodman congratulates playwright Eboni Booth on clinching the 2024 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play: Namir Smallwood will star as Kenneth in the Goodman’s Chicago-premiere production, October 5 – November 3, 2024. The Goodman’s 2024/2025 Season begins September 2024 and continues through August 2025. Memberships, including flexible packages, are available for purchase starting at $48; call 312.443.3800 or visit GoodmanTheatre.org/Connect. Single tickets go on sale for select productions beginning in July.

The world-premiere of Jordan Harrison’s The Antiquities jumps across time, taking human society to, and beyond, its conclusion. At the Museum of Late Human Antiquities, the curators are fiercely committed to bringing a lost civilization to life again: What were humans really like? What did they wear, what did they eat, how did they die out? By casting us into the far future, Harrison’s new play gives us an uncanny view of the present moment, as we straddle the analog world that was and the post-human world to come. 

In addition to Marjorie Prime, Jordan Harrison’s credits include Log Cabin, Amazons and Their Men and The Amateurs, among others. His TV work includes three seasons of the Netflix hit, Orange is the New Black. In Marjorie Prime’s 2015 production at Playwrights Horizons, Harrison’s ​​”elegant, thoughtful and quietly unsettling drama” was hailed as “a rumination on technology that fits right into the current spate of essays and news articles about the rise of robots in our lives…[that] keeps developing in your head, like a photographic negative, long after you’ve seen it” (The New York Times). Over the past decade, those “essays and news articles” speculating on the future of AI have become our present, with the recent implementation of countless technologies, The Antiquities accordingly expands Harrison’s examination of what this means for human life. A co-production with Playwrights Horizons and Vineyard Theatre.

The Goodman also announces that Namir Smallwood will star in the Chicago-premiere production of the 2024 Pulitzer Prize-winning play Primary Trust by Eboni Booth, an open-hearted, “utterly absorbing, very funny, darn near perfect play” (The Daily Beast), centers on Kenneth—a 38-year-old longtime bookstore worker, who is perfectly content with his after-work routine: a mai tai (or two) at the local tiki bar. But when his employer decides to close the store, Kenneth must also turn the page and choose a new direction—including some daring steps into a world he has evaded. 

Smallwood is a company member at Steppenwolf Theatre Company whose recent television credits include Elementary (CBS), Power Book IV: Force (Starz), American Rust (Amazon Prime). Chicago credits also include Victory Gardens, Northlight Theatre, The Gift Theatre and Writers' Theatre. New York credits include Pipeline and Pass Over at Lincoln Center and the Broadway production of Pass Over. He can also be seen on NBC TV’s Rounding and Chicago Fire. 

Playwright Eboni Booth’s plays include the Pulitzer Prize-winning Primary Trust (Roundabout Theatre) and Paris (Atlantic Theater). For television, she has written for Hulu’s We Were the Lucky Ones and HBO Max’s Julia.  She i is a resident playwright at New Dramatists and the recipient of a Steinberg Playwright Award, a Helen Merrill Award for Playwriting, and a John Gassner award.

About the Productions in Goodman Theatre’s 2024/2025 Season

Plays are listed in chronological order by venue

The Goodman is grateful to Abbott Laboratories, Allstate Insurance Company, the Paul M. Angell Family Foundation, the Edgerton Foundation, Elizabeth Morse Charitable Trust, Northern Trust, and Winston & Strawn LLP for their support of the 2024/2025 Season.

From a ground-breaking, form-defying, laugh-out-loud new drama by a Pulitzer-Prize finalist to the major revival of a Nobel Prize-winner’s utterly domestic, utterly dangerous classic work, Goodman Theatre’s 2024/2025 Season—the 99th year of the not-for-profit resident theater—begins in September 2024 and includes four world- or Chicago-premiere productions, two classic revivals and a new production of a beloved musical, plus the 47th annual production of A Christmas Carol and the 20th annual New Stages Festival. New and expanded complementary programming includes Theater for the Very Young professional performances for children aged 0-5 and their grown-ups. Dennis Watkins’ The Magic Parlour continues into the new season—with Watkins pausing his performances while acclaimed Latine magicians take the Parlour’s stage for an exclusive engagement as part of this fall’s Destinos Festival, in partnership with Chicago Latino Theater Alliance (CLATA). Summer 2025 welcomes the 4th annual Sweetest Season: A Gathering of Indigenous Creativity showcase featuring Native and Indigenous artists, produced in partnership with the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian. 

“Our stage is our audience’s space of possibility, where ephemeral moments make indelible memories through big, breathtaking, ‘why-not’ productions of some of the best new plays and classic works,” said Artistic Director Susan V. Booth. “The upcoming season is one deeply attuned to our current moment, a time when how and with whom we connect has never been more important. These plays lean into the beautiful danger of trying to make community in a new place. They ask you to look hard at your closest relationships—and consider what you might be missing. Ultimately, I’m interested in that which brings us together as people. Our 2024/2025 Season is an invitation to leave our differences at the door and surrender to story. Gather with friends. Laugh with a loved one. Relax, exhale away the noise and the daily grind. Let the art on stage transcend and transport us to a place of possibility.”

“Susan’s vision for the Goodman is clear through this thrilling collection of stories that invites bold new thinking and boundary-pushing creativity,” said John Collins, who assumes the role of Goodman Theatre Executive Director at the start of the 2024/2025 Season. “At the same time, it’s exciting to expand programming and partnerships that complement the work on our stages—continuing the conversation into our Chicago community and welcoming new audiences through our doors.”

IN THE ALBERT THEATRE (856-SEAT PROSCENIUM STAGE)

Inherit the Wind

By Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee

Directed by Henry Godinez

September 14 – October 13, 2024

A three-time Tony Award-winning masterwork and “cultural landmark that only seems to grow with relevance” (Los Angeles Times). 

Science and religion go head-to-head in this iconic courtroom showdown. A small-town educator’s trial for teaching the theory of evolution becomes a battle royal of wits, wisdom and will for two of the country’s most powerful lawyers. In a bold retelling for today, Goodman Resident Artistic Associate Henry Godinez directs an all-new production of one of the greatest dramas of the 20th century, based on the real-life Scopes “Monkey” Trial of 1925—an “explosive episode in American culture” (The New York Times).

“What does the flagship theater of a major American city put on its stage in Fall 2024, a decidedly complicated American moment? Do we run radically in the opposite direction of public discourse, and seem out of touch? Or do we lean directly into the noise, and risk topic fatigue? We found the answer in our common ground—the deeply and communally held American ideals of freedom of thought and freedom of speech—and in a big, bold, fantastic play that celebrates them. Luckily for us, Inherit the Wind also happens to be among Henry Godinez’s all-time favorite plays.” --SVB

Betrayal
By Harold Pinter
Directed by Susan V. Booth

February 8 – March 16, 2025


Oscar, Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winner Helen Hunt stars in Susan V. Booth’s major revival of Pinter’s utterly domestic and utterly dangerous famed masterwork.


Emma, Robert and Jerry have history. The “eternal triangle” takes center stage in an inventive retelling by the Nobel Prize-winning playwright. As Emma’s marriage to Robert comes to an end, she reconnects with Jerry, her former lover—and her husband’s best friend. The action unspools backward in time, uncovering hidden truths and revealing how little we know about those we think we know so much about. Acclaimed stage and screen actor Helen Hunt (Mad About You, As Good As It Gets) makes her Goodman debut in this “elegy about time and memory (where) the greatest dramatic weight lies in what’s unspoken, in the darkness of unsorted feelings” (The New York Times).

“More than anything, I love a play of big ideas. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve seen Betrayal—but every time, I’m reminded of how Pinter’s decision to tell the story of the dissolution of relationships from back to front makes for one of the singularly brilliant works of theatrical literature. I’m absolutely thrilled to welcome Helen Hunt, an actor I’ve long admired, to the Goodman for this delicious role. I can’t wait to see where she takes it.” –SVB

BUST

By Zora Howard

Directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz

April 19 – May 18, 2025 | A World-Premiere Co-Production with Alliance Theatre

It’s not only hell that breaks loose in this ground-breaking, form-defying, laugh-out-loud new drama from Pulitzer-Prize finalist playwright Zora Howard.

Retta and Reggie are enjoying their usual evening on the porch when a longtime neighbor is pulled over by the police just before turning into his driveway. Everything goes as expected—until the unexpected happens. Tensions escalate, and eventually erupt, transporting us to a startling conclusion in Ms. Howard’s powerful new work. Lileana Blain-Cruz, a “master of curating chaos” (The New York Times), directs.

“It's been called Afrocentrist. It's been called Afro Fututurist. It’s a wicked smart, inventive new play from an astonishing artist. Funny, inspiring and unlike anything I've ever seen on the page, it’s a piece that begins in ways that feel familiar and moves to whole new worlds. We’re thrilled to partner with the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta on this world-premiere production, directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz—one of the most sought-after directors working today.” –SVB

The Color Purple

Directed by Lili-Anne Brown

Based on the Novel by Alice Walker and the Warner Bros./Amblin Entertainment Motion Picture

Book by Marsha Norman

Music and Lyrics by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray

June 21 – July 27, 2025

Twenty years since its Broadway musical debut, The Color Purple is reborn in Lili-Anne Brown’s revelatory production—“perfection on every level!” (Chicago Sun-Times).

It’s a celebration of life, hope and the healing power of love! The musical stage adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize- and National Book Award-winning novel is a heart-rending, yet ultimately joyous, story of a young woman’s perilous journey of personal awakening in the American South. Come ready to shout in church, stomp at the juke joint, laugh and cry with unforgettable “come-to-glory gospel hymns, down-and-dirty bump-and-grinds, jazz that stutters, dips and dives, and gorgeous alto arias” (Chicago Sun-Times). 

“Alice Walker’s brilliant and beloved novel is consistently counted among the most re-read works of English language literature. It’s an essential work of art that has, for decades, endured beyond the page, in films and on stage. Lili-Anne Brown’s glorious rendering of the musical remains one of the most memorable, highly acclaimed productions of recent years. It’s our joy and privilege to invite her to revisit her creation on the Goodman stage as our summer musical.” –SVB


IN THE OWEN THEATRE (350-SEAT FLEXIBLE STAGE)

Primary Trust

By Eboni Booth

Directed by Malkia Stampley

October 5 – November 3, 2024 | A Chicago Premiere

An open-hearted, “utterly absorbing, very funny, darn near perfect play” (The Daily Beast) about leaving your comfort zone to find fulfillment.

Meet Kenneth, a 38-year-old longtime bookstore worker, who is perfectly content with his after-work routine: a mai tai (or two) at the local tiki bar. But when his employer decides to close the store, Kenneth must also turn the page and choose a new direction—including some daring steps into a world he has evaded. BOLD Producer Malkia Stampley makes her Goodman directing debut with this “tender, delicately detailed portrait” (The New York Times) about new beginnings.

“To experience this intimate, absolutely beautiful piece is to enter a meditation on the power of connection and friendship. Eboni Booth is one of today’s most gifted emerging writers. For this Chicago premiere, she’s partnered with Malkia Stampley—an empathic director of remarkable warmth and curiosity. It’s an invitation to see the world from a fresh new perspective.” –SVB 

Fat Ham

By James Ijames

Directed by Tyrone Phillips

January 11 – February 23, 2025 | A Chicago Premiere Co-Production with Definition Theatre

A boisterous Southern cookout sets the scene for a Black, queer discovery of self and resilience in this Pulitzer Prize-winning, five-time Tony nominated “uproarious reimagining of Hamlet” (The New Yorker).

“This is what I was raised in: pig guts and bad choices.” As Juicy grapples with his identity and his family at a backyard barbecue, his father’s ghost shows up asking for revenge—on Juicy’s uncle, who has married his widowed mom—bringing his quest for joy and liberation to a screeching halt. James Ijames has reinvented Shakespeare’s masterpiece, creating what The New York Times hails as “a hilarious yet profound tragedy, smothered in comedy,” where the only death is the patriarchy. For more than a decade, Definition Theatre has celebrated stories created with, inspired by and intended for people and communities of color. Supported by a dedicated ensemble of artists, Definition is a cultural hub that amplifies + archives underrepresented voices as catalysts for social justice and racial healing.

“Producing this absolutely fantastic play together with the author’s home theater company elates me. What James has imagined is lightning in a bottle: a singular work drawn from his own experience as an actor cast in Hamlet that shines a light on Black masculinity, revenge and intergenerational complexities. Shakespeare’s classic play has often been revisited and retold. And in the talented hands of Tyrone Phillips, Definition Theatre’s founding artistic director, this reinvention is not to be missed.”  –SVB

The Antiquities

By Jordan Harrison

Directed by David Cromer

May 3 – June 1, 2025| A World-Premiere Co-Production with Playwrights Horizons and Vineyard Theatre

A play for anyone whose computer has ever asked them to prove that they’re human. Which is to say, everyone.

At the Museum of Late Human Antiquities, the curators are fiercely committed to bringing a lost civilization to life again: What were humans really like? What did they wear, what did they eat, how did they die out? By casting us into the far future, Pulitzer Prize-finalist Jordan Harrison’s new play gives us an uncanny view of the present moment, as we straddle the analog world that was and the post-human world to come. 

“This season is filled with unprecedented, big-idea-filled works that can’t compare with anything else. Which is maybe the quintessential reason to produce something? The Antiquities by Jordan Harrison may just be the very best example.” –SVB

Playwrights Horizons is a writer's theater dedicated to the development of contemporary playwrights, and to the production of innovative new work. Throughout its 52-year-old history, the organization has distinguished itself by a steadfast commitment to centering and advancing the voice of the playwright as essential to civic discourse and the illumination of life’s greatest paradoxes. Playwrights Horizons values the broad, eclectic spectrum and diversity of writers. At Playwrights, writers are supported in every stage of their growth through commissions (engaging several of today’s most imaginative playwrights each year), New Works Lab, and Almanac, the organization’s literary magazine. Engaging a risk-taking and adventurous audience, Playwrights Horizons presents a season of productions annually on their two stages, each of which is a world, American, or New York premiere.

Vineyard Theatre is one of America's preeminent homes for the creation of new plays and musicals, dedicated to pushing the boundaries of what theatre can be and do. Notable premieres: Paula Vogel's How I Learned to Drive (Pulitzer Prize) and Indecent (two Tony Awards); Edward Albee's Three Tall Women (Pulitzer Prize); musicals including Avenue Q (Tony Award, Best Musical), The Scottsboro Boys,  [title of show]; Tarell Alvin McCraney’s Wig Out!, Nicky Silver’s The Lyons, Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’ Gloria, David Cale’s Harry Clarke, Colman Domingo's Dot, Tina Satter’s Is this a Room (now HBO’s Reality), Lucas Hnath’s Dana H. (co-produced with Goodman and Center Theatre Group), and many more. Proud recipient of special Drama Desk, Obie and Lucille Lortel awards for artistic excellence. 


SPECIAL PRODUCTIONS, EVENTS AND PARTNERSHIPS

2024 Destinos Festival at The Magic Parlour Fall 2024 Dates TBA

Produced by Chicago Latino Theater Alliance (CLATA) At The Magic Parlour In partnership with Dennis Watkins and Goodman Theatre 50 W. Randolph

This fall, Goodman Theatre builds on its long-running partnership with Chicago Latino Theater Alliance (CLATA), the leading advocate organization for Latino theater in Chicago, in an exciting new offering. During the fall 2024 Destinos Festival, the Goodman and magician Dennis Watkins invite acclaimed Latine magicians to take the stage of The Magic Parlour for an exclusive limited engagement. Destinos, the Chicago International Latino Theater Festival, an annual, citywide festival showcasing Chicago’s Latine theater artists and companies alongside top Latine artists from the U.S. and Latin America. The Magic Parlour at 50 W. Randolph is the permanent home for Chicago’s longest-running magic show—featuring acclaimed third-generation magician Dennis Watkins in an intimate evening of classic close-up magic and mind-reading. Dates and performance details TBA.

47th Annual A Christmas Carol November 16 – December 30, 2024   By Charles Dickens

In the Albert Theatre

Adapted by Tom Creamer       

Directed by Jessica Thebus

Starring Larry Yando as Scrooge

Nearly two million theatergoers have attended “the crown jewel of the holiday season” (Daily Herald) since the Goodman established it as an annual offering in 1978—a time when only a handful of U.S. theaters mounted the production. Dickens’ holiday classic is the iconic tale of greedy businessman Ebenezer Scrooge, whose sizable bank account is only matched by his disdain for the holidays. One Christmas Eve, Scrooge is visited by four ghosts who take him on a spectacular adventure through his past, present and future, helping him rediscover the joys of life, love and friendship. 

20th Annual New Stages Festival December 2024 (Dates TBA)

In the Owen Theatre

The 20th annual New Stages Festival of new plays includes developmental productions and staged readings. Founded in 2004, the New Stages Festival is a celebration of innovative new plays designed to give playwrights an opportunity to take risks and experiment. New Stages offers Chicago theatergoers a first look at dozens of plays, many of which have gone on to become successful full productions—including Noah Haidle’s Smokefall, Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Ruined and more.

Sweetest Season 2025: A Gathering of Indigenous Creativity July 2025 (Dates TBA)

In Partnership with the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian

In the Owen Theatre

For a fourth summer in 2025, Goodman Theatre and the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian join forces to present a celebration of local Indigenous artistry. With a centerpiece performance showcase of music, movement, poetry, spoken word and more, previous events have been curated by Vincent Romero (Pueblo Laguna) with a line-up of featured artists including Brandi Berry Benson (Chickasaw; Violinist), William Buchholtz (Algonquin/Metis; Musician), Sergio Ceron (Otomi-Pame; Singer/Drummer), Leighann Daihl (Flutist), Martiza Garcia (Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians; Singer/Dancer), Mark Jourdan (Oneida/Ho-Chunk; Singer/Songwriter), Lanialoha Lee (Native Hawaiian; Choreographer/Composer), Michaela Marchi (Isleta Pueblo; Singer), Vincent Romero (Pueblo Laguna; Storyteller/Curator) and Jennifer Stevens (Oneida and Oglala Lakota; Singer/Visual Artist). Details including the 2025 line-up of featured performers and dates TBA.           

Theater for the Very Young (Dates TBD)

The Goodman's Theater for the Very Young offers enchanting and immersive theatrical experiences designed specifically for children aged 0-5 and their grown-ups. Through interactive performances, storytelling, and sensory-rich activities, young audiences are invited to embark on magical journeys that ignite their imaginations and nurture their early development. With a focus on creativity, exploration, and connection, our programming provides a joyful introduction to the world of theater, fostering a lifelong love of the arts from the very beginning.

Dennis Watkins’ The Magic Parlour Performances are ongoing

In Partnership with Dennis Watkins and Petterino’s 50 W. Randolph

“Chicago’s premiere resident magician’s 4-star, special retro magic experience” (Chicago Tribune) continues its extended run in its new home in the heart of the loop, established by acclaimed third-generation magician Dennis Watkins in partnership with Goodman Theatre and Petterino’s. Hailed as a “star attraction dazzling audiences in an elegant underground Loop parlor” (WBEZ), the new venue offers increased capacity and an expanded six-performance weekly schedule—“90 minutes of mind-boggling fun that would make Houdini proud, offer(ing) warmth, intimacy and a great close-up view of the magic being performed right before your eyes” (WGN Radio). 

Performances, currently on sale through June 30, 2024, take place weekly, Thursday through Sunday, at 50 W. Randolph. Tickets are $85 (includes the 90-minute performance + complimentary beverage) or $115 (includes the performance, beverage and “The Encore Room” 25-minute VIP experience). To purchase tickets, call the Goodman Theatre Box Office at 312.443.3800 (12 Noon – 5pm daily) or visit TheMagicParlourChicago.com. The Magic Parlour is recommended for audiences ages 12+; while there is no inappropriate content, this elegant experience is designed for adults.

ABOUT GOODMAN THEATRE

Chicago’s theater since 1925, Goodman Theatre is a not-for-profit arts and community organization in the heart of the Loop, distinguished by the excellence and scope of its artistic programming and community engagement. Led by Artistic Director Susan V. Booth and Executive Director/CEO Roche Schulfer*, the theater’s artistic priorities include new play development (more than 150 world or American premieres), large scale musical theater works and reimagined classics. Artists and productions have earned two Pulitzer Prizes, 22 Tony Awards and more than 160 Jeff Awards, among other accolades. The Goodman is the first theater in the world to produce all 10 plays in August Wilson’s “American Century Cycle.” Its longtime annual holiday tradition, A Christmas Carol, now in its fourth decade, has created a new generation of theatergoers in Chicago. The Goodman also frequently serves as a production and program partner with national and international companies and Chicago’s off-Loop theaters.

As a cultural and community organization invested in quality, diversity and community, Goodman Theatre is committed to using the art of theater for a better Chicago. Using the tools of the theatrical profession, the Goodman’s Education and Engagement programs aim to develop generations of citizens who understand the cultures and stories of diverse voices. The Goodman’s Alice Rapoport Center for Education and Engagement is the home of these programs, which are offered free of charge for Chicago youth—85% of whom come from underserved communities—schools and life-long learners.

Goodman Theatre was founded by William O. Goodman and his family in honor of their son Kenneth, an important figure in Chicago’s cultural renaissance in the early 1900s. The Goodman family’s legacy lives on through the continued work and dedication of Kenneth’s family, including Albert Ivar Goodman, who with his late mother, Edith-Marie Appleton, contributed the necessary funds for the creation of the new Goodman center in 2000.

Today, Goodman Theatre leadership also includes the distinguished members of the Artistic Collective: Rebecca Gilman, Henry Godinez, Dael Orlandersmith, Steve Scott, Kimberly Senior, Chuck Smith and Mary Zimmerman. Julie Danis is Chairman of Goodman Theatre’s Board of Trustees, Lorrayne Weiss is Women’s Board President and Kelli Garcia is President of the Scenemakers Board for young professionals.

*Note: On September 1, 2024, John Collins becomes Executive Director of Goodman Theatre. 

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