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Showing posts with label Stage 773. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stage 773. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2018

OPENING: TimeLine Theatre Company's Master Class Starring Janet Ulrich Brooks as Maria Callas Through December 9, 2018

Chi, IL LIVE Shows On Our Radar:

JANET ULRICH BROOKS STARS AS LEGENDARY
OPERA DIVA MARIA CALLAS
TIMELINE PRESENTS TERRENCE McNALLY’S 
MASTER CLASS, 
DIRECTED BY
NICK BOWLING WITH MUSIC DIRECTOR DOUG PECK,

“Is this a story that we need to continue to tell? With
Janet Ulrich Brooks in the role, under Nick Bowling’s heartfelt and purposeful direction, the answer is a resounding yes.”
-New City 



OCTOBER 19 – DECEMBER 9, 2018 AT STAGE 773

TimeLine Theatre Company announces members of the cast and creative team for Master Class, Terrence McNally’s Tony Award-winning play about the formidable opera star Maria Callas, inspired by a series of classes she taught at Julliard in the 1970s. I'll be out to catch the show November 4th, so check back shortly after for my full review.


"A magnetic, mercurial performance
by Janet Ulrich Brooks"

"Like opera itself, TimeLine’s staging is filled with huge emotions. There’s ecstasy and agony in “Master Class,”
both writ huge, like the art form Callas dominated."
-Chicago Sun-Times 


TimeLine Company Member Janet Ulrich Brooks (she/her) stars as the legendary opera diva Maria Callas. Brooks is a six-time Jeff Award nominee for her roles at TimeLine including 33 Variations, A Walk in the Woods, and All My Sons. She most recently played to critical acclaim last season as Queen Elizabeth II in TimeLine’s extended run of Peter Morgan’s The Audience.

TimeLine’s Master Class will also feature Eric Anthony Lopez (he/him), a past American Idol contestant with credits on Broadway and London’s West End, as Tenor/Tony; Molly Hernandez (she/her), named one of the Chicago Tribune Theater Loop’s “Hot New Faces of Chicago Theatre” in 2017, as First Soprano/Sophie; and Keirsten Hodgens (she/her), who recently wowed audiences in Ragtime at Marriott Theatre, as Second Soprano/ Sharon. Also appearing will be Stephen Boyer (he/him) as Manny and Raymond Hutchison (he/him) as Stagehand.

TimeLine Associate Artistic Director Nick Bowling (he/him), who also directed The Audience, will stage McNally’s glorious, raw, and bittersweet look at one of opera’s most iconic talents. Bowling is a seven-time Jeff Award recipient for Outstanding Direction, including for TimeLine’s memorable productions of The History Boys, The Normal Heart, and Fiorello!

TimeLine’s Master Class will be music directed by six-time Jeff Award recipient Doug Peck (he/him), who previously music directed Fiorello! and Juno at TimeLine. Peck’s extensive credits include work at Chicago’s Court, Goodman, and Chicago Shakespeare theaters, and regional theaters across the United States.

The production team includes Arnel Sancianco (Scenic Designer, he/him); Sally Dolembo (Costume Designer, she/her); Jessica Neill (Lighting Designer, she/her); TimeLine Associate Artist Andrew Hansen (Sound Designer and Composer, he/him); Katie Cordts (Wig and Hair Designer, she/her); Vivian Knouse (Properties Designer, she/her); TimeLine Associate Artist Eva Breneman (Dialect Designer, she/her); Lucas Garcia (Co-Dramaturg, they/them); Maren Robinson (Co-Dramaturg, she/her); and Luci Kersting (Stage Manager, she/her).

Performances run through December 9 at Stage 773, 1225 W. Belmont Avenue in Chicago, TimeLine’s alternate location for one production each season. For tickets and information, visit timelinetheatre.com or call the Stage 773 Box Office at (773) 327-5252.


Playwright Terrence McNally (from left), director Nick Bowling, and cast members Janet Ulrich Brooks, Eric Anthony Lopez, Molly Hernandez, and Keirsten Hodgens. 





























Maria Callas



MORE ABOUT MASTER CLASS

Witness a master class conducted by legendary opera diva Maria Callas. Glamorous and demanding, Callas critiques and regales a new crop of opera’s finest. Both frustrated and amazed by the students thrust before her, she escapes into recollections of the glories and failures of her past, remembering her rise as one of opera’s biggest underdogs. This authentic and musically rich Master Class presents a portrait of a fading star who refuses to be anything but unapologetically herself.

Master Class debuted in 1995 at the Philadelphia Theatre Company, followed by productions at the Mark Taper Forum and the Kennedy Center. It premiered on Broadway under the direction of Leonard Foglia at the John Golden Theatre on November 15, 1995 and closed on June 29, 1997 after 598 performances and 12 previews. The play won the 1996 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Play, the 1996 Tony Award for Best Play, plus Tony Awards for original cast members Zoe Caldwell (as Callas) and Audra McDonald (as Sharon) for Actress and Featured Actress, respectively. Since its Broadway debut, such luminaries as Patti LuPone, Faye Dunaway, Dixie Carter, and Tyne Daly have all essayed the coveted lead diva role in Master Class, and there have been countless tours and international and regional productions since.


MASTER CLASS PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE/EVENTS

Previews of Master Class are Friday, October 19 and Saturday October 20 at 8 p.m.; Sunday, October 21 at 2 p.m.; and Tuesday October 23 and Wednesday, October 24 at
8 p.m.

Regular performances continue through December 9: Wednesdays and Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. (except no performance on Thanksgiving, November 22); Fridays at 8 p.m.; Saturdays at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. (except no performance October 27 at 4 p.m.); and Sundays at 2 p.m. There is an added 4 p.m. performance on Friday, November 23.


DISCUSSION & ACCESSIBILITY EVENTS:

—    Post-Show Discussions: A brief, informal post-show discussion hosted by a TimeLine Company Member and featuring a production dramaturg and members of the cast on Thursday, November 1; Sunday, November 4; Thursday, November 15; Thursday, November 29; and Wednesday, December 5.

—    Pre-Show Discussions: Starting one hour before these performances, a 30-minute introductory conversation hosted by a TimeLine Company Member and the production dramaturg on Wednesday, November 7, and Sunday, November 11.

—    Company Member Discussion: A post-show discussion with the collaborative team of artists who choose TimeLine’s programming and guide the company’s mission on Sunday, November 18.

—    Captioned Performance: An open-captioned performance with a text display of words and sounds heard during the performance on Saturday, November 10 at 4 p.m.

—    Sunday Scholars Panel Discussion: A one-hour post-show discussion featuring experts on the themes and issues of the play on Sunday, December 2.

All discussions are free and open to the public. For further details about all planned discussions and events, visit timelinetheatre.com.


BUYING TICKETS

The best way to secure seats to Master Class is to purchase a 2018-19 TimeLine Theatre FlexPass Subscription, on sale now, offering four amazing shows, starting at only $88.

Preview tickets are $27.50. Single tickets to regular performances are $42.50 (Wednesday through Friday), $51.50 (Saturday evenings) and $56.50 (Saturday and Sunday matinees). Student discount is 35% off regular price with valid ID. TimeLine is also a member of TCG’s Blue Star Theatre Program and is offering $27.50 tickets to U.S. military personnel, veterans, first responders, and their spouses and family.

Discounted rates for groups of 10 or more are available. Ticket buyers age 18-35 may join TimeLine’s free MyLine program to obtain access to discounted tickets, special events and more. Visit timelinetheatre.com/discounts for more about Blue Star, MyLine and other available discounts.

For more information, visit timelinetheatre.com or call the Stage 773 Box Office at (773) 327-5252.


LOCATION/TRANSPORTATION/PARKING/ACCESSIBILITY
                 
Master Class will take place at Stage 773, 1225 W. Belmont Ave., Chicago. Stage 773 is located one-half block west of the corner of Belmont and Racine and immediately east of Theater Wit in Chicago’s Lakeview East neighborhood. The theater is accessible via the CTA El stop at Belmont (Red/Brown/Purple lines). CTA bus #77-Belmont stops at Racine. Valet parking is available for $12 and there is also limited free and metered street parking nearby. Visit timelinetheatre.com for complete directions and parking information. Stage 773 is accessible for people with disabilities.


BIOGRAPHIES


Terrence McNally (Playwright) is a recipient of the Dramatists Guild Lifetime Achievement Award and the Lucille Lortel Lifetime Achievement Award. He has won four Tony Awards, for his plays Master Class and Love! Valour! Compassion! and his musical books for Kiss of the Spider Woman and Ragtime. The Kennedy Center recently produced three of his plays under the title Terrence McNally’s Nights at the Opera: Master Class, The Lisbon Traviata, and the world premiere of Golden Age. He has written a number of TV scripts, including Andre’s Mother, for which he won an Emmy Award. He has received two Guggenheim Fellowships, a Rockefeller Grant, and a citation from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1996, he was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame. He recently wrote the book for the Tony Award-nominated musical, The Visit, which opened on Broadway in the spring of 2015 with music and lyrics by John Kander and Fred Ebb. He wrote the libretto for the opera Great Scott as well as Dead Man Walking, both with music by Jake Heggie. His play It’s Only a Play opened on Broadway in the fall of 2014. He is the writer of the book for the musical Anastasia, which is currently playing on Broadway. His newest play, Fire and Air, premiered at Classic Stage Company in the winter of 2018. Other plays include Tony Award-nominated Best Play Mothers and Sons; And Away We Go; Frankie and Johnny in the Claire de Lune; Lips Together, Teeth Apart; Corpus Christi; The Ritz; Some Men; A Perfect Ganesh; and Deuce.

 
Nick Bowling (Director, he/him) was the founding Artistic Director and is now Associate Artistic Director and a Company Member of TimeLine Theatre. He is the recipient of seven Jeff Awards for Outstanding Direction (The History Boys, The Normal Heart, Fiorello!, This Happy Breed and The Crucible at TimeLine, Sondheim on Sondheim at Porchlight Music Theatre, and Another Part of the Forest at Eclipse Theatre) and also received Jeff Award nominations for Blood and Gifts, The Farnsworth Invention, Hauptmann and The Lion in Winter at TimeLine; Closer Than Ever at Porchlight Music Theatre; City of Angels, The King and I and Man of La Mancha at Marriott Theatre. Other recent credits at TimeLine include The Audience, A Disappearing Number, The Last Wife, Danny Casolaro Died for You and Juno. Other Chicago credits include Marriott’s The Bridges of Madison County, Paramount's A Christmas Story, Northwestern University’s Cabaret, Porchlight’s A Catered Affair, Writers Theatre's Bach at Leipzig and Shattered Globe Theatre's Time of the Cuckoo and Frozen Assets. 
Doug Peck (Music Director) is one of Chicago’s leading music directors, having received six Joseph Jefferson Awards (The Jungle Book; Porgy and Bess; Caroline, or Change; Carousel; Fiorello!; and Man of La Mancha) and two After Dark Awards (Guys and Dolls, Hello, Again), as well as the Sarah Siddons Award and the Siddons Award and the Guy Adkins Award, for his music direction and orchestrations in Chicago and across the country. Other favorite projects include Dreamgirls; Animal Crackers; Shenandoah; Candide; Fiddler on the Roof; Hair; Cabaret; Oh, Coward!; James Joyce’s The Dead; A Catered Affair; Grey Gardens; and Raisin. Peck’s work has been heard in Chicago at Court Theatre, Goodman Theatre, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Writers Theatre, TimeLine Theatre, Northlight Theatre, Paramount Theatre, Drury Lane Oakbrook Terrace, Porchlight Music Theatre, and the Ravinia Festival. Regional credits include work at the Huntington Theatre Company, the Shakespeare Theatre Company, Long Wharf Theatre, Asolo Repertory Theatre, and Peninsula Players Theatre, among others. Peck can be heard on the recordings Bright Young People: The Songs of Noël Coward, Foiled Again Live, and Loving Repeating: A Musical of Gertrude Stein. For the Chicago Humanities Festival, he was part of presenting Assassins and Follies in concert, as well as the original concert evenings Birds Do It, Bees Do It and A Night At The Oscars, a chronological survey of every single song that has won the Academy Award. Peck is a graduate of Northwestern University and also trained at the Interlochen Center for the Arts. He is a creative partner with the Goodman, an artistic associate with Porchlight Music Theatre, and a faculty member of the National High School Institute of the Arts. Additional projects include Juno at TimeLine Theatre, the world premiere musical Days Like Today at Writers Theatre, and Carousel at the Glimmerglass Opera.

 
Janet Ulrich Brooks (Maria Callas) is a TimeLine Company Member, and Master Class marks her 12th production with the company. She most recently appeared at TimeLine as Queen Elizabeth II in the extended hit The Audience last season, and in Bakersfield Mist with Mike Nussbaum in 2016. She received Jeff Award nominations for her work at TimeLine in 33 Variations, A Walk in the Woods, All My Sons, Not Enough Air, When She Danced and Weekend. Other recent credits include The Lady with all the Answers at Theatre at the Center, Plantation at Lookingglass Theatre, 2666 and Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike at the Goodman Theatre (Equity Jeff Award nomination, Actress in a Principal role – Play), and Women Laughing Alone with Salad at Woolly Mammoth Theatre in Washington, D.C. (Helen Hayes Award nomination, Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play). Other credits include the remount of TimeLine’s To Master the Art (Chicago Commercial Collective and Broadway in Chicago at the Broadway Playhouse); A True History of the Johnstown Flood, Teddy Ferrara, and The Seagull (Goodman); Native Gardens and Failure: A Love Story (Victory Gardens); South of Settling (Steppenwolf); Ten Chimneys (Northlight); and portraying Golda Meir in Golda’s Balcony (Pegasus Players, Non-Equity Jeff Award, Outstanding Solo Performance). Brooks’ television credits include the Netflix series Sense8, Chicago Fire, Boss, Underemployed, and The Playboy Club. Film credits include Divergent, Conviction, Polishbar, One Small Hitch, The Middle Distance, I Heart Shakey, and Recursive Pictures’ short film For a Good Time. Brooks was the first recipient of the Ed See Outstanding Theatre Alumnus Award from the University of Central Missouri. She is a proud member of AEA and SAG/AFTRA and is represented by Gray Talent Group.



MORE ABOUT TIMELINE’S 2018-19 SEASON

In addition to Master Class at Stage 773, TimeLine’s Theatre’s 2018-19, four-show subscription season includes three more shows at the company’s home base,
615 W. Wellington in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood: 

—    A Shayna Maidel by Barbara Lebow, directed by Vanessa Stalling, a poignant story about two sisters reunited after years of separation brought on by the rise of the Nazis; now extended by popular demand through December 2, 2018.

—    The Chicago premiere of Cardboard Piano by Hansol Jung, a powerful story of faith, love, and the human capacity for forgiveness set amidst violent conflict in northern Uganda, directed by TimeLine Company Member Mechelle Moe, January 9 – March 17, 2019.

—    The Chicago premiere of Too Heavy for Your Pocket by Jiréh Breon Holder, a hopeful and moving story taking place at the height of the Civil Rights Movement that explores family, responsibility, and the personal sacrifices that enable progress, directed by TimeLine Company Member Ron OJ Parson, April 24 – June 29, 2019.

Save on tickets to TimeLine’s 2018-19 season with a FlexPass Subscription. Four tiers, priced from $88 to $204, are now on sale. For more information and to purchase a FlexPass, call (773) 281-8463 x6 or visit timelinetheatre.com.

PLUS, TIMELINE PARTNERS WITH FIREBRAND THEATRE’S FALL PRODUCTION OF CAROLINE, OR CHANGE:

In addition to its 2018-19 four-show subscription series, TimeLine Theatre is excited to be partnering with Firebrand Theatre—Chicago’s new musical theatre company committed to employing and empowering women—on Firebrand’s upcoming fall production of the Tony Award-nominated musical Caroline, or Change, featuring music by Jeanine Tesori (Fun Home)

Tuesday, September 18, 2018

OPENING: THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE Via Hell in a Handbag At Stage 773 October 28, 2018

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

Hell in a Handbag Productions Presents 
THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE
By Charles Ludlam
Directed by Shade Murray
September 20 – October 28, 2018 at Stage 773


**The Handbag production marks the first time in over 25 years this campy classic has been performed in Chicago**

Here at ChiIL Live Shows, we love it when our favorites play well together. We're admirers of the work of Shade Murray of A Red Orchid Theatre and adore Hell in a Handbag Productions' high camp classics, so we're eager to catch The Artificial Jungle. I'll be out to review their latest at the press opening September 23rd. So check back like we vote in Chi, IL... early and often. 


This fall, Hell in a Handbag Productions is thrilled to explore THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE, the final play by the legendary master of camp, Charles Ludlam. Who better to direct this criminal tale of lust and murder than Hell in a Handbag’s longtime partner in crime, Shade Murray of A Red Orchid Theatre. 

THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE will play September 20 – October 28, 2018 at Stage 773’s Black Box Theater (1225 W. Belmont Ave., Chicago), where Handbag staged its recent revival of L’Imitation of Life and 2017’s hit musical Bewildered. Tickets are currently available at www.stage773.com or by calling (773) 327-5252. 

THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE features an all-ensemble cast including Chazie Bly*, David Cerda*, Sydney Genco*, Ed Jones* and David Lipschutz*.

Things at The Artificial Jungle, the dilapidated pet store owned by mild-mannered Chester Nurdiger (Ed Jones*), are pretty routine. The devoted Mother Nurdiger (David Cerda*) does her best to give her son everything he needs, but there are some things a mother just can’t provide. Chester’s wife, the sultry and stifled Roxanne Nurdiger (Sydney Genco*), is as restless as one of the hamsters in a cage, and when Zachary Slade, a mysterious drifter (David Lipschutz*) enters the picture, passions run wild. Roxanne and Zachary have the perfect plan to get rid of Chester and live the life Roxanne craves.

Combining elements of Thérése Raquin, Double Indemnity and even Little Shop of Horrors – THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE is a masterful mélange of styles that leave no doubt as to why Mr. Ludlam is considered one of the creators of the Theatre of the Ridiculous. It’s also the perfect fit for Hell in a Handbag Productions – Chicago’s leading theater dedicated to ridiculousness, camp and parody.

The production team for THE ARTIFICIAL JUNGLE includes: Samantha Gribben (scenic design), Kate Setzer Kamphausen (costume design), Rachel Lake (lighting design), Brando Triantafillou (sound design and original music), Keith Ryan* (wig design), Adrian Hadlock* (props design), Mark Blashford (puppet design), Lana Whittington (violence coordinator), A.Kay Wyatt (production manager) and Alexandra Hazen (stage manager).

*Denotes Handbag ensemble member.

Location: 
Stage 773 Black Box Theater, 1225 W. Belmont, Chicago
Dates: Previews: Thursday, September 20 at 7:30 pm, Friday, Sept. 21 at 7:30 pm and Saturday, September 22 at 7:30 pm
Opening/Press performance: Sunday, September 23 at 7:30 pm
Regular run: Thursday, September 27 – Sunday, October 28, 2018 
Curtain Times: Thursday, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm; Sundays at 3 pm. Please note: there will be an added performance on Monday, October 15 at 7:30 pm.


Tickets: Previews $19. Regular run $32 in advance, $39 at the door. Group rates $29 for 10 or more. $25 senior and student rates. Tickets are currently available at www.stage773.com or by calling (773) 327-5252. 

About the Artists
Charles Ludlam (Playwright, 1943-1987) grew up in Queens, New York, just a few subway stops from Greenwich Village and the heart of Gay America. At 24, he founded the Ridiculous Theatrical Company, where he wrote, directed and performed in almost every production for the next two decades, often with Everett Quinton, his life partner and muse, by his side. Renowned for drag, high comedy, melodrama, satire, precise literary references, gender politics, sexual frolic and a multitude of acting styles, the Ridiculous Theater guaranteed a kind of biting humor that could both sting and tickle. Ludlam’s many plays included Turds in Hell, Der Ring Gott Farblonjet, a riff on Wagner's Ring Cycle, Bluebeard and The Mystery of Irma Vep, his most popular play, and a performer's tour-de-force. Ludlam continued working until almost the day he died of PCP pneumonia, just three months after his AIDS diagnosis. He was 44.

Shade Murray (Director) is happy to return to Hell In A Handbag after directing The Golden Girls: The Lost Episodes and The Divine Sister. He is an ensemble member and Associate Artistic Director of A Red Orchid Theatre, where he has directed the world premieres of Brett Neveu’s Pilgrim’s Progress and Ike Holter’s Sender, as well as productions of David Adjmi’s 3C, Grant Varjas’s Accidentally Like a Martyr, Marisa Wegrzyn’s Mud Blue Sky and The Butcher of Baraboo, Annie Baker’s The Aliens, Nick Jones’ Trevor, Mike Leigh’s Abigail’s Party and Kimberly Akimbo by David Lindsay-Abaire. He also performed in the A Red Orchid production of The Mutilated. Other directing credits include Steppenwolf Theatre Company, The House Theater, Steep Theater, Second City, Writers’ Theater and elsewhere. Shade is a lecturer at University of Chicago and teaches at DePaul University and Acting Studio Chicago. 

About Hell in a Handbag Productions
Hell in a Handbag is dedicated to the preservation, exploration, and celebration of works ingrained in the realm of popular culture via theatrical productions through parody, music and homage. Handbag is a 501(c)(3) Not for Profit.


COMING SOON:

Sunday, June 3, 2018

REVIEW: Nobody's Home, Part of the Physical Festival Chicago at Stage 773

Chi IL Live Shows On Our Radar:

Nobody's Home, 
part of the 
Physical Festival Chicago at Stage 773, 
showing at 1225 W. Belmont 
(773)327-5252

Review
By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic 

Wow.

I have never seen a play before where all the action revolves around a bathtub. “Set in a bathroom, Nobody’s Home follows a soldier’s journey through his own mind, as he struggles with the monsters of his past to finally come home,” as described by Theatre Temoin and Grafted Cede theatre. While sometimes hard to witness, Nobody’s Home is an important story to tell about PTSD---the hell it creates for the central figure as well as his frustrated and exasperated wife. During the pre-show introduction, the audience is reassured that if anyone needs to step out because of the intensity of the show, the actors will not be offended; they are used to it from their many performances on military bases.

Returned soldier Grant and wife Penny are struggling to return to normalcy after his third tour of duty, which has pushed him over the edge. Penny wants Grant to finally fix the bathtub drain, but Grant’s demons prevent him from accomplishing anything other than basic survival. While her traumatized husband plays Zombie Hunter for endless hours in the bathroom, his also-suffering wife reminisces to their unborn child about the man she married. “He’s been home eight months, and I still feel like I’m waiting.” She reassures herself by reading the love letters he had sent home from the front. The husband she knew is damaged beyond recognition. “Either he’s playing video games in the bathroom, or he is lying next to me, and I’m afraid for my life.”

Will Pinchin does a great job playing the emotionally tormented Grant. But his real-life wife Dorie Kinnear as Penny is amazing in her many roles, playing a psychiatrist, a dead comrade who torments Grant’s thoughts, (“Where were you when I was getting my face blown off?”) and a woman Grant encountered overseas who still haunts him. Penny deserves a medal for what she is tolerating, and I wondered how spouses in these tough circumstances are able to cope. (They are heroes as well.) Just as she is ready to leave Grant, he begs her to stay. In a cool bit of choreography, Pinchin and Kinnear alternate between reality and scary flashbacks in a move they call “the spin.” The lights dim when Grant envisions the native woman from the war and brighten as he embraces Penny, trying to not let her slip away.

Nobody's Home has been perfected over the ten years since its inception. We were lucky to chat with the actors after the show, delighted to discover they are a married couple with a two-and-a-half-year-old daughter. Americans from the two coasts, they met doing theater and currently reside in England. They said the play has a prominent, kind of weird place in their relationship. It is a story that needs to be told. 

Pinchin and Kinnear were impressed with our city and commented on how “nice everyone has been in Chicago.” Awwww. They planned to explore a bit the next day, so we made suggestions on where to eat and what to see. We are lucky they shared their unique play with the Windy City and hope they return soon.








LET’S GET PHYSICAL!
FINAL WEEK PHYSICAL FESTIVAL CHICAGO HIGHLIGHTS:

AN INGENIOUS DON QUIXOTE VIA SPAIN/UK

A KICK-ASS, ONE-WOMAN LITTLE GIRL WAR
REFUGEE TALE VIA BRAZIL/FRANCE

THIS JUST IN!
A NEW AUDITION WORKSHOP
WITH A LEADING CIRQUE DU SOLEIL TALENT SCOUT


New workshop just added!

From the Inside Out- Dance/Physical Theater Guided Improv – Friday, June 8, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Learn directly from top Cirque du Soleil talent scout Leon Kupferschmid. Find out what he looks for in potential performers prior to Cirque du Soleil’s Chicago auditions for dancers, clowns and physical actors, June 9 and 10.

Bouffon Workshop with Eric Davis (aka Red Bastard), Sunday, June 3, 10 a.m.- 1 p.m. has sold out.

Limited space is still available for the remaining workshops:

Sculpting Space with Dorie Kinnear and Will Pinchin (UK/USA), Monday, June 4,
10 a.m.- 1 p.m.

Dreams, Wishes, Lies with Michael Montenegro, Wednesday, June 6, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Create Your Own Solo with Gaël Le Cornec and Ben Samuels, Thursday, June 7,
10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Comedy & Clowning with Little Solder Productions, Saturday, June 9 at 10 a.m.-1 p.m.


Visit physicalfestival.com/workshops for full workshop descriptions and to register. Workshops are $50 each, or look for information on a discounted workshop pass.



Tickets and for full details on all Physical Festival shows and workshops HERE



REVIEW: "Red Bastard" in the 5th Annual Physical Festival Chicago at Stage 773

Chi IL Live Shows On Our Radar:
Red Bastard
Featured as part of the 5th Annual 
Physical Festival Chicago, 
Stage 773 at 1225 W. Belmont  (773)  327-5252


Review
By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic

I’m gonna be honest with you,
I’m not gonna lie,
this is the TRUTH:

The Red Bastard is worth seeing. It is theater like you have not seen before. (And he begins the performance by informing us there is no ending.) 

Then again, all people LIE, so why would you believe me??  ;-)

The premise that all people fib, cheat, or are perverts is the foundation of the Red Bastard’s guide to life and love, especially in matters of the heart. Because who really writes these “Rules of Love” that we follow in terms of our relationships? What do we consider “cheating” in a relationship? How honest do
we need to be with our partners? 

Swans may pair off and mate for life, but Eric Davis, a.k.a. Red Bastard, concedes he was not wired for being a swan and had his share of sexual shenanigans that made him a “dirty pony.” (How many audience members will make that their new naughty catch phrase?)

To prove that “Everyone lies,” at the beginning of the show, Red Bastard has the audience stand up. (if you are uncomfortable with participating in live theater, BEWARE...or sit waaay in the back. I discovered this personally. More on that later...) To locate an honest person, just one, Red Bastard surveys the crowd. If someone has lied to that particular question, he or she sits down.

It only took three questions to leave nobody standing. 

I expected the usual questions: have you fibbed about your age, weight, or a past job experience... but the question that “killed” over half the crowd dealt with how often we select the “I have read and understand” the content on any online website’s “terms and conditions” page before we sign off on all that annoying fine print. As Red Bastard exclaims: “It’s a show about YOU--LIES!” In the theater, which is “a temple of lies!”

So how was I dragged into this soul-baring experience? “If you have ever dated more than one person at a time, wink at me.” I winked. He noticed. Oh, crap. He grilled me on particulars. “Did I lie to one of them?” No. “Why not?” I answered truthfully that they “lived in different cities.” Oh, Red Bastard
loved that and mimed driving across the stage, back and forth, back and forth, visiting my lovers.

Did I regret it? If I could erase the experience, would I?

No.

“Why Not?”

I shrugged. “It was fun.”

I think I earned the respect of Red Bastard at that moment with my candor.

Told with boundless energy, humor, music (he plays a concertina!), physical theatrics, and wonderful improv, Eric Davis’ tour-de-force was vastly entertaining and thought-provoking. He had the audience rapt; we even laughed when he ate a piece of chocolate onstage. He ate a mango and slow-danced with a man from the crowd, charming all. And this English teacher learned a new vocabulary word from the show: “compersion.” Look it up.

Davis is also running a Bouffon Workshop for the fest. We chatted with Eric (our new BFF) after the show, and he was a delightful, friendly person. When asked where he lives, he said his wife is a member of Cirque du soleil, so he travels to follow her career. What a great husband! His wife got him to finally rebuke his dirty pony ways. We teased him that he needs to officiate at our maybe-someday-wedding.

No lie.








LET’S GET PHYSICAL!
FINAL WEEK PHYSICAL FESTIVAL CHICAGO HIGHLIGHTS:

AN INGENIOUS DON QUIXOTE VIA SPAIN/UK

A KICK-ASS, ONE-WOMAN LITTLE GIRL WAR
REFUGEE TALE VIA BRAZIL/FRANCE

THIS JUST IN!
A NEW AUDITION WORKSHOP
WITH A LEADING CIRQUE DU SOLEIL TALENT SCOUT


New workshop just added!

From the Inside Out- Dance/Physical Theater Guided Improv – Friday, June 8, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Learn directly from top Cirque du Soleil talent scout Leon Kupferschmid. Find out what he looks for in potential performers prior to Cirque du Soleil’s Chicago auditions for dancers, clowns and physical actors, June 9 and 10.

Bouffon Workshop with Eric Davis (aka Red Bastard), Sunday, June 3, 10 a.m.- 1 p.m. has sold out.

Limited space is still available for the remaining workshops:

Sculpting Space with Dorie Kinnear and Will Pinchin (UK/USA), Monday, June 4,
10 a.m.- 1 p.m.

Dreams, Wishes, Lies with Michael Montenegro, Wednesday, June 6, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Create Your Own Solo with Gaël Le Cornec and Ben Samuels, Thursday, June 7,
10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Comedy & Clowning with Little Solder Productions, Saturday, June 9 at 10 a.m.-1 p.m.


Visit physicalfestival.com/workshops for full workshop descriptions and to register. Workshops are $50 each, or look for information on a discounted workshop pass.



Tickets and for full details on all Physical Festival shows and workshops HERE

Sunday, May 27, 2018

Physical Festival Returns To Chicago For 5th Year June 1st-9th, 2018

Chi IL Live Shows On Our Radar:

THEATRE THAT MOVES YOU: 
PHYSICAL FESTIVAL CHICAGO WARMING UP FOR BIG FIFTH ANNIVERSARY, JUNE 1-9, 2018 AT STAGE 773


Physical Festival Chicago, founded in 2014 and curated by Alice da Cunha and Marc Frost, is the city’s annual contemporary, visual and physical theater festival presenting new forms of theater from around the world. 

Hold tight for nine whirlwind days of physical theater programming including four incredible, award-winning shows from around the world, hometown master Michael Montenegro, a Scratch Night featuring cutting edge 
new works by Chicago performers, and master classes taught by top international physical theater artists. 

Marvel at physical theater artists from Brazil, France, New York, 
Spain, the U.K. and Chicago sure to shock, entertain and amaze

Scratch Night Chicago artists and six workshops announced, including 
How to Audition for Cirque du Soleil with a leading Cirque talent scout



Top, from left: The 2018 Physical Festival Chicago, June 1-9 at Stage 773, will feature Nobody’s Home by UK-based Theatre Témoin and Grafted Cede, Red Bastard: Lie with me from New York City, (bottom) The Other by Gaël Le Cornec from Brazil/France, and The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote de la Mancha by Little Soldier Productions from Spain/UK. Michael Montenegro, acclaimed artistic director of Evanston’s Theatre Zarko, is the 2018 festival’s featured Chicago artist.

Physical Festival Chicago - the city’s annual contemporary, visual and physical theater festival presenting new forms of theater from around the world - is returning June 1-9, 2018 for its fifth anniversary outing. 

Hold tight for nine whirlwind days of physical theater programming including four incredible, award-winning shows from around the world, hometown master Michael Montenegro, a Scratch Night featuring new works by Chicago performers, and master classes taught by top international physical theater artists. 

All performances are presented at Stage 773, 1225 W. Belmont Ave., in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood. Single tickets ($12-$18) and festival passes ($45 and $60) are on sale now at physicalfestival.com

Two incredible out-of-town acts kick off the 2018 Physical Festival opening weekend, June 1-3. 



First, UK-based Theatre Témoin and Grafted Cede will present Nobody’s Home, a unique and striking exploration of PTSD in a modern retelling of Homer’s Odyssey. Performances are Friday and Saturday, June 1 and 2 at 7 p.m. and Sunday, June 3 at 5 p.m. (Note: Nobody’s Home replaces the previously announced La Causeuse by Montreal collective Equivoc’, which had to drop out of the festival due to scheduling conflicts.)



Sure to shock and seduce is the opening weekend “late night” act, New York’s 
Red Bastard with a new work, Red Bastard: Lie with me, a wild one man show about lies lovers tell. Performances are Friday and Saturday, June 1 and 2 at 9 p.m. and Sunday, June 3 at 7 p.m.
                                                                              
The spotlight shifts to Chicago’s physical theater scene after opening weekend with Scratch Night, Monday, June 4 at 7 p.m. This evening features a curated collection of new and experimental works by emerging Chicago artists including Centology by Nelia Miller, The Dolphin Show by David Gordezky, Keep Your Guard Up, Smitty Harbinger by Tim Campos, It Takes Two by Chesa Greene, MEMORABILIA by Jean Carlos Claudio, Love Hurts by C:DC Comedy Dance Collective, Bluets by Ellenor Riley-Condit and a new Portmanteau work in progress by Jessica Mondres and Stephanie Diaz with music by Barry Bennett.

The Chicago focus continues Tuesday and Wednesday, June 5 and 6 at 7 p.m. with two evenings showcasing the festival’s featured local artist, Michael Montenegro, the acclaimed artistic director of Evanston’s Theatre Zarko. On stage both nights is Theatre Zarko’s Drunken Half Angel, a unique selection of short solo puppet and mask theater performances created by Montenegro and accompanied by Jude Matthews and fellow musicians.

Two international acts close the festival, starting with Franco-Brazilian Gaël Le Cornec presenting The Other, a disturbing coming-of-age, dark adventure-thriller about a girl refugee overflowing with poetry, strange creatures and stunning imagery. Performances are Thursday through Saturday, June 7-9 at 7 p.m. 

Rotating with The Other at Stage 773 closing weekend is Spain/U.K.-based Little Soldier Productions, aka Patricia Rodriguez and Mercè Ribot, presenting The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote de la Mancha, a bold, physical attempt to re-enact Cervantes’ sweeping, timeless novel, in its entirety. Performances are Thursday through Saturday, June 7-9 at 
9 p.m.

What is Physical Festival Chicago?

Physical theater pursues storytelling through primarily physical and visual means to create original and contemporary work. It embraces a wide variety of styles, approaches and aesthetics including clown, puppetry, mime, mask, dance, theater, vaudeville and circus, stop motion film and poetry, among others.

Physical Festival Chicago, founded in 2014 and curated by Alice da Cunha and Marc Frost, is the city’s annual contemporary, visual and physical theater festival presenting new forms of theater from around the world. 

Following is the full, fifth anniversary line-up for Physical Festival Chicago, in chronological order, June 1-9:


Nobody’s Home Theatre Témoin and Grafted Cede Theatre
From UK via USA
Friday and Saturday, June 1 and 2 at 7 p.m.
Sunday, June 3 at 5 p.m.
60 minutes
For ages 14+ 

Odysseus has come home from the war. His bath is broken, and he can’t fix it. As he stares at his reflection, he begins to find that his journey back to the people he loves might not be as easy at it seems.

Set in a bathroom, Nobody’s Home follows a soldier’s journey through his own mind, as he struggles with the monsters of his past to finally come home. In their signature physical style, Theatre Témoin and Grafted Cede present a unique and striking exploration of PTSD in this gripping, modern retelling of Homer’s Odyssey. “Ingenious and grotesque…an astounding and moving play” wrote Three Weeks Edinburgh. Broadway Baby called Nobody’s Home “a masterpiece…the audience spontaneously laughed, gasped and burst into tears.”

Nobody’s Home was developed in California through a series of collaborative workshops with combat veterans. In addition to public performances, Theatre Témoin tours Nobody’s Home to army barracks, veterans’ organizations and military academies. The company was founded in Toulouse in 2007 by graduates of the London International School of Performing Arts (LISPA) as a forum for creating new works of theatre that are both socially engaged and fun. In 2010 the company moved its base back to London and has since produced projects in the UK, USA, Mexico, Rwanda, India, Israel, and Lebanon. Nobody Home is directed by Theatre Temoin Artistic Director Allison Conant. Learn more at theatretemoin.com. 

Nobody’s Home features UK-based Grafted Cede Theatre’s Co-Artistic Directors, Will Pinchin as Grant, and Dorrie Kinear as Penny. Both are graduates of the London International School of Performing Arts. Visit graftedcede.com to learn more.



Red Bastard: Lie with me
From New York, USA
Friday and Saturday, June 1 and 2 at 9 p.m.
Sunday, June 3 at 7 p.m.
70 minutes
For ages 18+ 




How free is your love? You’re about to find out. Every. Single. One of you. 

Red Bastard is coming to Chicago to expose the lies we tell our lovers and those bastards who made us lie in the first place! A complete Edinburgh Fringe sell-out in 2013, 2014 and 2017, New York’s Red Bastard is ready to charm, disarm, shock and seduce in this brilliant new show. The List named Red Bastard one of the “Top 5 shows in the UK. 5 stars.” The Edinburgh Evening News exclaimed “Not a show. This is an experience.” 

Red Bastard, aka Eric Davis, is an award winning, New York-based performer, writer, director and teacher, and a former performer with Cirque du Soleil. The red beast within, acclaimed by critics and sold-out audiences across the globe, is an infamous buffoon who fuses theater, stand-up, clown and social psychology to create powerful, life-changing comedy. Learn more at redbastard.com.



Scratch Night
Chicago, USA
Monday, June 4 at 7 p.m.
70 minutes

Scratch Night is the festival’s annual, one-night-only showcase of what is brewing in Chicago’s physical theater scene. The evening features a curated collection of new and experimental short works by emerging Chicago artists including Centology by Nelia Miller, The Dolphin Show by David Gordezky, Keep Your Guard Up, Smitty Harbinger by Tim Campos, It Takes Two by Chesa Greene, MEMORABILIA by Jean Carlos Claudio, Love Hurts by C:DC Comedy Dance Collective, Bluets by Ellenor Riley-Condit and a new Portmanteau work in progress by Jessica Mondres and Stephanie Diaz with music by Barry Bennett.



Drunken Half Angel, a selection of short solo pieces attempting, with one wing, to escape gravity 
Chicago, USA
By Theater Zarko, created by Michael Montenegro and accompanied by Jude Matthews and fellow musicians 
Tuesday and Wednesday, June 5 at 6 at 7 p.m.
60 minutes
For ages 11+

Over the past 20 years, Chicago’s Michael Montenegro, this year’s local featured artist, has developed a signature style of puppet and mask theater as both a solo artist and collaborator. 

His work Drunken Half Angel is a unique selection of short solo puppet and mask theater performances ranging from the grotesque, to the comical, and then poignant. Inventive, innovative, unusual, and occasionally profound, Montenegro will be accompanied by the magical and sublime original music of Jude Mathews, Musical Director of Theatre Zarko. 

Montenegro is artistic director of Theatre Zarko which has presented numerous original puppet theater plays such as He Who, Haff (The Man), Sublime Beauty of Hands, Klown Kantos and Iktu Blas. His collaborations include commissions by the Lookingglass Theatre for Mary Zimmerman’s Argonautica, by Next Theatre for The War With the Newts and The Long Christmas Ride Home, and by Writers Theatre for The Puppetmaster of Lodz, which earned a Jeff Award for puppet design. In 2016 he collaborated with Blair Thomas, Greg Allen, Michael Zerang, and Michael Smith on Blair Thomas & Co.’s production of Moby Dick at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, which was restaged at the 2017 International Puppet Festival in Charleville-Mezieres, France in 2017. Montenegro also presented Kick The Klown in the 2017 Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival in collaboration with director Greg Allen. 

Jude Mathews has been Music Director and Composer for Theatre Zarko since 2000, working in collaboration with Michael Montenegro to develop the sound elements of the theatre’s work. She is trained as a classical pianist, playing in chamber music ensembles and Klezmer, Balkan, and barn dance bands. More recently, she studied interdisciplinary arts, songwriting, and composition at Columbia College and Northeastern University. She has composed and performed for Perceptual Motion Dance Company, Access Contemporary Music, and at various interdisciplinary events around the Midwest. 



The Other by Gaël Le Cornec 
From Brazil/France
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, June 7-9 at 7 p.m.
60 minutes
For ages 14+


The Other - Trailer from Gaël Le Cornec on Vimeo.


Unicef estimates 30 million children are fleeing brutal violence, extreme poverty or both today. Gaël Le Cornec’s The Other is a kickass one girl show about surviving war and refuge.

Embark in this disturbing coming-of-age, twisted fairy tale, darkly comic adventure-thriller overflowing with poetry, strange creatures and stunning imagery. Like many others, one night, young Mana from the Red-yellow planet, is forced to catch a shooting star to seek refuge elsewhere. During her journey across the universe, imagination is her best defense. Will she win her struggle for survival? Will Mana ever arrive to her dreamland, the beautiful blue planet? 

Don’t miss this 2016 Edinburgh Fringe Three Weeks Editors Choice Award winner, Edinburgh Fringe Top Show about Refugees and 2017 runner-up for Amnesty International’s Freedom of Expression. Le Cornec is a French/Brazilian actress, director and playwright. Acting credits include 23 stage productions around the world, from one-woman shows about Camille Claudel and Frida Kahlo, to recent productions at London’s Young Vic Theatre and Shakespeare’s Globe. 



The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote de la Mancha by Little Soldier Productions
From Spain/UK
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, June 7-9 at 9 p.m.
80 minutes
For ages 16+ 



Little Soldier Productions boldly re-enacts one of the most accomplished works of fiction ever written with this award winning, critically acclaimed take on Cervantes’ timeless novel.

Two feisty senoritas and a downtrodden Englishman embark on a journey through Spain, accompanied only by a guitarist whose presence makes no sense whatsoever. This is a wildly imaginative and provocative adventure of epic proportions, traversing joy, pain and ultimately, wisdom. Taken with a pinch of salt and a handlebar moustache, Physical Festival fans can look forward to 80 madcap minutes which conclude with the common sentiment, “These guys did not read the book.” 

The Guardian hailed The Ingenious Gentleman…“Cunningly constructed and wonderfully inventive. A show that embodies not just Cervantes’ novel but the spirit of the fringe itself.” Time Out called it a “hilariously dirty adaptation” while Broadwaybaby pegged it “An absolutely riveting and hilarious physical theatre show. A must see.” 

London-based Little Soldier Productions was founded by award-winning performers Patricia Rodriguez and Mercè Ribot, both from Spain. They are clowning, devising and physical theater specialists who have toured extensively in the UK and abroad in the U.S., Mexico, Spain and Poland. Little Soldier is joined on stage by Told By an Idiot associate artist Stephen Harper, with help from their mentor, Spymonkey’s Aitor Basauri. Learn more at littlesoldierproductions.co.uk.



Physical Festival Chicago Workshops: Learn from the world’s leading physical theater artists

In addition to public performances, Physical Festival Chicago will offer five workshops with visiting and local artists during the festival. Chicago artists looking to hone their skills, add to their artistic toolbox and meet fellow physical theater artists in an engaging setting are encouraged to register for: 

Bouffon Workshop with Eric Davis (aka Red Bastard), Sunday, June 3, 10 a.m.- 1 p.m.

Sculpting Space with Dorie Kinnear and Will Pinchin (UK/USA), Monday, June 4, 10 a.m.- 1 p.m.

Dreams, Wishes, Lies with Michael Montenegro, Wednesday, June 6, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Create Your Own Solo with Gaël Le Cornec and Ben Samuels, Thursday, June 7, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Comedy & Clowning with Little Solder Productions, Saturday, June 9 at 10 a.m.-1 p.m. 

Space is limited. Visit physicalfestival.com/workshops for full workshop descriptions and to register. Workshops are $50 each, or look for information on a discounted workshop pass. 


Behind the scenes: Physical Fest Chicago

In 2014, Alice da Cunha and Marc Frost launched the inaugural Physical Festival through the Artistic Associate program at Links Hall. The inspiration for the Festival drew upon their combined experience in London as physical theater students at the London International School for the Performing Arts (LISPA). Moving from London to Chicago, they were inspired to start a new festival to promote a more progressive, fresh and physical approach to theater-making in Chicago.

Five years later, Physical Festival Chicago is following in the tradition of such great European theater festivals as the London International Mime Festival (LIMF) and the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, to name a few. Each year, the Festival seeks to program work that is: 

Contemporary - using cutting-edge, on-the-pulse theatrical forms that are responding to the contemporary moment using contemporary notions of theater.

Visual - elevating the visual aspects of its stories, theater which is occupied with the creation of visual atmospheres and images as much as verbal text.

Physical - pursuing storytelling through primarily physical means, whose aim is to create original stories which start and end with the body as the foundational textual source.

Since 2014, Physical Fest Chicago has presented artists and companies from (alpha list of all countries you’ve ever presented here.)

Co-Artistic Director Alice da Cunha has worked for various festivals. While in London, she was the Marketing Director for CASA (London's Latin American Theatre Festival) and she produced, curated and presented SHORTCUTZ (a weekly short film festival). She was also the Production Assistant for TODOS Festival, an interdisciplinary festival in Lisbon, Portugal. In Chicago she has worked in Hospitality for the Chicago Latino Film Festival for the last two years. da Cunha is also an actress and has performed in many plays and films.

Co-Artistic Director Marc Frost has started two theater companies and one theater festival. At Tufts University, he co-founded Bare Bodkin Theater Company to give student playwrights a platform for their work. In London, he co-created and curated Physical, a scratch night for new pieces of physical theater. Back in Chicago, he founded Theater Unspeakable to create devised, physical theater. 

Physical Festival Chicago is supported by The MacArthur Funds for Arts and Culture at The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and is also supported by Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Events (DCASE), Fractured Atlas, Stage 773 and Theater Unspeakable LLC.

For more information, visit physicalfestival.com.

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