Pages

Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2016

WIN 2 Lisa Loeb Adult Tixs/ Blow Out & No Chip Mani at Pickle's Playroom & Salon (2 winners) and/or SOLD OUT Kids Show Tixs & CD!

WIN 2 Pairs of Lisa Loeb Adult Tickets 
AND 2 No Chip Manicures & Blow Outs From Pickle's Playroom & Salon! 
(2 Winners)
and/or 2 Lisa Loeb SOLD OUT 
Kids Concert Tickets and CD (1 Winner) 


ChiIL Mama's ChiIL Picks List:

Here at ChiIL Mama and ChiIL Live Shows, we've been covering Chicago's CIMMfest for years. It's one of our annual favs, combining two of our passions, music AND film! This year we're partnering up with Lisa Loeb, Pickle's Playroom Salon, and Old Town School of Folk Music (a special stage for CIMMfest) and running 2 great giveaways, one family friendly and one for the big kids (AKA: adults)! 



Disclosure: Thanks to Lisa Loeb, Jennifer Kim, owner at Pickle's Playroom & Salon, and Old Town School of Folk Music for partnering up with ChiIL Mama to offer our readers this fabulous giveaway. As always, all opinions are my own.

ENTER EITHER OR BOTH FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN!
CLICK HERE: 

Both giveaways are open through midnight on Thursday 4/14. Enter early and often. All winners will be chosen randomly via Rafflecopter. All information remains confidential.

Adult Night Out (2 winners):
AND
  • 1 Hair Blow Out & 1 No Chip Manicure provided by Pickle's Playroom & Salon with each pair of tickets ($125 Total Value, appointment will be required) 

Grammy®-nominated singer/songwriter Lisa Loeb was launched into the limelight in 1994 with her platinum-selling Number 1 hit song “Stay (I Missed You)” from the film Reality Bites. Since then, she has enjoyed a successful career encompassing music, film, television, voice-over work, and children’s recordings. 

She will be performing two shows during CIMMfest on Sunday, April 17th, co-produced by PicklesPlayroom.com Radio and the Old Town School of Folk Music: an 11am Kid’s Concert featuring her children’s recordings and a 7pm Evening Concert for her "grown up" fans. Both shows are all ages.
Chris Corsale, a Chicago-based singer/songwriter, Old Town School opens the 7pm evening performance. 


Pickle's Playroom & Salon is a multi-service children's facility in Chicago that recently launched its very own digital family radio station, PicklesPlayroom.com Radio, which is played in-store and can also be accessed worldwide. The station features music for every generation, and serves as a platform for local and national "kindie" musicians. LISTEN NOW!

 Lisa with kids (by Juan Patino)



SOLD OUT KIDS SHOW (1 winner):
    AND


    Lisa's new album (exclusively on Amazon Music), has been winning awards from Kids First! and the American Library Association. She has a number of cute new videos on her YouTube channel. Check 'em out, then enter for your chance to WIN! 

    Lisa Loeb was the first artist to have a number one single in the United States while not signed to a recording contract. Her five studio CDs include her debut album and gold-seller Tails, followed by the Grammy-nominated gold-seller Firecracker. Loeb will perform music selections from her album and book Lisa Loeb's Silly Sing-Along: The Disappointing Pancake and Other Zany Songs and her new release with Amazon Music: Nursery Rhyme Parade!



    CIMMfest 2016
    ChiIL out with ChiIL Mama & ChiIL Live Shows. We're back again for 2016 with comprehensive CIMMfest coverage, news, reviews and interviews before, during and after the fest. So check back like we vote in Chi, IL... early and often. It's rewarding! Check out the full schedule for CIMMfest right HERE. We highly recommend getting your individual tickets and fest passes in advance. 
    We'll be ChiILin' with CIMMfest in Chi, IL from opening night at Music Box and METRO through the last of the fest.






    For the best deal, snag a 4-Day Fest Pass!






    Disclosure: Thanks to Lisa Loeb, Jennifer Kim--owner at Pickle's Playroom & Salon, and Old Town School of Folk Music for partnering up with ChiIL Mama to offer our readers this fabulous giveaway. As always, all opinions are my own.

    Monday, January 5, 2015

    WIN 4 Tickets (up to $152 value) To The Selfish Giant & Full Schedule For Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival JANUARY 14-25, 2015 #ChiPuppetFest #CompleteSchedule

       
    THE CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL PUPPET THEATER FESTIVAL
    JANUARY 14-25, 2015 
    CHICAGOPUPPETFEST.ORG  #ChiPuppetFest


    Act Out:  Chicago Theatre openings, closings, reviews, giveaways, ticket sale dates and more via ChiIL Live Shows. 



    Here at ChiIL Mama & ChiIL Live Shows, we're super stoked about the inaugural Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival! The city's hoping to make it a bi-annual event, and there's magic in beginnings. They're kickin it off in style January 14-25, 2015, with a line-up of top contemporary puppets acts and artists from around the world, the U.S. and Chicago at venues large and small all over the city. Book your tickets in advance to guarantee seats!

    Then ChiIL out with ChiIL Mama & ChiIL Live Shows for the latest arts news, photo & video filled reviews, and giveaways in Chi, IL and beyond. Check back with us like we vote in Chi, IL... early and often.

    WIN 4 Tickets (up to $152 value) To The Selfish Giant

       *CCT family 4-pack giveaway 
    for opening night Fri, 1/23, 6 pm* 


    Chicago Children's Theatre presents
    Blair Thomas & Co.'s production of The Selfish Giant
    Chicago Children's Theatre at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts,
    1016 N. Dearborn St.

    Five festival performances: Friday, January 23-Sunday, January 25 
    Friday, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
    Approximately 50 minutes
    $28 children; $38 adults; $5 off with promo code PUPPET
    (production runs through February 22) 
    All ages

    The Selfish Giant, a musical spectacle created for Chicago Children's Theatre by two Chicago theater icons - Blair Thomas and Michael Smith - is based on Oscar Wilde's classic story about a grumpy giant who forbids children from playing in his garden. After the children are locked out, the trees and flowers refuse to grow and the garden plunges into an eternal winter. Then one morning, the children sneak back into the garden, bringing with them the joyous rebirth of spring.

    Featuring original puppets and music, The Selfish Giant is enormously imaginative, gigantically whimsical, and is sure to thrill children and giants of all ages. The production is one of the festival's closing weekend presentations, but kicks off Chicago Children's Theatre's full run of the The Selfish Giant through February 22. 

    Blair Thomas & Co. (BlairThomas.org) is a national and international touring puppet theater company founded in 2002 by puppeteer and director/designer Blair Thomas.



    Founded to establish Chicago as a center for the advancement of the art of puppetry, the 12-day, city-wide festival will showcase an entertaining and eclectic array of puppet styles from around the world for residents and visitors to experience together. 

    More than 50 different performances are slated, showcasing more than 50 artists and a dozen puppet theater acts from around the globe, presented by more than a dozen top Chicago cultural institutions in partnership with the festival.


    Visit ChicagoPuppetFest.org for information and to book tickets. The official festival hashtag is #ChiPuppetFest. Fan the festival on Facebook and follow the festival on Twitter at @ChiPuppetFest:
     


    COMPLETE SCHEDULE 
    **Following is the latest information about each presentation - in chronological order by starting date and time - including dates, venues, show times, ticket prices and estimated run time.**                            

    Click here to download a handy festival map and calendar in pdf format.





    Free Street Theatre presents

    Stephanie Diaz and Company's Mariposa Nocturna: A Puppet Triptych


    at Free Street Theatre, Pulaski Park Fieldhouse, 1419 W. Blackhawk St., 3rd Floor

    Two performances: Wednesday and Thursday, January 14 and 15 at 6 p.m.

    40 minutes

    $5-$20

    A child's wish to a Guatemalan folk saint for her dying grandmother to have a "happy sleep" results in a bawdy, Japanese shadow-dream. Two bird-headed spinsters suddenly find themselves custodians of a large, glowing egg. A lonely toy carriage embarks upon a jaunty odyssey in search of buried dreams. Employing handcrafted tabletop and shadow puppets, original music, and stop-motion film, and showcasing precise, artful manipulation, Mariposa Nocturna explores loss, longing and rebirth in this gently humorous, darkly beautiful and emotionally resonant new work. 

    The production includes a beautiful, immersive folk-art-inspired community altar and live installation. Audiences are encouraged to bring a token or memento of a loved one to contribute to the show's folk-art inspired community altar.

    Mariposa Nocturna: A Puppet Triptych was conceived and created by Stephanie Díaz, and features original music by Barry Bennett and film by Jessica Mondres.



    Chicago Shakespeare Theater presents

    Blind Summit's The Table


    Upstairs at Chicago Shakespeare Theater on Navy Pier, 800 E. Grand Ave.

    13 performances: Wednesday, January 14-Sunday, January 25

    Tuesday-Friday at 8 p.m.; Saturday at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.

    $20-$35

    70 minutes

    Here at ChiIL Live Shows/ChiIL Mama we caught The Table last year and highly recommend it! Moses, the charismatic cardboard character has heart, soul and depth. The Table is a must see.

    Chicago Shakespeare Theater presents the return engagement Blind Summit's The Table, the widely acclaimed production that played to sold-out houses last fall.



    Come meet Moses, a cantankerous puppet with a cardboard head immersed in an existential crisis on a table.
    Intended to be a theatrical interpretation of the biblical story of Moses, The Table is performed by a grizzled, crotchety old man but the grumpy puppet narrator strays far from the planned storyline.

    Blind Summit (blindsummit.com), London-based theatrical innovators who have created puppetry for Anthony Minghella, Complicité and Danny Boyle's Olympic Opening Ceremony, presents epic puppetry drawing on the Japanese Bunraku style. Hilarious, beautiful and occasionally profound, it is performed completely on the table top with multiple, visible puppeteers who improvise and interact with each other and the audience. Blind Summit's remarkable artists breathe poignant life into the character, revealing something of ourselves in the cardboard, wood and fabric creation onstage.

    As part of the development of a new work, Blind Summit will also showcase a work in progress exclusively for Chicago audiences on Fridays and Saturdays at 9:15 p.m. during the festival.

     






    MCA Stage presents

    Manual Cinema's Mementos Mori

    Museum of Contemporary Art, Edlis Neelsin Theater, 220 E. Chicago Ave.

    Four performances:  Thursday, January 15-Sunday, January 18

    Thursday-Saturday, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, 3 p.m.

    $28; $22 MCA Members; $10 students

    80 minutes



    Chicago's own Manual Cinema is one of our favorites here at ChiIL Live Shows/ChiIL Mama. We totally dug Luna del Rey, and the hairy short they performed with Barrel of Monkeys, That's Weird Chicago.

    This endlessly inventive group of Chicago artists, uses disarmingly simple tools - live music, paper puppets, overhead projectors - to tell transformative stories. Their enchanting works unsettle the boundaries between cinema and theater.



    With Mementos Mori, their new feature-length performance of cinematic shadow puppetry, Manual Cinema offers a beguiling meditation on how digital culture is changing our relationship to death and dying. Mementos Mori weaves together three interrelated stories about death and technology. After she steals a pocket watch from her grandmother's mysterious visitor, five-year-old Melba sees visions of dying birds. A washed-up TV host with heart problems, Mel finds unexpected romance in the arms of a bewitching stranger. And bike messenger, Marie, finds herself playing a life-or-death chess match with a dangerous opponent.

    Shadow puppets interact with live actors in silhouette, while a chamber ensemble and video complete the immersive multimedia experience, imbuing the experience of attending a movie with a live theatrical immediacy.

    Mementos Mori was commissioned by MCA Stage. Manual Cinema (manualcinema.com) was provided an eight-day production residency at the MCA culminating with a Work-In-Progress showing this past August.


     


    Chicago Shakespeare Theater and Richard Jordan Productions present

    Nick Steur in Freeze!

    Chicago Shakespeare Theater on Navy Pier, 800 E. Grand Ave.

    Wednesday, January 14-Sunday, January 25

    Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, January 14-16 at 6 p.m.; Saturday, January 17 at 1:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.; Sunday, January 18 at 1:30 p.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, January 20-22 at 6:30 p.m.; Friday, January 23 at 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.; Saturday, January 24 at 1:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.; Sunday, January 25 at 1:30 p.m.

    $10-$15

    30 minutes



    Creator and performer Nick Steur (NickSteur.com) welcomes audiences as he artfully balances stones without glue or other manipulations.

    Chicago Shakespeare Theater presents the U.S. premiere of this one-of-a-kind live performance event from The Netherlands. Winner of the Edinburgh Fringe First award in 2013, Freeze! blurs the line between performer and audience as all collectively experience the unexplainable harmony that comes from balance and focus. 

    The Scotsman declared, "occasionally a show appears that has a poise, an authority, an inner strength so profound that it takes a rushing, hyperactive audience and moves it into a completely different place...slowing its heartbeats, making it pause, changing the way it breathes and sees. Nick Steur's remarkable performance is one of those rare and beautiful shows."

     

     

    The Center for Community Arts Partnerships (CCAP) at Columbia College Chicago presents

    Sandglass Theater's D-Generation: An Exaltation of Larks

    The Dance Center of Columbia College, 1306 S. Michigan Ave.

    Two performances: Friday and Saturday, January 16 and 17, 7 p.m.

    1 hour 10 minutes

    $20

    A piece about play, joy, and communication. A piece about dementia. From playful story circles to dark private terror, from lyrical inner visions to demanding confrontations, from the reflections of caregivers to the fragmented memories of residents of care facilities, D-Generation evokes a complex world of people living with dementia.

    D-Generation: An Exaltation of Larks is a full-length theater piece based on stories written collaboratively by groups of people with late-stage dementia. The work is performed by three puppeteers (the caregivers) and five puppets (the residents of a care-facility). Set to a compelling original score and striking animated video segments, D-Generation takes us into a world that is all too much a part of our lives.

    The collected stories were gathered by performers at Vermont's Sandglass Theater (sandglasstheater.org) during 20 visits to care facilities, during which circles of people with dementia were guided through a collective story-making method called Timeslips. These stories reveal a humor, and playfulness, as well as the dark reality of the disease. They stand on their own as dramatic material from a remarkable source.






    The Field Museum presents

    Dozin' with the Dinos

    The Field Museum, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr.

    Friday, January 16, 5:30 p.m. to Saturday, January 17, 9 a.m.

    $55-$88; Pre-registration required. No tickets sold at the door.

    For families with children 6 to 12. Adult-only parties are not permitted. 
    All ages

    Spend the night at The Field Museum - Sue the T. rex is having a special, puppetry-filled sleepover! Bring the family for puppet shows, activities and self-guided tours, then spread your sleeping bag amidst some of the most popular exhibitions. Enjoy a night of puppetry and fun you'll never forget at Chicago's Field Museum (fieldmuseum.org), one of the largest natural history museums in the world.  





    The Field Museum presents
    Open Mic Puppets
    Hosted by Jabberwocky Marionettes
    The Field Museum, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr.
    Saturday, January 17, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. 
    General Admission tickets ($13-$18) includes Open Mic Puppets program
    All ages

    Chicago's Jabberwocky Marionettes hosts a startling array of area puppeteers-young and old, professional and amateur, solo and ensemble-who perform family-focused puppet shows throughout the day on one of two stages at The Field Museum. 

    Puppeteers will include Adventure Sandwich, Clothespin Puppets, Sea Beast Puppet Company, Puppetfolk Productions!, Matteson Public Library Puppet Pals and Mother Goose and her Ventriloquist Puppets. Join the Jabberwocky Marionettes at the end of the day as they lead visitors on a spectacular puppet-filled parade throughout the museum! Check fieldmuseum.org for information.









    The Field Museum presents

    Chinese Theater Works' Rich in Tradition - Chinese Shadow Puppets

    The Field Museum, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr.

    One performance: Saturday, January 17, 3 p.m.

    50 minutes

    Free with General Admission ticket ($13-$18) 
    All Ages


    Street theaters and festivals in China featuring shadow puppets can be traced back for hundreds of years. The stories within these traditional performances are. Don't miss a unique opportunity to see this beautiful tradition come to life in a shadow puppetry performance by renowned New York-based Chinese Theatre Works (CTW). Featured works will take inspiration from The Field Museum's own shadow puppet collection and will include famous stories like Monkey King and Journey to the West, which is still performed today.

    Chinese Theatre Works (ChineseTheatreWorks.org) was created in 2001 out of the merger of two non-profit institutions with long histories of bringing traditional and innovative, contemporary Chinese performing arts to local New York City, national and international audiences - The Gold Mountain Institute for Traditional Shadow Theater (GMI) and Chinese Theatre Workshop.



    CTW has won the highest honor in U.S. puppetry, a Citation of Excellence from UNIMA-USA, for their show Toy Theater Peony Pavilion. The company has also been featured at many festivals and conferences around the world, including Puppet Power in Calgary, Canada; the DALA Festival (Seoul, South Korea); Taipei Children's Theater Association's Festival (Taiwan); and The Shanghai First International Puppet Festival.

     

     

    The Art Institute of Chicago presents

    Family Festival: Puppets!

    Art Institute of Chicago, Ryan Education Center, Modern Wing entrance,

    159 E. Monroe St.


    Saturday, January 17, 10:30 a.m. - 3 p.m.

    See performances of Bullooney Puppetworks' Rikki Tikki Tavi at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.

    Interactive family gallery tours at 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.*

    Free
    All Ages


    Explore the world of puppets at a drop-in festival for all ages.Visit Puppets!, an interactive installation in the Ryan Education Center where you can create a story and act it out with hand-made puppets inspired by artwork in the museum's collection and the special exhibit Temptation: The Demons of James Ensor. Create your own puppets in a workshop and perform a show for your family and friends. Enjoy the museum on an interactive gallery tour at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m.

    Don't miss Bullooney Puppetworks' adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's classic short story Rikki Tikki Tavi, told using hand puppets, rod puppets and masks within a lush landscape of leaves, trees and original music. Performances are at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., but space is limited. Free tickets will be distributed in the Ryan Education Center an hour prior to each performance.

    Note:  In addition to Saturday's Family Festival, Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival-goers are encouraged to stop by the Puppets! exhibition anytime during the festival. Puppets! debuts in the Art Institute of Chicago's Ryan Education Center on December 6, and is open daily from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Thursday nights until 8 p.m.) Admission is free.

    *Proof of museum admission or an Art Institute member card is required for adults and children age 14 and over.

     

    Chicago Humanities Festival and Adventure Stage Chicago co-present

    Laurent Bigot in Le Petit Cirque (The Little Circus)

    Adventure Stage Chicago, Vittum Theater, 1012 N. Noble St.

    Four performances: Saturday and Sunday, January 17 and 18, 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.

    45 minutes

    $20


    Within a circus-like, table-top installation, electroacoustic musician Laurent Bigot sets various objects in motion. A "circus of sound" and a theater of objects, Le Petit Cirque is made from odds and ends, salvaged material and cheap gadgets. Action nourishes sound, and sound gives new meaning to action, via improvisation and the chance of mechanics. 

    The piece explores two distinct and interacting concepts. The first is how stereotypical circus imagery alters one's perception of the performance's musical aspect. The second, and more abstract, is how sound allows the spectator to see these theatrical situations from a different perspective. The spectator skips from one point of view to another, engaging ears, eyes, skin, imagination, and thought associations.

    A composer, sound artist, and musician based in Grenoble, France, Laurent Bigot develops his ideas through his own explorations or through collaboration with musicians, dancers, filmmakers, writers, actors, and visual artists. As a saxophonist, he plays with Musicabrass, an open-air orchestra that engages with the environment. As an electroacoustician and a tinkerer, he composes in the studio and plays on stage, using various analog devices, with a fondness for live sound creation. Visit oisiveraie.com/petit_cirque/cirque/cirque_spectacle_eng.htm

    Supported in part by the Cultural Service at the Consulate General of France in Chicago.

                                                                   



    Links Hall presents

    Nasty, Brutish & Short Presents...

    Curated by Links Hall Artistic Associates Taylor Bibat and Mike Oleon

    Links Hall, 3111 N. Western Ave.

    Seven performances: Saturday, January 17-Saturday, January 24

    Run times vary

    $8-$15; $30 NASTYPASS

    Links Hall presents eight days of short and medium works of puppetry highlighting Chicago's rich experimental puppet scene. 

    Titled Nasty, Brutish & Short Presents... is a buffet of the dark and twisty, humorous, tender and everything in between. Ranging from a ludicrous and sublime toy theater adaptation of Beowulf with 100 + Vikings to  trick marionettes and their circus act encompassing tight rope walking and roller skating. 

    The series culminates Saturday, January 24 with the Late Night International Puppet Slam featuring riskier short-form work from the festival's visiting artists from around the world and a closing party at Constellation Bar.


    This fest within the fest expands on Nasty, Brutish & Short (NBS), the wildly popular quarterly cabaret of contemporary puppetry, supporting new works by some of Chicago's most innovative puppeteers since 2011 at Links Hall. 

    Jammed packed with local puppet heroes and brilliant newcomers (*recommended for adults only): 


    Saturday, January 17, 1 p.m.  
    Snorf! by Noah Ginex Puppet Company
    All ages 

    Snorf! (The Saturday Afternoon Monster and Piggie/Comedy Variety Show) is an all-ages monthly variety show. Featuring puppets from the Jeff Award nominated Noah Ginex Puppet Company (noahginex.com), Snorf! has sketches, improvised scenes, songs and a special guest TBA.

     

    Sunday, January 18, 1 p.m.  
    Stars on Strings by Dave Herzog's Marionettes/The Dunworth Puppets 
    All ages 


    This features beautifully hand crafted trick marionettes, including marionettes that roller skate, perform on the tight rope and trapeze, transform, juggle, and much more in the traditional cabaret style with the puppeteers in full view of the audience.



    Dave Herzog (herzogmarionettes.com) has been a puppet artist for more than 40 years and is Great Lakes Regional Director of the Puppeteers of America. Marc Dunworth grew up with a father as a magician, created his own degree in puppetry at Columbia College Chicago, has worked in Chicago and abroad, and formed The Dunworth Puppets (dunworthpuppets.com) in 2014.





    Sunday, January 18, 7:30 p.m.  
    Nasty, Brutish & Short: A Puppet Cabaret*
    featuring VonOrthal Puppets, Sea Beast Puppet Company, Jessica Simon and Hearts and Brains

    Using hand, rod and Bunraku puppets, shadow play and music, A White Heron is VonOrthal Puppets' (vonorthalpuppets.com) interpretation of the classic short story by Sarah Orne Jewett exploring the relationship between society and nature through the experience of a little country girl, Sylvia.

    Sea Beast Puppet Company (seabeastpuppetry.com) presents Best Day Ever. It's a beautiful day when Tom leaves the dock for a relaxing day of sailing. Hopefully it stays that way in this shadow puppet comedy. In Mermaids, Sam Clam's Oyster bar is proud to present the one...the only...the incomparable...Miss Sandy Bottoms. And in Another Man's Treasure, technology and life meet face to face in this table top short about making do with what you have and finding what you need.

    Jessica Simon presents Ruby and Charlie, a work-in-progress presentation of a glimpse into the lives of two people falling in and out of love, inspired by the music of Ray Charles.

    Hearts and Brains presents Beowulf vs. Grendel (A 25-minute toy theater cavalcade of wonder), a mead-soaked, toy theater exploration of the classic epic poem Beowulf.  With a cast of three humans and over a hundred Vikings, Hearts and Brains, also known as Lacy Katherine Campbell, takes on what it means to be a hero or a monster in a show that is visually as sublime as it is ludicrous. Highly optional sing-along included.


    Monday, January 19, 7:30 p.m
    Nasty, Brutish & Short: A Puppet Cabaret*
    featuring VonOrthal Puppets, Sea Beast Puppet Company, Jessica Simon and Hearts and Brains
    See previous description



    Tuesday, January 20, 7:30 p.m.  
    Drunken Half-Angel by Michael Montenegro

    A presentation accompanied by live music of several new puppet theatre pieces by Evanston puppet artist and collaborator Michael Montenegro, founder of Theatre Zarko: Puppet Symbolist Theatre (theatrezarko.com).


     
       
    Wednesday, January 21, 7:30 p.m.  
    Nasty, Brutish & Short: A Puppet Cabaret*
    featuring Joe Mazza, Rough House, Vanessa Valliere and Meredith Miller

    Joe Mazza (joemazza.org) presents The Hubrist, a grandiloquent farce of tiny proportion, and a continuation of the earlier epic picaresque, The Hyperbolist.

    Rough House Theater ( roughhousetheater.com) presents And Dream of Teeth, employing the highest technologies available to them - namely glue, paper, flashlights and fabric - to dive into the psyche of the Dreamer.

    Chicago performer, deviser, clown and Mucca Pazza nerd-cheerleader Vanessa Valliere presents Nice Try, about a sweet song, a high wire circus snail, and maybe a tiny bit of murder, and Your Best Self, the story of a woman who attends a leadership conference where she surprises herself by dreaming all of her biggest dreams. Love, food, and...sex?

    Chicago-based performance artist and cabaret singer Meredith Miller (meredithjmiller.com) presents Cabaret Interludes,employing her unique fusion of costumes and puppetry to tell three short tales of love, seduction, and heartbreak.





    Thursday, January 22, 7:30 p.m.
    Nasty, Brutish & Short: A Puppet Cabaret* 
    featuring Joe Mazza, Rough House, Vanessa Valliere and Meredith Miller
    See previous description


    Friday, January 23, 7:30 p.m.  
    Drunken Half-Angel by Michael Montenegro
    See previous description

     




    Saturday, January 24, 1 p.m.   
    The Joshua Show 
    All ages

    When Mr. Nicholas, the sock puppet, makes an unnerving self-discovery that causes him to spiral down a path of loneliness and despair, his soul mate Joshua teaches him to celebrate his differences in this show full of songs, comedy, whimsy, abundant joy, and just a smattering of tap dancing. 

    Don't miss this chance to see the show awarded "Best Performance" and "Audience Favorite" at the 2013 Puppeteers of America's National Festival. Described by the Boston Globe as "a modern day Mr. Rogers with hipster appeal," Joshua Holden (TheAmbassadorOfJoy.com) is an award winning puppeteer actor and joy-maker based in NYC, recently seen on the Broadway national tour of Avenue Q.


    Saturday, January 24, 10:30 p.m.  
    Late Night International Puppet Slam*

    The Late Night International Puppet Slam is an opportunity for puppeteers presenting at other Festival venues to try out riskier, short-form work for an audience who may or may not be drinking beer. The Late Night Slam will be followed by a closing party at Constellation Bar.


     

    The Neo-Futurists present

    Modern Toy Theatre of David Commander

    at The Neo-Futurists, 5153 N Ashland Ave.

    Three performances: Thursday, January 22-Saturday, January 24, 7:30 p.m.

    60 minutes

    $10

    The Neo-Futurists present Modern Toy Theatre of David Commander. The first piece by this New York-based artist is named In Flight, which mocks the market of mis-focusing information and our potential for mass apathy, and questions what it is as a species that allows us to look the other way. The story begins on an airplane that is crashing. We join the passengers of the doomed vessel as the crew saturates them with fast-paced, numbing entertainment and advertising in an attempt to distract them from their imminent doom. We watch the crew use commercials for Sky Mall products, and a talk show that is a demonic blend of 'Oprah' and 'Ellen' to cull the passengers into being distracted from their fate in flames that is only moments away.

    Next, Commander moves to the miniature sets of Sacrament Burger, which focuses on our disconnection from the function and value of food and how that detachment contributes to the waste of nearly half of all food produced globally. It also explores the inherent need to ritualize the act of eating and how this ceremony is performed within restaurant culture.

    For the last 14 years David Commander (davidcommander.org) has been a member of Big Art Group, a NYC theater company dedicated to building culturally transgressive and challenging new works through using the language of media and blended states of performance. In addition, David has written, directed and performed in his own works: PIGGY 1.5 (2006 NYC International Fringe Festival), Machine World Gospel (2007 Philadelphia Fringe Festival), and since 2011 he has developed and performed several modern toy theater works in New York, Philadelphia, Minneapolis and The TBA Festival in Portland, Oregon.

      

     

    MCA Stage presents

    Stan's Cafe's The Cardinals

    Museum of Contemporary Art, Edlis Neelson Theater, 220 E. Chicago Ave.

    Three performances: Thursday, January 22-Saturday, January 24, 7:30 p.m.

    $28; $22 museum members; $10 students


    In this thought-provoking, witty, and hugely entertaining show, three Cardinals in crimson robes are on an evangelical mission. They're touring a puppet show to broaden knowledge of the Bible, undeterred by the loss of their puppets they take to the miniature stage themselves amid the two dimensional scenery and act their roles with touching deadpan sincerity. Conflicts ebb and flow as a young female Muslim stage manager supports their efforts and the show races through scenes from the Cardinals' take on major Bible stories from creation to the crucifixion and on to the crusades before arriving in the present-day Middle East.

    From the British company Stan's Cafe, The Cardinals draws humor from its engaging performances and ingenious staging, which expose frenetic backstage efforts to create beautiful onstage action. Almost wordless, with witty and ingenious practical effects, which allow miracles to be performed on stage, the show looks at how religion can frame our worldview. Though playful, almost childlike throughout, The Cardinals is underpinned with a steely rigor that is exposed in the show's final shocking 'Revelation'.

    While theater often asks its audiences to suspend their disbelief, the cardinals ask them simply to believe. "Our show does not seek to take sides in any religious debate. Instead we hope to prompt people to consider afresh their relationship to religious faith," say the artists from Stan's Cafe (stanscafe.co.uk).


      

    Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, as part of its OnEdge performance series, presents

    Daniel Barrow in The Thief of Mirrors

    Storefront Theater, 66 E. Randolph St.

    Two performances: Thursday and Friday, January 22 and 23, 7:30 p.m.

    1 hour

    Free, no reservations required

    Since the early 90s, Daniel Barrow has developed a unique style of "manual" animation, layering and manipulating his intricate drawings on overhead projectors. 

    With The Thief of Mirrors, Barrow returns to Chicago with a world premiere, the story of a jewel thief who wears the mask of a sad clown. His deep, emotive eyes charge the mask with supernatural powers-so captivating is his expression that his gaze can permanently inscribe his visage in the glass. The Thief of Mirrors pays homage to the classic archetype of the "Kissing Bandit"- the cat burglar who creeps into women's homes, collects their jewelry, and kisses them in their sleep, leaving them both violated and charmed. Exploring forgotten sexual mores and kitschy characters, Barrow walks the razor edge of irony, challenging systems of class and control in our culture.

    Winnipeg-born, Montreal-based artist Daniel Barrow (DanielBarrow.com) has exhibited widely in Canada and abroad. He has performed at The Walker Art Center (Minneapolis), PS1 Contemporary Art Center (New York), The Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), The International Film Festival Rotterdam, The Portland Institute for Contemporary Art's TBA festival, and the British Film Institute's London Film Festival. Barrow is the winner of the 2010 Sobey Art Award - Canada's largest prize for young Canadian artists - and the 2013 Glenfiddich Artist-In-Residence Prize.

     

     WIN 4 Tickets To The Selfish Giant
    Enter HERE



    Chicago Children's Theatre presents

    Blair Thomas & Co.'s production of The Selfish Giant

    Chicago Children's Theatre at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts,

    1016 N. Dearborn St.


    Five festival performances: Friday, January 23-Sunday, January 25

    Friday, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

    Approximately 50 minutes

    $28 children; $38 adults; $5 off with promo code PUPPET
    (production runs through February 22) 
    All ages

    The Selfish Giant, a musical spectacle created for Chicago Children's Theatre by two Chicago theater icons - Blair Thomas and Michael Smith - is based on Oscar Wilde's classic story about a grumpy giant who forbids children from playing in his garden. After the children are locked out, the trees and flowers refuse to grow and the garden plunges into an eternal winter. Then one morning, the children sneak back into the garden, bringing with them the joyous rebirth of spring.

    Featuring original puppets and music, The Selfish Giant is enormously imaginative, gigantically whimsical, and is sure to thrill children and giants of all ages. The production is one of the festival's closing weekend presentations, but kicks off Chicago Children's Theatre's full run of the The Selfish Giant through February 22. 

    Blair Thomas & Co. (BlairThomas.org) is a national and international touring puppet theater company founded in 2002 by puppeteer and director/designer Blair Thomas.


     

    The University of Chicago's Theater and Performance Studies program presents

    In The Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre's Mortal City

    Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th St. - Theater West
    Two performances: Friday, January 23 at 7 p.m.; Saturday, January 24 at 9 p.m.
    $15 general public; $5 students

    Inspired by singer-songwriter Dar William's song of the same title, Mortal City uses music and visual imagery to puppeteer a poem of a city. Set during an ice storm at night, Mortal City explores creating and finding the warm pulse of the city in its layered soundscape, fragile infrastructure, simple light, and periwinkle winter skies. 

    In the Heart of the Beast Theatre (hobt.org), based in Minneapolis, has been at the vanguard of theater melding performance with the rich history of puppetry from its shamanistic roots and lively street theater traditions to the imaginative performance language found in experimental theater. Rooted in an aspect of ceremony and celebration, whether it be narrative, episodic, or the award winning annual MayDay Parade and Festival, HOBT invites audiences to a theater of wonder that gives voice to under-represented communities and perspectives and draws together diverse communities to address local and global issues and celebrate our shared humanity. 


     

    The University of Chicago's Theater and Performance Studies program presents In The Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre's Cartooon

    Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th St. - Theater East
    Two performances: Friday, January 23 at 9 p.m.; Saturday, January 24 at 7 p.m.
    $15 general public; $5 students

    A live-action, 3D cartoon performed by a cast of 15, Cartooon introduces audiences to the fictional animated program Tummy da Talking Turtle Sucks on Piano Keys, created by Earl Dives and Gerry 'Crackjaw' Sanders while sharpening their lumberjack axes in the fall of 1940. 

    Knowing nothing about animation, children, or public decency, the two cobbled together obscure Bible passages about dynamite and ran them over a flip book of crude drawings of Gerry's penis talking that they then put teeth on to resemble a crocodile. One episode of the show was created. It was a failure. This is that episode.


     

    The University of Chicago's Theater and Performance Studies program presents FlipFlap Productions' The Temp
    Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th St. - Performance Lab (501)
    Two performances: Friday, January 23-Saturday, January 24, 7:30 pm
    60 minutes
    $15 general public; $5 students

    Presented by The University of Chicago's Theater and Performance Studies program, The Temp is a darkly comic tale exploring the life of an over-age temp who wants to be anything else. Told with music, puppets, and video, The Temp confronts demons, strangers, and the eternal search for the bathroom. This piece was developed in part through a residency with the Chicago Performance Lab.

    FlipFlap Productions (Thetempthetempthetemp.tumblr.com) is home to a collective of comedy writers and musicians who create story-driven theater focused on original expression of modern stories. Founded in 2013 with a goal of stretching the boundaries of what makes a comedy show, FlipFlap explores people and places that aren't normally seen on stage in a weirdly natural, weirdly believable, weirdly weird way.

     

     

    The University of Chicago's Theater and Performance Studies program and the Logan Center for the Arts present Logan Center Family Saturday Festival: Puppets!

    Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th St.
    Saturday, January 24, Noon to 5 p.m.
    $5; $20 for families of 5 or more
    All ages   

    The Logan Center's monthly family series will draw inspiration from the world's puppet and mask traditions with a family-friendly performance of Heart of the Beast's Cartooon at 2 p.m., plus drop-in-activities, a photo booth, a "Make and Take" puppet workshop, and a "Puppet Zoo" with House Theatre, FlipFlap Productions, Heart of the Beast, Adventure Stage and more.

     


    Volkenburg Puppetry Symposium

    Saturday January 24, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 220 E Chicago Ave.

    Free and open to the public

    This international symposium brings together artists from Manual Cinema, Blind Summit, Stan's Cafe and others with invited scholars from diverse fields to investigate the meaning, vitality and relevance of contemporary puppetry.  At once cutting to the heart of puppetry and seeking its broadest significance, participants will address questions such as:  How do we attach identity to a face? How do we perceive realness and fakeness?  Where do we find meaning in materiality?



    Conceived and organized by Blair Thomas (Artistic Director, Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival), Leslie Danzig (Curator, Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry) and Sarah Fornace (Co-Artistic Director, Manual Cinema), this day-long event will be of interest to artists and thinkers from any discipline with an interest in the creative pursuit of inquiry and the tension between ideas and practice.



    Presented by the Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry in partnership with the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. Check chicagopuppetfest.org/symposium for more details on participants, schedule for the day and registration information.


    FESTIVAL PRESENTERS
    The new Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival is intended to be a bi-annual event to establish Chicago as a prominent center for the art of puppetry practices by artists in the world today. Led by Artistic Director Blair Thomas, the festival builds on the city's hunger for high quality international theater work, while at the same time harnessing the spirit of collaboration with established local presenters: 

    FESTIVAL SPONSORS
    The inaugural festival is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, the Reva & David Logan Family Foundation, the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events and the Jentes Family Foundation, with additional in-kind support from the League of Chicago Theatres.

     

    OFFICIAL HOTEL 
    The Official Hotel of the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival - the Warwick Allerton Hotel Chicago, 701 N. Michigan Ave. in downtown Chicago - is pleased to offer festival attendees and their guests a discounted rate of $82 per night (plus tax). To secure this discount, call toll free, (877) 701-8111, call the Warwick Allerton directly at (312) 440-1500, or enter discount code PUPPT11515 online at warwickhotels.com/allerton-hotel-chicago/


    Check back with ChiIL Mama and ChiIL Live Shows like we vote in Chi, IL... early and often! We have loads of original content, photo and video filled reviews and interviews, giveaways, and more.

    Follow us on social media here:





    Google Analytics