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Monday, March 17, 2025

Goodman Theatre Presents The World Premiere of BUST APRIL 19 – MAY 18, 2025

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar 

World Premiere of 

BUST 

BY PULITZER PRIZE FINALIST ZORA HOWARD 

co-produced with Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre 

COMES TO CHICAGO, APPEARS ON STAGE APRIL 19 – MAY 18, 2025

**LILEANA BLAIN-CRUZ'S CAST FEATURES MARK BEDARD, CECIL BLUTCHER, CAROLINE CLAY, BERNARD GILBERT, CAITLIN HARGRAVES, JORGE LUNA, VICTORIA OMOREGIE, KEITH RANDOLPH SMITH, RAYMOND ANTHONY THOMAS, IVAN CECIL WALKS AND RENIKA WILLIAMS-BLUTCHER**

***THE WORLD-PREMIERE CO-PRODUCTION WITH ALLIANCE THEATRE IS PRODUCED IN ASSOCIATION WITH SONIA FRIEDMAN PRODUCTIONS, KHALIAH NEAL AND THOMAS SWAYNE*** 


Here at ChiIL Live Shows, we're so excited to catch BUST. This laugh-out-loud new drama, BUST is directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz and penned by Pulitzer Prize finalist, playwright Zora Howard! Our son, Dugan is on run crew again for this show, as he was for Goodman's Christmas Carol this past season, so  my husband and I will be there for opening night on April 28th. Check back soon after for my full review at ChiILLiveShows.com. 

Hell isn’t the only thing that breaks loose in BUST. A finalist for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize and co-produced with Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre and produced in association with Sonia Friedman Productions, Khaliah Neal and Thomas Swayne, the cast for the world-premiere production features Mark Bedard, Cecil Blutcher, Caroline Clay, Bernard Gilbert, Caitlin Hargraves, Jorge Luna, Victoria Omoregie, Keith Randolph Smith, Raymond Anthony Thomas, Ivan Cecil Walks and Renika Williams-Blutcher. 

BUST appears April 19 – May 18 (opening night is April 28 at 7pm). Tickets ($25 - $85; subject to change) are available at GoodmanTheatre.org/Bust or by phone at 312.443.3800. Goodman Theatre is grateful for the support of Allstate (Major Corporate Sponsor), the BOLD Theater’s Women’s Leadership Circle, an initiative of the Helen Gurley Brown Foundation (BOLD Ventures Grant), Laurents/Hatcher Foundation (Theater Development Grant), WBEZ Chicago (Media Sponsor) and The Elizabeth Morse Charitable Trust (Lead Funder of IDEAA Programming).

“BUST is absolutely unlike anything I’ve ever seen on a stage before. In one sit-down at the theater, this thrilling new play ranges from high comedy to transcendent drama—beginning in ways that feel familiar and moving to whole new worlds. Zora Howard’s masterful writing is in gifted hands with Lileana Blain-Cruz, one of the most sought-after directors working today,” said Artistic Director Susan V. Booth.

In BUST, Retta and Reggie are enjoying their usual evening on the porch when a longtime neighbor is pulled over by the police just before turning into his driveway. Everything goes as expected—until the unexpected happens. Humor, suspense and surrealism converge in this gripping exploration of what it costs to be Black and free.

"At its core, BUST is a meditation on rage," said playwright Zora Howard. "It asks, 'What if Black people could use the rage that we carry, with which we are in such constant and intimate relationship, for our own constructive and collective gain?' It is an offering—an invitation for all of us to consider how we might harness our rage, what we can move with it.”

Added Director Lileana Blain-Cruz, “There’s a real invitation at the center of this play to experience something new, to be part of a radical act of imagination. In BUST, the audience has the opportunity to recognize themselves in these characters. We get to simultaneously live inside their humanity and the absurdity of what it means to be alive in the world today.” 

The BUST cast features Mark Bedard (TV/HBO Max: The Gilded Age) as Tomlin/Jack, Cecil Blutcher (TV/Paramount+: The Game, Signature Theatre Co.: The Hot Wing King) as Trent, Renika Williams-Blutcher (Starz: P-Valley) as Krystal, Caroline Stefanie Clay (Broadway: The Little Foxes and Doubt) as Retta, Bernard Gilbert (TV/Showtime: The Chi, Goodman Theatre: How to Catch Creation) as Zeke, Caitlin Hargraves (Alliance Theatre: A Christmas Carol, TV/HBO Max: Mi Casa) as Ms. Pinto, Jorge Luna (TV/Netflix: Zero Day) as Ramirez, Victoria Omoregie (Alliance Theatre: Fat Ham, The Huntington Theatre: John Proctor is the Villain) as Paige, Keith Randolph Smith (Film: Malcolm X, Alliance Theatre: God of Carnage, National Theatre, London: Jitney) as Mr. Woods, Ray Anthony Thomas (Film: American Fiction, The Harbinger and Pariah) as Reggie, and Ivan Cecil Walks (The Huntington Theatre: K-I-S-S-I-N-G) as Boobie. Understudies include Jodi Gage, Cory Hardin, Gabrielle Lott-Rogers, Vernon Mina, Patrick Newson, Jr., Joseph Primes and Jazzy Rush.

Zora Howard (Playwright) is a Harlem-bred writer and director. Plays include STEW (2021 Pulitzer Prize Finalist; P73 Productions), THE MASTER’S TOOLS (Wiener Festwochen; WTF), HANG TIME (The Flea), THE MOTIONS, and GOOD FAITH. Her work has been developed at Ojai Playwrights Conference, Stillwright, Mercury Store, and Cape Cod Theatre Project, among others. In 2020, her feature film Premature, which she co-wrote with director Rashaad Ernesto Green, opened in theaters following its world premiere at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival. Howard is a Lilly Award and Helen Merrill Award recipient, a former MTC Judith Champion Fellow and Lark Van Lier New Voices Fellow and alumna of the P73 I-73 Writers Group. She is currently under commission from Seattle Rep and Chautauqua Theatre Company. zoramakes.com.

Lileana Blain-Cruz is a director from New York City and Miami. She is the recipient of the Drama League’s 2022 Founders Award for Excellence in Directing and is currently the resident director of Lincoln Center Theater. Blain-Cruz was named a 2021 Doris Duke Artist, a 2020 Lincoln Center Emerging Artist, and a 2018 United States Artists Fellow. Recent projects include: El Niño (Metropolitan Opera); The Skin of Our Teeth (Lincoln Center, Tony nomination); Stranger Love (LA Philharmonic); Flex (Lincoln Center, Audelco Award Nomination); Create Dangerously (Miami New Drama); White Girl in Danger (Vineyard / Second Stage); The Listeners (Opera Norway); Dreaming Zenzile (NYTW/National Black Theatre); Marys Seacole (LCT3, Obie Award); Wayne Shorter and esperanza spalding’s …(Iphigenia) (MASS MoCA, Arts Emerson, The Kennedy Center); Hansel and Gretel (a film for Houston Grand Opera); Afrofemononomy (PSNY); Anatomy of a Suicide (Atlantic Theater Company); Fefu and Her Friends (TFANA); Girls (Yale Rep.); Faust (Opera Omaha); Fabulation, Or the Reeducation of Undine (Signature Theatre); Thunderbodies and Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again. (Soho Rep.); The House That Will Not Stand and Red Speedo (New York Theatre Workshop); Water by the Spoonful (Mark Taper Forum/CTG); Pipeline (Lincoln Center); The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World AKA The Negro Book of the Dead (Signature Theatre, Obie Award); Henry IV, Part One and Much Ado About Nothing (Oregon Shakespeare Festival); The Bluest Eye (The Guthrie); War (LCT3/Lincoln Center Theater and Yale Rep.); Salome (JACK); Hollow Roots (Under the Radar Festival at The Public Theater). Upcoming: Purple Rain. 


Full Company of BUST (in alphabetical order)

By Zora Howard

Directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz


Mark Bedard…Tomlin/Jack

Cecil Butcher…Trent

Caroline Clay…Retta

Bernard Gilbert…Zeke

Caitlin Hargraves…Ms. Pinto/Newscaster

Jorge Luna…Ramirez

Victoria Omoregie…Paige

Keith Randolph Smith…Mr. Woods

Raymond Anthony Thomas…Reggie

Ivan Cecil Walks…Boobie

Renika Williams-Blutcher…Krystal

Understudies for this production include Jodi Gage, Cory Hardin, Gabrielle Lott-Rogers, Vernon Mina, Patrick Newson, Jr., Joseph Primes and Jazzy Rush.


Creative Team

Associate Director…Malkia Stampley|

Set Designer…Matthew Saunders

Costume Designer…Dominique Fawn Hill

Lighting Designer…Yi Zhao

Associate Lighting Designer…Jonah Bobilin

Sound Designer…Mikaal Sulaiman

Ethnomusicologist…DJ Reborn

Special Effects Designer...Jeremy Chernick

Fight Choreographer...Rocio Mendez

Casting is by Jody Feldman, CSA and Lauren Port, CSA. shiku thuo is the Production Stage Manager.


ENHANCED AND ACCESSIBLE PERFORMANCES AT GOODMAN THEATRE

ASL-Interpreted Performance: Friday, May 9 at 7:30pm – Professional ASL interpreter signs the action/text as played.

Touch Tour* and Audio-Described Performance: Saturday, May 10, 12:30pm Touch Tour; 2pm performance – The action/text is audibly enhanced for patrons via headset.

Spanish-Subtitled Performance: Saturday, May 10 at 7:30pm – An LED sign presents Spanish-translated dialogue in sync with the performance.

Open-Captioned Performance: Sunday, May 11 at 2pm – An LED sign presents dialogue in sync with the performance.

Visit Goodmantheatre.org/Access for more information about Goodman Theatre’s accessibility efforts.

ABOUT ALLIANCE THEATRE

Founded in 1968, Alliance Theatre is the leading producing theater in the Southeast, reaching more than 165,000 patrons annually. The Alliance is led by Jennings Hertz Artistic Directors Tinashe Kajese-Bolden and Christopher Moses and Managing Director Mike Schleifer. The Alliance is a recipient of the Regional Theatre Tony Award® for sustained excellence in programming, education, and community engagement. In January 2019, the Alliance opened its new, state-of-the-art performance space, The Coca-Cola Stage at Alliance Theatre. Known for its high artistic standards and national role in creating significant theatrical works, the Alliance has premiered more than 140 productions including eleven that have transferred to Broadway. The Alliance education department reaches more than 90,000 students annually through performances, classes, camps, and in-school initiatives designed to support teachers and enhance student learning. The Alliance Theatre values community, curiosity, collaboration, and excellence, and is dedicated to representing Atlanta's diverse community with the stories we tell, the artists, staff, and leadership we employ, and audiences we serve. www.alliancetheatre.org

ABOUT GOODMAN THEATRE

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

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

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

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

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

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

Sunday, March 16, 2025

420 Shakespeare Fridays at Your Budz & Sunday, 4/20 at 4:20pm at The Annoyance Theatre

 ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

Hello, lovers of the Bard and partakers of the Chronic...


Mark your calendars! 420 Shakespeare is coming to the Annoyance Theatre (when else?) on Sunday, 4/20 @ 4:20pm.

420 Tickets are live here! This is one show you don't want to miss, so get booked or get cooked and we'll see you there!


Can't Wait For 4/20? 

Come see us: Fridays at Your Budz (near Music Box) and 4/20 at The Annoyance Theatre!







Take 4 professional actors. Add 20mg of “Shakespeare.”

“To weed or not to weed?” It’s not even a question!

Here’s a few more: Was Shakespeare a stoner? How do four professional actors perform a play with over twenty characters? Should one get high while doing it? As our merry band hunts for answers, high jinks and good times ensue. Get your Friday Your Budz tickets HERE. 

REVIEW: Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble Presents Rachel Bublitz's "Funny Like an Abortion" MARCH 10 - MARCH 30, 2025

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

CHICAGO DANZTHEATRE ENSEMBLE PRESENTS THE CHICAGO PREMIERE OF 

FUNNY, LIKE AN ABORTION

MARCH 10 - MARCH 30, 2025 



GUEST REVIEW

By Barbara Belcore


How to Make Abortion Funny

Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography

I drove right past the theater address not realizing the performance of Rachel Bublitz's "Funny Like an Abortion" would take place in a church theater. Greeters guided me upstairs where chairs sat in rows in front of a stage set up as a slightly cluttered apartment that could be any vintage Chicago flat. The rest of the multipurpose room was staggered with facts about abortion history and key points in the history of reproductive rights. The audience was wonderfully diverse and the title of the play alone is fair warning of the darkly provocative and wholly political nature of the content.


(L to R): Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade” and Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography


As the lights went down, A solo actress runs around the stage, talking to her home smart device, decorating for a party, inspiring laughs from the audience. A knock on the door signals one of several well placed opportunities for the performers to break character; This time to present a disclaimer directly to the audience NOT to try anything they see on stage at home. We then meet Monroe and Jade, two quirky best friends gathering to address an unwanted pregnancy in an all-too-real near future where it becomes clear that choice is not a word one can say out loud. 

(L to R): Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe” and Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography


The characters are well written in a way any close friendship pair can relate to: Monroe, the quirky, free spirit who makes light of even the most morbid of topics, and Jade, the serious, career-focused rule-follower who needs a little help loosening up. The actresses had tremendous chemistry and clearly enjoyed playing their well rehearsed roles making it seem like a closing performance as opposed to opening night. The dialogue is both risky and compelling, allowing for laughter in the face of discomfort. 


(L to R): Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade” and Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography


(L to R): Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe” and Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography

The playwright did her research! As a midwife I found the topic both urgent and relevant. The facts were accurate and managed to be both grim and silly at the same time. Even the ending, which was true physical comedy genius, taught important lessons while leaving the finality gently up to interpretation. I strongly recommend anyone, regardless of your affiliation, go see this clever and thought provoking play.

Barbara is a Chicago-area home birth midwife, maker, theater enthusiast, avid reader, and mom of two quirky, creative teens. She is currently snuggling three cats who are perpetually convinced that they have never been fed. 


(L to R): Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe” and Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography

Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble (CDE),  located at 1650 W. Foster Ave, in collaboration with Fat Theater Project will present Funny Like an Abortion March 10 - 30. Monday, March 10 at 7:30 p.m. will be the one preview performance with the press opening Tuesday, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. Written by Rachel Bublitz and directed by Eileen Tull, Funny, Like an Abortion, a Chicago premiere, takes place Fridays through Sundays at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are pay-what-you-can with a suggested donation of $30. NOTE: Doors will open at 7 p.m. for each performance as there will be a gallery exhibition that comments on the social aspects of the femme experience focusing on the rights of women and femmes that are now under attack.  A timeline of women’s history milestones will also be displayed. For additional information on participants and to purchase tickets visit DanzTheatre.org (https://www.danztheatre.org/funny-like-an-abortion.html).


(L to R): Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade” and Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography


Set in a future America where even saying the word “abortion” is a crime, Monroe has just discovered that she is unexpectedly and unwantedly pregnant. She invites her best friend, Jade, over for a surprise abortion party in this darkly funny, devastatingly prescient play by Rachel Bublitz. Eileen Tull directs this searing Chicago premiere, co-produced by Chicago Danztheatre and Fat Theater Project.  


(L to R): Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade” and Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography


The cast of Funny Like an Abortion includes Bianca Thompson (she/they, Monroe) and Saniafaith (she/her, Jade), Kit Kelly (they/them, Monroe - understudy) and Erin Feldmen (she/her, Jade - understudy). The production team includes Ellyzabeth Adler (she/her, CDE founder and producer), Eileen Tull (she/her, director and producer), Naomi Flores (she/they, CDE community engagement director), Gail Gallagher (she/her, sound designer), Joshua Paul Weckesser (he/him, lighting designer), Christine Marie (she/her, puppet designer), Taylor Owen (he/him, stage manager), Mary Moore (she/her, props designer), Shellie DiSalvo (they/she, assistant director) and Davon Suttles (they, them choreography)


ABOUT FAT THEATRE PROJECT

Founded in 2022 by Eileen Tull, Fat Theater Project seeks to tell stories by/about/for/with fat artists. Sometimes the company creates plays about living in a fat body. Sometimes they do plays that are about people with all bodies. Their work is imaginative, compassionate, and bold. Fat Theater Project strives to pay artists for their work while also keeping art accessible for audiences. 


Top: Saniafaith (she/her) as “Jade”

Bottom: Bianca Thompson (she/they) as “Monroe”

Photo by Anthony Robert La Penna Photography



ABOUT CHICAGO DANZTHEATRE ENSEMBLE 

Founded in 2001, Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble (CDE) is Chicago’s only multidisciplinary arts organization dedicated to social justice and socially conscious work that builds community through the arts “one voice, one story, one person at a time.” CDE’s mission is to engage, inspire, and challenge the community, both onstage and in the classroom, through innovative and collaborative multidisciplinary storytelling to illuminate aspects of social issues. We do this in the genre of Tanztheatre, "which unites all art media to achieve an all-embracing, radical change in humankind.” Through our school-based art and performance programs, CDE helps students in Chicago schools explore their own creativity, supporting their social and emotional learning. CDE provides a physical and emotional space where community conversation and cultural change can happen.

For our performance series, CDE is dedicated to creating performances that blend together dance, theatre and visual art to tell stories about the human condition. We give an artistic voice to those who are not always heard.


Dedicated since our founding to diverse casting of age, body type and ethnicity


Consistently listed as a “Top Theater and Dance Performance to See” 

by New City and Chicago Reader


Unique collaborations with the Veterans Art Museum, Poetry Center Chicago, Cantigny Museum, Neighborhood Writing Alliance, Voice of the City and numerous dance and theater companies


MacArthur Award Grantee for International Collaborations.  

Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble is supported by The Illinois Arts Council, a state agency; Bayless Family Foundation, The Saints Foundation,The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, The Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation; Innovation 80; Farny Wurlitzer Foundation; Mardi Gras Fund and the annual support of individual donors.


 



Thursday, March 13, 2025

New Adaptation of Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities Via Shattered Globe Theatre at Theater WIT Apr 18–May 31, 2025

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

Director Mikael Burke makes his Shattered Globe debut with 

Brendan Pelsue’s new adaptation of 

Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities

April 18–May 31, 2025

Here at ChiIL Live Shows we're huge fans of Charles Dickens and we've been following the directing career of uber talented Mikael Burke for years. This cast and crew are incredible and we can't wait to catch this one. I'll be out for opening night, so check back soon for my full review. 

Shattered Globe Theatre’s 34th season finale is the Midwest premiere of a bold new adaptation of Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities by Brendan Pelsue (top, center)  directed by Mikael Burke (top, right) in his SGT debut, featuring (bottom, from left) Shattered Globe ensemble members Demetra Dee, Daria Harper and Jazzma Pryor, and Diego Vazquez Gomez, Glenn Obrero, Jeff Rodriguez, William Anthony Sebastian Rose II and Penelope Walker.

It’s the best of times, and it’s the worst of times.

Still today.

So what better time to take a new look at Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities? It may be 165 years old, but Shattered Globe’s Midwest premiere of Brendan Pelsue’s bold new adaptation of Dickens’ classic story feels a tad too relevant. As the gap between rich and poor widens and cries for change grow louder, Dickens’ tale of power, privilege and political adaptation reminds us that some things never change.

Or can they? 

“This is not your mama’s Dickens,” declares director Mikael Burke, who is making his Shattered Globe debut staging Pelsue’s new riff on Dickens’ chillingly timely novel. “This is Dickens’ powerful story of life, liberty and the pursuit of love, told as only live theater can. In turns both hilarious and heart-rending, A Tale of Two Cities holds a striking mirror up to our world and makes us take a long look at the best and worst of ourselves. What Brendan has crafted here is something you must experience to believe, and I can’t wait to share this incredible and thrilling play with Chicago.”

A Tale of Two Cities runs April 18-May 31 at Theater Wit. The first preview, Friday, April 18 at 7:30 p.m., is Pay-What-You-Can. Previews continue Saturday, April 19 at 7:30 p.m., Sunday, April 20 at 3 p.m, and Wednesday, April 23 at 7:30 p.m. Previews are $10-$25. Press opening is Thursday, April 24 at 7:30 p.m. Performances run through May 31: Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Sunday at 3 p.m. No show Friday, April 25. There’s an added 3 p.m. matinee on closing day, Saturday, May 31. Performances are $15-$52.

Theater Wit is located at 1229 W. Belmont Ave. in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood. Purchase tickets online at SGTheatre.org, call the Theater Wit box office, (773) 975-8150, or purchase in person at Theater Wit. For group discounts, email groupsales@shatteredglobe.org or call (773) 770-0333. Visit SGTheatre.org for more information, including content warnings and exclusive news. Follow the company on social media @shatteredglobe on Facebook and Instagram. 

A Tale of Two Cities features the best of casts: Shattered Globe ensemble members Demetra Dee, Daria Harper and Jazzma Pryor, along with Diego Vazquez Gomez, Glenn Obrero, Jeff Rodriguez, William Anthony Sebastian Rose II and Penelope Walker.

There is also prodigious strength in the production team: Mikael Burke (director), Brendan Pelsue (adaptor), Milo Bue and Eleanor Kahn (co-set designers), Kotryna Hilko (costume designer), Eric Watkins (lighting designer), Christopher Kriz (original music and sound designer), Ab Rieve (props designer), Maya Vinice Prentiss (intimacy and fight director), Joel Willison (assistant director), Erik Tylkowski (production manager), Jean E. Compton (stage manager) and Emily Nicholas (assistant stage manager).

Access Services:

Audio Description and a Touch Tour for patrons who are blind or have low vision will be offered on Friday, May 23. The Touch Tour begins at 6:15 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m. 

Shattered Globe will offer a captioned performance on Sunday, May 25 at 3 p.m. for patrons with hearing loss. Assisted Listening Devices are available for all performances.

Theater Wit is wheelchair accessible, and all patrons with disability needs are invited to purchase $20 access tickets with the code “ACCESS20” at Theater Wit’s checkout page. Please email boxoffice@theaterwit.org to ensure the theater can reserve the right seat for your access needs. 

Company biographies

Brendan Pelsue (playwright, he/him) is thrilled to be making his Shattered Globe debut. Past Chicago area credits include productions of his play Wellesley Girl at Compass Theatre and North Central College. Other credits include Hagoromo at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, A Tale of Two Cities at The Alliance, Don Juan at Westport Country Playhouse, and Read to Me at Portland Stage. He has been a MacDowell Fellow, a Château de la Napoule artist in residence, and the John C. Grace Memorial Playwright in Residence at Green College, University of British Columbia. Originally from Newburyport, MA, he received his BA from Brown University and his MFA from Yale School of Drama. He teaches at Rutgers University. brendanpelsue.com

Mikael Burke (director, he/him/anything respectful) is a Black, queer director, deviser, and educator based in Chicago. A Princess Grace Award-winner in Theatre (2017) and Jeff Award-winning director (2024), his recent credits include Milo Imagines the World by Christian Magby, Christian Albright and Terry Guest (rolling world premiere: Chicago Children’s Theatre and Children’s Theatre Company, Minneapolis), King James by Rajiv Joseph (Forward Theatre, Madison), Oak by Terry Guest (Urbanite Theatre, World Premiere), Othello by William Shakespeare (Theatreworks Colorado Springs), Short Shakes! Romeo & Juliet (Chicago Shakespeare Theatre), Notes from the Field by Anna Deveare Smith (TimeLine Theatre, Chicago Premiere), The Salvagers by Harrison David Rivers (Yale Repertory Theatre, World Premiere), Tambo & Bones by Dave Harris (Refracted Theatre Company, Chicago Premiere, winner of eight Jeff Awards), Blues for an Alabama Sky by Pearl Cleage (Remy Bumppo Theatre Company), Clyde’s by Lynn Nottage (Theaterworks Hartford), and The Magnolia Ballet by Terry Guest (About Face Theatre, Chicago Premiere, winner of two Jeff Awards). Burke has also been recognized with a Black Theatre Alliance Award for Directing (2022), and as one of Newcity Magazine’s 50 Players of Chicago in 2023 and 2025. Burke is an artistic associate at Remy Bumppo Theatre Company, as well as at About Face Theatre, where he previously served as associate artistic director. He’s also an adjunct faculty member at DePaul University and Roosevelt University, and a member of SDC. Burke earned his MFA in Directing from The Theatre School at DePaul University. mklburke.com

Charles Dickens (author, A Tale of Two Cities, 1812-1870) was born in Landport, Hampshire, during the new industrial age. His father was a clerk in the Navy pay office, who was well paid but often ended in financial troubles. In 1814 Dickens moved to London, and then to Chatham, where he received some education. He worked in a London blacking factory, while his family was in Marsgalea debtor's prison. In 1824 - 27 he studied at Wellington House Academy, London and at Mr. Dawson's school. From 1827 to 1828 he was a law office clerk and then worked as a shorthand reporter at Doctor's Commons. He later wrote for True Son, Mirror of Parliament, Morning Chronicle, Monthly Magazine, The Evening Chronicle and Bentley's Miscellany. By the 1840's Dickens was editor of the London Daily News. His career as a fiction writer started in 1833 when his short stories and essays appeared in periodicals. His novels first appeared in monthly installments and included Oliver Twist, Nicholas Nickelby, and Old Curiosity Shop, David Copperfield, Bleak House, A Tale of Two Cities (1859), Great Expectations, and his unfinished mystery novel The Mystery of Edwin Drood. In the 1840's Dickens spent much time travelling and campaigning against many of the social injustices of his time and he gave talks and readings, wrote pamphlets, plays and letters. In the 1850's Dickens was founding editor of Household World and its successor All the Year Round (1859-70). 

Demetra Dee (Actor 3, she/her) is a Shattered Globe ensemble member, where her credits include Be Here Now and Stew. Other Chicago credits include Little Women (Northlight Theatre), Corduroy (Chicago Shakespeare Theatre), Relentless (TimeLine Theatre), The Penelopiad, The Nacirema Society and Relentless (Goodman Theatre), Chlorine Sky (Steppenwolf), Cullud Wattah (Victory Gardens), The Last Pair of Earlies and Crumbs from the Table of Joy (U/S performed, Raven Theatre), Middle Passage (Lifeline Theatre), Comfort Stew and Migration (ETA Creative Arts Foundation), The Colored Museum (Pegasus Theatre Chicago) and The Greenbook (Chicago Dramatists). TV credits include Power Book IV: Force (Starz) and The Bear (FX). Dee earned her BFA in Theater at East Carolina University.

Daria Harper (Actor 1, she/her), born and raised in Los Angeles, is a Shattered Globe ensemble member. Her SGT credits include Mill Fire, Crime and Punishment, Rose Tattoo, Hannah and Martin and Rasheeda Speaking, for which she received a Jeff Nomination for supporting actor in 2022. Other credits include Spoon River Anthology (Provisions Theatre), The Hat Maker’s Wife (Evolve Theatre), Devil in the Dirt (Red Twist Theatre), Tartuffe (Bo Ho Theatre), The Golden Dragon (Sideshow Theatre), The Cyclist (Genesis Theatrical Productions), Never a Bridesmaid (Polarity Ensemble Theater) and Fuddy Meers (Ka-Tet Theatre). Film credits include El Salvador (director Oliver Stone).  Harper holds a BFA in acting from Carnegie Mellon University, an MFA in Acting from the University of Virginia, and has been a London-trained Alexander Technique Teacher since 1982.

Jazzma Pryor (Actor 6, she/her) is an ensemble member with Shattered Globe Theatre where her credits include Jump, STEW, Hannah and Martin and Crime and Punishment. Other Chicago credits include Until The Flood, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is Enuf, The Light, Twilight: Los Angeles,1992, Sunset Baby and From The Mississippi Delta (Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre), Doubt: A Parable (Irish Theatre of Chicago), Phillis: The American Revolutionary (Redd Opera), Insurrection: Holding History (Stage Left Theatre), Marisol (Promethean Theatre) and Prelude to a Kiss (The Comrades). Pryor has a M.S. in Leadership for Creative Enterprises from Northwestern University and B.A. in Production Studies in Theatre from Clemson University. 

Diego Vazquez Gomez (Actor 2, he/they) is a proud Mexican and Argentinian theater artist from Miami and recent Chicago transfer making his Shattered Globe debut. Other Chicago credits include The Full Monty (Paramount Theatre), A Year with Frog and Toad and The Beatrix Potter Holiday Tea Party (Chicago Children’s Theater) and A Christmas Carol (Drury Lane Theater). Other credits include Romeo y Julieta Limeño (National Black Theatre Festival) and Heathers and The Motherf*cker with the Hat (UNCSA). TV credits include Chicago Stories (WTTW). Gomez graduated with a BFA in Acting from the University of North Carolina School of the Arts in 2023.

Glenn Obrero (Actor 4, he/him) is also making his Shattered Globe debut. He was last seen in Ironbound at Raven Theatre. Other credits include The Great Leap (Steppenwolf Theatre), The Chinese Lady (Timeline Theatre), 20,000 Leagues under the Seas (Lookingglass) and Wipeout (Rivendell). Film credits include When Cats Fly. TV credits include Chicago Fire (NBC) and nExt (FOX). Obrero is an ensemble member of Rivendell Theatre. He graduated from Savannah College of Art and Design with a BFA in Acting.

Jeff Rodriguez (Actor 7, she/her, he/him) previously appeared at Shattered Globe Theatre in last season’s production of Jump. Other Chicago credits include All's Well That Ends Well, As You Like It, Shakespeare in Love, Richard III and The Comedy of Errors (Chicago Shakespeare Theatre), Support Group for Men and Revolutions (Goodman Theatre), 33 to Nothing (A Red Orchid Theatre), The Legend of Georgia McBride (Northlight Theatre), Verboten (The House Theatre of Chicago), Zurich (Steep Theatre), One Came Home (Lifeline Theatre), Romeo and Juliet (Teatro Vista), All My Sons (Eclectic Theatre Co.) and Amadeus (Boho Theatre). Regional credits include As You Like It (Milwaukee Repertory Theatre) and Richard III, Twelfth Night and The Tempest (Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre). TV credits include Mayor of Kingstown (Paramount), Chicago Fire, Chicago Med and Crisis (NBC), and Proven Innocent (FOX). Rodriguez is a graduate of The School at Steppenwolf and Illinois State University.

William Anthony Sebastian Rose II (Actor 8, he/him) is also making his Shattered Globe debut. Chicago credits include Inanimate (Theater Wit), The Love Object (The Story Theater), Tambo & Bones (Refracted Theater Co., Jeff Award Winner Performance in a Principal Role in a play), Fences (American Blues Theater, Jeff Award Best Production of a Play) and The Tragedy of King Christophe (The House Theater Chicago, Black Theater Alliance Award Winner Best Leading Actor in a Play). Regional credits include Oak (Urbanite Theater) and A Christmas Carol (Farmers Alley Theater).

Penelope Walker’s (Actor 5, she/her) many credits include A Christmas Carol, Inherit The Wind, The Story, Crowns and Wit (Goodman Theatre), Purpose and Don DeLillo’s Love Lies Bleeding (Steppenwolf and The Kennedy Center), Mother Of The Maid, Into The Breeches, Curve Of Departure, Eclipsed, Gee’s Bend and Bee-luther-Hatchee (Northlight Theatre), The House That Will Not Stand and No One As Nasty (Victory Gardens), Life Sucks and J. Nicole Brooks’ Black Diamond: The Years the Locusts Have Eaten (Lookingglass), Seven Homeless Mammoths Wander New England (Theater Wit), Love & Information (Remy Bumppo), We’re Gonna Be Okay, The Project(s), Agnes of God, Doubt and The People’s Temple (American Theater Company), Will You Stand Up? (Erasing the Distance), Laura Jacqmin’s 10 Virgins and Lydia R. Diamond’s Voyeurs de Venus (Chicago Dramatists), Omnium Gatherum (Next Theatre), Chris-T (MPAACT), The Clink (Rivendell Theatre) and Shakin’ the Mess Outta Misery (Chicago Theatre Company). Walker created and starred in her own solo pieces, Daddy’s Girl and How I Jack Master Funked the Sugar in My Knee Caps! She has appeared regionally with the Alliance Theatre, Arena Stage, Hartford Stage and the Alley Theatre. Films include Olympia, Dubious Ruffians and Flowers. TV credits include The Bear, Chicago Med, Chicago Justice and Chicago Fire (NBC), South Side (Comedy Central), and Work In Progress and Boss (Showtime). 

About Shattered Globe Theatre

Shattered Globe Theatre seeks to redefine what it means to be an ensemble theatre, discover new connections between story, artist and audience, and explore drama from bold, challenging perspectives. 

Shattered Globe Theatre was born in a storefront space on Halsted Street in 1991. Since then, SGT has produced more than 80 plays, including nine American and world premieres, and garnered an impressive 44 Jeff Awards and 118 Jeff Award nominations, as well as the acclaim of critics and audiences alike. 

Guided by Producing Artistic Director Sandy Shinner, Shattered Globe’s values are rooted in a commitment to racial equity, respect for all artists and support for the ensemble, while creating new opportunities to amplify traditionally marginalized voices and collaborate in all aspects of its work. Through initiatives such as the Protégé Program, Shattered Globe creates a space which allows emerging artists to grow and share in the ensemble experience.

Shattered Globe Theatre’s Ensemble has 29 members: Judy Anderson, Louis Contey, David Dastmalchian, Demetra Dee, Joe Forbrich, Christina Gorman, Daria Harper, Tina M. Jach, Rebecca Jordan, Steve Kleinedler, Vivian Knouse, AmBer Montgomery, Tina Muñoz Pandya, Eileen Niccolai, Jazzma Pryor, Hailey Rakowiecki, Deanna Reed-Foster, Linda Reiter, Nate Santana, Drew Schad, Adam Schulmerich, Leslie Ann Sheppard, Sandy Shinner, Joe Sikora, Shelley Strasser, Devonte E. Washington, Sarah Jo White, Joseph Wiens and Brad Woodard.

SGT’s Artistic Associates now number 20 including Daniela Colucci, Mikey Gray, Lawrence Grimm, Darren Jones, Christopher Kriz, Jason Lynch, Elizabeth Margolius, Kelsey Melvin, Tim Newell, Jane Nix, Aila Peck, Steve Peebles, David Antonio Reed, Jasmine Cheri Rush, Angie Shriner, Abbey Smith, Becca Smith, Michael Trudeau, Ayanna Wimberley and Austin Winter.

Brenda and James Grusecki are the Lead Season Sponsors of Shattered Globe Theatre. SGT is also supported by generous grants from The Bayless Family Foundation, The Shulman-Rochambeau Charitable Foundation, Brenda and James Grusecki, Carol P. Eastin, The Shubert Foundation, a CityArts Grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, the Paul M. Angell Family Foundation, The Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation and the Illinois Arts Council.

Visit SGTheatre.org for subscriptions, tickets and information, and follow the company @shatteredglobe on Facebook and Instagram. 



Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Acclaimed Obliteration Returns to Chicago at The Revival Theater April 10-May 4, 2025

 ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

The critically acclaimed hit production of

Obliteration

returns for a strictly limited run at The Revival Theater

April 10-May 4, 2025

Written by Andrew Hinderaker

Directed by Jonathan Berry

Performed by Michael Patrick Thornton and Cyd Blakewell 

Obliteration, LLC & The Revival Theater announce a limited engagement of Obliteration, written by Andrew Hinderaker, directed by Jonathan Berry, featuring Michael Patrick Thornton and Cyd Blakewell. Obliteration runs April 10-May 4, 2025, at The Revival Theater, 906 S Wabash Ave in Chicago.

Obliteration is a fusion of stand-up comedy and theater that tells the story of two comedians, Neal (Thornton) and Lee (Blakewell), trying to make sense of a world that's falling apart, even as their own lives are hanging on by a thread.

Obliteration played last summer to sold out audiences and rave reviews as part of Steppenwolf’s LookOut Festival and produced by The Gift Theatre in a production directed by Andrew Hinderaker. 

“I’ve loved stand-up comedy my whole life. But I’d never attempted to write it—I’m a playwright, not a comedian. Then a few years ago, I stumbled upon this quote from the brilliant Phoebe Waller-Bridge: ‘You get a lot for free from an audience if you can make them laugh.’ Immediately an idea for a play unspooled in my mind: a fusion of stand-up and theater that would tell the story of two comedians, whose lives were hanging on by a thread,” comments Andrew Hinderaker. 

Hinderaker continues, “I wrote the piece for two of my fellow ensemble members of Chicago’s Gift Theatre: Michael Patrick Thornton, with whom I’ve collaborated for over a decade; and Cyd Blakewell, with whom I’ve been desperate to work for years. Our process was simple: I’d write some pages, hoping they would make Cyd and Mike laugh and/or cry. Then they’d read the pages and make me laugh and cry. Over a year, we built the ‘play’ like this, gradually folding an audience into our process. And once we got people in the room, that’s when we realized, holy shit, there’s something here.”

“I’ve known all three of these artists for over 20 years and what I can say with certainty is that they are uncompromising in their pursuit of excellence in the art. It’s a privilege to return to this production as director and, because we’re in a very different moment, I’m sure the play and these actors will be in response to that. What hasn’t changed, is our need for laughter, our need for connection, and I am thrilled to create the opportunity for a new audience to experience that,” comments Jonathan Berry. 

The Revival Theatre’s John Stoops comments, “The Revival is thrilled to host the incomparable Michael Patrick Thornton and Cyd Blakewell in Obliteration. We can’t imagine a better way to celebrate our 10th year than to present this groundbreaking production that celebrates comedy and drama in equal measure.”

Location: The Revival Theater, 906 S Wabash Ave in Chicago

Dates: April 10-May 4, 2025

Previews: April 10, 11, 13, and 16, 2025

Opening: April 17, 2025 


Performance schedule: Thursdays-Sundays at 8pm

by: Jonathan Berry

Cast: Cyd Blakewell and Michael Patrick Thornton 

Production team: Matthew Chapman (sound designer), Sheryl Williams (intimacy director), Jenn Thompson (production coordinator), Sarah Luse, (stage manager)

No performances April 12 or 19, 2025


Tickets: https://www.the-revival.com

Previews: $25, $20 students

Regular run: $35, $25 students


About the Artists

Andrew Hinderaker (Playwright) most recently served as an Executive Producer and Showrunner of Black Rabbit, an upcoming Netflix series starring Jason Bateman and Jude Law. He previously created and showran the Showtime series, Let the Right One In, starring Oscar Nominee Demián Bichir, as well as the Netflix series, Away, starring Oscar Winner Hilary Swank. Additional TV writing credits include Penny Dreadful and The Path, but Hinderaker’s heart and soul belong to the theater, where he specializes in writing plays that are (nearly) impossible to produce. Recent projects include The Magic Play (Goodman Theatre; Actors’ Theatre of Louisville; Portland Center Stage) a five-year collaboration with a sleight-of-hand card artist; and Colossal, an epic theatrical event featuring full-contact football hits, a modern dance company, and a drum line. Colossal received a National New Play Network (NNPN) Rolling World Premiere from 2014- 2016, with its inaugural production at the Olney Theatre Center (DC) receiving numerous Helen Hayes Awards, including Best New Play. Hinderaker’s additional plays include Suicide, Incorporated; Dirty; Kingsville; and I Am Going to Change the World, all of which premiered in his hometown of Chicago before enjoying productions in NY and throughout the world. Hinderaker holds an MFA in Playwriting from the University of Texas at Austin, and is a proud ensemble member of the Gift Theatre Company in Chicago. Obliteration marks his seventh collaboration with Michael Patrick Thornton, and his first with Cyd Blakewell. They are two of his favorite artists in the world.

Jonathan Berry (Director), a Chicago director, producer and teacher, is the Artistic Director of Penobscot Theatre in Bangor, Maine. He spent five years as an Artistic Producer at Steppenwolf Theatre Company and he remains a proud ensemble member of both Steep Theatre and Griffin Theatre. Steppenwolf directing credits include: Lindiwe (Co-directed with Eric Simonson and featuring Ladysmith Black Mambazo), The Children, You Got Older, Constellations, and the SYA productions of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, The Crucible, and A Separate Peace. Steep Theatre productions include: Paris, Red Rex, Earthquakes in London, Posh, The Life and Sort of Death of Eric Argyle, If There Is I Haven’t Found it Yet, The Knowledge, Festen, Moment, The Hollow Lands and The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui. At Griffin, productions include: The North American premiers of Simon Stephens Punk Rock (Jeff Award Director, Lead Actor, and Ensemble) Port, and On the Shore of the Wide World, as well as The Harvest, Winterset, Pocatello, Balm in Gilead, Golden Boy, The Burnt Part Boys, Spring Awakening Company, Picnic, Time and the Conways, Dead End, The Hostage and Journey’s End. He directed the NY premiere of Andrew Hinderaker’s Suicide, Incorporated for The Roundabout. His work has been honored with numerous Joseph Jefferson Award nominations, as well as frequent representation on the end of year Top Ten lists of the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun Times and TimeOut Chicago. He won the Joseph Jefferson Award for directing for his work on Simon Stephen’s Punk Rock.  

Berry served as Assistant Director for Anna D Shapiro’s Broadway productions of Of Mice and Men and This is Our Youth. At the Gift Theatre, he directed the world premieres of Andrew Hinderaker’s Dirty and Suicide, Incorporated. At the Goodman Theatre, he directed the New Stages productions of Martin Zimmerman’s The Solid Sand Below and Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig’s The World of Extreme Happiness. Other work includes: American Theatre Company: Kill Floor, American Blues: Little Shop of Horrors and Sideman; Redtwist: Look Back in Anger and Reverb, Chicago Dramatists: I am Going to Change the World, Jackalope Theatre: The Casuals, Strawdog: Conversations on a Homecoming, Remy Bumppo: The Marriage of Figaro, Theatre Mir: The Sea and Caucasian Chalk Circle, Lifeline Theater: The Piano Tuner (Afterdark Award – Best Production) He pursued his MFA in directing from Northwestern University under the tutelage of Anna D. Shapiro. He has taught acting, directing, and viewpoints at University of Michigan, Northwestern University, University of Chicago, University of Illinois – Chicago, Vagabond School, Act One Studios, and Columbia College Chicago. For 17 years he played an integral role in the esteemed ensemble training program The School at Steppenwolf, serving as director of the program from 2015-2019. 

Michael Patrick Thornton (Neal) has appeared on stages throughout the world, most recently on Broadway with Jessica Chastain in the acclaimed and Tony-nominated production of A Doll’s House, directed by Jamie Lloyd and adapted by Amy Herzog, for which Michael’s performance as “Dr. Rank” won the 2023 Actors’ Equity Foundation Joe A. Callaway Award for the best performance by an actor in a classical play in the New York metropolitan area. 

Thornton made his Broadway debut in Sam Gold’s production of Macbeth with Daniel Craig and Ruth Negga. Other highlights: The Gift Theatre’s Doubt at Steppenwolf’s 1700, Will Eno’s Title and Deed (Lookingglass—Time Out Magazine Best Actor Award) as well as Eno’s Middletown (Steppenwolf) the premiere of Andrew Hinderaker’s Colossal (Olney Theatre, Kennedy Center) Othello (The Gift, “Iago”) Our Town (Actors Theatre of Louisville) and the world premieres of Hinderaker’s Dirty and Suicide, Incorporated (The Git) for which Thornton was nominated for a Joseph Jefferson Award. During his 2016 performance in the title role of Richard III (The Gift, at Steppenwolf) Thornton became the first actor to ever act onstage while wearing a robotic exoskeleton, pairing not only an actor with a disability with a character with a disability, but furthermore using cutting-edge technology to theatrically complicate the character of Richard and its discussion around disability, ableism, and representation. This production continues to be the subject of podcasts, published essays, anthologies, and academic papers.

Michael won the 2006 Jeff Award for Solo Performance for The Good Thief (The Gift).

On camera, Thornton has acted opposite Oscar Winners Jessica Chastain, J.K. Simmons, Hilary Swank, Alicia Vikander as well as Oscar nominees Jude Law and Demián Bichir. For two seasons, he played the love interest of six-time Tony Award winning legend Audra McDonald on Private Practice. 

In addition, Thornton’s acclaimed improv show—You & Me—premiered at Steppenwolf and has since played for over a decade throughout Chicago, the country, as well as Dublin, Ireland. You & Me most recently had the honor of making its New York debut at Lincoln Center with Michael’s comedy partner for life Susan Messing. The Chicago Reader has called the show and Thornton’s improvisation “masterful.”

Select Film/TV: Ponderosa, The Last Day, The Savant, Black Rabbit, NCIS, The Good Doctor, Let The Right One In, Chicago Party Aunt, 61st Street, A Million Little Things, Away, All Rise, Madam Secretary, The Red Line, Counterpart, Elementary, and The View From Tall. 

Select Awards: Actors’ Equity Foundation Joe A. Callaway Award; Irish Books and Music Festival (iBAM!) Award Recipient; Best Actor: 2017 Midwest International Film Festival (The View From Tall); Tree of Life Award: Shirley Ryan Ability Lab; 3Arts Artist Award; Northlight Theatre’s Jack Springer Award for Outstanding Performance; The Tim Meier and Helen Coburn Meier Foundation Achievement Award; The Second City Foundation’s Jim Zulevic Chicago Arts Award; The Joseph Jefferson Award for Solo Performance, and induction into The University of Iowa and St. Patrick High School Halls of Fame.

Cyd Blakewell (Lee) is living her best life working on this incredible project with this fantastically dreamy team. She is a proud ensemble member of The Gift Theatre, where she is also the Casting Director. Gift Shows: The Locusts, The Pillowman, Doubt, A Life Extra Ordinary, Good For Otto, Body + Blood, Broadsword, Mine and multiple episodes of TEN. Chicago theatre credits: The Brightest Thing in the World (About Face); Birthday Candles (Northlight); The Snare (Jackalope); Balm In Gilead and Port (Griffin); Buddy Cop 2, breaks & bikes and MilkMilkLemonade (Pavement Group); Sweet Confinement and Ivanov (SiNNERMAN Ensemble); Orange Flower Water (Interrobang); Lies & Liars and Mimesophobia (Theatre Seven)d; Rewind (The Side Project). She recently wrapped a short film called Fairground and can also be seen in Jeri’s Grille. Cyd got her BFA from Southwestern University in Georgetown, TX, is a graduate from the School at Steppenwolf and is represented by Promote Talent Agency. She is married to Keith Neagle and mother to Wesley, who give her an endless amount of love and support.

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