Showing posts with label Court Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Court Theatre. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

REVIEW: Court Theatre's Latest Breaks The Zoom Barrier With Free Interactive One On One Microplays

 COURT THEATRE PRESENTS CHICAGOLAND PREMIERE OF CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED DIGITAL EXPERIENCE 

THEATRE FOR ONE: HERE WE ARE

Cheryl Lynn Bruce, Adithi Chandrashekar, Sydney Charles, Melissa DuPrey, Xavier Edward King, Elizabeth Laidlaw, Deanna Reed-Foster, TayLar


REVIEW:

By Bonnie Kenaz-Mara

Sunday I had an utterly unique experience at opening night for the Chicago premiere of Theatre for One: Here We Are. In what I can best describe as the theatre equivalent of a tapas bar, I was treated to a random assortment of four new microplays, all written and directed by Black, Indigenous, and Women of Color. Like tapas, these bite sized theatrical offerings were filling, flavorful, multilayered, and far more impressive than your typical snack.

Theatre For One: Here We Are not only breaks down the 4th wall, but several dimensions as well. These short shows transcend distance, isolation, and the impersonal medium of a flat computer screen, to create a highly engaging, personal show, that truly feels face to face. The experience from the audience end feels a lot like being on stage in an improv scene, figuring out "who am I, where am I, what am I doing", as clues to your identity and relationship to the scene unfold around you. If this sounds intimidating, know that all that's required of you is listening. As each actor's story unfolds, you can nod, laugh, commiserate, and interject in a natural way, yet the pressure's off. I promise, you will not be asked to monologue. Questions can be responded to or rhetorical. The show will go on whether you join in verbally or just soak it all in. 

Since Covid reared it's ugly head a year ago, and darkened theaters nationwide, the community has struggled to find new, effective modes of storytelling that don't require the life threatening intimacy of a packed house. Many companies have streamed past productions to stay afloat, which has had the positive effect of reaching far flung fans, by eliminating geographic constraints. Others have mounted new Zoom style streaming shows, prerecorded or in real time, but all of these options have lost the give and take of live shows, and the connection between the audience and actors' energies mingling in the moment. Theatre For One: Here We Are brings action and reaction roaring back to real time theatre in an in your face way that's a joy to see. 

Deeply rooted in the belief that intimacy and human connection is possible at any moment, at any time, and with any person. Theatre For One: Here We Are is a live digital theatrical experience that brings together one actor and one audience member featuring eight new microplays. A laugh shared with a stranger, a world created by imagination, a soul nourished through storytelling: these are things only theater can accomplish.

Even the "waiting room" was an experiment in interconnectedness and individuality. Names and faces are obscured, but audience members can chat with each other, asking and answering questions in black and white text, in a small group until the solo shows begin. You are exactly where you need to be indeed!



Once the performance starts, you will briefly see your own face, then just the actor on screen and talking directly to you. Each play I saw was quite different, and all were thought provoking and engaging. The first show I caught was Before America Was America By DeLanna Studi, Directed by Chris Anthony, Performed by Elizabeth Laidlaw. This fabulous piece highlights the gender equality in leadership of Native Americans, particularly The Cherokee Nation. It was fascinating to hear how advanced this culture was in valuing women and elders, stewardship of the land, and so many issues America is still struggling with as a society today. I loved this deeply personal account, and it gave me hope that our country can be reclaimed from the bigots, bullies, colonizers, and suit n tie savages that have been running it into the ground for the past 200 years. 

Elizabeth 


The second production I was paired with was whiterly negotiations 
By Lydia R. Diamond, Directed by Monet Felton, Performed by Deanna Reed-Foster. Wow. Just wow. The eye contact and energy were electric, and this play packed a punch. It's the one that got under my skin the most in an unforgettable way and I admired it for that. The subject matter was confrontational and tough but oh so necessary. I found myself nodding and tearing up a bit and interjecting "I hear you" and "truth". It's what wasn't said though that also made a lasting impression on me. I had to fight with my inner defensive "not all white women" voice, and do some deep listening. This relationship setup is not only collegues and writer/editor, but also a long term friendship deep enough to survive some intense real talk. It's an opportunity to be part of an invaluable conversation on who gets their stories through the gatekeepers intact, and the courage it takes to voice your truth at the risk of alienating others. Being a real ally is as much about shutting up as it is about speaking out. The era of white fragility being expected and accepted is done. 



Deanna Reed-Foster


The next micro play was out of this world... literally. I laughed the most at Here We Are By Nikkole Salter, Directed by Monet Felton, Performed by Xavier Edward King.  King's enthusiasm is contagious, as he embarks on a mission to start a whole new civilization. Yet, there's inescapable baggage, new rules to create, and a vast expanse of ethical questions to navigate like how to deal with any preexisting residents. There's a lovely bit of homesickness at the sight of a distant earth, some scary forays into thought policing, and the dilemma of how to get the same people to make different choices. Overall, this piece touches on layers of crucial questions about creating a fair and sustainable new world, while avoiding the problems that made you have to flee the last one. I adored the galumphing energy, like puppies and children at play, or new countries ready to be better. 

Xavier

My evening concluded with What Are The Things I Need To Remember By Lynn Nottage, Directed by Chris Anthony, Performed by TayLar. This one was most like a conversation with a friend for me. I felt a genuine rapport and was eager to hear the tale of teen risks and new friendships. The storyline is compelling, with unexpected twists, and a trajectory that goes from a lighthearted tale of questionable fun and youthful bad decisions, to downright harrowing. It's one of those life experiences that makes you grow up faster, question peer pressure, realize your own mortality, and expose the glaring difference between close friends you're responsible for and virtual strangers you happen to be hanging out with. There's nothing like a crisis to show you glimpses of your true self. This story is also ultimately a cliffhanger, much like real life. We don't always get closure and some incidents are just destined to leave you wondering.  

TayLar

These 8 microplays are just the tonic for pandemic weary, touch starved souls. Whether you catch one or more, we are all stories in the end, and these collaborative nuggets are pure gold. The whole experience is highly recommended. 

Bonnie Kenaz-Mara is a Chicago based writer-theater critic-photographer-videographer-actress-artist-general creatrix and Mama to two terrific teens. She owns two websites where she publishes frequently: ChiILLiveShows.com (adult) & ChiILMama.com (family friendly). 



Sydney

THEATRE FOR ONE: HERE WE ARE

Creator and Artistic Director: Christine Jones

Co-Artistic Director for Here We Are: Jenny Koons

Platform Programing & Design by Open Ended Group—Marc Downie & Paul Kaiser

Originally produced by Octopus Theatricals—Mara Isaacs, Executive/Creative Producer

Preview Performances: February 18 and 19, 2021
Press Opening: Matinee on February 20, 2021
Regular Run: February 21, 2021 - March 14, 2021


Performance Schedule:
Thursday and Friday at 7:30pm
Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday at 2:00pm and 7:30pm

Tickets will be free and open to the public beginning Thursday, February 11, at 10am. For reservations, visit CourtTheatre.org.


Adithi


Plays:



Melissa

Thank You For Coming. Take Care. 
By Stacey Rose, Directed by Miranda Gonzalez


What Are The Things I Need To Remember

By Lynn Nottage, Directed by Chris Anthony


Pandemic Fight 

By Carmelita Tropicana, Directed by Miranda Gonzalez


Here We Are

By Nikkole Salter, Directed by Monet Felton


Thank You Letter 
By Jaclyn Backhaus, Directed by Lavina Jadhwani 


Before America Was America 

By DeLanna Studi, Directed by Chris Anthony


whiterly negotiations 
By Lydia R. Diamond, Directed by Monet Felton


Vote! (the black album) 
Written and Directed by Regina Taylor



Cheryl

Court Theatre, under the continuing leadership of Charles Newell, Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director, and Executive Director Angel Ysaguirre, announces the Chicago premiere of Theatre for One: Here We Are.  Following its critically acclaimed run in New York, Court Theatre brings these eight stories to life with Chicago actors to offer audiences a deeply personal theatrical experience that breaks the boundaries of digital theatre. 

“Court is thrilled to present the Chicago premiere of this intimate, digital experience as part of our 2020/21 season,” says Charles Newell, Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director. “Written and directed by an impressive array of BIPOC artists, each of these plays is an astonishing, boundary-pushing experience, perfectly tailored to the current moment.”

“We’re excited to provide access to Theatre for One: Here We Are free-of-charge,” shares Angel Ysaguirre, Executive Director of Court Theatre. “As a form of public art, these microplays offer a unique opportunity for one-on-one connection at a time when the need for new stories is more urgent than ever to make sense of ourselves and the world around us.”


While Theatre for One: Here We Are is inspired by the pandemic; the 100th Anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment; and the Black Lives Matter, We See You WAT, and other movements fighting racism, the Here We Are writers have contributed works that span a spectrum of ideas and points of view. Theatre For One elevates a vibrant chorus of voices creating deeply personal works that resonate in this shared moment. 

Here We Are was commissioned by Arts Brookfield with additional support from Thomas M. Neff, and the Chicago premiere is supported by the University of Chicago Women's Board, Allstate, and De and Paul Gray.  


Artist Profiles

Chris Anthony (director, What Are The Things I Need To Remember and Before American was America) is a director, teacher, actor, and producer working at the intersection of art and community empowerment. Now Assistant Professor of Acting at The Theatre School at DePaul University, she has worked in educational, professional, and community spaces. Professional directing credits include the original Off the Rails for Native Voices at the Autry, Lunch Lady Courage at Cornerstone Theater, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo & Juliet, and Othello at the St. Louis Black Rep, and Romeo & Juliet at the Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles. As Associate Artistic Director of the Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles, she oversaw the development of the company’s Youth & Education programs, including Will Power to Youth,

Jaclyn Backhaus (playwright, Thank You Letter) is a playwright, cofounder of Fresh Ground Pepper, and new member of The Kilroys. Her plays include Men On Boats (New York Times Critics’ Pick, Clubbed Thumb, Playwrights Horizons, published by Dramatists Play Service), India Pale Ale (Manhattan Theatre Club, recipient of the 2018 Horton Foote Prize for Promising New American Play), You Across From Me (co-written with three other writers for the Humana Festival), Folk Wandering (book writer and co-lyricist with 11 composers, Pipeline Theatre Company), and You On the Moors Now (Theater Reconstruction Ensemble), among others. She was the 2016 Tow Foundation Playwright-in-Residence at Clubbed Thumb and she is currently in residence at Lincoln Center. Backhaus holds a BFA in Drama from NYU Tisch, where she now teaches. She hails from Phoenix, Arizona, and currently resides in Ridgewood, Queens with her husband, director Andrew Scoville and their son Ernie.

Lydia R. Diamond (playwright, whiterly negotiations) is a nationally recognized playwright and an assistant professor at Boston University’s School of Theatre. Her award-winning plays—including Harriet Jacobs, The Bluest Eye, and Voyeurs de Venus—have been produced across the country. Most recently, Diamond’s play Stick Fly was produced on Broadway at the Cort Theatre, where it enjoyed a three-month run. Diamond’s work has won the African American Arts Alliance of Chicago Black Excellence Award, an American Alliance for Theatre and Education Award, a Back Stage Garland Award, a Black Theatre Alliance's Negro Ensemble Company Award for Best Play and Lorraine Hansberry Award for Best Writing, an Independent Reviewers of New England (IRNE) Award, an LA Weekly Theater Award, and a Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award. She received an Illinois Arts Council Grant and has been in residence at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago through the NEA/TCG Theatre Residency Program for Playwrights. Diamond has been a W.E.B. DuBois Institute Fellow and a Huntington Playwrighting Fellow and is currently a member of the Theatre Communications Group board and the Huntington Theatre Company’s Council of Overseers. She graduated from Northwestern University.  

Monet Felton (director, Here We Are and whiterly negotiations) is a Director, Producer, Writer, Teaching Artist, and Company Member at Jackalope Theatre. Monet earned their BFA in Acting at The University of Illinois at Chicago. They are currently studying on a scholarship to be certified in Alexander Technique. They have had the opportunity of working at theatres such as Jackalope Theatre, Writers Theatre, Steppenwolf for Young Adults, and Bluebird Arts. 

Miranda Gonzalez (director, Pandemic Fight and Thank You For Coming. Take Care) is currently a Producing Artistic Director at UrbanTheater Company (UTC) in Humboldt Park and is a part of The Nova Collective, a diversity equity and inclusion consulting firm. She was a founding ensemble member of Chicago’s All Latina Theater company Teatro Luna and has devised and developed plays since 2000. She is a 2 time 3Arts and ALTA nominee and a recipient of the International Centre for Women Playwrights 50/50 Award. Her most recent play Back In The Day: An 80’s House Music Dancesical, world premiered as a part of Destinos, the Chicago International Latino Theater Festival, at UTC in the fall of 2019. Previous directing, writing, and script development credits include Ashes of Light by Marco Antonio Rodriguez; La Gringa by Carmen Rivera; Of Princes and Princesas by Paola Izquierdo at the 2010 Goodman Latino Theatre Festival; Lullaby by Diane Herrera; Crossed; GL 2010; The North/South Plays, a workshop at the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs; F.O.P and Crime Scene Chicago with Collaboraction; and Melissa DuPrey’s Sushi-Frito at Free Street Theater. She is also an Executive Producer for the web series 50 Blind Dates with Melissa DuPrey and has written for web series Ruby's World Yo created by Marilyn Camacho (Season 1, episode 3 and Season 2, episodes 1-4).

Lavina Jadhwani (director, Thank You Letter) is a theatre director, adaptor, and activist. Recent directing credits include As You Like It at the Guthrie Theater, Peter and the Starcatcher at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Roe and The Cake at Asolo Repertory Theatre. Her adaptations include The Sitayana (a solo piece based on The Ramayana), Shakuntala, Uncle Vanya, The Cherry Orchard, and A Christmas Carol. Lavina lives in Chicago, where she was recently named "One of the Top Fifty People Who Really Perform for Chicago" by NewCity; in 2013 she was TimeOut Chicago's "Best Next Generation Stage Director." BFA/MA, Carnegie Mellon University; MFA, The Theatre School at DePaul University.

Lynn Nottage (playwright, What Are The Things I Need To Remember) is a playwright and a screenwriter. She is the only woman to have won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama twice. Her plays have been produced widely in the United States and throughout the world. Her plays include Sweat (Pulitzer Prize, Obie Award, Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, Tony Nomination, Drama Desk Nomination), This is Reading, Floyd’s, Mlima’s Tale, By The Way, Meet Vera Stark (Lilly Award, Drama Desk Nomination), Ruined (Pulitzer Prize, OBIE, Lucille Lortel, New York Drama Critics’ Circle, Audelco, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle Award); Intimate Apparel (American Theatre Critics and New York Drama Critics’ Circle Awards for Best Play); Fabulation, or The Re-Education of Undine (OBIE Award); Crumbs from the Table of Joy; Las Meninas; Mud, River, Stone; Por’knockers; and POOF! Nottage wrote the book for the world premiere musical adaptation of Sue Monk Kidd's novel The Secret Life of Bees and is currently writing the book to the upcoming musical MJ, featuring the music of Michael Jackson, premiering on Broadway in summer 2020. She is the co-founder of the production company, Market Road Films, whose most recent projects include The Notorious Mr. Bout directed by Tony Gerber and Maxim Pozdorovkin (Premiere/Sundance 2014), First to Fall directed by Rachel Beth Anderson (Premiere/ IDFA, 2013) and Remote Control (Premiere/Busan 2013- New Currents Award). She has developed original projects for HBO, Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, Showtime, This is That and Harpo. She was a writer and producer on the Netflix series She's Gotta Have It, directed by Spike Lee. Nottage has received various fellowships, grants, and playwright awards, including a MacArthur Fellowship. She is a board member for BRIC Arts Media Bklyn, Donor Direct Action, Dramatist Play Service, Second Stage and the Dramatists Guild. She recently completed a three-year term as an Artist Trustee on the Board of the Sundance Institute. She is a member of the The Dramatists Guild, WGAE, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She is currently an artist-in-residence at the Park Avenue Armory and an Associate Professor in the Theater Department at Columbia School of the Arts.

Stacey Rose (playwright, Thank You For Coming. Take Care.) hails from Elizabeth, NJ and Charlotte, NC respectively. She is a proud mom, daughter, and sibling. Stacey is a 2019- 20 McKnight Fellow, 2020-22 Playwrights’ Center Core Writer, 2018-19 Goodman Theatre’s Playwrights Unit writer, and member of The Civilians R&D Group. She was a 2018 Sundance Theatre Lab Fellow, 2017-18 Playwrights’ Center Many Voices Fellow, and 2015-16 Dramatist Guild Fellow. Her play America v. 2.1 was awarded the inaugural Burman New Play Prize and received its world premiere production at Barrington Stage Company in June 2019. Her play Legacy Land, developed at The Playwrights’ Center, will world premiere at Kansas City Rep in February 2020.  America v. 2.1 and her play AS IS are featured on the 2019 Kilroys list. Legacy Land also made The List as an Honorable Mention. Stacey is a recipient of a 2019 Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Women Commissioning Grant in partnership with Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre. Her work has been presented at UNC Charlotte, On Q Productions, NYU Tisch School of the Arts, The Fire This Time Festival, The Brooklyn Generator, The Bushwick Starr Reading Series, Mosaic Theatre, The Amoralists Theatre Company, Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre, National Black Theatre, and Pillsbury House Theater. She served as Writers Assistant and Script Coordinator for season one of the series “She’s Gotta Have It.” She holds an MFA in Dramatic Writing from NYU Tisch School of the Arts and a BA in Theatre from UNC Charlotte. While at Tisch, she was the recipient of an AAUW Career Development Grant, Future Screenwriting Fellowship, and The Goldberg Prize for her play The Danger: A Homage to Strange Fruit. Stacey’s work celebrates and explores Blackness, Black identity, Black history, body politics, and the dilemma of life as the “other.”

Nikkole Salter (playwright, Here We Are) arrived onto the professional scene with her co-authorship and co-performance (with Danai Gurira) of the Pulitzer Prize nominated play, In the Continuum (ITC). For its Off-Broadway run at Primary Stages and the Perry Street Theatre and for its US State Department and Bloomberg sponsored international tour, Ms. Salter received an OBIE Award, and the NY Outer Critics Circle's John Gassner Award for Best New American Play, the Seldes-Kanin fellowship from the Theatre Hall of Fame, and the Global Tolerance Award from the Friends of the United Nations to name a few. Ms. Salter also received Helen Hayes and Black Theatre Alliance nominations for Best Actress for her performance. ITC, published by Samuel French, was pronounced by The New York Times, Newsday, and New York Magazine as one of the best plays of 2005 and was featured in numerous esteemed media outlets including Essence Magazine, American Theatre Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, and NPR’s Leonard Lopate Show. ITC has received over 20 productions across the world to date. As a dramatist, Ms. Salter has written 8 full-length plays, been commissioned for full-length work by 6 institutions, been produced on 3 continents in 5 countries, and been published in 12 international publications. Her work has appeared in over 20 Off-Broadway, regional and international theatres, and the Crossroads Theatre production of her play Repairing a Nation (directed by Marshall Jones, III) was regionally aired during the second season of the WNET program "Theatre Close-Up" on NYC's channel THIRTEEN, WLIC, NJTV. The National Black Theatre production of her play Carnaval was nominated for 7 AUDELCO awards including Best Playwright and Best Production, and won for Best Ensemble Performance. Ms. Salter is a 2014 MAP Fund Grant recipient, a Eugene O'Neill Theater Center National Playwrights Conference semi-finalist, USA Fellowship nominee, a two time Playwright's of New York (PoNY) Fellowship nominee, and is currently working on a commission from Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company. Ms. Salter is an active member of the Actors Equity Association, the Screen Actors Guild/American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, and the Actors Center; and sits on the Council of the Dramatists Guild and serves as Chair of the Board of the Theatre Communications Group. She received her BFA in theatre from Howard University under the instruction of Al Freeman, Jr. and Sybil Roberts; and her MFA from New York University's Graduate Acting Program under the tutelage of Zelda Fichandler and Ron Van Lieu.

DeLanna Studi (playwright, Before America Was America) most recently starred in Astoria: Part One at Portland Center Stage and Indiana Repertory Theatre’s Finding Home: Indiana at 200. DeLanna’s Off-Broadway Debut in Informed Consent at the Duke Theater on 42nd Street was a New York Times Critics’ Pick, which described her performance as “moving gravity.” She was a company member of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival for two seasons, where she was one of only ten Native people (onstage and off) to have done so! She performed in the first national Broadway tour of the Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning August: Osage County. She has won awards for her performances in Hallmark/ABC’s Dreamkeeper and Chris Eyre’s Edge of America. DeLanna also tours in the Encompass Compassion Play Kick, a one-person show written by Peter Howard which explores the power of images, stereotypes, and Native American mascots. She recently starred in the short film Blessed and can be seen in ABC’s General Hospital, Showtime’s Shameless, and SyFy’s Z Nation. She is the current chair of the SAG-AFTRA Native Americans Committee. Her next project, in addition to And So We Walked, will be Portland Center Stage’s Astoria: Part Two. This spring, she will begin writing the memoir counterpart to And So We Walked.

Regina Taylor (playwright and director, Vote! (the black album) is best known to television audiences as Lilly Harper in the series I'll Fly Away and as Molly Blane in CBS's hit drama The Unit. Her credits as a playwright include Oo-Bla-Dee (Recipient of the American Theatre Critics Association New Play Award), Drowning Crow (Manhattan Theatre Club), The Trinity River Plays (Dallas Theater Center and the Goodman Theatre; Recipient of the 2010 Edgerton Foundation New American Play Award), Magnolia, The Dreams of Sarah Breedlove, A Night in Tunisia, Escape from Paradise, Watermelon Rinds, and Inside the Belly of the Beast. Taylor's critically acclaimed Crowns continues to be one of the most-performed musicals in the country, and is the winner of four Washington, D.C. Helen Hayes awards. Taylor also wrote and directed Post Black for New York's Ensemble Studio Theatre. Taylor is a member and Artistic Associate of the Goodman Theatre and a resident playwright at New York's Signature Theatre Company. She received the Hope Abelson Artist-in-Residence Award from Northwestern in 2010. She has received honorary doctorates from Columbia College, DePaul University and Lake Forest College. Most recently, Taylor both wrote and directed stop. reset. at Signature Theatre Company. She will direct stop. reset. again at the Goodman Theatre in 2015. Taylor has also received a Golden Globe, an NAACP Image Award, two Emmy Award nominations, and the Oscar Micheaux Award from the Chicago Film Critics Association. Visit ReginaTaylor.com for more information.

Carmelita Tropicana (playwright, Pandemic Fight) has been performing in New York’s downtown arts scene since the 1980s, straddling the worlds of performance art and theater in the US, Latin America, and Europe with her irreverent humor, subversive fantasy, and bilingual puns. She received an Obie for Sustained Excellence in Performance (1999) and is a recipient of the Performance and Activism Award from the Women in Theater Program / American Theater in Higher Education (2015). Notable and recent works include: Schwanze-Beast (2015), a performance commissioned by Vermont Performance Lab; Recycling Atlantis (2014), a performance installation at 80WSE Gallery; Post Plastica (2012), an installation/video and performance presented at El Museo del Barrio; and the highly anthologized Milk of Amnesia (1994). Her publications include the book, co-edited with Holly Hughes, Memories of the Revolution: The First Ten Years of the WOW Café (University of Michigan Press, 2015). Tropicana has taught at numerous universities and sits on the Board of Directors at Performance Space 122 and NYFA.


The creative team for the production includes Erica Friesen (costume designer), Emily Brown (lighting designer), Lara Musard (properties designer & chatroom curator),  Jennifer Gadda (production supervisor), Bryan Hunt (Theatre For One production supervisor), Joshua McCammon (technical supervisor), Cherie B. Tay (tech consultant), Srđa Vasiljević (artistic consultant), and Erin Albrecht (production stage manager). 




Court Theatre is the professional theatre of the University of Chicago, dedicated to innovation, inquiry, intellectual engagement, and community service. Court endeavors to make a lasting contribution to classic American theatre by expanding the canon of translations, adaptations, and classic texts. The theatre revives lost masterpieces; illuminates familiar texts; explores the African American theatrical canon; and discovers fresh, modern classics. Court engages and inspires its audience by providing artistically distinguished productions, audience enrichment activities, and student educational experiences. In all of this work, we are committed to recognizing, addressing, and eradicating racism, as we strive to better serve our South Side community. 

Theatre for One was originally conceived as a mobile state-of-the-art performance space for one actor and one audience member. Conceived by Artistic Director Christine Jones and designed by LOT-EK architects, Theatre for One commissions new work created specifically for each venue's one-to-one relationship. Embracing serendipity, Theatre for One is presented in public spaces in which audience members are invited to enter into an intimate theatrical exchange in which actor and audience member encounter each other as strangers and are equally dependent on each other. Theatre for One is produced by Octopus Theatricals and was originally produced by True Love Productions.

Friday, October 12, 2018

Halloween Party and First Look at Court Theatre's Frankenstein By Manual Cinema 10/31/18

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

Court Theatre Hosts Halloween Party for
the World Premiere of
Frankenstein
By Manual Cinema, adapted from the novel by Mary Shelley


Tickets on sale now for special Halloween performance of Frankenstein

Manual Cinema is a favorite of ours here at ChiIL Mama and ChiIL Live Shows. We can't wait to see their take on Mary Shelley's classic, just in time for the 200 year anniversary of Frankenstein's publication. Want to be one of the first to see it? Court Theatre is hosting a Halloween Party that includes a first look at the show! 

Court Theatre, under the leadership of Charles Newell, Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director, and Executive Director Angel Ysaguirre, gives audiences a first look at the World Premiere of Manual Cinema’s Frankenstein this Halloween. On October 31, be the very first to experience Manual Cinema’s world premiere production of Frankenstein at the final dress rehearsal. Before the show, partake in a frightfully fun Halloween party hosted by the caped and cursed at Court Theatre. Compete in our ghoulishly glamorous costume contest and enjoy horror d’oeuvres and a creepy cocktail on us. With enough candy to raise the dead, this is one party you don’t want to miss. The festivities begin at 6:30pm at Court Theatre, 5535 S Ellis Ave in Hyde Park.



The World Premiere of this immersive take on the thrilling gothic tale Frankenstein by Manual Cinema, is adapted from the novel by Mary Shelley. Frankenstein is devised by Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace, and Julia Miller, with concept by Drew Dir and original music by Kyle Vegter and Ben Kauffman. Be the first to see Manual Cinema’s new adaptation of Mary Shelley’s classic novel, in a production that merges stories of Mary Shelley, Victor Frankenstein, and his Monster to expose how the forces of family, community, and education shape personhood—or destroy it by their absence. Frankenstein runs November 1 – December 2, 2018 at Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Ave.

Stick around after the show for a behind-the-screens conversation with Manual Cinema, interact with the artists and learn more about the innovative way they tell stories.

In a special world premiere presentation, internationally-renowned multimedia company Manual Cinema stitches together the classic story of Frankenstein with Mary Shelley’s own biography to create an unexpected story about the beauty and horror of creation. Manual Cinema combines handmade shadow puppetry, cinematic techniques, and innovative sound and music to create immersive visual stories for stage and screen. Manual Cinema is a performance collective and film production company, founded in part by former Court dramaturg Drew Dir.  

Tickets, priced $75, include the pre-show party with drinks, Horror d’oeuvres, and plenty of candy, plus the performance and post-show experience with the artists. Receive $5 off per ticket when purchasing two or more. Season subscribers may be eligible for $65 tickets. Tickets are available at the Court Theatre box office (5535 S. Ellis Avenue, Chicago), by calling (773) 753-4472, or online at www.CourtTheatre.org.


Dates: Halloween Party:   October 31, 2018 at 7:30pm
Previews: November 1 - 9, 2018
Press Opening: Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 7:30pm
Regular Run: November 11 – December 2, 2018
           
Schedule: Wed/Thurs/Fri: 7:30 p.m.
Sat/Sun: 2:00 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.

Location: Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Ave.
Tickets: 
$75 Halloween Party
$38-$56 previews
$50-$74 regular run

Box Office: Located at 5535 S. Ellis Avenue, Chicago; (773) 753-4472 or www.CourtTheatre.org.




 Court Theatre’s 2018/19 season is dedicated to Court’s late Executive Director, Stephen J. Albert.

Subscription Information
Three, four, and five-play subscriptions to Court’s 2018/19 season range from $96 to $300 and are on sale now. To purchase a subscription or to receive more information, call the Court Theatre Box Office at (773) 753-4472, or visit Court’s website at www.CourtTheatre.org.

Court Theatre is the professional theatre of the University of Chicago, dedicated to innovation, inquiry, intellectual engagement, and community service. Court endeavors to make a lasting contribution to classic American theatre by expanding the canon of translations, adaptations, and classic texts. The theatre revives lost masterpieces; illuminates familiar texts; explores the African American theatrical canon; and discovers fresh, modern classics. Court engages and inspires its audience by providing artistically distinguished productions, audience enrichment activities, and student educational experiences.

Manual Cinema is a performance collective, design studio, and film/video production company founded in 2010 by Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace, Ben Kauffman, Julia Miller, and Kyle Vegter. Manual Cinema combines handmade shadow puppetry, cinematic techniques, and innovative sound and music to create immersive stories for stage and screen. Using vintage overhead projectors, multiple screens, puppets, actors, live feed cameras, multi-channel sound design, and a live music ensemble, Manual Cinema transforms the experience of attending the cinema and imbues it with liveness, ingenuity, and theatricality.


Thursday, September 20, 2018

1 Day Only FRANKENSTEIN: Unearthed, Panel Discussion September 30th at Lookingglass Theatre Company

Chicago Theatres Announce 
FRANKENSTEIN: Unearthed


 Special joint event between Court Theatre and Manual Cinema, Lifeline Theatre, Lookingglass Theatre Company and 
Remy Bumppo Theatre Company
explores four unique productions of Frankenstein
coming to Chicago stages this season

It's Time to Get Your Monsters In a Row...
Here at ChiIL Mama and ChiIL Live Shows we can't wait to celebrate 200 years of Mary Shelley's classic with four productions of FRANKENSTEIN on stage in Chicago this season. I'll be out to review all of them. How many of the "frankenfour" do you plan to see? We're already off to a stellar start with Lifeline's stunning world premiere adaptation featuring a female lead and a life sized, soul eating puppet monster! Highly recommended. 

Wondering where to start, with such a plethora of unique productions? Lookingglass Theatre Company, Court Theatre and Manual Cinema, Lifeline Theatre, and Remy Bumppo Theatre Company announce FRANKENSTEIN: Unearthed, a one-time-only event exploring the four productions of this classic tale coming to Chicago stages during the 2018-2019 season. 


FRANKENSTEIN: Unearthed takes place September 30, 2018 at 1:00 p.m. at Lookingglass Theatre Company. Tickets are $15 and can be purchased online HERE. Lookingglass is located at 821 N Michigan Avenue at Pearson.

In celebration of the 200th Anniversary of the first publishing of Frankenstein, Mary Shelley's monster comes to life in Chicago this season with four distinctive theatrical productions at Court Theatre, Lifeline Theatre, Lookingglass Theatre Company, and Remy Bumppo Theatre Company.

What is Chicago’s fascination with this undying tale? How will this story be told? Four Frankensteins, seriously? Artists David Catlin and Cordelia Dewdney (Lookingglass Theatre Company), Drew Dir (Manual Cinema), Ian Frank and Eliza Stoughton (Remy Bumppo Theatre Company), and Robert Kauzlaric and Ann Sonneville (Lifeline Theatre) will answer these questions and more in a conversation led by Chicago Tribune critic Chris Jones. Come learn about the vision behind each Frankenstein adaptation and get a preview of each show!

“As all the major Chicago productions of Frankenstein were announced this past spring, each one of them vastly different in style and substance, we realized the potential for a collaborative, synergistic exploration of this rich and constantly surprising story, and of Mary Shelley, the brilliant mind behind it,” comments Nick Sandys, Producing Artistic Director of Remy Bumppo. “That a theatrical endeavor of this scale and diversity is happening here speaks not just to the artistic dynamism of Chicago, but to the sophistication and curiosity of its arts patrons. We wanted therefore to spark a city-wide conversation with our colleagues and discuss how we are all tackling the novel's myriad themes and universal questions, which still so clearly speak to us today. This special event will bring all four theaters together for one evening and give our audiences a sneak-peek at this season's unique "Frankenstein festival"--and the chance to explore the question: Why so many Frankensteins?”

About the Artists
DAVID CATLIN (Writer/Director of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein at Lookingglass Theatre Company) is a founding Ensemble Member, actor, writer, director, and former Artistic Director of Lookingglass. David adapted and directed Moby Dick, which debuted at Lookingglass in summer 2015, toured nationally, and played again at Lookingglass in summer 2017. Other Lookingglass writing credits include: Lookingglass Alice, Icarus, Her Name Was Danger, and The Idiot (Jeff Award for Adaptation). He is currently directing A Midsummer Night’s Dream, an adaptation of Shakespeare’s original, for Alliance Theatre in Atlanta. Additional Lookingglass directing credits include: The Little Prince, Black Diamond (co-director), Metamorphosis, and West. Lookingglass acting credits include: Hard Times, The Arabian Nights, Our Town, Argonautika, La Luna Muda, The Odyssey, and The Jungle. David is an Artistic Associate with Actors Gymnasium and serves on the acting faculty at Northwestern University.

CORDELIA DEWDNEY (Mary Shelley/Elizabeth in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein at Lookingglass Theatre Company) is a graduate of Northwestern University where she studied Theatre and English. Recent credits include: Hard Times and Moby Dick at Lookingglass Theatre Company and Women Beware Women with the Chicago Shakespeare Project She has worked with Alliance Theatre, Arena Stage, and South Coast Repertory for the National tour of Moby Dick, and has appeared on Chicago Med. She is joyfully represented by Stewart Talent.

DREW DIR (Manual Cinema Co-Artistic Director) is a writer, director, and puppet designer. Previously, he served as the Resident Dramaturg of Court Theatre and a lecturer in theater and performance studies at the University of Chicago. He holds a master’s degree in Text and Performance Studies from King’s College London and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

IAN FRANK (Director of Frankenstein at Remy Bumppo) is the Artistic Assistant and the director of Frankenstein at Remy Bumppo Theatre Company. He is the Producer of Remy Bumppo's SPARK Reading Series (directing both Inheritors and Conversations in Tusculum) and assistant directed Pygmalion. In Chicago, Ian directed Incident at Vichy (Jeff nomination for Best Ensemble), Another Bone and Shipwrecked! (Redtwist) and Bob: A Life in Five Acts (LiveWire) and assisted Sunday in the Park with George and Cyrano at Chicago Shakespeare Theater. He recently workshopped his own adaptation of The Call of the Wild at Milwaukee Rep. Ian holds an MFA in Directing from The Theatre School at DePaul University and has a long relationship with Actors Theatre of Louisville where he has directed several shows at the Humana Festival of New American Plays.

ELIZA STOUGHTON (Elizabeth in Frankenstein at Remy Bumppo) has worked in Chicago at Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Court Theatre, Writers Theatre, Raven Theatre, TimeLine Theatre, The Gift Theatre, Lifeline Theatre, 16th Street Theatre, and Oak Park Festival Theatre. Regionally, she has worked at American Players Theatre, Cardinal Stage (Bloomington, IN), Illinois Shakespeare Festival, Riverside Theatre in Iowa, and toured many wonderful years with Montana Shakespeare in the Parks and Montana Shakespeare in the Schools. Eliza is a proud graduate of Loyola University of Chicago and a Core Ensemble member with Remy Bumppo Theatre Company.

ROBERT KAUZLARIC (Adaptor of Frankenstein at Lifeline Theatre) is a Chicago-based playwright, director, and actor. He has written more than a dozen theatrical adaptations, which have been performed in over 40 states across the U.S., as well as in England, Ireland, Wales, Canada, and Australia. Previous Lifeline adaptations include Neverwhere (Non-Equity Jeff Award: New Adaptation) and Northanger Abbey (with George Howe; Non-Equity Jeff Award: New Musical).

ANN SONNEVILLE (Victoria in Frankenstein at Lifeline Theatre) is an Ensemble Member with Trap Door Theatre, where she has appeared in numerous productions, and Red Tape Theatre, where she recently appeared in Round Heads and Pointed Heads. Other credits: Actors Theatre of Louisville, The Steppenwolf Garage, Lookingglass Theatre Company, Lifeline Theatre, Griffin Theatre, Strange Tree, Oracle Productions, the side project, The Chicago Mammals, and numerous original productions with Bruised Orange Theatre Company. Film/TV credits: Miriam Is Going To Mars (BMA Award - Best Actress), Dig Two Graves, Chicago P.D., Hunting God, and numerous shorts. She is a professional voiceover artist and instructor at the Vagabond School.

CHRIS JONES (Moderator) has been the chief theater critic and Sunday culture columnist of the Chicago Tribune since 2002 and he is author of Bigger, Brighter, Louder: 150 Years of Chicago Theater (2013), and the upcoming book Rise Up!: Broadway and American Society from 'Angels in America’ to ‘Hamilton’ (November 2018). His work has appeared often in the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, American Theater, and many other publications. In 2014, he became the director of the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center's National Critics Institute in Waterford, CT. In 2001, Chris was named by American Theater magazine as one of the most influential theater critics in America. In 2015, he was the winner of Cornell University's George W. Nathan Award, the most prestigious honor for drama critics in the United States.



About the Productions

Lifeline Theatre presents:
A world premiere adaptation of the novel by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
FRANKENSTEIN
Adapted by Robert Kauzlaric
Directed by Paul S. Holmquist
September 7 – October 28, 2018
Lifeline Theatre (6912 N Glenwood Ave)
Tickets: lifelinetheatre.com  |  773.761.4477

When an unexpected death shatters her family, Victoria retreats into the darkest recesses of her psyche in search of a way forward. To find meaning in this impossible loss, she brings a terrible creation to life – one whose existence threatens all hopes for the future. Haunted and hunted at every turn, Victoria must endure a nightmare journey of the soul in a quest for survival. Grapple with the demons of grief and denial in this world premiere adaptation of the 1818 thriller by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley.

About Lifeline
Lifeline Theatre is driven by a passion for story. Lifeline’s ensemble process supports writers in the development of literary adaptations and new work, and its theatrical and educational programs foster a lifelong engagement with literature and the arts. A cultural anchor of Rogers Park, Lifeline is committed to deepening its connection to an ever-growing family of artists and audiences, both near and far.

Remy Bumppo Theatre Company presents:
FRANKENSTEIN
By Mary Shelley, Adapted by Nick Dear
Directed by Ian Frank
October 11 – November 11, 2018
Performing at Theater Wit (1229 W Belmont Ave)
Tickets: RemyBumppo.org  |  773.975.8150
Mary Shelley’s revolutionary horror classic is shocked to life in Nick Dear’s adaptation. Retold from the abandoned creature’s point of view, this taut, muscular version raises urgent questions about scientific responsibility, parental neglect, and the nature of good and evil. *MATURE CONTENT

About Remy Bumppo Theatre Company:
Remy Bumppo Theatre Company produces theatre that thrills the ear, stirs the heart, feeds the mind, and sparks a conversation. As an ensemble-based producer of intellectually and emotionally inspiring plays that reveal the power and pleasure of language, we explore timeless ideas in timely productions that celebrate our common humanity; and we invite audiences to converse directly with the art and the artists.

Remy Bumppo challenges our audiences with the intersection of expansive ideas and rich language, often presenting texts that have been sidelined because they may seem too intellectually complex, demanding active intelligence as well as great passion from artist and patron alike. We produce such art in order to advance deeper understanding of the human condition, test commonly perceived notions, and elevate cultural discourse. We then invite audiences to converse directly with the art and the artists, engaging them in one-on-one conversation about the work itself through innovative supplementary programming.

Court Theatre presents:
FRANKENSTEIN
by Manual Cinema
adapted from the novel by Mary Shelley
concept by Drew Dir
devised by Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace, and Julia Miller
original music by Kyle Vegter and Ben Kauffman
November 1 - December 2, 2018
Court Theatre (5535 S Ellis Ave)
Tickets: 773.753.4472  |  CourtTheatre.org
In a special world premiere presentation at Court Theatre, internationally-renowned multimedia company Manual Cinema stitches together the classic story of Frankenstein with Mary Shelley's own biography to create an unexpected story about the beauty and horror of creation. Using an ingenious “laboratory" of cameras, overhead projectors, actors, and puppets—and accompanied live by a chamber ensemble performing Kyle Vegter and Ben Kauffman’s haunting original score—Manual Cinema’s Frankenstein assembles music, theater, and silent film to create a Frankenstein like you’ve never seen before.

About Court Theatre
Court Theatre is the professional theatre of the University of Chicago, dedicated to innovation, inquiry, intellectual engagement, and community service. Court endeavors to make a lasting contribution to classic American theatre by expanding the canon of translations, adaptations, and classic texts. Court revives lost masterpieces, illuminates familiar texts, explores the African American theatrical canon, and discovers fresh, modern classics.

About Manual Cinema
Manual Cinema is a performance collective, design studio, and film/ video production company founded in 2010 by Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace, Ben Kauffman, Julia Miller, and Kyle Vegter. Manual Cinema combines handmade shadow puppetry, cinematic techniques, and innovative sound and music to create immersive visual stories for stage and screen. Using vintage overhead projectors, multiple screens, puppets, actors, live feed cameras, multi-channel sound design, and a live music ensemble, Manual Cinema transforms the experience of attending the cinema and imbues it with liveness, ingenuity, and theatricality.

Lookingglass Theatre Company presents:
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
Written and Directed by Ensemble Member David Catlin
From the Book by Mary Shelley
May 8–August 4, 2019
Lookingglass Theatre Company (821 N Michigan Ave)
Tickets: lookingglasstheatre.org | 312.337.0665

Within every man there is a monster; within every monster, a man. But which is which? An eerie evening of ghost stories crackles to life as Mary Shelley unspools her tale of Victor Frankenstein and his unholy experiment. This gothic tale of love, horror, and the power to create life—and destroy it—awakens in this visceral, original retelling of Frankenstein. Fresh from the brain of Ensemble Member David Catlin, creator of Moby Dick and Lookingglass Alice, comes a galvanic adaptation of this undying story. See for yourself this latest invention come to shocking life!

About Lookingglass Theatre Company
Inventive. Collaborative. Transformative. Lookingglass Theatre Company, recipient of the 2011 Regional Theatre Tony Award, was founded in 1988 by eight Northwestern University students. Entering its 31st Season, Lookingglass is home to a multi-disciplined ensemble of artists who create story-centered theatrical work that is physical, aurally rich and visually metaphoric. The Company has staged 66 world premieres, received 144 Joseph Jefferson Awards and nominations, and work premiered at Lookingglass has been produced in New York City, Los Angeles, Seattle, Berkeley, Philadelphia, Princeton, Hartford, Kansas City, Washington D.C., Atlanta, Louisville and St. Louis. In 2016, Lookingglass received the MacArthur Award for Creative and Effective Institutions.

Lookingglass Theatre in Chicago's landmark Water Tower Water Works opened in June 2003. In addition to developing and presenting Ensemble work, Lookingglass Education and Community programs encourage creativity, teamwork and confidence with thousands of community members each year. For more information, visit lookingglasstheatre.org.


Sunday, September 3, 2017

PARENTS NIGHT OUT: Five Guys Named Moe at Court Theatre 9/7-10/8

Chi, IL LIVE Shows On Our Radar:

Court Theatre opens 63rd Season with
Five Guys Named Moe
By Clarke Peters
Directed by Ron OJ Parson, Music Director Abdul Hamid Royal
and Associate Director Felicia P. Fields




September 7 - October 8, 2017


Here at ChiIL Mama & ChiIL Live Shows, we're jazzed for the season opener at Court Theatre. Sax is my favorite instrument and with the impressive staying power of 63 years of history, Court Theatre has never steered us wrong. Finally, director Ron OJ Parson is a ubiquitous part of Chicago's theatre scene, and a favorite of ours. This will be Ron's first musical at Court.

Court Theatre, under the continuing leadership of Charles Newell, Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director, and Stephen J. Albert, Executive Director, opens its 2017-2018 season with Five Guys Named Moe by Clarke Peters, directed by Resident Artist Ron OJ Parson, Music Director Abdul Hamid Royal and Associate Director Felicia P. Fields. Five Guys Named Moe, which features Louis Jordan’s greatest hits, runs September 7 – October 8, 2017 at Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Ave.



"Ron OJ Parson and Felicia Fields have pulled together an incredible team for Five Guys Named Moe," says Charles Newell, Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director. "This show marks Ron's first musical at Court, and this production is going to make a lot of people bounce!  It will be a great way to launch the season."

A lively musical tribute to the hit songs of saxophonist and songwriter Louis Jordan, Five Guys Named Moe introduces Nomax: a broke, newly single guy singing the blues late into the night. Suddenly, five unexpected friends – Big Moe, Four-Eyed Moe, Eat Moe, No Moe, and Little Moe – emerge from his radio to help ease his broken heart. Pioneering musician Louis Jordan’s new approach to jazz paved the way for rock and roll in the 1950s.

"We are excited to produce this show in Court's intimate setting," says Resident Artist Ron OJ Parson. "We will keep Louis Jordan's spirit alive as we tell this story, and we'll have a lot of fun with our audiences along the way."

The cast of Five Guys Named Moe includes Stephen Allen (Nomax), Darrian Ford (Little Moe), James Earl Jones II (Eat Moe), Eric Andrews Lewis (No Moe), Kelvin Roston, Jr. (Four-Eyed Moe) and Lorenzo Rush, Jr. (Big Moe).

The creative team includes Courtney O’Neill (scenic design), Michael Alan Stein (costume design), Heather Gilbert (lighting design), Victoria Deiorio (sound design) and Chris Carter (choreography). The Stage Manager is Erin Albrecht.



About the Artists
RON OJ PARSON (Resident Artist, Director) hails from Buffalo, New York and is a graduate of the University of Michigan’s professional theatre program. He is a Resident Artist at Court Theatre,  former co-founder and artistic director of the Onyx Theatre Ensemble, and co-founder of the Beyond the Stage Theatre Project. Ron is a company member of TimeLine Theatre, and associate artist at Writers Theatre and Northlight. Ron has worked with Black Ensemble Theatre, ETA, Congo Square Theatre, Goodman, Writers, Victory Gardens, Teatro Vista, Chicago Dramatists, Urban Theater Company, Steppenwolf, Chicago Theatre Company, and City Lit. Regional theatres include Virginia Stage Company, Portland Stage, Studio Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, Roundabout Theatre, Mechanic Theatre, Center Stage in Baltimore, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Milwaukee Rep, St. Louis Black Rep, Pittsburgh Public Theater, Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre, Geva Theatre, Signature Theatre (New York), Alliance Theatre, South Coast Rep, and Pasadena Playhouse. In Canada, Ron directed the world premiere of Palmer Park by Joanna McClelland Glass at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. Ron is a proud member of AEA, SAG-AFTRA, and SDC.

ABDUL HAMID ROYAL (Music Director/Pianist) won the Ovation Award, the Los Angels Drama Critics Circle Award, the SAGE Award, and the NAACP Image Award for his work on The Gospel at Colonus; the NAACP Image Award for Broadway’s Five Guys Named Moe; and the Stage Scene LA Award for Outstanding Musical Direction on Recorded in Hollywood. Broadway/International/National Music Director: Five Guys Named Moe, Twist, Sophisticated Ladies, Ain’t Misbehavin’, Jelly’s Last Jam, The Wiz, Truly Blessed, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, Sound of Music, Fiddler on the Roof, Betsy Brown, Concerts for the Earth, Colors of Christmas, Smokey Joe’s Café, The Life. Composer/Arranger: Five Guys Named Moe, Truly Blessed, Body and Soul, Twist, Cole Porter Festival, Colors of Christmas. Recording Artists: Natalie Cole, Peabo Bryson, Melissa Manchester, Cy Coleman, Al Jarreau, The Pointer Sisters, Liza Minelli, Ashford & Simpson, Martha Wash, Jennifer Holliday, Jeffrey Osborne, Maurice Hines, Melba Moore, Patti Austin, Masashi Sada, Patti LaBelle, Christina Aguilera, Jason Mraz, Stevie Wonder, David Foster, Doc Powell, The LA Philharmonic, Ty Herndon, Roberta Flack, Brenda Russell, and Phil Collins.

FELICIA P. FIELDS (Associate Director) was last seen at Court stage headlining her own concert and in Seven Guitars. She is best known for her portrayal of Sofia in the Broadway musical The Color Purple, for which she received a Tony nomination, Clarence Derwitt Award, and several other awards. She has performed in shows at the Marriott, Goodman, Milwaukee Rep, Drury Lane, Broadway in Chicago, Northlight, Theatre at the Center, and more as well as many productions throughout the United States and Canada, commercials, voice-overs, and films. Felicia has received several Jeff nominations, garnering one for Sophisticated Ladies. TV: Chicago Fire, Sense 8,and Who gets the dog? She travels regularly throughout the United States with productions of Low Down Dirty Blues and I’ll Take You There. She can be seen next in the film Slice with Chance the Rapper.

STEPHEN ‘BLU’ ALLEN (Nomax) makes his Court Theatre debut. Previous Chicago credits include In The Heights and The Scottsboro Boys with Porchlight Music Theatre. He was last seen in Jesus Christ Superstar at The Paramount Theatre. 

DARRIAN FORD (Little Moe) A Chicago native, Ford moved to New York City at 18 to dance in the companies of Alvin Ailey and Donald Byrd/The Group. He made his Broadway debut as Charlie in State Fair, and appeared in The Who's Tommy(Broadway/First National), as well as the first national Broadway tours of Smokey Joe’s Cafe and The Color Purple. He co-starred opposite Halle Berry in HBO's Introducing Dorothy Dandridge and had a recurring role on Disney's That’s So Raven. The Cooke Book: The Music of Sam Cooke, Ford’s original concept concert, opened in 2008 and also tours nationally. His new original vocal jazz album, The New Standard, will release September 30, 2017. 

JAMES EARL JONES II (Eat Moe) Chicago credits include She Loves Me, October Sky, Elf, Dreamgirls, The Full Monty (Marriott Theatre); Satchmo at the Waldorf, The Secret Garden, The Good Book, Porgy and Bess(Court); Wonderful Town, Carlyle (Goodman); Scottsboro Boys, Sondheim on Sondheim (Porchlight Music Theatre); Shrek (Chicago Shakespeare); Cymbeline (First Folio); Sweet Charity, Company (Writers); Mr. Rickey Calls a Meeting (Lookingglass); Porgy and Bess (Lyric Opera,San Francisco Opera); The Wiz (TATC); Aida, Spamalot, Ragtime (Drury Lane); A Civil War Christmas (Northlight); Annie Get Your Gun (Ravinia Festival); The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (Broadway in Chicago); and Dessa Rose (Apple Tree). National tours: Porgy and Bess. Television/film: Pokerhouse, Chicago Fire, Hot Date, and Empire. James is represented by Stewart Talent.

ERIC A. LEWIS (No Moe) was last seen in the off-broadway hit, Spamilton. Chicago credits include Jimmy Early in Dreamgirls at Porchlight Theatre, which earned him a Jeff Award; Disney’s The Little Mermaid, In the Heights, and Tommy (Paramount Theater); My Way, Women on the Verge and All Shook Up (Theater at the Center); Parade at BoHo Theatre; and How to Succeed in Business…, Sister Act, and Seussical(Marriott Theatre); and Once Upon a People (Black Ensemble Theater). Regional credits: Fireside Theatre, Dreamgirls at Milwaukee Rep.

KELVIN ROSTON JR (Four Eyed Moe) Court credits: Seven Guitars, Porgy and Bess, Ma Rainy’s Black Bottom. Other Chicagoland theaters: Congo Square, Paramount, Marriott-Lincolnshire, Goodman,Writers, Black Ensemble, Timeline, Northlight, Steppenwolf. Regional theatres: The Black Rep (St. Louis, MO), Fulton (Lancaster, PA), New Theatre Restaurant (Overland Park, KS), MSMT (Brunswick, ME), Baltimore Center Stage (Baltimore, MD). International: Orb (Tokyo, JP), Festival Hall (Osaka, JP). Television: Chicago Med, Chicago PD, KFC, Instant Care. Film: Get a Job, Princess Cyd, Breathing Room. Kelvin is an artistic associate of Congo Square Theatre, a member of AEA, and represented by Paonessa Talent.

LORENZO RUSH, JR. (Big Moe) Chicago credits include: Jesus Christ Superstar(Paramount); Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Jeff Award); A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (Porchlight Music Theater); Dreamgirls, City of Angels (Marriott Theater); Parade (BoHo Theater). Regional Credits includes: Shrek, Big River and Ragtime (Grandstreet Theater). TV/Film: Sirens on USA. Lorenzo received his BA in Musical Theater at Western Illinois University.

         
Schedule: Wed & Thurs: 7:30 p.m.
Fridays: 8:00 p.m.
Saturdays: 3:00 p.m. & 8:00 p.m.
Sundays: 2:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.

Location: Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Ave.
Tickets: $38-$48 previews
 $44-$74 regular run

Box Office:  Located at 5535 S. Ellis Avenue, Chicago; (773) 753-4472 or www.CourtTheatre.org.


Subscription Information
Five, four, and three play subscriptions to Court’s 2017/18 season range from $96 to $300 and are on sale now. To purchase a subscription or to receive more information, call the Court Theatre Box Office at (773) 753-4472, or visit Court’s website at www.CourtTheatre.org. Individual tickets for all shows will be available on August 1st.

Court Theatre is guided by its mission to discover the power of classic theatre. Court endeavors to make a lasting contribution to American theatre by expanding the canon of translations, adaptations, and classic texts. Court revives lost masterpieces, illuminates familiar texts, and distinguishes fresh, modern classics. Court engages and inspires its audience by providing artistically distinguished productions, audience enrichment activities, and student educational experiences.


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