Archive for June, 2009

Theater Thursday: ‘5th of July’

Thursday, July 2

5th of July by Lanford Wilson
Oak Park Festival Theatre
Austin Gardens, Oak Park

5thofjulypicKick off the 4th of July holiday weekend a day early with Lanford Wilson‘s sequel to Talley’s Folly. A compassionate ensemble portrait of a generation trying to decide how to cope with the idealism of the 60′s. At once poignant and marvelously funny.  Prior to the performance there will be an opportunity to meet and talk with actors from the production, with appetizers courtesy of Wishbone Restaurant.

Event begins at 6:45 p.m.

Show begins at 8 p.m.

TICKETS ONLY $22 for adults, $17 for students and seniors
For reservations call 708.445.4440 and mention "Theater Thursdays" or buy online at http://oakparkfestival.org with code "ThTh."

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Theater Thursday is sponsored by this Chicago-area restaurant guide, as well as Chicago area bar guide,
 a great site for Chicago foodies and theater enthusiasts alike.

June 30, 2009 | 0 Comments More

Filipino inmates pay their respect to Michael Jackson: dance to “I’ll Be There” and “We Are The World”

A tribute performed by 1,500 CPDRC Inmates (Filipino prisoners) on June 27, 2009 in memory of Michael Jackson. Completed in 10 hours after receiving word that the King of Pop passed away. May he always be remembered. “Ben” and “I’ll Be There” were sung by Michael when he was still younger! “We are the World” was composed and organized by Michael Jackson. Enjoy.

June 29, 2009 | 0 Comments More

Think Fast: Rebecca Gilman, Rondi Reed and Mary Poppin’s walking tour of Avenue Q.

 

  • Audience members were in for an unexpected treat regarding yesterday’s final performance of the Tony award-winning August: Osage County: Rondi Reed, the originator of the role of the boozy Mattie Fae Aiken, returned to play the role for the last time.  Ms. Reed is currently performing the role of Madame Morrible in Wicked, which she returned to later on Sunday for an evening performance.
 
 
  • Oops – the main computer of Broadway in Chicago’s Mary Poppins crashed.  After 45-minutes of unsuccessful IT support, the audience was told the performance would have to be canceled.  Double oops.
 
 
June 29, 2009 | 0 Comments More

Review: Creative Arts Foundation’s “Pill Hill”

Testing the Bonds of Brotherhood in Sam Kelley’s  “Pill Hill”

 "Pill Hill", by Sam Kelley, now playing at eta Creative Arts Foundation

The award winning eta Creative Arts Foundation wraps up its 38th season with a sterling production of Sam Kelley’s Pill Hill, a play that explores the journeys of 6 Chicago steel mill workers trying to realize economic and social success. Director Aaron Todd Douglas has honed his actors into a taut and dynamic ensemble. His direction shines at its best when it contrasts the vital camaraderie that unites these African American men with the unspoken truths, rationalizations, and false aspirations that throw each character into isolation.

Pill Hill is the black upper-class neighborhood on Chicago’s south side where these men aspire to live one day as a sign that they have “made it.” As some take their first tentative steps away from the steel mill, others get left behind—Charlie, the senior member of the group, who has worked there since migrating to Chicago from the South and Joe, who cannot bear to turn away from a sure paycheck, even though the mill inexorably grinds him down. Kelley’s play examines the toll that success takes on friendship, while acknowledging that the price of doing nothing is certainly just as high.

There is much to be said about Kelley’s keen eye on friendships between the men of Pill Hill. Most of that dynamic plays out between Joe (Kelvin Roston, Jr.) and Eddie (Anthony Peeples), in the crucible of their desire for a better life. Much as they both share their dreams of getting out of the mill and onto the Hill, more goes unsaid between them about the limits of their friendship when the stagnation of one strains against the overwhelming success of the other.

Indeed, the whole cast, under Douglas’s watchful direction, construct nuanced relationships between their characters, where what is not said matters as much as what is. Therefore, much is made about Joe’s need to move on from mill work, but silence surrounds his encroaching alcoholism; Scott (Cecil Burroughs) gets to revel in his glory days as a prospective football player, but no one confronts him about his descent into drug sales once his potential truly dries up; the guys remark frequently on Tony’s (Corey Spruill) natural abilities as a salesman, but none question his growing lack of a moral center.

Attention, as well as praise, must be paid to the most riveting monologue of the production, delivered by David Adams, as Charlie. It is critical to the play. It grounds it in the recognition that success can never be as simple to African Americans as it is for whites. Success for African Americans bears the awful burden of reflecting full-fledged personhood and first-class citizenship. Tragically, material success may also dangerously expose a black man as being “too uppity.” Charlie relates the time that Southern police officers pulled him over for the crime of driving his new Cadillac around his old hometown. After they have terrorized and humiliated him in front of his family, Charlie drives back to Chicago and puts the Cadillac up on blocks, not to be driven again, until a new sheriff has taken over, years later. Obviously, having more than white bigots think you deserve can get you into as much trouble as having nothing.

While having it all and having nothing contend most dramatically between Joe and Eddie, it’s the internal struggle between the two that wreaks the most havoc with Eddie’s soul. Eddie is the greatest achiever of the group, breaking the glass ceiling as the first black lawyer of a prestigious Chicago law firm. He becomes the group’s living symbol of promise and hope. But one almost wishes Eddie could be a little less successful, but a little more content, as is dear, henpecked Al (Kevin Hope). Peeple’s Eddie is ready to crack under the burden of it all—the success, the compromise that success demands of him, and especially, the childlike adulation of Joe, who is already so broken, no attempt can be made to hide it. Something has got to give. The showdown between Joe and Eddie is searing and unforgettable.

It is my hope that theatergoers who are familiar with the north side will head south to see this magnificent production. Douglas and cast strike the right balance between playfulness and tension, humor and anger, yearning, helplessness, and hope. While some dialogue may be stilted, Sam Kelley’s work truly ranks with other dramas that critique the American Dream, like Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman or David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross. Whatever its limits, this play examines something that the previous two works do not. It explores the modern day tests that are put to an African American brotherhood that is, all at once, flawed, endangered, compassionate, and powerful.

Rating:  ««««

Pill Hill runs through August 9th, at the eta Creative Arts Foundation, located at 7558 S Chicago Avenue.  For more info and tickets, call (773) 752-3955.

Thursday, Friday, Saturday at 8:00 P.M.
Sunday at 3:00 P.M. & 7:00 P.M.

 

For more info regarding eta Creative Arts, click on “Read more”

June 28, 2009 | 1 Comment More

Happy Pride Everyone!!

raising the rainbow flag

It’s been 40-years (to the day) since gay men and women finally said “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take it anymore!”.  On that day, a haphazard group gay men and women, fought back against the New York police after one too many police raids on the Stonewall Inn..  These brave acts are now referred to as the Stonewall Riots, and mark the beginning of the modern-day gay rights movement.  Truly a reason to celebrate and be proud of!

But, as pointed out in the following Frank Rich New York Times op-ed, our community still has a long ways to go, including here in Illinois:

40 Years Later, Still Second-Class Americans

 

June 28, 2009 | 1 Comment More

Sunday Night Sondheim – Polish video of West Side Story “Tonight”

A few comments: first, it really is a testament to Sondheim’s (and Leonard Bernstein’s) brilliance that their music is done all over the world and in so many languages. Second, is the Tony character lip-synching?  If so, it’s a crappy job.  Finally, don’t you love the stray dog that is hanging around Tony as he walks down the street???  :-)

June 28, 2009 | 0 Comments More

Aaahh, aren’t they cute….

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June 27, 2009 | 3 Comments More

Congress approves NEA funds increase – for now…

Great news via the NEA:

Today, the U.S. House of Representatives approved a $15 million increase for both the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for FY 2010.  Currently funded at $155 million, this increase would bring both agencies’ budgets to $170 million

Thanks to the arts leadership of House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman Norm Dicks (D-WA) and Congressional Arts Caucus co-chair Louise Slaughter (D-NY), this House-approved funding increase for the NEA exceeds President Obama’s budget request by $8.7 million and is the highest proposed appropriation for the NEA since its $176 million peak in FY 1992. On June 25, corresponding legislation in the Senate Appropriations Committee set NEA and NEH funding at only $161.3 million each.

We must now put pressure on the Senate to match the funding level set in the House of Representatives.  Please take two minutes to visit Americans for the Arts E-Advocacy Center to send a letter to your Senators.

 

Aside: Thanks to all of my readers for helping increase arts funding.  We all know from experience that any child, when introduced to the arts, becomes a smarter child. 

June 26, 2009 | 0 Comments More

Explore Chicago – Millennium Park

Besides our great theatre, there’s so much more to do in the great world-class city of Chicago.  One of my favorite places in the city is Millennium Park.  Check it out:

Millennium Park is an award-winning center for art, music, architecture and landscape design. From free concerts in the Frank Gehry-designed Jay Pritzker Pavilion, to Jaume Plensa‘s interactive Crown Fountain, Millennium Park has something for everyone. Tour the Lurie Garden; or have your photo taken by Anish Kapoor’s hugely popular Cloud Gate sculpture. Admission is FREE. For more information, visit http://www.millenniumpark.org.

June 26, 2009 | 0 Comments More

Johnny Depp gives $4,000 tip to Gibsons Steakhouse waiter

Money not key to happiness, Johnny Depp says.

filming-Public-Enemy

Although, to Depp, money is not the be-all-end-all, he certainly has made a difference in one waiter’s life via his money.  Johnny Depp, along with his "Public Enemies" co-star Marion Cotillard, director Michael Mann, and others — who were in Chicago last week for the premiere of the Chicago-filmed “Public Enemies” — made a stop at Gibsons Steakhouse around 11:30 PM, according to the Chicago Sun Times.

depp-thumb Once the bill came around 2:30 AM – totaling up to a reported $4,400 – Depp made sure the man who waited on the group into the late hours was well compensated for his time, as Mohammaed Sekhani reportedly received a $4,000 tip from the star.

"He had visited our restaurant several times before while he was filming ‘Public Enemies’ and he promised me that he would return after the premiere," Sekhani told Radar Online.

According to the longtime Gibsons waiter, Depp and his friends ordered items including shrimp cocktails, Clams Casino, as well as a few expensive bottles of wine.

Marion Cotillard"He also ordered some $500 bottles of Italian wine and he was in good spirits throughout the evening chatting with Mr. Mann and Miss Cotillard," Sekhani added.

Generous tip aside, Sekhani said he always enjoys waiting on the "Pirates of the Caribbean" star each time he visits Gibsons.

"Because he had visited us before he calls me ‘Mo’ and I know exactly the way he likes to be treated. He may be one of the most famous actors in the world but he is a very ‘humble guy’ and a really cool dude," the waiter continued. "I have worked with a lot of stars like Sean Connery and Robert De Niro but Johnny Depp is my favorite He is a very soft spoken guy who is very charming and sweet – when I wait for him he doesn’t like to be too fussed over and is not in any way demanding."

Biograph-shootin

June 24, 2009 | 1 Comment More

Opening this week in Chicago

500 Clown and the Elephant Deal - 500 Clown

Boleros for the Disenchanted - Goodman Theatre

A Celebration of Hope and Peace - Chiesa Nuova

A Celebration of Johnny Mercer - Northwestern University Theater

Dead Wrong - The Factory Theater

Earth: TTFN?!WWS Productions

The Hollow Lands - Steep Theatre

In Your Facebook - Prop Thtr

Once Upon a Time (or the Secret Language of Birds) - Redmoon Theater

Over the Rainbow - Chicago Gay Men’s Chorus

Snubfest 2009 - Chemically Imbalanced Comedy

Summer Music Series - Drury Lane Theatre Watertower

Two Torn Apart - Gorilla Tango Theatre

Up - Steppenwolf Theatre

 

Show closings after the fold.

June 24, 2009 | 0 Comments More