Theater, Dance, Comedy and Performance in Chicago

Review: When She Danced/Timeline Theatre Company

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WhenSheDanced_377Isadora Duncan’s innovative approach to choreography set the dance world on its ear; she inspired such devotion that dancers took her name in tribute. She was an outsized figure who lived a manic, tragic life and died a victim of her own affectation.

Unfortunately, affectation is the only thing the audience gets to see in Timeline’s current bio-play of Duncan’s life. There is no dancing, no examples of the work that earned Duncan such affection and acclaim; just sex, drinking and the scrambling for cash that make the sex and drinking possible.

We see affecting memory of Duncan in her prime. Duncan’s translator, Miss Belzer (the reliably poignant Janet Ulrich Brooks) and accompanist  Alexandros Eliopolos (a fresh and funny Alejandro Cordoba) detail Duncan’s (Jennifer Engstrom) artistic victories, but the rest is dramatized excess. Director Nick Bowling does what he can with a script that doesn’t give us all we need. (Lisa Buscani)

“When She Danced” plays at Timeline Theatre Company, 615 W. Wellington, (773)281-8463, through December 20.

Review: All My Sons/Timeline Theatre

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AllMySons_172RECOMMENDED

A substantial, convincing production of a timely Arthur Miller play about wartime profiteering, denial and, of course, the Lost American Dream. “I just want something I can give myself to,” the play’s naif tells his father, in a line that encapsulates the play’s  tense web of desire, thwarted with bleak modernism that’s peppered with real insights into human psychology. Director Kimberly Senior pulls out remarkably strong performances, with Janet Ulrich Brooks in a standout role as a grieving mother. The show hits all the right notes, from banter to melodrama, effectively teasing out the play’s subtle and off-kilter comedy, through creative use of mumblings and echoings, that could have been lost in a more constrained production. Visually, it’s at times surrealistically television-like, with a fairly corny, astroturfed set straight out of a sitcom backyard, and the acting often feels very TV-influenced. Yet this element adds to the production, embedding its “sins of the fathers” heaviness and explorations of the limitations of knowledge into a claustrophobically mediated way of being in the world. (Monica Westin)

TimeLine Theatre at the Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, (773)404-7336. Through October 4.

Equity Jeff Award nominations announced

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Here’s the press release announcing the Jeff noms for Equity:

Chicago Theatres Shine in Outstanding Jeff Nominated Productions of 2008-2009 Season

Goodman Theatre and Drury Lane Oakbrook
Top List of Award Nominees

50 Years of The Second City to be Spotlighted
at The Jeff Awards

Thursday, August 27, 2009 – Chicago, IL.   The Jeff Awards today announced 179 nominations in 35 categories for Chicago Equity theatrical productions which opened between August 1, 2008, and July 31, 2009. The Jeff Awards sent judges to the opening nights of 141 productions offered by 57 producing organizations. From these openings, 98 Equity productions were “Jeff Recommended,” which made them eligible for award nominations.

The 41st Annual Jeff Awards ceremony, honoring excellence in professional theatre produced within the immediate Chicago area, will be held on Monday, October 19, at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie, 9501 Skokie Boulevard. A pre-show Appetizer Buffet will run from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., and the Awards Ceremony, directed by Michael Weber, will begin at 7:30 p.m. The Second City, celebrating 50 years as a producer, will play a featured role at the Jeff Awards ceremony. Advance purchase tickets, which include the ceremony and the pre-show buffet, are $75 ($55 for members of Actors’ Equity Association, United Scenic Artists, Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, and The Dramatists Guild of America). The evening is black tie optional and the public is cordially invited to attend. To purchase tickets, visit the Jeff Awards website at www.jeffawards.org. For more information, contact Equity Chair Diane Hires at equitywing@jeffawards.org. Read the rest of this entry »

Eclipse Theatre announces 2009-2010 season

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Here’s the press release from Eclipse:

Eclipse Theatre Company Leads Year-Long Exploration of Arthur Miller
in 2009 / 2010 Chicago Theatre Season

(CHICAGO, August 5, 2009) – Classic American theatre fans are in for a treat this upcoming season with several new productions exploring the works one of the 20th century’s greatest American playwrights – some might argue the greatest – Arthur Miller.

Currently, there are four local theatre companies with Arthur Miller productions slated, including Chicago’s Eclipse Theatre Company, which is unique in the Midwest in its mission to focus on a single playwright each season. After a critically acclaimed and commercially successful two-year Celebration Series, in which Eclipse featured the work of the first 10 playwrights produced since the company adopted its mission of “one season, one playwright,” the 2010 Arthur Miller Season is a welcome return to the company’s seasonal format. Read the rest of this entry »

Strawdog Theatre Company 2009-2010 season announcement

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Here’s the press release from Strawdog: (Updated August 4, 2009)

STRAWDOG THEATRE COMPANY ANNOUNCES
22ND ANNIVERSARY SEASON THEMED “Why We Fight”

Strawdog Theatre Company of Chicago announces their 22nd anniversary season of presenting “the whole wide world in a little black box,” with the three mainstage plays focusing on the theme of “why we fight”:  the Midwest premiere of Matt Pepper’s St. Crispin’s Day, Curt Columbus’ translation of Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya and David Harrower’s translation of Bertolt Brecht’s The Good Soul of Szechuan. The productions run Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 4 and 8 p.m., and Sunday at 7 p.m.

These productions, plus ongoing late night offerings, are presented at Strawdog’s space in the heart of Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood at 3829 N. Broadway Street. Adult single ticket prices are $20 (single gala night tickets are $40 each, closing night tickets are $30 each); preview tickets are $10, student and senior tickets are $15 (with ID); and $15 tickets are available for groups of ten or more.  Season flex-passes are $50 for three admissions and $100 for six admissions, benefit performances count as two admissions. (All benefit performances include post-show reception with refreshments). Admission for Strawdog Late Night programming starts at $5 and varies for visiting artists. Tickets are available at 773.528.9696 and www.strawdog.org Read the rest of this entry »

Review: The History Boys/TimeLine Theatre

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historyboys_13RECOMMENDED

Walking down into the basement of the church where TimeLine Theatre holds court, there has always been the sense of heading into a school of sorts, but having to literally pass by the cluttered bedrooms of the “The History Boys” to find your seat—with the boys there engaged in various leisure activities as you do—it is amazing how instantaneously you are transported back to school.  As you find a seat, you notice that four across each section have upright armrests and there is a natural instinct not to take these desks, in the same way that most of us were unlikely to sit in the front of a classroom on the first day.   As the bell rings and the boys whoosh by you to take their seats, class is in session.  Any worries that you might have had about how ready TimeLine—or any smaller theater company, for that matter—might be to take on the area premiere of such a celebrated play with so many potential pratfalls from casting credible kids put in delicate situations to perfecting working-class British accents quickly fade away as you find yourself totally immersed in their world.  I don’t know what kind of techniques director Nick Bowling might have employed to have the eight-ensemble cast seem as if they know each other as well as a group of students who have been together in class together for what always seems like an eternity while it is happening, but the way these young men interact is extraordinary.  No less an accomplishment is that the teachers and the headmaster who are preparing these students for their Oxford and Cambridge entrance exams also interact with the students and each other with the needed familiarity necessary for Alan Bennett’s witty and thought-provoking play to work its special charms.   Read the rest of this entry »

History in the Making: How TimeLine Theatre landed the Chicago premiere of a Tony-winning play, and what they are doing with it

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Photo: Lara Goetsch

Donald Brearley, Michael Peters, Govind Kumar, Brad Bukauskas, Behzad Dabu, Joel Gross, Will Allan, Rob Fenton and Alex Weisman/Photo: Lara Goetsch

By William Scott

“I’ve never seen so many white button-down shirts and thin black ties sitting in our lobby—rows and rows of boys in black ties,” recounts TimeLine Theatre artistic director PJ Powers of the audition process for the highly anticipated Chicago premiere of Alan Bennett’s play “The History Boys.” “The enthusiasm and competition to be in this show is unlike anything I’ve experienced. I watch about a thousand auditions a year and have never seen anything like the number of letters and emails and calls I got.”

The fierce competition to land a role on stage mirrors the high stakes offstage, as TimeLine prepares for its most ambitous and high-profile production yet, amplified by an economic downturn that’s threatened the very existence of some of its peers. But if TimeLine’s feeling the pressure, they’re not showing it. Instead they’re exhibiting the poise typical of theater companies several times larger, maintaining the collegial sense of artistic collaboration that keeps things humming along. Read the rest of this entry »

TimeLine Theatre 2009-2010 season announcement

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Here’s the press release from TimeLine (final updates announced in May included):

TIMELINE THEATRE COMPANY
ANNOUNCES 2009-10 SEASON

TimeLine Theatre Company, dedicated to presenting plays inspired by history that connect to today’s social and political issues, announces three of the four plays of its 2009-10 season, including the Chicago premiere of Aaron Sorkin’s The Farnsworth Invention. [Note: Updated May 21 to include details of all four plays.]

“We have put together a season filled with bold ideas and tremendous heart and hope and guts,” said TimeLine Artistic Director PJ Powers. “Through a steadfast commitment to our mission, TimeLine aspires to be a place for people to come together, to feel a sense of community and to engage in a dialogue about our place in history. The work on our stage allows audiences to lose themselves in a story from the past in order to perhaps better understand where we are today and where we might go tomorrow. During our 2009-10 season, we look forward to exploring some defining moments of the 20th Century together — moments of art and beauty, of friendship and understanding, and of innovation and exploration.”
Read the rest of this entry »

Ideas as Currency: Chicago theater reacts to hard times

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Anthony Moseley

Anthony Moseley

By William Scott

“With this new reality we thought it would be important to make sure arts organizations weren’t becoming isolated, burrowing in, attempting to go it alone in meeting their financial and operational challenges,” shares Peter Kuntz, executive director of the Arts & Business Council of Chicago. Last month his organization, along with the Department of Cultural Affairs and the Illinois Arts Alliance, hosted a forum titled “Break on Through: The Creative Response to Tough Times.”  The objective was to get the arts community to jumpstart a dialogue that might lead to innovation in product and infrastructure.  Though Chicago has not escaped the quake of the economic landscape, the creative vitality that has distinguished the city’s art makers for so long may lead the way out of the financial muck.

“We are a receptor,” says Kuntz, “a community of common experiences, a collective resource if and when we want to be that.”  His sentiments echo the larger conversations currently facing our nation. Our new administration’s mission to restore transparency and encourage bold action may create trickle-down inspiration that gives some Chicago groups the optimism to make it out alive.

“I firmly believe that Barack Obama plus the economic crisis does equal a revolution and it is one we needed badly,” says Anthony Moseley, executive artistic director of Collaboraction, a multidisciplinary performing arts organization that is best known for the Sketchbook Festival of short performances. Moseley’s unusual title positions him in charge of the creative and administrative strata of the company.  A concept he believes to be integral to weathering financially turbulent times ahead.

“I think it is finally time to dissolve the imaginary line between the business and art sides of our company.  It does not exist so stop pretending it does,” asserts Moseley.  “We need more creative thinking in the business meetings and more savvy business smarts in our creative meetings. Ideas are our currency.”

Collaboraction has seen creativity turn directly into dollars by developing a profit center based on existing assets.  The company calls it Experience Design.  Event conceptualization, design, casting and management form the bones of this project that has already proven to be a profitable venture.  The program follows a similar path to Redmoon Theater’s event work, work that is transitioning to a primary focus for the company. This year will see an annual calendar of public events for Redmoon.  Less emphasis on producing shows in their space. Both Collaboration and Redmoon see public engagement as critical steps to ensuring long-term viability and maintaining importance within the community.

In addition to strategic creative moves, companies are also faced with establishing infrastructure that can withstand the turbulence.  As belts tighten, individual giving will decrease and the hunt for foundation, corporate and government money will become increasingly competitive. For the past eleven years, Timeline Theatre has operated with a cash surplus, a record the Timeline staff intends to carry on despite these difficult conditions.  The staff believes transparency is vital to establishing resiliency.

“You can’t avoid it.  It wouldn’t be prudent to not talk about it,” tells Timeline director of marketing Lara Goetsch.  “We created ‘Inside Story’ for people we consider to be investors.  This document gives the supporters an honest assessment of what is going on.”

“Inside Story” is a brief newsletter, financial report and call to arms.  The document will be published quarterly throughout 2009 as a way to keep the general perception of this smaller mid-sized company accurate.  With Timeline’s fortunate economic situation and consistently high quality of production, it would be easy for patrons to turn their attentions elsewhere when making contributions.  Timeline wishes to make it abundantly clear that sustained growth is only possible with the continued support of such individuals.  This and other strategies recently garnered the company the Richard Goodman Strategic Planning Award in the nonprofit category by the Association for Strategic Planning.

“Timeline has always been a calculated risk taker,” says Goetsch. “We don’t want to pare down. We want to be smart and do things we hope stand out. At the end of the day we aren’t being safe, we are being realistic and planning carefully so that we are in good shape.”

In the coming weeks, months and perhaps years, stories of arts organizations scaling back, merging or shutting down will be told. However, stories of nimble, creative problem solving, like the ones above, will also surface.  It is this creativity that will prove Chicago organizations are properly suited up with realistic optimism that will define the city’s cultural DNA into the future.  (William Scott)

Review: Not Enough Air/TimeLine Theatre Company

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notenoughair_06RECOMMENDED

Ruth Snyder’s 1928 trial for the murder of her husband was the Simpson trial of its day; the same brutal violence, the same media sensationalism. Journalist Sophie Treadwell covered the trial and, in her pioneering play “Machinal,” explored the societal restrictions that might force a woman to snap. Timeline Theatre Company’s “Not Enough Air” is a fascinating look at Treadwell’s creative process and her struggle to shine a light on women’s issues.

The crackerjack ensemble masters the fast-paced staging and rapid-fire language. Each performance is strong and well-defined; standouts include Terry Hamilton and Danica Ivancevic in their many roles. The second act drags slightly as Treadwell (Janet Ulrich Brooks) confronts the figurative (and literal) ghosts that haunt her; she and her husband, sportswriter William O. McGeehan(the charming David Parkes), must avoid the pitfalls of their unconventional marriage. But Brooks never lets Treadwell’s fire extinguish; we see how Treadwell’s passion comes close to consuming her. (Lisa Buscani)

At Timeline Theatre Company, 615 W. Wellington, (773)281-8463, through March 22.