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Wednesday, 15 July 2026 14:48

Nothing Without a Company presents The Trouble With My Hair: Coloring, Cutting, and Coming into Who I Am - Five Performances across Chicago, August 21st-30th

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Nothing Without a Company (NWaC) is proud to announce five performances of The Trouble With My Hair: Coloring, Cutting, and Coming into Who I Am. This is a solo performance, written and performed by award-winning storyteller Ada Cheng, which intimately explores gender, sexual identity, and boundary-making through her evolving relationship with her hairstylist and her hair. The production will have five performances across Chicago. Friday August 21st, 7:30 PM at Scissor & Fork, 3968 North Elston Ave. Saturday August 22nd, 7:30 PM at Visceral Adventure Lounge, 3638 W Grand Ave. Sunday August 23rd, 7:30 PM at REM Salon, 3035 W Fullerton Ave. Saturday August 29th, 7:30 PM at Haibayo, 1132 W Argyle St. Sunday August 30th, 1:00 PM at The Center on Halsted, 3656 N Halsted St. Each performance will be followed by a Q&A discussion. August 30th performance will end with a reaction piece by Stir Friday Night, along with a reception catered by Krung Thep Thai Cuisine, 3205 N Halsted St, Tickets range from $15.00 - $50.00 and are available at NothingWithoutaCompany.org.

This production is supported by Crossroads Fund. 

NWaC is accepting submissions for Chicago-based Guest Artists through July 19, 2026. 

History of The Trouble With My Hair: Coloring, Cutting, and Coming into Who I Am.

The performance is developed with and directed by Jessica Lynn Johnson, an award-winning director and solo show development expert known for shaping compelling, authentic solo works. "Ada is a brilliant and gifted storyteller. Gentle, perfectly paced and warmly welcoming in her sweetly sarcastic way. The writing is magical. Evocative, sensual and human." -Samantha Simmonds-Ronceros of NoHo Arts District. Ada has performed The Trouble With My Hair nation-wide, including the Asheville Fringe Art Festival, was an official selection of the Soaring Solo Studios Stars Series 2025, and she continues to have more shows throughout the year in and out of the country.

Synopsis:

The Trouble With My Hair: Coloring, Cutting, and Coming into Who I Am, is an intimate exploration of gender, sexual identity, and boundary-making through Ada's evolving relationship with her hairstylist and her hair. Blending narrative art and theatrical storytelling, Ada Cheng playfully brings her audience on a journey of self-discovery and self-love through her struggles with hair. From early memories of negotiating belonging to courageous acts of boundary-making in adulthood, Cheng uses her changing hairstyles and haircolors as milestones marking her path toward self-definition. Each cut, color, and conversation becomes a metaphor for reclaiming voice and visibility in a world eager to define her first.

"Hair is never just hair, It holds our histories, our rebellions, our identities, our desires to belong, and our declarations of independence. This show is about coming home to oneself and learning to love the person underneath it all." - Ada Cheng

Writer and Performer Bio 

Dr. Ada Cheng is an award-winning storyteller, solo performer, and producer. Committed to amplifying and uplifting marginalized voices, she has created numerous storytelling platforms for BIPOC and LGBTQIA community members to tell difficult and vulnerable stories. She has consistently engaged in public education and public outreach through the use of storytelling and performance arts. Since 2016, she has toured her solo performances Not Quite and Loving Across Borders nationwide, presenting at universities, theaters, and conferences. She premiered her third solo performance, The Trouble with My Hair, in Los Angeles in October 2025 as part of Soaring Solo Studios' Stars Series. She has been a speaker with the Illinois Humanities Road Scholars Speakers Bureau since 2019. Dr. Cheng was named the 2023–24 Lund-Gill Endowed Chair at Dominican University and was a recipient of the 2024 Public Humanities Award from Illinois Humanities. 

Artistic Director's Note

Hannah Ii-Epstein "My relationship to my hair is personal. I come from mixed lineages, and it has always felt like hair-itage, something that carries different parts of me at once. It holds memories of family, culture, identity, and how I have grown into myself over time. What I appreciate about Ada Cheng's work is how honest it is, and how it leaves room for people to recognize themselves.

We are bringing the performance into five hair salons and gathering places because I want people who might not usually see theatre to be able to walk into it easily, and to leave room for conversation in each neighborhood. This is Ada's personal story, but I also see it reflecting experiences shared across the area. It feels rooted in places where those stories already live. I also wanted each of these gatherings to feel like a conversation, so NWaC has invited artists whose work sits with memory and lived experience to be part of it. For the closing performance, we're really glad to be in conversation with Stir Friday Night, the longest running AAPI improv team in Chicago."

Nothing Without a Company has also updated their mission & vision statements.

New Mission: "Nothing Without a Company (NWaC) utilizes theatre and film to amplify culturally inclusive stories by immersing audiences in site-specific environments."

New Vision: "To create a safe space where everyone feels welcome, highlighting authentic stories about LGBTQIA+, Women, Trans and Gender Nonbinary/GNC, AANHPI and BIPOC communities."

Website: www.nothingwithoutacompany.org

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