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In 2020, the Ovals of Ostropol, the fictional troupe of travelling players that bring the story of Hershel and the goblins who menace him to life in Strawdog Theatre Company’s holiday tradition, were forced to spread Hanukkah cheer and occasional chills online. This year, the Ovals are back in a surprisingly rollicking (given the size of the troupe) live production of Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins, adapted from the children’s book by Eric Kimmel by Michael Dailey, with music and lyrics by Jacob Combs.  Tickets are free, making this story accessible to all, though donations are welcome and well-deserved. Director Hannah Todd has marshalled a team of designers and performers that create a charming and joyful holiday entertainment for the whole family. The enthusiastic cast play multiple roles and instruments, using deliberately low-budget stage magic to transport the audience to the town of Chelm, where they must convince the community that stories are worth retelling...and that performers are deserving of food and shelter. Only the most jaded will not be convinced.

Eric Kimmel’s children's book tells of one man’s efforts to save Hannukah from the goblins who have taken over the old synagogue and who, for reasons unknown, hate Hanukkah and blow out the candles and throw the latkes on the floor whenever anyone tries to celebrate the holiday. Michael Dailey’s adaptation frames the story with a troupe of down-on-their-luck traveling players, including a descendant of the book’s principal character, also named Hershel. This year’s company, wearing Oval-branded masks against the anachronistic COVID-19 pandemic, are a troupe of vaudevillians whose skills do not earn them enough to pay their dinner, though they make for an entertaining pre-show. Which brings them back to Chelm—the town where Hershel’s grandfather set out to outwit the series of goblins. Hoping to find a warm welcome, windows lit with Hanukkah lights, and food and shelter, the troupe instead finds a dour shopkeeper who explains that the town has no need for stories and turns them away. After some cajoling and bullying Hershel convinces her to listen to the story of how his ancestor defeated the goblins and then make her decision. The troupe scrambles to put together the show, sharing all the elements that will become the props and goblins through theatrical magic and commitment.

Hannah Todd and the ensemble of performers and designers have created an accessible, low-tech performance that relies on mild Catskills-style humor, slapstick, and some dance and acrobatics. Nothing fancy. The Ovals seem to rely more on charm than skill, which explains their destitution. However, they have charm in spades, which makes it nearly impossible not to root for them. Todd does an excellent job of keeping the pace moving, allowing just enough time for laughs (or groans) and audience responses, and, finally, a moving celebration of stories and community. She introduces all the elements of the play-within-the-play either in the preshow, or in the “panic” to pull together a show in a moment’s notice, and it is fun to see how the elements are transformed when the story of Hanukkah-hating goblins is performed. The cast convey the urgency of their characters predicament without ever losing their connection to the audience and their message of togetherness. As Hershel, Morgan Lavenstein plays Hershel with just the right amount of swagger, easily switching between physical humor and solemn songs of the season, which beautifully ground the production. She also does a great job of encouraging the moments of audience participation. As Hershel’s foil and partner, Leor, who does not share Hershel’s faith that all will be well, Charlie Baker plays multiple roles, including a greedy goblin who must battle a pickle jar, with physical aplomb and comic timing. The droll Rebecca Marowitz as Max teams with Baker for vaudevillian hijinks and brings the Innkeeper to life. LaKecia Harris as Sara brings energy and warmth to her role in the ensemble, as well as a big vocal presence as one of the more menacing goblins. Christopher Thomas Pow and Amy Gorelow provide the musical spine, with Pow on violin and Gorelow on the upright bass underscoring and accompanying much of the play. Pow also voices an oddly charming, tiny tong-goblin, and Gorelow adds some comedy with her character’s attempts at acrobatics. The whole company does an excellent job of manipulating the objects that comprise the set, props and goblins. There’s even a goblin-brawl!

Scenic designer Caitlin McLeod has created a puzzle-box wagon that contains the entire play, with a few scenic touches that unite cast and audience in the spirit of Hanukkah. The wagon provides a backdrop for the Ovals’ act, holds chests of props and accessories, and then transforms into a stage. Lighting designer K Story subtly shifts focus from exterior to interior, allows the “candles” to shine, and helps create the dramatic Goblin King entrance and the miracle of the Hanukkah lights that eventually comes to pass. The props by Foiles, and puppets by Foiles and McLeod, with Stephanie Diaz serving as puppetry consultant, exemplify stage magic—common objects are transformed into goblins of all shapes and sizes, including an initially terrifying Goblin King. Both the design and performance of these puppets are delightful. Daniel Etti-Williams’s sound design relies heavily on old-fashioned Foley effects, which adds to the sense of theatricality; the coming of the King of Goblins is particularly foreboding. The movement by choreographer Amanda Crockett, incorporates acrobatics, vaudeville and traditional dance elements to tie together the worlds of players and play. Gregory Grahams costume designs bring the story closer to modern times, early in the 20th century, with a mix of urban and rural styles. Music director Ricky Harris deploys the considerable instrumental and vocal talents of the cast to perform Jacob Combs’s klezmer-inflected score, creating a rich musical backdrop for the play. From the energetic Dreidel song, which provides a good primer of the rules of the dreidel game—helpful for later in the play—to spare settings of the Hanukkah prayer that accompany the lighting of the candles, to goblin encounters and a final musical lesson on latke-making, Harris’s musical direction fills the space.

Even the youngest members of the audience will be able to figure out what will transpire long before it does, but in the hands of Strawdog’s energetic ensemble, Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins is a fast-paced, magical love letter to storytelling and community. Though Hershel and the goblins both are delighted by geld, Hershel and his company ultimately desire just enough to keep themselves fed and sharing stories. Though enjoyable for children of any age (there was only one child in attendance at the performance, but he represented his generation well), this show will delight younger theatergoers with opportunities to join in songs, offer advice and dance along. Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins is a joyful and moving part of the holiday season, and well worth a visit.

Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins, now in its fourth consecutive year, runs through December 12, 2021 at Rivendell Theatre, 5779 N. Ridge Ave. in Chicago. Tickets are FREE and currently available at www.strawdog.org. Please note that audience members 2+ must wear a mask, and all audience members 12+ must provide proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test before entering the theater. Performances take place Saturdays and Sundays at 1 pm and 4 pm, and there will be an added understudy performance on Friday, December 10 at 7:30 pm.

Published in Theatre in Review

What brings people together? Similar interest, physical attraction, and availability? Or could it be just a side effect of the medication the doctor prescribed? Strawdog Theatre Company kicks their 32nd season off with the Chicago Premier of Lucy Prebble’s The Effect.

Tristan, a cheerful young man hungry to see the world, and Connie, a bright young woman unsure of her purpose in life, volunteer as subjects for a new antidepressant. The study is being monitored by Dr. Lorna James who battles with her own depression. From the moment they take their first dosage of this new medication, Connie and Tristan find themselves falling in love. An attraction that appears as a blessing to Tristan but troubling to Connie who is already in a relationship with an older man. As the experiment proceeds, and the dosage Tristan and Connie ingest increase, so does their attraction with one another. Connie offers that the antidepressant could very well be the reason they are willing to change their lives for one another. Believing what is pulling them together is simply a side effect. That’s until one of them finds out that the other is on a placebo.

Acclaimed writer Lucy Prebble, Co-Executive Producer and Co-writer of HBO new hit show Succession has created an impressive catalog. The Effect originally premiered at the National Theater and won the Critic’s Circle Award for Best New Play and has been dazzling audiences since then. The dialogue feels authentic to the point that it hurts. Free of any restraint, allowing the characters to reveal the best and worst part of themselves. 

Chicago based director Elly Green gives displays The Effect on a cube shape stage. Using the monitor in the center as into the character’s dosage amount, their EKG, and bio. It’s presented in a way that to make the audience feel like doctors sitting before the stage in lab coats, analyzing the experiment at hand. The production very well deserved an applause along with the actors for catapulting the audience into the play like a 2001: A Space Odyssey trip in a vortex of lights.

Each actor holds their own in this fine play, but the one I want to place the spotlight on is Justine C. Turner who plays Dr. Lorna James. She handles the transition from a calm, collected doctor doing her job to a broken woman in an astounding way. As if you’re watching Lady Macbeth struggle to rub that damn spot from her clothes for an entire half of a play. 

The Effect is modern love tale that deeply absorbs the reality of prescribed medications and its weight in our society. These new medicines, its shady providers or overuse by the consumer, brings new questions for this generation and others following to answer. We must find a balance between ourselves and this new medicine. Establish a way we use them to aid us through our everyday lives and not hinder or disrupt. The Effect takes on this subject with intellect, humor, and plenty of heart. 

Through November 23, 2019 at Strawdog Theatre.

Published in Theatre in Review
Wednesday, 04 July 2018 16:49

Review: Sickle at Strawdog Theatre

Written by Abbey Fenbert and directed by Elizabeth Lovelady, Red Theater’s new play Sickle takes on the very little-known subject of Holodomor (or “Golodomor”, Famine-genocide, or “death by hunger”). The story takes place in 1932-33, in a Ukrainian village, one of many Ukrainian villages sacrificed by Stalin to advance his communist agenda of land de-privatization and collectivization. Though initially collectivization was voluntary, eventually all agricultural land was declared Socialist property. Later all farmers (“kulaks”) were ordered to give up their land ownership to the State, merge their land together into collectively operated farms (“kolkhozy”) that would “belong to all”. Farms that refused were given requisition quota of grain that was set at unreasonably high levels. Any grain withholdings were severely punishable by ceasing of property, Siberian labor camps, or death without trial. A law was passed forcing peasants who could not meet their grain quotas to surrender any livestock they had. Collective farms that failed to meet their quotas were placed on "blacklists"; blacklisted communes had no right to trade or to receive deliveries of any kind and became death zones. In January 1933 Ukraine's borders were sealed in order to prevent Ukrainian peasants from fleeing to other republics. Black flags were placed outside of the villages failed to comply with the Soviet Government. Thus, full scale mass murder was underway.

In Sickle, by the time comsomolka (young party activist) Nadya (Katherine Bourne Taylor) arrives in the village, the only remaining inhabitants are four women (Iryna, Anna, Yasia and Halka) dressed in dirty clothes and weak from “skipping meals”, and a baby. Grain is severely rationed, their husbands and family are either dead or in Siberia - there’s really no hope left, but with self-given titles like general, lieutenant and captain, they consider themselves soldiers and theirs is organized resistance. Comsomolka Nadia had been sent by the Party to investigate why the village is under-performing; she accuses them of cheating and keeping more grain than they claim they had. Nadia is from a city and knows next to nothing about farming, but she’s good with numbers, and she’s a really good Party dog.

Wonderful acting, most notably by Christine Vrem-Ydstie who plays General Yryna, and Katherine Bourne Taylor who plays Nadya, and witty dialogue make the play very enjoyable, despite its grim subject matter. The tiny space that is Strawdog theater seems like the perfect venue, giving the story the layer of intimacy for all five [well developed] characters to relate to each other.

The play is a brave undertaking, considering the authentically Ukrainian terminology used that’s unfamiliar to most American theater-goers. But it is a poignant story that needs to be told. There was a terrible time in the history of Ukraine when, by some accounts, nearly 12 million people were exterminated, yet very few people know about that.

Red Theater's production of Sickle is being performed at Strawdog Theatre through July 29th. For more show info visit https://redtheater.org/

Published in Theatre in Review

Kristoffer Diaz’s “The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity” is getting a knock-out revival by Red Theater. Named for the colorfully staged, and bombastic entrances of professional wrestlers - with costumes, smoke, lights, confetti, and plenty of trash-talking put-downs of their rivals to rile up the audience - pro wrestling is really a natural event for the stage.

In this send-up of the seemingly testosterone-laden world of pro wrestlers – and a hilarious one at that - director Jeremy Aluma has also plumbed the depths of this play, lauded with an Obie and a Pulitzer finalist after its 2008 premier.

Our narrator and guide, Mace (Alejandro Tey), a young Puerto Rican man with a life-long love of wrestling – explains his career in that vital role as one of the class of professional losers, who are willingly vanquished so that the celebrated star wrestler – in this play Chad Deity – can be further elevated and celebrated. And the pay is good.

With amazing casting by Gage Wallace, the production puts the audience in the role of fans at the arena. Much as I resist such tropes (please, let me hide in my seat!), this production drew me in, then captured me – along with the rest of us watching at the StrawDog Theatre building.   

This was in part due to the charismatic and captivating performance of Alejandro Tey as Mace. He carries on for perhaps 45 minutes, relating his life story, teaching us the fine points of the profession, and explaining the symbiosis between the winner and loser. This almost mesmerizing performance is punctuated by demonstrations of wrestling technique.

But in very large measure Chad Deity succeeds on the seamless performances of the troupe – Mickey Sullivan is top drawer as Eko, the promoter; Will Snyder as The Bad Guy and as Fight Captain; and the night I saw it, Harsh Gagoomal as VP. Special kudos to Dave Honigman as the other Bad Guy and as an off-the-wall Referee who also performs janitorial duties and even wanders into the lobby during intermission. Chad Deity himself – Semaj Miller – tears up the in an over the top performance

Before seeing Chad Deity, I was quite blind to the team work and dynamic between winners and losers. My perception was the wrestling was clowning, not sport. In fact, the throws – and accompanying falls – require careful training. The troupe at Red Theater did its due diligence in learning these skills and clearly put in the hours on the wrestling mat.

The revival of this play is also timely. The panoply of villainous characters challenging Chad Diaz’s script highlights the American male heroes who vanquish the Bad Guys. The play – like real wrestling – trades on caricatures for the winners and designated losers alike. Over time, new models of trending bad guys are rolled out.

In Chad Deity, that new character is VJ, a motormouthed Pakistani who stands in for a variety of Middle Eastern villains. Mace adopts the role of his accomplice, playing a Mexican bandit. Let’s just say neither of them intend to pay for any frigging wall.

The plot may be overly burdened by one additional claim on it: Mace is really a great wrestler, and wants to win, rather than lose well. Just once he would like to take the winners belt. Mace and the play deserve this, but it does seem to slow the action at points.

The Red Theater creative team has converted the Strawdog Theatre space into a convincing live wrestling event. It was an absolute delight. The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity plays through September 16, 2017 at 1802 W Berenice Ave, Chicago, IL 60613. It is highly, highly recommended.

Published in Theatre in Review

In Akvavit Theatre Company's Hitler On The Roof, playwright Rhea Leman has devised the perfect post-mortem punishment for the man behind the Nazi propaganda machine. It’s spring of 1945, Berlin, infamous Fuhrerbunker; the war is all but lost, Hitler had just committed suicide, Dr. Joseph Goebbels and his wife have followed his lead, first having poisoned their six children. Everybody’s dead. But, wait: Dr. Gobbels’ ghost (played by Amy Gorelow) is still hanging around refusing to cross onto the next world. Seventy-two years had passed, it’s now 2017, yet, Dr. Goebbels believes that the war is still going on and that he’s got some important work to do.


I’d like to note that Strawdog Theatre is a very intimate space with just two double rows of seats on each side of the stage. The stage itself is made to look like a bunker (set design by Chad Eric Bergman), empty food cans strewn around, Edith Piaf’s “Non, je ne regrette rien” blasting in the background, and muffled old radio recordings of Hitler’s speeches occasionally chiming in (sound design by Nigel Harsch).


Ducking under the table each time a bomb goes off above the bunker, Dr. Goebbels keeps himself busy reciting Hitler’s and his own accomplishments and quotes, playing radio broadcasts to non-existent audiences, and boasting about his past, unable to let go and “move on”. Pacing around the bunker and reflecting on Germany’s past (“in 1931 Hitler turned dying country into a thriving country” and “created a new DNA, designed a new Germany”), he also analyzes propaganda’s manipulative power. As Minister of Propaganda and Peoples Enlightenment, Dr. Joseph Goebbels would know: he controlled arts, media, news and information in Germany from 1933 until his death in 1945.


Playwright Rhea Leman uses this original way to shine the light on the media and how it may be used as a tool to shape people’s perceptions and opinions, creating our reality. History is always there to remind us of our past and warn about the future. Born and raised in New York City, Rhea Leman moved to Denmark in 1981. She wrote Hitler On The Roof in 2011 in response to rise of Danish Nationalism. The original production of the play by the company Folketeatret toured Denmark for two years, winning the prestigious Reumert award for Best Leading Actress. Rhea Leman is the winner of multiple awards, including the Allen Prize award for “excellent dramatic writing”. Her writings focus on serious subjects which she presents in humorous ways, not unlike the current piece.


Mid-way through the play, Dr. Gobbels is joined in the bunker by the ghost of artist and filmmaker Leni Reifenstahl (Jay Torrence in drag), and the play picks up quite a bit. Together these two actors have such great chemistry on stage, and the gender role reversal of the two actors makes the premise of the play even more comical. Dressed like clowns, they dance (adorable!), flirt, and slap each other around (choreography by Susan Fay), all the while engaging in conversational battles to try and out-manipulate one another. But Leni Reifenstahl didn’t just drop in to chat; she’s there on a self-serving mission that, ultimately, doesn’t go as well as planned. Let’s just say the two “living dead” might just end up passing an eternity together, stuck in the bunker. Well done.


Hitler on the Roof is being performed at Strawdog Theatre (1802 W. Bernice Ave) through July 9th. For more information on this show or to purchase tickets, visit www.chicagonordic.org.

Published in Theatre in Review
Tuesday, 08 March 2016 12:59

Strawdog's D.O.A. A Nice Ode to Film Noir

In Strawdog Theatre’s final performance at the popular northside theatre bar, Hugen Hall, we are presented with Elizabeth Lovelady’s world premiere adaptation of Rudolph Mate’s film noir thriller D.O.A.

Intrigue is the name of the game in this whodunit and audience members are kept guessing to the end.

When Frank Bigelow walks into a police station to report a murder, the intrigue begins immediately as we find out the victim is none other than himself. Poisoned and running out of time, Bigelow frantically searches for the reason he has been targeted and the people responsible. Going over past events leading up to the present and speculating on all possibilities as to why someone would want him dead, Bigelow puts the pieces of the puzzle together, bringing to light a few surprises along the way. As the sixty-minute play unfolds, clues are slowly revealed at a nice pace and the plot steadily gains traction.

The plot has enough to keep one interested though not necessarily keeping one on the end of their seat. What makes the play special is its setting. Thanks to commendable efforts by costume designer Raquel Adorno, lighting designer John Kelly, sound designer Heath Hays, prop designer Jamie Karas and scenic designer Mike Mroch, the simple space is nicely transformed to which D.O.A. embodies a classic flatfoot detective style with scenes reminiscent unforgettable films such as The Third Man or Double Indemnity.

Capturing the smallest of details to add a genuineness to the proposed era are the women made up in black lipstick, the stylish 1940s suits and dresses, the smoke-filled room that creates moving shadows amongst the white spotlighting and the snappy dialogue filled with film noir jargon. Actors gracefully walk around the stage and seating area as the scenes quickly change, often leaving a cast member standing or sitting right alongside a member of the audience, making this a unique theatre experience.   

The play also offers its share of humor as a handful of scenes over-emphasize the drama with extended freeze frames, gazes and deadpan deliveries of cheesy lines.

Mickey O’Sullivan leads the capable cast as a desperate Frank Bigelow with fellow cast members contributing nicely – many in dual roles, especially getting strong performances by Sean McGill (Harry, Bartender, Chester) and Kelsey Shipley as Elaine/Ms. Foster.  

 

Strawdog Theatre’s D.O.A. is being performed at Hugen Hall (3829 N. Broadway) through April 5th. For tickets and/or more show information visit www.Strawdog.org.      

Published in Theatre in Review

 

 

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