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Filtering by Tag: Sherman Edwards

PicksInSix Review: 1776 - Marriott Theatre

 
 

“TO THINK THAT HERE WE ARE.”
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

The inspiring production of “1776” that opened Wednesday at the Marriott Theatre brought a few familiar thoughts to mind about our young and exuberant country.  Democracy is messy. The more things change, the more they stay the same. And a line from one of Sherman Edwards’ songs: “To think that here we are.”

That jubilant statement is sung out by Benjamin Franklin (Richard R. Henry) to John Adams (Tyrick Wiltez Jones) and Thomas Jefferson (Erik Hellman) as the newly drafted Declaration of Independence is being read to the 2nd Continental Congress. They know that there are pitfalls and more debate ahead—and the reality of the bloody war already underway that is underscored throughout the show with missives from ‘G. Washington’ himself—but for a brief instant, getting to this point feels like a small victory.

Obviously, no one truly knows what transpired in the room where this happened. That said, Edwards’ 1969 Tony Award-winning concept, music and lyrics and Peter Stone’s book together create a captivating menagerie of historical characters who are (mostly) bent on unification. All those years later we are today mired in a never-ending election cycle and immersed in an escalating debate about the future vision for our democracy. There is hope and we do generally agree that a new, yet imperfect, nation was formed on July 4, 1776 for the people of the thirteen original colonies, even as freedom and equality for all is still lagging woefully behind.

With director Nick Bowling’s steady hand, sharp choreography by Tanji Harper and a casting coup that has assembled many of Chicago’s top performing artists together on one stage, Marriott Theatre’s “1776” has a sweeping professional sheen as one of the finest and most unique shows on stage right now.

The opposing voice to Adams’s passionate colonial independence is embodied in Pennsylvania delegate John Dickinson, a stellar performance by Heidi Kettenring. The two opposing forces—mediated by Joel Gelman’s stalwart John Hancock and Gabriel Lott-Rogers‘s Charles Thomson with assistance from the ever-present Karl Hamilton as Andrew McNair—weave arguments and slow progress to a bitter stalemate. Along the way, songs teeter from the humorous—“Sit Down, John,” “The Lees of Old Virginia” and “He Plays The Violin”—to the horrific, by South Carolina’s Edward Rutledge (Matthew Hommel) whose chilling referendum to slavery “Molasses to Rum” is alarmingly prophetic. The moving performances of Katherine Alexis Thomas (Abigail Adams), Alicia Kaori (Martha Jefferson), Lucy Godinez (Richard Henry Lee) and a remarkable performance by Jay Westbrook (Courier) in “Momma Look Sharp” deserve special mention in a company stocked with extraordinary voices under the musical direction of Ryan T. Nelson and conductor Brad Haak.

Regina Garcia’s crisp, multi-level scenic design expands Marriott’s in-the-round configuration to create a wide and striking panorama of the chamber interior punctuated by Jesse Klug’s evocative light design and Michael Daly’s pinpoint sound design. The visual picture is complete with Theresa Ham’s gorgeous costumes that make “1776” a truly wonderful—and historic—theatrical event.  

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

Marriott Theatre Lincolnshire
presents
1776
through October 13, 2024


Ten Marriott Drive
Lincolnshire, IL 60069

WEBSITE

TICKETS

847-634-0200 (Box Office)


For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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PicksInSix Review: Is God Is - A Red Orchid Theatre

 
 

“Deceptive power fuels “Is God Is.”
 PicksInSix® Review|Guest Contributor Ronald Keaton

There is a challenging, stylish production at A Red Orchid Theatre entitled “Is God Is,” where violence is examined from the standpoint of families and their histories, in a kind of rebellious, yet bracing take by playwright Aleshea Harris that plays at the legendary Old Town theatre through May 28.

Directed in pointed and demanding strokes by the fine Milwaukee-based actor/director Marti Gobel, “Is God Is” tells the difficult story of a family unit wracked by domestic and criminal violence that uses a dose of dark humor to make the hard moments palatable for people to bear—and for an audience to follow in the story.  And does it very well. Harris is an intelligent, resourceful writer whose full mix of familial language and street vernacular grabs us by the scruff of the neck and holds on. It produces moments that are eye-opening and brutally truthful.

Twin sisters Anaia (Ashli Rene Funches) and Racine (Aja Singletary) have scars, physical scars that we are meant to see and be uncomfortable with.  They stem from a fire in their house that was set by their father when they were much younger children, and they’ve been told that their mother (dubbed ‘She’) is dead, that is until a letter comes from her wanting to see them.  As they see She (Karen Aldridge) in her withered, damaged state close to death, they get a chilling request. These three artists—Funches and Singletary in their fun, give-and-take sister dynamic, and Aldridge in a stunning, frightening take as a burn victim facing death—are worth the price of admission.  But there’s more here than meets the eye.

As an audience member, this writer discovers here the value of truly innovative storytelling, which at first seemed problematic.  The sister’s revengeful quest that follows stretches from the Deep South to California.  At first I wondered why we had so little to work with in accepting the story.  It sneaks up on you, really: murderous acts that Racine and Anaia commit on a lawyer (a wild-haired, almost hippie-like Sherman Edwards), on the father’s second wife (Rita Wicks, whose suburban entitlement is wonderfully ironic) and on the twin…yes, twin sons Riley (a humorously deadpan Donovan Session) and Scotch (Andrew Muwonge in a hilarious turn as a self-aware writer) of this second family. The bodies start piling up like so much kindling wood around a campfire.

At last, Man—the character name for the father – comes home. As Man, Kevin Minor is at once threatening, dark and ironic in his defense of what he did all those years ago.  We first see him in a silent mime during the original description of the fire by She.  We hear his voice share an explanation that bespeaks the cycle of violence that he has instigated, that this family has endured, and that we in the audience take with disturbing ease.

The ending is a surprise that will not be revealed here.  It took getting away from the actual production to reflect upon and fully understand the experience.  The entire 100 minutes of performance does not at all give us an easy ride.  But it makes us think and consider why we accept such violence in our midst with seeming ease, like a Sam Peckinpah film of yore. Makes one wonder if we have indeed become so numb in our society, no matter the form or reason for it, that we put it on an unbecoming list of solutions.  “Is God Is” has that kind of numbing, deceptive power.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL. www.solochicagotheatre.com  Coming soon, his new solo play “Echo Holler.” www.echoholler.com

PHOTO|Fadeout Media

A Red Orchid Theatre
presents

IS GOD IS

1531 N Wells St, Chicago, IL 60610

through May 28

TICKETS

(312) 943-8722

CONTENT ADVISORY

WEBSITE

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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