CHICAGO – Excelsior! Comic book legend Stan Lee’s famous exclamation puts a fine point on the third and final play of Mark Pracht’s FOUR COLOR TRILOGY, “The House of Ideas,” presented by and staged at City Lit Theater in Chicago’s Edgewater neighborhood. For tickets/details, click HOUSE OF IDEAS.
Penelope Walker
Podtalk: Director Gregory Dixon of ‘Olympia’ at 54th Chicago International Film Festival, Oct. 15, 2018
Submitted by PatrickMcD on October 15, 2018 - 8:26amCHICAGO – As each generation transitions to adulthood, the overwhelming changes that occur in employment, relationships and loss become their drama. Director Gregory Dixon and writer McKenzie Chinn teamed up to create a film that addresses that drama, in the made-in-Chicago “Olympia.” The film is screening at the 54th Chicago International Film Festival on Monday, October 15th, 2018 (5:30pm). For details and tickets, click here.
Theater Review: American Theater Co.’s ‘We’re Gonna Be Okay’ Seeks Identity in Early 1960s
Submitted by PatrickMcD on February 3, 2018 - 8:07pm- Adithis Chandrashekar
- American Theater Company
- Avi Roque
- Basil Kreimendahl
- Brittany Love Smith
- Cuban Missile Crisis
- Diversity
- Gay
- HollywoodChicago.com Content
- Identity
- John F. Kennedy
- Kelli Simpkins
- Patrick McDonald
- Penelope Walker
- Sarai Rodriguez
- Theater
- We’re Gonna Be Okay
- Will Davis
- Theater, TV, DVD & Blu-Ray
CHICAGO – The 1960s were a time of historical social transition. The movements – civil rights, feminist, gay rights – all had roots in that tumultuous decade. The Chicago premiere of Basil Kreimendahl’s “We’re Gonna Be Okay” echoes all of those movements in its characters, and collides them against the October 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. The show has a Thursday-Sunday run at the American Theater Company through March 4th, 2018. Click here for more details, including ticket information.
Theater Review: Lookingglass Theatre Co. Knows ‘Life Sucks’
Submitted by PatrickMcD on October 3, 2016 - 5:16pmCHICAGO – Let’s face it, life does suck. But what can we do about that? How do we survive? Lookingglass Theatre Company’s latest stage presentation tries to answer those thorny questions through a group of fellow travelers, flung together at a cabin retreat, trying to figure out why (indeed) “Life Sucks.”