
City Lit Theater will follow up its three Jeff Award wins announced on March 31 - including the top award of “Production - Play” for last fall’s August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS - with its season-closing production of R.U.R. (ROSSUM'S UNIVERSAL ROBOTS), a world premiere adaptation of the 1920 science-fiction play by the Czech writer Karel Čapek. R.U.R. (ROSSUM’S UNIVERSAL ROBOTS) introduced the term “robot” and looked ahead to the wonders and dangers of artificial intelligence decades before Arthur C. Clarke imagined HAL 9000 in his 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY or George Lucas gave us STAR WARS’ C3PO and R2D2. “Rossum’s Universal Robots” (“R.U.R.” for short) is a mysterious island factory run by the eccentric scientist Harry Rossum that manufactures artificial human beings. When Helena Glory arrives to advocate for the rights of these machines, a series of events is set into motion that sees Harry and Helena married against the backdrop of a global robot uprising. This “freely adapted” version of R.U.R. by the playwright and director Bo List, adds some perspective from the present, in which AI is now a reality. R.U.R. (ROSSUM'S UNIVERSAL ROBOTS) will open to the press on Sunday, May 11, 2025, following previews from May 2 and play through June 15, 2025.
Executive Artistic Director Brian Pastor, who will direct, announced their cast today. Harry Rossum will be played by Bryan Breau, who has been seen at City Lit as Stan Lee in THE HOUSE OF IDEAS and as the menacing Preacher in THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER. Brian Parry, veteran of such iconic roles as King Lear, Richard Nixon, and Willy Loman, has been cast as Rossum’s trusted accountant and financial manager Alquist. Madelyn Loehr, of Redtwist Theatre’s recent TITUS ANDRONICUS and City Lit’s PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD, will be Helena Glory. Shawna Tucker, who for City Lit has appeared in Brian Pastor’s adaptation of THIRTEEN DAYS and her own adaptation of THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER, is playing Helena’s chaperone Nana.
Cast in the role of Sulla, the robot who sparks an uprising of Rossum’s robots, is Alex George. George’s recent credits include A SHADOW BRIGHT AND BURNING for Black Button Eyes and AYN RAND’S IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE…. for The Conspirators. Mary Ross has been cast as the chief engineer Dr. Gall. Playing robots, who will have a human appearance more like Disney World animatronics than like C3PO, are Brendan Hutt (Marius), Claudia Sevilla (Tibia), and Sean Kelly (Radius).

Top Row L-R: Bryan Breau, Alex George, Brendan Hutt, Sean Kelly, Madelyn Loehr.
Lower Row L-R: Brian Parry, Mary Ross, Claudia Sevilla, Shawna Tucker.
The production team includes Jeremiah Barr (Scenic Designer), Beth Laske-Miller (Costume Designer), Liz Cooper (Lighting Designer), Meghan X McGrath (Properties Designer), Maureen Yasko (Violence/Intimacy Designer), Jonathan Guillen (Sound Designer/Composer), CJ Day (Assistant Director/Dramaturg) and Hazel Flowers-McCabe (Stage Manager).
Single tickets are priced at $30 for previews and $35 for regular performances and are on sale now at www.citylit.org. Senior prices are $25 for previews and $30 for regular performances. Students and military are $12.00 for all performances.
LISTING INFORMATION
R.U.R. (ROSSUM'S UNIVERSAL ROBOTS)
WORLD PREMIERE ADAPTATION
by Bo List
Freely adapted from the play by Karel Čapek
Directed by Artistic Director Brian Pastor
May 2 – June 15, 2025
Previews May 2 – 10, 2025
Press opening Sunday, May 11 at 3 pm
Regular run May 16 – June 15, 2025
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 3 pm
Mondays, June 2 and 9, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Tickets $30 for previews and $35 for regular performances. Senior prices are $25 previews and $30 regular performances. Students and military are $12.00 for all performances.
Tickets available online at www.citylit.org or by phone at 773-293-3682.
All performances at City Lit Theater, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr, on the second floor (accessible via elevator) of the Edgewater Presbyterian Church.
In 1920, Karel Čapek’s early science fiction classic R.U.R. coined the term “robot” and looked ahead to the wonders and dangers of artificial intelligence decades before it was cool to worry about such things. “Rossum’s Universal Robots” (“R.U.R.” for short) is a mysterious island factory that manufactures artificial human beings, run by the eccentric scientist Harry Rossum. When Helena Glory arrives to advocate for the rights of these machines, a series of events is set into motion that sees Harry and Helena married against the backdrop of a global robot uprising.
BIOS
Bo List (Adapter) is thrilled to return to City Lit, 13 years after their "electrifying" production of his FRANKENSTEIN, adapted from Mary Shelley’s novel. Other plays include the WWII-era comedy LADIES OF LIBERTY, his other spooky adaptation - THE LAST DRACULA, his one-acts CANARY YELLOW (winner of the Father Jeff Hamblin Playwriting Award at Abingdon Theatre in NYC) and I LEFT MY HEART IN KISSIMMEE, and his historical dramas for the Kentucky Humanities Council based on the lives of Abraham Lincoln, Henry Clay, Daniel Boone, and Nancy Green. He is a proud member of the Dramatists Guild of America.
Brian Pastor (they/them, Director) is a trans/non-binary director, actor, playwright, and Jeff Award-winning producer (Production – Play, August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS) in Chicago and the Executive Artistic Director of City Lit Theater. Brian previously spent ten and a half years on staff at City Lit, including nine as Managing Director. From 2019 to 2024, Brian served as City Lit’s Resident Director, where they directed GLASSHEART, THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER, THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD, George Bernard Shaw’s ARMS AND THE MAN, Archibald MacLeish’s J.B., and their own acclaimed adaptation of Robert Kennedy’s THIRTEEN DAYS. Brian is a founder and Emeritus Artistic Director of Chicago’s Promethean Theatre Ensemble, where they directed THE LION IN WINTER, THE WINTER’S TALE, and GROSS INDECENCY: THE THREE TRIALS OF OSCAR WILDE (all Broadway World Award Nominated- Best Director), as well as HENRY V and THE DARK SIDE OF THE BARD. Brian also directed the world premiere of THE BLACK KNIGHT by Angeli Primlani, the inaugural show for Lifeboat Productions. As an actor, Brian has worked with Strawdog, Raven, WildClaw, Promethean, Accomplice, and City Lit, among others. Brian is the former Executive Director of Sideshow Theatre and the former Executive Director of Raven Theatre. They also served as a board and company member of The Mime Company and as a founding company member of Chicago dell’Arte. A Pittsburgh native, Brian has called Chicago home since their graduation from Northwestern University in 2003.
ABOUT CITY LIT THEATER COMPANY
City Lit is the eighth oldest continuously operating theatre company in Chicago, behind only Goodman, Court, Northlight, Oak Park Festival, Black Ensemble Theatre, Steppenwolf, and Pegasus theatres. It was founded in 1979 with $210 pooled by Arnold Aprill, David Dillon, and Lorell Wyatt. For its current season, its 44th , it operates with a budget slightly over $200,000. It was the first theatre in the nation devoted to stage adaptations of literary material. There were so few theatres in Chicago at the time of its founding that at City Lit’s launch event, the founders were able to read a congratulatory letter they had received from Tennessee Williams.
For four decades and counting, City Lit has explored fiction, non-fiction, poetry, memoirs, songs, essays and drama in performance. A theatre that specializes in literary work communicates a commitment to certain civilizing influences—tradition imaginatively explored, a life of the mind, trust in an audience’s intelligence—that not every cultural outlet shares.
City Lit is located in the historic Edgewater Presbyterian Church building at 1020 West Bryn Mawr Avenue. Its work is supported in part by the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation, the Illinois Arts Council Agency, and the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events CityArts program. An Illinois not-for-profit corporation and a 501(c)(3) federal tax-exempt organization, City Lit keeps ticket prices below the actual cost of producing plays and depends on the support of those who share its belief in the beauty and power of the spoken written word.