"Life After" - Review by Carol Moore & Al Bresloff
**** Highly Recommended **** "Life After" is a poignant new musical packed with beautiful songs about the way a teenaged girl comes to accept the sudden death of her father. Hard enough as an adult, right? As if that weren’t enough, 16-year-old Alice had a huge fight with her dad and stormed out. He called, left a message, but she never got the chance to call him back. "Life After" is a beautiful musical. 4 Spotlights
"Steel Magnolias" - Reviewed by Keith Laggos, PhD for TSP News
Laugh, laugh, cry and then laugh more as you enjoy Steel Magnolia at the elegant Drury Lane in Oak Brook. A well adorn set down to the hanging Spanish Moss from tree limbs all bring Louisiana in the 80’s to life.
"Steel Magnolias" is an emotional roller coaster - Review by Carol Moore
**** Highly Recommended **** Drury Lane’s production of "Steel Magnolias" is an emotional roller coaster, heartwarming humorous ups followed by heart-wrenching downs. In case you’re thinking you’ve seen "Steel Magnolias" before, so I can skip this one, I have one word for you – don’t! The cast is magnificent. In fact, I can’t imagine anyone else in any of these parts. They made me laugh and made me cry. Kudos to Johanna McKenzie Miller, the cast and the all-female production crew for an outstanding job! 4 BIG Spotlights
"The Thin Place" - Review by Carol Moore
June is here, and that means Canterbury Summer Theatre is back. Canterbury opened the season with a rather eerie play, "The Thin Place" by Lucas Hnath, directed by David Graham. If you like hearing/reading/watching spooky ghost stories, this is the play for you. I’m not really into this genre, but I have to say, I felt a prickle of unease once or twice. 3 ½ Spotlights
Review of “cullud wattuh” by Julia W. Rath for TSP News
5 Stars ***** Moving, powerful, and intense, “cullud wattuh” is an undeniably phenomenal production! Sad but never depressing, informative yet never beating you over the head, the regional premier of this show is based on real events that took place in Flint, Michigan, over the past eight years.
Review of Walk on the Wild Side by Julia W. Rath for TSP News
“Walk on the Wild Side” is a collection of four short one-act plays written by John Patrick Shanley. The Chicago premiere fleshes out characters who suffer from low self-esteem and don’t know who they are or what they need to be happy. Through a series of vignettes that depict very different slices of life, we see how all the characters are miserable.
Review of “Tommy on Top” by Julia W. Rath for TSP News
3 Stars *** Chris Woodley’s “Tommy on Top” is a tale of two plays, one overlaying the other. The primary story has to do with Tommy (Ryan Cason), who is a talented Hollywood actor who can pass as straight when, in fact, he’s gay. Because he keeps his sexual orientation hidden from the public, he struggles with inner conflict. In this show, Tommy lets his frustrations out by getting drunk and sometimes disorderly among the people he’s closest to.
“Queer Eye: The Musical Parody” - Review by Al Bresloff
★★★★★It has been a crazy and hectic world of theater in our city. Openings almost every night, making it both exciting and tiring. Just one week after an opening at Second City’s Mainstage, tonight they had a new show opening at their UP Stage ( in Pipers Alley). The show is “Queer Eye: The Musical Parody” and takes a look at the old tv show “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” ( I think that was the show’s name) or was it just “Queer Eye”? Doesn’t matter!
"Run for Your Wife" a really funny farce - Review by Carol Moore
**** Recommended **** The Drama Group in Chicago Heights is celebrating their 90th season, definitely a major milestone. As if that’s not enough for a party, this is their 20th year exchanging productions with the Stables Theatre from Hastings, England. So, for the first time on an American stage, the Stables Theatre production of "Run for Your Wife", a really funny farce by Ray Cooney. 3 ½ Spotlights









