All stories by Chris Jones on BroadwayStars

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Drury Lane snags 'Chicago' for Chicago for the first time since '83 by Chris Jones

A quiz for you, theater-loving reader: When was the last time a professional Chicago theater company produced "Chicago," a musical that burnishes the city's scandalous reputation each and ev…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Wednesday, April 26, 2017

A Broadway 'Bandstand' for the Greatest Generation by Chris Jones

Most works of art dealing with the post-traumatic stress suffered by those who served and saw action overseas have dealt with the war in Vietnam or the wars in Iraq. The so-called Greatest G…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM
Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Martha Lavey, longtime leader of Steppenwolf Theatre, is dead at 60 by Chris Jones

An indefatigable, unstinting and intellectually voracious artistic director who reinvented Chicago’s most audacious and aggressive theater for a new era, Martha Lavey wrestled the Steppenw…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:39PM

African-American cast in Paramount's 'Superstar' reinvents those familiar songs by Chris Jones

If you are one of those people who know every note of "Jesus Christ Superstar," the anthemic rock opera penned as a concept album by a couple of pimply upper-class Brits named Andrew Lloyd W…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:55PM

'Three's Company' parody '3C' ends up more than a bit uncomfortable by Chris Jones

The rights holders of the sitcom "Three's Company," which aired on ABC from 1977 through 1984 and starred the late John Ritter as a man who lived with two single women and pretended to be ga…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:54PM
Monday, April 24, 2017

In Broadway's 'Anastasia,' the screens put our princess in a corner by Chris Jones

Alas for imperial Russia and the family of Czar Nicholas II, the 17-year-old Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna was murdered in 1918 by the Cheka, Vladimir Lenin's secret police. But since p…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM

'Shakespeare in Love,' thou is now an actual love story by Chris Jones

So when William Shakespeare wrote Sonnet 18, he must at some point have screamed to himself, "Shall I compare thee to a ... What? What? What's the word? What the flippin' heck are thou more …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 05:02PM
Sunday, April 23, 2017

'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' has barely a drop of that magic chocolate by Chris Jones

Malted milk balls, chocolate bars, sweet jars and other candied treats of all delights are stacked high in the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre. You'd expect that — right? — at a musical called "Ch…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM
Friday, April 21, 2017

'Argo' and the new play 'Oslo' are stories about heroes nobody knows by Chris Jones

In 1980, the Central Intelligence Agency and the Canadian government concocted a bizarre but ultimately successful scheme to rescue six American diplomats trapped in Tehran, following the fa…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00AM
Thursday, April 20, 2017

'Hello, Dolly!' on Broadway: All stand for Bette Midler by Chris Jones

As the redoubtable Bette Midler seamlessly transitioned from the perils of a chronic onstage coughing fit to the received joy of yet another standing ovation the other night, United Airlines…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM

Disney's 'Aladdin' is more grounded as it launches tour in Chicago by Chris Jones

The gleaming white teeth of Adam Jacobs have done many sparkly trips around the rialto since their owner opened on Broadway atop "Aladdin," the most frenetic and intentionally cartoonish of …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:55PM

What's changed in 'My Fair Lady' is how we see Eliza by Chris Jones

Moss Hart. Jerry Adler. Alan Jay Lerner. Trevor Nunn. Bartlett Sher coming in 2018 on Broadway. Most directors of major productions of "My Fair Lady," it's fair to say, have come from a back…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Wednesday, April 19, 2017

'Marry Me a Little' digs deeper into Sondheim - just the thing for spring by Chris Jones

Spring has sprung in Chicago. High time, then, for a Stephen Sondheim revue. Porchlight Music Theatre is obliging, not with a revival of "Putting it Together," nor "Side by Side by Sondheim,…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 12:44PM
Tuesday, April 18, 2017

'Indecent' on Broadway: Lessons of an obscenity trial by Chris Jones

How did a Yiddish playwright born the youngest of 10 children in Kutno, Poland, the child of Hasidic Jews who frowned on secular education, come to write a lesbian love scene so thrillingly …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM
Monday, April 17, 2017

'Groundhog Day' on Broadway: The show must (still) go on by Chris Jones

When it comes to credible depictions of small-town Pennsylvania, "Groundhog Day the Musical" is about as veracious as a woodchuck named Phil is a qualified rodent meteorologist. This British…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM

'Carousel' to Broadway in 2018 with Jessie Mueller, Josh Henry and Renee Fleming by Chris Jones

Three artists with strong connections to Chicago are at the center of a planned spring 2018 revival of "Carousel," the much-beloved musical by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. Jessi…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 09:03AM
Friday, April 14, 2017

The Bean's a winner! How we're changing how we spend our time and money by Chris Jones

Which is the biggest tourist attraction in the Midwest? For years, that honor has gone to Navy Pier with about 9 million visitors a year. On Travel & Leisure's 2014 list of America's most-vi…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Thursday, April 13, 2017

Soul mates test lines of race and sexuality in 'Mystery of Love & Sex' by Chris Jones

The two young people who flail around in the first act of Bathsheba Doran's compassionate and ultimately complex play, "The Mystery of Love & Sex," which opened Thursday night at Writers The…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:30PM

Chicago Shakes announces 2017-18 season, opening of The Yard by Chris Jones

Chicago Shakespeare Theater announced most of its 2017-18 season of theatrical productions Thursday — including the first programming at The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare, its newest indoor …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 12:00PM

Why so cagey about closing dates? by Chris Jones

The quest is not exactly investigative journalism worthy of a Pulitzer Prize, but determining how long a commercial show plans to stay in town can take some serious detective work. Take, for…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Wednesday, April 12, 2017

'King of the Yees': A playwright tells her own Chinese-American story by Chris Jones

To a large extent, "King of the Yees" is the kind of young play that a talented, smart and very funny writer such as Lauren Yee needs to write before she can move on to the greatness that su…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM
Tuesday, April 11, 2017

'The Great and Terrible Wizard of Oz' lands back at the House in time for a dark family spring break by Chris Jones

In 2003, director Amanda Dehnert (who now teaches at Northwestern University) staged an infamous production of "Annie" at Rhode Island's Trinity Repertory Company that ended with the titular…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:43PM
Monday, April 10, 2017

Don't camp up Mary Poppins. She's a family business by Chris Jones

The boutique "Mary Poppins" at the Mercury Theater is stacked with talent. Matthew Crowle, who plays the chimney sweep Bert, warbles a Broadway-level "chim chiminy," and is fully in touch wi…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:50PM
Sunday, April 9, 2017

In Tracy Letts' 'Linda Vista,' a middle-aged dude just can"t get it together by Chris Jones

Dick Wheeler — he prefers to go by his last name — is a heterosexual white male, halfway to an antique. He was once a Chicagoan, a photographer at the Sun-Times, no less, and surely a lo…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00PM
Thursday, April 6, 2017

Broadway: 'War Paint' a shared spotlight on Christine Ebersole and Patti LuPone by Chris Jones

"Every woman has the right to be beautiful," cosmetics titan Elizabeth Arden famously observed, speaking from somewhere behind her elegant Red Door, through which a wealthy-enough woman coul…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM

Talking to Alan Menken about how 'Aladdin' was born - and changed by Chris Jones

In 1986, an energetic playwright, lyricist and director named Howard Ashman and a young composer named Alan Menken had a New York hit with a satirical off-Broadway show called "The Little Sh…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:46PM

In extraordinary 'Battlefield' at the MCA, a king confronts his victory by Chris Jones

In 1985, the great director Peter Brook staged a theatrical version of the Sanskrit epic known as "The Mahabharata" and often described as the world's longest epic poem. First staged in Fran…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:30PM
Wednesday, April 5, 2017

'Odysseo' lets horses run through our digital imaginations by Chris Jones

At one point in Tuesday night's "Odysseo" — the tented equestrian extravaganza that variously imports the essence of the steppe of Kazakhstan and the damp of the Naeroyfjord of Norway to t…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 05:24PM

Tracy Letts is back at Steppenwolf, but no Jeff Committee freeloaders, please by Chris Jones

Playwright, actor and Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble member Tracy Letts has two plays coming to the theater this year: "Linda Vista," which opens this weekend, starring Ian Barford, and then "…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 10:32AM
Monday, April 3, 2017

C'est triste, Broadway's 'Amelie' can't recapture the movie's charm by Chris Jones

To make a cinephile smile, merely mention "Amelie." Who can recall the French film from Jean-Pierre Jeunet, the one in which Audrey Tautou stars as a young woman who overcomes her own enfanc…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM
Sunday, April 2, 2017

Review: 'Play That Goes Wrong' gets it right by going really remarkably wrong by Chris Jones

When your British farce is so old-school that you'd swear the whole pox of a post-colonial schoolhouse crumbled at least two generations ago, you need a title that helps justify why the pick…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM

All that Chat

2024-2025 BROADWAY SEASON
Jun 05, 2024: Home - Todd Haimes Theatre
Jul 11, 2024: Oh, Mary! - Lyceum Theatre
Jul 30, 2024: Job - Hayes Theater
Sep 12, 2024: The Roommate - Booth Theatre
Nov 14, 2024: Tammy Faye - Palace Theatre
Nov 17, 2024: Elf - Marquis Theatre
Dec 12, 2024: Cult of Love - Hayes Theater
Dec 19, 2024: Gypsy - Majestic Theatre
Mar 17, 2025: Purpose - Hayes Theater
Apr 10, 2025: Smash - Imperial Theatre
TBA: Titanic
TBA: Ragtime