Nah-Cromancer: A Review of Neil Tobin, Necromancer: Near Death Experience
Death may not be the final frontier according to Neil Tobin but this solo performance is sure to get on your last nerve.
Death may not be the final frontier according to Neil Tobin but this solo performance is sure to get on your last nerve.
This Gift Theatre world premiere asks uncomfortable questions about the visibility and value of black lives.
Trevor Dawkins and The Neo-Futurists explore the highs and lows of hero worship in this vigorous world premiere.
This adventurous new show from Actors Gymnasium showcases the developing talents of their young ensemble.
This poorly-handled production from Saint Sebastian Players shows Coward at his most cringe-inducing.
Mercury Theater presents the story of Gilda Radner as told by her kvetching, entitled best friend.
Brown Paper Box Co.'s production of Stephen Karam's teen drama struggles to reach its potential.
In producing this Howard Barker play, Red Tape raises some red flags.
Sondheim's biggest flop looks even worse in 2018 than it did in 1981.
Marriott Theatre's production of "Ragtime" is a stunning spectacle grounded in social realities.
Despite claims to the contrary, Raven Theatre's latest feels like a product of simpler times.
The moral of House Theatre's trigger-happy retelling of "Romeo and Juliet" gets lost in the fray.
Pride Films and Plays WWII-set musical has all the aesthetic hallmarks of its time period with the noteworthy exception of its subject: the gay men who served.
A profile on actor and arts activist Tony Santiago, program manager of Chicago Arts Access and co-founder of The Chicago Theater Accountability Coalition.
For all its performance chops, Drury Lane's production of "Joseph" is unremittingly tone-deaf.
This world premiere at Theater Wit explores the intersection of fandom and fanaticism.
Babes With Blades' suffragist drama presents a narrow vision of the movement.
Stage Left Theatre's latest traces the lineage of slavery through Reconstruction and Jim Crow to broken windows policing and Black Lives Matter.
A little humor can go a long way though not always in the right direction in this parody of the beloved 2003 film "Elf"
Lauren Gunderson's lighthearted Shakespeare-centered drama answers the question "What is theater without conflict?"
The inaugural production from Firebrand Theatre resonates boldly.
The local premiere of this movie musical cult classic turned Tony Award winner will have you leaping from your seat.
Like its protagonists, this world premiere coming-of-age drama needs to focus more on personal growth.
Rohina Malik's living room romance is revived at the Goodman.
Court Theatre's production of this 1976 play about the poet Emily Dickinson falls short of a complete portrait of the complex Massachusetts native.