I gotta admit I always have a certain level of apprehension whenever I go to see a Hypocrites show. Mind you, it’s not a “walking alone down a dark alley scared of being jumped by an axe murderer” kind of anxiety, but more like “first date from Match.com and is he going to be as charming and smart as his online picture is hot” type of uncertainty. Because, you never really know what you are going to get with The Hypocrites, truly the most unpredictable, irreverent, wildly creative, wickedly smart theater company in Chicago, responsible for many unsurpassable Chicago theatrical highs over the past couple of years, but also, frankly, some resounding lows. So I really wasn’t sure what to think when at the beginning of what I thought was their latest show, a new adaptation by Steve Moulds of Luigi Pirandello’s Absurdist classic 6 Characters in Search of an Author, the actors started rehearsing Pirates of Penzance, their recently-shuttered remount of an idiosyncratic take on the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta. I’m like, Huh? Of course, when the titular six characters finally show up, looking like haunted escapees from an Edward Gorey book crossed with Halloween night at the Kardashians, I finally get where director Halena Kays, in her first production as new Artistic Director succeeding Sean Graney (the embodiment of The Hypocrites for more than a decade) is going in this production. 6 Characters is a celebration of the artistic passing of the baton, and a reassurance to its zealous followers (like me) that the qualities that unmistakably and brilliantly brand and differentiate a Hypocrites show will continue to endure.
Tags: The Hypocrites









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