I’m not a theater critic, nor a theater practitioner. I’m just a regular, passionate theater aficionado who writes a blog (and who pays for most shows that I go to see). And it was wonderful to be a regular, passionate theater aficionado who wrote a blog in 2009 in Chicago, when great-not merely good, not just serviceable-theater was available every weekend night. 2009 began with the Goodman Theatre’s Eugene O’Neill Festival, a singular, unsurpassable program of theatrical bravado that I will always remember, and which even long time Chicago residents marveled at. But 2009, for me, was also a year of getting a thrilling first look at world premieres; of seeing plays in random places, whether it was in a warehouse in Ravenswood, inside the rehearsal hall of the Goodman theater, or on the actual stage of the MCA; of discovering new theater companies putting on plays with so much impressive, balls-out fierceness; of finally being validated in my very firm, vocal belief that it is Chicago, not New York City or any other self-proclaiming town, that is the theater capital of the US.
Chris Jones reports that the Goodman Theater’s O’Neill Festival, which concluded last weekend with the Neo-Futurists’ controversial take on Strange Interlude (which I sadly missed), has turned in “recession-busting” numbers: average of 90% capacity in the theater, 50,000 audience members, $1.1 million gross for Robert Falls’ Broadway-bound Desire Under the Elms. This is terrific, terrific news, which just goes to prove that good, stimulating art is alive and well in this economic downturn. And I think the numbers are accurate, since, in all the performances I attended during the Festival (and I saw all the productions except for Strange Interlude), the Goodman was packed with people, many of them the “non-traditional Goodman audience” kind – people of color and people below forty. I think the results of the O’Neill Festival once again proved what I continue to harp on from my soapbox here on this blog: that we, the Chicago theater audience are generally a pretty sophisticated lot, so if a theater appeals to our intellectual level and artistic sensibilities, we will come; and if they don’t, we’ll find something else to do. People flocked to see an Emperor Jones that stunningly mixed minstrelsy and Noh theater (Wooster Group), an eloquent and elegant Cardiff that was performed in Portugese without any surtitles, letting the imagery speak to the audience directly (Companhia Triptal), a memorable Desire Under the Elms without any elms but with boulders, a floating house, a vague time period, and a Bob Dylan musical score (Goodman), a flawed but mesmerizing Hairy Ape performed in three performance levels and with a re-conceptualized final scene (The Hypocrites), a world-class Mourning Becomes Electra that powerfully used video and technology (Toneelgroep Amsterdam), and a Strange Interlude performed in its original five hour length and as an almost-parody of the text (Neo Futurists). Man, the Festival was the height of provocative, cerebrum-busting theater! But the Festival’s productions, more importantly, respected the audience, and engaged us to be thinking, introspecting, reflecting, and passionate participants in O’Neill’s work; the plays didn’t give us a hallway pass for a relaxing, catatonic night at the theater, which so many nights seem to be; rather, they made us think, feel, explode (just check out these passionate responses to Strange Interlude in Chris’s blog). I know some theater companies in Chicago are loudly bellyaching and constantly sounding mournful doom and gloom bells about the impact of the recession on the arts. I agree that all of us, artists, audience members, and critics alike, who have a stake in Chicago’s vital arts community need to be aware and concerned. But the audiences are out there, and we will give theaters our money- just don’t give us another round of The Cherry Orchard, or another tedious play by some hot-shot, MFA-stamped, self-absorbed New Yorker, or an original play about a teenage girl that brings together a Midwestern community that suspiciously sounds very similar to that original play you’ve already trotted out a couple of years ago.
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One of the defining moments of my theatergoing life was seeing Dutch-Belgian director Ivo van Hove’s The Misanthrope at the New York Theater Workshop, one of From the Ledge’s inaugural top ten theatrical events, back in the fall of 2007. The Misanthrope wasn’t just great theater, it was boundary-expanding, preconception-breaking theater, with its innovative use of both live and filmed video, it’s emotionally intense, no-holds-barred acting, it’s rocket-out-of-your-chair directorial devices (“did Bill Camp actually haul in New York City garbage from outside the theater and strew it all over the stage as additional props?” WOW!). So when I saw that van Hove and his theater company, Toneelgroep Amsterdam, one of the pre-eminent contemporary theater ensembles in all of Europe, was going to be part of the Eugene O’Neill Festival at the Goodman Theatre, I thought I was going to have an out-of-body experience – van Hove is actually coming to my city! As Goodman Artistic Director Robert Falls said in the pre-performance director’s conversation last night, he could not have imagined curating a festival of O’Neill’s works in the 21st century without having van Hove participate. The American premiere of his Rouw Siert Electra (Mourning Becomes Electra), already widely-acclaimed in Europe, finally arrived last night at the Goodman, and with all due respect to the Wooster Group, Companhia Triptal, The Hypocrites, Mr. Falls himself, whose Broadway-bound Desire Under the Elms is quite memorable and noteworthy, the unquestionable highlight for this audience member of the Festival is van Hove and Toneelgroep’s stunningly-realized, truly world-class Mourning. No, make that universe-class. Anyone who says he or she is a sophisticated and savvy theatergoer, but doesn’t go to see Mourning during its four performance run (people, it’s $25 on the Goodman website, $12.50 on hottix.com), is an imposter. And I mean that.




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