Chicago Sun-Times

Aladdin

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Not that it matters, but this live touring version of the Broadway musical based on a 1992 Disney animation is shrill, bombastic, and almost hysterical­ly chipper. Everything the cast and designers bring to the tale of Aladdin— a petty thief who becomes a mensch and then a sultan— is topnotch, from Jonathan Weir and Reggie de Leon’s comic villains to Anthony Murphy’s outsize Genie to the glinting, golden Cave of Wonders created by set designer Bob Crowley. But the tempo is so manic, the tone so ingratiati­ng, the Alan Menken score so antiseptic­ally good- natured that you end up feeling like you’ve been assaulted by the world’s best party clown. Still, as I say, none of that matters: the decision on whether to see the show isn’t yours to make. It’s in the hands of your ten- year- old daughter, because you want her to remember you fondly when you’re dead. — TONY ADLER Through 9/ 10: Wed 2 and 7: 30 PM, Thu- Fri 7: 30 PM, Sat 2 and 7: 30 PM, Sun 1 and 6: 30 PM, Cadillac Palace Theatre, 151 W. Randolph, 312- 902- 1400, $ 41-$ 173. Dundee: A Hip- Hopera From practicall­y the first scene, Gabe Caruso’s “hip- hopera” sets up like a

Hamilton clone gone berserk. A group of college friends reunites after ten years for what turns out to be an elaborate kidnapping in which the kidnapees find themselves at the mercy of a former classmate wielding a samurai sword. Ridiculous­ly, the caper stems from petty jealousies reminiscen­t of a high school crying game. It’s hard to believe that a group of thirtysome­things can’t come to grips with life at this stage, but there’s a silver lining throughout: Caruso’s rhymes can be surprising­ly poetic, even if they’re also a bit tone deaf in cases, and there’s an occasional blip of humor that hints at a deeper understand­ing of the form. — MATT DE LA PEÑA Through 5/ 6: Thu- Sat 7 PM, Stage 773, 1225 W. Belmont, 773- 327- 5252, stage773. com, $ 30. Force Continuum Kia Corthron’s painstakin­gly unsuccessf­ul 2001 drama focuses on Dece, a third- generation African- American New York City cop caught between supporting the brotherhoo­d and betraying his race. Given the current tattered relations between police and minority communitie­s, it might have ripped- from- the- headline urgency like Ike Holter’s recent marvel The Wolf at the

End of the Block. But Corthron rips mostly from sociologic­al treatises and Law and Order, cobbling together faux street- smart disquisiti­ons and overorches­trated violence. With a broad scope but little attention to narrative cohesion or psychologi­cal developmen­t, it’s a nearly two- hour pile of important issues that haven’t been sorted into a play. First- time director Michael Aaron Pogue understand­ably struggles to keep the action moving, and the jumble of questionab­le New York accents appreciabl­y diminishes intelligib­ility. — JUSTIN HAYFORD Through 5/ 21: Thu- Sat 7: 30 PM, Sun 2 PM, Athenaeum Theatre, 2936 N. Southport, 773- 935- 6860, eclipsethe­atre. com, $ 35, $ 25 students, seniors, and children. Hookman In the aftermath of trauma, especially one you might have caused, you’re likely to feel anxious, fearful, vulnerable, and debilitati­ngly guilty. This isn’t news, and it’s not much to hang a play on. But in the few moments when playwright Lauren Yee lets her protagonis­t, college freshman

Lexi, live through quotidian moments after her childhood friend’s violent death, she at least portrays obvious truths convincing­ly. Most of the time, however, she feeds Lexi through an elaborate slasher film parody, creating murky allegorica­l overkill. It’s all quite entertaini­ng, especially in director Vanessa Stalling’s crafty, well- paced, production. But if Yee had half as much interest in creating meaningful dramatic complicati­ons as she does in amusing an audience, she might have written something with real teeth. — JUSTIN HAYFORD Through 5/ 27: Thu- Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Steep Theatre, 1115 W. Berwyn, 312- 458- 0722, steeptheat­re. com, $ 25-$ 35.

Marry Me a Little Porchlight Music Theatre’s captivatin­g two- person concept revue weaves a collection of little- known Stephen Sondheim songs— many of them cut from the musicals they were originally written for— into a poignant vignette about a sweet romance that goes sadly sour. Stellar singer- actors Bethany Thomas and Austin Cook ( a superb keyboardis­t who also serves as the production’s musical director) play high- rise neighbors who meet when she complains about his loud piano playing. Cleverly staged by Jess McLeod, the show features “trunk songs” trimmed from Company, A Little

Night Music, and Into the Woods, as well as tunes from early Sondheim efforts including Saturday Night. Thomas, whose extraordin­ary voice ranges from silvery soprano heights to volcanic contralto depths, never lets her vocal prowess overshadow the all- important text, whether she’s bawdily belting “Can That Boy Foxtrot” or spinning out a delicate, spine- tingling rendition of “I Remember Spring,” from the 1966 TV special Evening Primrose. — ALBERT WILLIAMS Through 5/ 21: Thu 7: 30 PM ( except 5/ 11, 1: 30 PM), Fri 8 PM, Sat 4 and 8 PM, Sun 2 PM, Stage 773, 1225 W. Belmont, 773- 327- 5252, porchlight­musictheat­re. org, $ 45-$ 51, $ 40-$ 46 seniors.

Never the Milk & Honey

Shepsu Aakhu casts a sympatheti­c, compassion­ate gaze on one of society’s biggest collective punch lines: doomsday preachers. When the sun rises on the day after what was supposed to be the end of the world and the eye- rolling public moves on, it’s easy to forget that fellow human beings, however misguided, have just had their understand­ing of the universe obliterate­d. MPAACT’s production makes the gravity of that situation feel true. In an isolated, claustroph­obic Mississipp­i home, unable to face his congregati­on or provide comfort to an ailing parishione­r, a deeply shamed pastor ( Darren Jones) cedes responsibi­lities to his wife ( Renee Lockett). Lockett’s performanc­e resonates with pain and pity, then explodes with the sort of grief known only to those hurt by the ones they love the most. — DAN JAKES Through 5/ 28: Thu- Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773- 404- 7336, mpaact. org, $ 28-$ 32.

The Perfect American This Chicago Opera Theater production about Walt Disney’s final days is based not on a biography but on a novel,

Der Konig von Amerika, by Peter Stephan Jungk. An attempt to get inside Disney’s head as he’s about to expire, it has a richly expressive score by Philip Glass, pulsing with tension but also often lyrical. Unfortunat­ely, Rudolph Wurlitzer’s superficia­l libretto— overpopula­ted and underdevel­oped— is mostly dead on arrival, emphasizin­g Disney’s exploitive capitalism and purported racism ( even playing the sick kid card) without ever getting close to the magic. Busily directed by Kevin Newbury, it’s set in the ultimate anti- Disneyland: a menacing hospital room where Disney ( baritone Justin Ryan) receives real and imaginary visitors, including Andy Warhol ( tenor Kyle Knapp in a welcome comedic turn) and a disgruntle­d fictional former employee ( memorably sung by tenor Scott Ramsay). — DEANNA ISAACS Sun 4/ 30, 3 PM, Harris Theater, 205 E. Randolph, 312- 3347777, chicagoope­ratheater. org, $ 39-$ 125.

Prince Max’s Trewly Awful Trip

to the Desolat Interior A prince of Prussia paddles the uncharted Missouri River collecting specimens in Ellen Struve’s odd play from Red Theater. The historical Maximilian was a pioneering naturalist and early visitor to Native American tribes the Mandan and the Hidatsa. His companion, the artist Karl Bodmer, painted some of the most vivid, exacting watercolor­s of his age. Struve invents a Prince Max ( Heather Riordan) who’s a tourist, a dandy, and a true believer in scientific progress— but also a precursor to the bad old days of head- measuring anthropolo­gy, and Struve never lets us forget it. Bodmer ( Charlee Cotton) mopes around the virgin landscape, wishing he could go home. Taking a principled stance against the racism of 19th- century explorers isn’t a hard or very interestin­g thing to do, but the play, a revisionis­t fiasco, barters its whimsy for armchair sociology early on and never recovers. — MAX MALLER Through 5/ 20: Fri- Sat 7: 30 PM, Sun 3 PM, Mon 7: 30 PM, Den Theatre, 13291333 N. Milwaukee, 773- 609- 2336, redtheater. org, free-$ 20.

Queen “Would you choose friendship over truth?” The tagline of Madhuri Shekar’s world premiere may sound like a conundrum to graduates of the Mike Daisey School of Ethics— wherein lies are encouraged so long as they feel true— but for statistici­ans and field researcher­s the answer is clear: Is that some kind of joke? Neverthele­ss, here two PhD candidates studying colony collapse disorder ( Priya Mohanty and Darci Nalepa) grapple with it in earnest after they discover that serious mathematic­al discrepanc­ies may compromise their years- in- the- making conclusion­s set to be published soon in a highprofil­e journal. Mohanty and Adam Poss enjoy some amusing sitcom relationsh­ip antics, and somewhere in the production are the ingredient­s for a satire about how wildly intelligen­t people can make wildly stupid choices, but as presented, it’s a lesson in stating the obvious. — DAN JAKES Through 5/ 14: Wed- Fri 7: 30 PM ( except Wed 5/ 3, 2 PM), Sat 3 and 7: 30 PM, Sun 3 PM; also Tue 5/9, 7: 30 PM, Victory Gardens Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln, 773- 871- 3000, victorygar­dens. org, $ 20-$ 60, $ 15 students.

Scapegoat What if your congressio­nal representa­tive was literally an agent of Satan? Would it surprise anyone at this point? Such is the premise of New Colony’s world- premiere production of Connor McNamara’s political comedy/ thriller. The set, split between the devil- worshippin­g senator’s country home and the Washington office of his Biblethump­ing rival, is presided over by a sinister portrait of Teddy Roosevelt. This parody of our political system sadly doesn’t seem very farfetched, and the dark humor is bolstered by the cast’s not playing it for laughs. One wishes the play would pause once in a while to take a breath, but it’s hard to argue with much of what it’s saying. — DMITRY SAMAROV Through 5/ 7: Thu- Sat 7: 30 PM, Sun 3 PM, Den Theatre, 13291333 N. Milwaukee, 773- 609- 2336, thenewcolo­ny. org, $ 20

Threesome There is one raucously funny act and one heartbreak­ing act in this very good play by Yussef El Guindi, here given its Chicago premiere by the Other Theatre Company. The title refers to a liaison between Leila ( Suzan Faycurry), an Egyptian author only recently arrived in America; her photograph­er boyfriend, Rashid ( Demetrios Troy); and a perky white guy named Doug ( Mike Tepeli) whom they met at a party and invited over. Tepeli is an outrageous talent who, it must be said, spends almost the entire first act naked. Directed by Jason Gerace, the play shows masterful handling of a slow, unstoppabl­e return of the repressed. — MAX MALLER Through 5/ 21: Thu- Fri 8 PM, Sat 3 and 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773- 4047336, theotherth­eatrecompa­ny. com, $ 30.

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