Chicago Sun-Times

More reviews and schedule info at chicagorea­der. com/ theater.

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Ideation We’re in a meeting room at a consulting firm ( whiteboard, ergonomic chairs). Four consultant­s ( MBAs, engineers) and an intern ( Scooter) have been tasked with conceptual­izing a system for the liquidatio­n and disposal ( killing and hiding) of a million or more victims in the ( as yet) theoretica­l event of an extinction- level viral outbreak. The consultant­s focus all their brainpower and arrogance on ideating ( brainstorm­ing) the problem. But as they draw arrows and circles on the whiteboard (“LF” = “liquidatio­n facility”) it occurs to them that things may not be what they seem. The rest of Aaron Loeb’s erudite dark comedy presents the spectacle of smart people going nuts, weighing a possible genocide against keeping their jobs. Gus Menary’s Jackalope Theatre staging is hilarious and disquietin­g, its darkest joke being the first one: that these savants are gung ho as long as they think the job is just killing sick people. — TONY ADLER Through 6/ 17: Thu- Sat 7: 30 PM, Sun 3 PM, Broadway Armory Park, 5917 N. Broadway, 312- 742- 7502, chicagopar­kdistrict. com, $ 25.

Italian Bred Candice Guardino’s one- woman show about growing up Italian- American on Staten Island leans so hard on caricature that it sometimes hides the heartfelt family tribute at its core. With over- the- top New Yawk- accented parodies of her relatives, video cameos by the likes of Sopranos actor Steven Schirripa, and treacly musical interludes, Guardino works hard to make her life story feel like a cliche played for easy laughs. The truest parts of the show reveal her very real affection for her grandmothe­r, Fran, who taught her to never take grief from anybody and to follow her dreams. Her stories about Fran’s no- nonsense lessons could’ve made for a compelling evening in their own right. In fact, if Guardino had cut most of the people- pleasing schmaltz, there’s no telling how proud grandma might’ve been. — DMITRY SAMAROV Through 5/ 28: Wed- Fri 7: 30 PM, Sat 2: 30 and 7: 30 PM, Sun 2: 30 PM, Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773- 404- 7336, greenhouse­theater.org, $ 30-$ 40.

Johnny 10 Beer’s Daughter Dana Lynn Formby’s tight, intense drama, being given its world premiere by Something Marvelous, isn’t an easy play to watch— or to turn away from. From the moment the lights come up onstage, we’re drawn in, and with each passing scene we care more and more about the two main characters: a needy daughter seeking validation and her psychologi­cally wounded ex- marine father. Arti Ishak and Randy Steinmeyer play the pair with sometimes terrifying full- throttle intensity, heightened by Emmi Hilger’s simple, unobtrusiv­e direction. Formby tells her story well; hours after the play ended I found myself still brooding over the fates of these two lost souls. — JACK HELBIG Through 6/ 18: Thu- Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Chicago Dramatists, 1105 W. Chicago, 312- 633- 0630, somethingm­arvelous.org, $ 15-$ 28.

A Prayer for the Sandinista­s When the first Polish pope, John Paul II, made Chicago an early stop on his American tour of 1979, reports were circulatin­g nationally that a popular uprising had made strides against the Somoza client regime in Nicaragua. Leigh Johnson’s intricate and impressive play

encapsulat­es this historical moment inside the Blaczks’ living room on the northwest side, where a family of staidly conservati­ve Polish- Catholic parishione­rs, having invited a pair of Nicaraguan orphans into the home to experience the papal visit, encounter instead two revolution­ary fighters in camouflage and berets. Jonathan Hagloch’s staging for Subtext Theater Company is straightfo­rward, with natural dialogue and well- rounded characters that appear to be drawn from Johnson’s own past. Kate Robison is stunning in her minor role as Maria, a shy friend of the family. — MAX MALLER Through 6/ 11; Fri- Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Prop Thtr, 3502 N. Elston, 773- 539- 7838, subtextnfp. org, $ 25.

The River Bride There’s an eye- catching prop by Ellie Terrell that sums up the layered, enchanting aura of Marisela Treviño Orta’s 2014 one- act: in a Brazilian village along the Amazon River, as a father muses aloud about the mysteries of love, he slices a knife into a giant iridescent cloth fish, revealing a skeleton of wooden blinds and soft, plush bloodied guts. It’s at once childlike and grotesque, qualities that speak to the best of Orta’s fable and this allLatinx Halcyon Theatre production directed by Rinska CarrascoPr­estinary. Two sisters ( Sofia Tew and Flavia Pallozzi) reevaluate their romantic paths when a seemingly perfect suitor ( Nate Santana) disrupts a wedding. I found myself engrossed in the playfulnes­s of Orta’s poetry, and Santana radiates magic with a performanc­e that carefully balances empathetic realism with heightened, surreal expression. — DAN JAKES Through 6/ 18: Thu- Sat 8 PM, Sun 6 PM, Christ Evangelica­l Lutheran Church, 3253 W. Wilson, 773- 478- 7941, halcyonthe­atre. org, free-$ 20.

The Rogue Aviator The recurring theme in Otherworld Theatre’s new steampunk, glam droogiesty­led adventure- fantasy: big. Big cast, big performanc­es, big cinematic soundtrack, and a sprawling mythology of political and military factions built around a big ol’ retrofutur­istic metropolis hovering above 1930s America. An all- female squadron of bounty hunters navigates the skies, literal and diplomatic, after a rogue flyer declares war on a corrupt castesyste­m- based government. Does it all fit onstage? Sort of. Nick Izzo’s story and dialogue nod to classic sci- fi novels and comic books, and Tiffany Keane- Schaefer’s two- anda- half- hour production often feels blocked and edited for a summer blockbuste­r movie. But there’s an indisputab­le LARP enthusiasm to The Rogue Aviator, along with

plenty of creative world building for genre fans to sink their teeth into.

— DAN JAKES Through 6/ 10: ThuSat 7: 30 PM, Sun 5 PM, Strawdog Theatre, 1802 W. Berenice, 773- 3471350, otherworld­theatre. org, $ 20 suggested donation.

St. Jude Life isn’t a linear progressio­n. If you need evidence, look no further than this smart, moving one- man show from Luis Alfaro. The story centers on a journey back to Alfaro’s southernCa­lifornia hometown, where he’s met with a flood of memories while tending to his sickly father. Much of this hour- long saga is powered by raw emotion, informed by selfinflic­ted wounds and a troubled past. But a clever gimmick helps elevate it: the program doubles as a hymnal, and the audience/ congregati­on is prompted to sing. By playing preacher, Alfaro seems intent on soliciting a bit of redemption, even if it’s done with a healthy dose of irony. — MATT DE LA PEÑA Through 6/ 4: Thu 5/ 25 and Sat 5/ 27, 7: 30 PM; Sun 5/ 28 and 6/ 4, 3 PM; Thu 6/ 1- Sat 6/ 3, 7: 30 PM, Victory Gardens Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln, 773- 871- 3000, victorygar­dens. org, $ 20.

Three Days of Rain

Mercurial, carefully crafted performanc­es by Kyle Curry and Kate Black- Spence drive Derek Van Barham’s intimate staging of Richard Greenberg’s 1997 drama, whose theme is the complex legacy— emotional and material— passed down from parents to children. Curry and Black- Spence play two characters each in this BoHo Theatre production. In act one, they are Walker and Nan Janeway, estranged siblings who reunite after the death of their father, Ned, a famous New York architect, to collect their inheritanc­e, which they expect will be one of his celebrated houses. In the second half, set 37 years earlier, the actors portray Ned and Lina— the girlfriend of Ned’s business partner, Theo ( Niko Kourtis, who also plays Theo’s son, Pip)— at the moment when Lina and Ned fall in love during a three- day rainstorm. Greenberg’s dialogue is witty and literate, as befits his privileged, urbane characters, but the humor serves an achingly painful narrative that haunted me long after the show ended. Curry is riveting as the quirky, narcissist­ic Walker and the shy, sensitive Ned, and BlackSpenc­e is equally compelling as the nurturing Nan and especially the flamboyant, mentally unstable Lina, whose eccentrici­ty— so alluring to Ned— will, we know, lead to a madness that will wreck her marriage and traumatize her children. — ALBERT WILLIAMS Through 6/ 25: Thu- Sat 8 PM, Sun 2 PM, Heartland Studio Theatre, 7016 N. Glenwood, 773- 791- 2393, bohotheatr­e. com, $ 25.

Token Kaye Winks goes for the jugular in her saucy new solo show about growing up black in a mostly white world. And who could blame her? Helped by great direction from Schoen Smith, Winks has a knack for uncomforta­ble, often hilarious jokes that speak to the greater ills of race in America. But it’s arguable that her talent isn’t evident so much in nailing unseemly stereotype­s as in the subtle, self- deprecatin­g humor that puts her squarely at the center of a thoughtful and reflective comingof- age story. Bits about white friends from the suburbs, black cousins from the south side, and an exceptiona­lly awkward holiday trip to the southern states are relatable, even humbling at times. — MATT DE LA PEÑA Through 6/ 9: Fri 7: 30 PM, Second City Training Center, Judy’s Beat Lounge, 230 W. North, second floor, 312- 337- 3992, $ 13, $ 11 students. v

 ?? JOEL MAISONET ?? Ideation
JOEL MAISONET Ideation

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