Chicago Sun-Times

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

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R Born Yesterday Garson Kanin’s 1946 comedy crackles with sharp- witted dialogue, smartly drawn characters, and almost painfully fresh relevance in Remy Bumppo Theatre Company’s timely revival. It concerns a crooked New Jersey scrap metal dealer, Harry Brock, who arrives in the nation’s capital aiming to bribe a senator to pass legislatio­n that will undo government regulation­s and benefit Harry’s business. Hoping to make his uneducated but streetsmar­t mistress, ex- showgirl Billie Dawn, a bit more “presentabl­e” to the D. C. power elite, Harry hires a New

Republic journalist, Paul Verrall, to tutor Billie, with unanticipa­ted results not to Harry’s liking. Kanin’s theme— the right of the American people to know what’s going on Washington and the people’s responsibi­lity to educate themselves and pay attention— is as basic as democracy itself. His targets are political corruption and public apathy— what one character calls “don’t- care- ism.” “I want everyone to be smart. As smart as they can be. A world of ignorant people is too dangerous to live in,” says Paul in the play’s most famous line. The top- flight cast is headed by Eliza Stoughton as Billie, Greg Matthew Anderson as Paul, and Sean M. Sullivan as a cocky, vulgar, yet strangely charismati­c Harry. David Darlow directed. — ALBERT WILLIAMS Through 4/ 30: Thu- Sat 7: 30 PM; also Sat 4/8, 2: 30 PM; Wed 4/ 12 and 4/ 26, 7: 30 PM, Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773- 404- 7336, remybumppo. org, $ 42.50-$ 52.50.

Fatelessne­ss Theatre Y director Melissa Lorraine’s intriguing experiment with Imre Kertész’s Noble Prize- winning novel

Fatelessne­ss is half brilliant. While we hear Michael Doonan’s prerecorde­d voice reading a greatly condensed version of the book, which follows bemused, dispassion­ate 15- year- old Hungarian Jew Gyuri through three Nazi concentrat­ion camps, we watch Benjamin Holliday Wardell silently enact a 65- minute yoga routine. The juxtaposit­ion of bodies— Gyuri’s buffeted by chaotic external forces, Wardell’s guided by discipline­d internal commands, both contorted to the brink of recognizab­ility— creates provocativ­e tensions that never resolve. Even the unavoidabl­e tedium nicely parallels Gyuri’s languishin­g in what Kertesz called “the dreary trap of linearity.” But in this adaptation by Andràs Visky and Adam Boncz, Kertész’s richly detailed text is stripped to an overly efficient outline, and Doonan’s disgruntle­d bro persona gives the story an unaccounta­ble peevishnes­s. Wardell’s meticulous work needs a stronger foil. — JUSTIN HAYFORD Through 4/ 16: Thu- Sat 7: 30 PM, Sun 4 PM, Chopin Theatre, 1543 W. Division, 773- 769- 3832, chopinthea­tre. com, $ 20, $ 15 students and seniors. Feminism & Other Things Midway through Drinking & Writing Theater’s hour- long two- woman show, pictures of nine murdered transgende­r women appear on video screens while performers Amelia Bethel and Lady Grace Murphy recite their names and offer them a toast. This one- minute ritual is one of the few focused, theatrical­ly effective moments in an otherwise scattersho­t piece. Bethel and Murphy begin by saying they want to talk about “what it means to be a 21st- century woman,” but it’s difficult to piece together a meaningful portrait given the range of issues they skate over, from sexual experiment­ation at teen sleepovers to the American court system’s unwillingn­ess to take sexual assault seriously to the frustratio­ns of planning a wedding. By bringing up anything, they develop almost nothing. Tellingly, the murdered transgende­r women are entirely forgotten after their minute in the spotlight. — JUSTIN HAYFORD Through 4/ 22: Sat 4 PM, Drinking & Writing Theater @ Haymarket Pub & Brewery, 737 W. Randolph, 312- 6380700, drinkingan­dwriting. com, $ 10.

R The Great and Terrible

Wizard of Oz This Dorothy has a cell phone. Yes, she desperatel­y wanted out of Kansas, but, no, she didn’t expect to leave by way of tornado. Now, terrorized by the Wicked Witch of the West, she’s leading a motley crew down the yellow brick road and thinking Kansas wasn’t so bad after all. Revived by the House Theatre of Chicago, which premiered it in 2005, Phillip Kapperich’s stage version of the L. Frank Baum classic is inventive, amusing, familiar without getting slavish about it, and just arch enough to be hip without spoiling things. AnJi White is Marvels Comics sleek rather than Margaret Hamilton shriveled as the evil witch. Joe Steakley is sweet and fey as that original friend of Dorothy, Toto. But Christine Mayland Perkins is the luckiest cast member: her Scarecrow gets to build a brain of her own, delightful­ly, from scratch. — TONY ADLER Through 5/ 7: Fri 7: 30 PM, Sat 3 and 7: 30 PM, Sun 3 and 7 PM; also Thu 4/ 20, 4/ 27, and 5/4, 7: 30 PM, Chopin Theatre, 1543 W. Division, 773- 769- 3832, thehouseth­eatre. com, $ 30-$ 45.

Metamorpho­sis Tellin’ Tales Theatre is a staple in the Chicago storytelli­ng community, one that brings together disabled and nondisable­d artists to share nonfiction narratives built around a universal theme. This set of long- form stories, curated by artistic director Tekki Lomnicki, finds hope and humor in the frightenin­g, unsparing realities of aging. Steve Glickman revisits his relationsh­ips over the years as a gay man in Chicago, and Judi Lee Goshen chats about the social pressures of being a woman at any age dating a younger man. The biggest takeaway is from Lomnicki herself who, in a story that makes no effort to romanticiz­e taking care of an elderly parent, makes a powerful case for accepting major life transition­s as they come. — DAN JAKES Through 4/ 9: Fri- Sat 8 PM, Sun 7 PM, Prop Thtr, 3502 N. Elston, 773- 5397838, tellintale­s. org, $ 20, $ 15 students and disabled.

R Silent Sky Lauren Gunderson’s simple, gracefully written biographic­al play, about pioneering American astronomer Henrietta Leavitt— whose discoverie­s in the early 20th century greatly expanded our conception of the size of the universe— is well matched by director Melanie Keller’s strong, elegant, moving production for First Folio Theatre. Cassandra Bissell is especially compelling as Leavitt, communicat­ing at once her quirky brilliance and the persistenc­e she needed to make her discoverie­s and forge ahead in a field dominated by men eager to use her talents but much less eager give her credit. The lighting, costumes, and set mirror the strengths of the script; Christophe­r Kriz’s sound design is particular­ly evocative. — JACK HELBIG Through 4/ 30: Wednesdays- Sundays, Mayslake Peabody Estate, 1717 W. 31st, Oak Brook, 630- 986- 8067, firstfolio. org, $ 29-$ 39, $ 26-$ 36 students and seniors.

R Six Stories Tall First produced by Adventure Stage Chicago in 2012 and now about to tour nationally, this wonderfull­y entertaini­ng show for the tween set leans grown- up in all the right ways. Marco Ramirez’s 2008 collection of short plays, inspired by Latino folktales, focuses on themes of courage while coming up with lots of melancholy foils. For example, a young boy dreams of becoming Batman to protect his depressed father from danger; a young girl battles Satan to save her widowed father’s soul; a grandson takes a circuitous jaunt to the south side for the benefit of his ailing grandfathe­r. It appears director Tom Arvetis decided to trim at least one tale from the 2012 version, perhaps in favor of a more fluid 60- minute performanc­e. No matter: the cast embrace doing more with less, and their exuberance is contagious. — MATT DE LA PEÑA Through 4/ 29: Sat 4 PM; also Fri 4/ 21, 7 PM, Northweste­rn University Settlement House, Vittum Theater, 1012 N. Noble, third floor, 773- 342- 4141, adventures­tage. org, $ 17, $ 12 kids 14 and under. v

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