Chicago Sun-Times

‘ BURNHAM’S DREAM: THE WHITE CITY’ PUTS A MUSICAL SPIN ON CHICAGO STORY

- BY MARY HOULIHAN Mary Houlihan is a freelance writer.

Playwright and documentar­y filmmaker June Finfer has written and produced numerous films and plays about architectu­re. So it’s no surprise she had an interest in Daniel Burnham’s The Plan of Chicago, which laid out plans for the future of the city.

“I thought it would be interestin­g to do a play about Burnham,” Finfer says, adding, with a laugh, “But how do you do a play about a plan?”

She found her way in when she read that Burnham’s inspiratio­n for the plan came from his work in planning the 1893 Columbian Exposition, the world’s fair known as the White City. Finfer began by digging into the Burnham archive at the Art Institute of Chicago. She found a wealth of informatio­n there on Burnham and his ambitious plan to create his visionary design for the White City.

What began as a monologue and evolved into short plays about the characters involved — Burnham, architects John Root and Louis Sullivan, philanthro­pist Bertha Palmer, journalist Ida B. Wells — has now morphed into the musical “Burnham’s Dream: The White City.”

“This is no bio- musical,” Finfer says. “This is a story of building something that’s never been built before — how it happened and how it almost didn’t happen.”

“Burnham’s Dream” is being staged by Finfer’s Lost and Found Production­s, with Erik Wagner directing the 10- member cast that features Pavi Proczko as Burnham, Daniel Leahy as Sullivan, Sam Massey as Root, Genevieve Thiers as Palmer, Arielle Leverett as Wells and Laura Degrenia as Margaret Burnham.

Composer Elizabeth Doyle wrote the music, joining book writer and lyricist Finfer on the project. Doyle researched the styles of music popular in the early 1890s. The fair itself included performanc­es by John Philip Sousa, Scott Joplin and the Polish pianist Ignace Paderewski. The musical’s score features ragtime, barbershop quartet, art songs, sonnets and marches.

“It was really a wonderful time for music,” says Doyle. “I wanted to create music from that era but in my voice.”

Finfer drew a bit of inspiratio­n from an experience from her own past. In the mid- 1960s, her late husband Paul, an architect and urban planner, had the opportunit­y to plan the town of Valdez, Alaska, after it was deemed unsafe after an earthquake.

“The entire town had to be moved to a new location,” Finfer says. “I know from my husband’s experience that it takes a great deal of imaginatio­n, vision and persistenc­e, plus cooperatio­n from all sorts of people, to make it happen.”

Finfer says that Burnham lived on site while the White City was under constructi­on, a situation that must have been hard on his wife and one that Finfer could understand.

“Having been married to an architect who was away in Alaska for six months, I could emphasize with her,” she says, then adds with a laugh, “So I wrote a song called ‘ Never Marry an Architect.’ ”

‘ BURNHAM’S DREAM: THE WHITE CITY’

When: June 2- July 1 Where: Lost and Found Production­s at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont Tickets: $ 42 Info: theaterwit.org

In another song, “We Are a Team,” Burnham’s partner John Root describes their relationsh­ip: “He is the engine and I am the steam, he is pragmatic and I tend to dream.”

When Root dies suddenly while working on preliminar­y plans for the White City, big questions remain: Can Burnham go on alone? And will he be allowed to? All of this makes for good drama, says Finfer.

What amazes Finfer about Burnham — who was never formally trained as an architect — is how he continued to grow with everything he undertook.

“Burnham was ambitious, driven and charming, and he made things happen,” Finfer says. “People had confidence in him, and he made his vision a reality.”

Doyle hopes the musical gives audiences a new appreciati­on for Burnham and the White City.

“I often say that, if I had a time machine, I’d go back to the White City for a day,” she says. “So we hope audiences, for a couple of hours, can do just that by entering this world we’ve created, a world filled with positive and challengin­g issues.”

MORE CHICAGO HISTORY: Underscore Theatre soon debuts its new musical “Haymarket,” created by Alex Higgin- Houser and David Kornfeld. It’s the story of labor unrest in 1886 Chicago, where striking workers clashed with police, resulting in an act of terror, a corrupt trial and the death of five innocent men. Robert Ollis directs a cast of actor- musicians performing a folk- infused score. Performanc­es are June 13- July 22. For more informatio­n, go to underscore­theatre.org.

 ?? ANDY LYNN ?? Laura Degrenia as Margaret Burnham ( from left), Pavi Proczko as Daniel Burnham and Sam Massey as John Root in “Burnham’s Dream: The White City.”
ANDY LYNN Laura Degrenia as Margaret Burnham ( from left), Pavi Proczko as Daniel Burnham and Sam Massey as John Root in “Burnham’s Dream: The White City.”
 ??  ?? June Finfer
June Finfer
 ??  ?? Elizabeth Doyle
Elizabeth Doyle

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