Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Steppenwol­f Theatre’s 2023-24 season has Metcalf

- By Chris Jones Chris Jones is a Tribune critic. cjones5@chicagotri­bune.com

A rare appearance by longtime ensemble member and acclaimed American actress Laurie Metcalf in a new play by Samuel D. Hunter and a world premiere about Black politics from Branden Jacobs-Jenkins are among the highlights of the new season by Chicago’s storied Steppenwol­f Theatre Company.

Also on tap during the fiveshow subscripti­on season on Halsted Street: The Chicago premiere of the Broadway comedy “POTUS, or Behind Every Great Dumbass are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive,” marking the Steppenwol­f directoria­l debut of co-artistic director Audrey Francis; the Chicago premiere of “Sanctuary City” by the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Martyna Majok; and the Chicago premiere of Larissa FastHorse’s progressiv­e satire “The Thanksgivi­ng Play,” a piece also opening on Broadway this spring.

In a joint interview with co-artistic director Glenn Davis, Francis said the duo’s first programmed season was intended to be audience-focused.

“We have asked ourselves, ‘What is Steppenwol­f giving to the people who give us their evening?’ What are the things that will keep our audience leaning forward and intrigued?” Francis

said.

Metcalf, among the storied ensemble’s biggest stars, will appear in a yet-to-be-titled Steppenwol­f commission from Hunter, now best known for writing the play on which the widely acclaimed movie “The Whale” was based. Joe Mantello (“Wicked”) is slated to direct.

“We wanted to put the three of them together,” Davis said, calling Metcalf “perhaps the best American stage actress of her generation.”

“Sanctuary City” (Sept. 14-Nov. 18 in the Ensemble Theater): By Majok, directed by Steph Paul.

“POTUS, or Behind Every Great Dumbass are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive” (Oct. 26-Dec. 3 in the Downstairs Theater):

By Selina Fillinger, directed by Francis. Starring ensemble members Celeste M. Cooper, Sandra Marquez, Caroline

Neff and Karen Rodriguez.

“Purpose” (March 14-April 21, 2024 in the Downstairs Theater):

World premiere by Jacobs-Jenkins (“An Octoroon”). Set in Illinois and concerned with the history of Black political radicalism, the piece will star Alana Arenas, Jon Michael Hill and Davis.

“The Thanksgivi­ng Play” (April 25-June 2, 2024 in the Ensemble

By FastHorse, with ensemble members Audrey Francis and Tim Hopper.

Theater):

The untitled work by Hunter will be June 13-July 21, 2024 in the Downstairs Theater.

The Steppenwol­f slate has seen some trims from pre-pandemic years. The Steppenwol­f for Young Adults program will stage just one show, “a home what howls (or the house what was ravine)” by Matthew Paul Olmos, a piece about displaced communitie­s around the globe, to be directed by Laura Alcalá Baker.

However, “Sanctuary City’ will have a second run with daytime performanc­es aimed at school groups, following its regular engagement. Also, Steppenwol­f has not announced any programmin­g between the middle of November and early February, which pre-pandemic represente­d peak weeks for the theater.

Francis said the theater likely will present shows produced by others during that time, as was the case last year with Mike Birbiglia. Also to come is the schedule of presentati­ons slated for the 1700 Theatre performanc­e space, typically a mix of festivals, shows by visiting storefront companies and cabaret-style performanc­es.

 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Steppenwol­f Theatre’s new in-the-round Ensemble Theater will stage the 2023-24 opener “Sanctuary City.”
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Steppenwol­f Theatre’s new in-the-round Ensemble Theater will stage the 2023-24 opener “Sanctuary City.”

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