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Sci-fi head-scratcher

Organizational consulting is like a cube of lard: it looks like a sweet bite of white chocolate but sits heavy in the stomach. Stupid people are to be avoided, like how a dry foot rejects a wet sock. Working is like drinking salt water. Women with whom men have affairs are martini olives. Playwright and Yellow Rose Theater founder Joseph Zaki’s two-act sci-fi morality play, Gigi’s Party, purports to be an exploration of faith, the future of health care, and bodily autonomy, but it’s more memorable as perhaps the most peculiar collection of head-scratcher analogies and similes to be put onstage.

Gigi’s PartyThrough 9/3: Thu-Fri 7:30 PM, Sat 3 and 7:30 PM, Den Theatre, 1331 N. Milwaukee, 773-697-3830, gigisparty.com, $33 ($22 seniors)

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Gigi (Katherine Wettermann), a not-quite-middle-aged corporate executive, decides to throw herself an assisted-suicide “D Party” far earlier than the 70-to-150-year life expectancy enabled by modern medicine, which has all but eliminated the most common causes of natural death. Her announcement is met with horror by her loving husband (Sean Frett) and a mix of curiosity, conflict, and some respect from her friends and colleagues, including her genetic engineer lover (Kieran O’Connor). Director Kelly Levander’s production touches on significant and well-trodden existential themes common in hard science fiction, and creates some fun 2058 world-building, like the existence of 3D-printed designer apparel. But the performances are rendered so strange by inscrutable plot tangents, gravel-smooth dialogue, and the sort of character choices that feel more at home in a surreal Yorgos Lanthimos movie (at one point, adversaries at a bar inexplicably begin sliding beer bottles back and forth and call out chess moves) than the straightforward play Gigi’s Party is styled as. It certainly leaves audiences with questions. Just not the right kind. 

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Elastic Mind heralds a promising new playwright.

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Christian Alexander is the writer and co-star of this world premiere production from his brand-new company, Campfire Repertory Theatre. James (Keith Ferguson) and Michelle (Ashley Graham) come home after what should be a triumphant night. Michelle has starred in a play and expects James to shower her with praise; what she gets instead is a cold bucket of reality. The young couple, who’ve recently moved to Harlem in the 1920s with big dreams, are at a crossroads. James, an aspiring writer, has been supporting them and neglecting his craft while Michelle has been trying to break through on stage without much luck. Her solution is to follow their Black expatriate heroes like Josephine Baker to Paris, where she believes they’ll be appreciated, while he’s not ready to pick up and leave. Things get more complicated when James sells his first novel, brokered by his best friend, Christopher (Alexander), whose motives are anything but altruistic. Michelle’s best friend, Simone (Laura E. Rojas), is hardly an angel on her shoulder either.

Elastic Mind Through 9/4: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773-404-7336, greenhousetheater.org, $35-$45 ($25 students with ID at box office only)

For a first effort, Alexander has chosen to dive into the deep end of the pool, but his baby comes out smelling like a rose. He somehow balances marital tensions, racism, artistic ambition, and jealousy in a story that could’ve veered into melodrama and overkill a dozen times over but never does. His talented cast deserves a lot of the credit, but Alexander deserves major kudos for keeping this multileveled ship afloat and not falling back on obvious sentimentality or cheap shock value. I’m excited to see what he writes next.

Introducing his play (directed by Weléla Mar Kindred) before the curtain, Alexander stressed that this is a Black play rather than a Eurocentric one and urged the audience to call out and comment on the action in ways generally frowned upon in traditional theater presentations. And his audience didn’t disappoint. They rooted for James and criticized Michelle one minute, then changed their minds as the couple put each other through torments. Their engagement and participation added to the experience of taking in a production that heralds an exciting new voice on the local scene. 

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Elastic Mind heralds a promising new playwright. Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


State of anxiety

Darren Bailey’s anti-Semitic abortion rhetoric is part of a larger MAGA election strategy. Sad to say, so far it’s worked.


MAGA enablers

Andrew Yang and his third party lead the way for Trump.


Biased driving

Mayor Lightfoot uses NASCAR to lure the “Let’s Go Brandon” crowd to town.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Elastic Mind heralds a promising new playwright.Dmitry Samarovon August 24, 2022 at 5:52 pm

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Christian Alexander is the writer and co-star of this world premiere production from his brand-new company, Campfire Repertory Theatre. James (Keith Ferguson) and Michelle (Ashley Graham) come home after what should be a triumphant night. Michelle has starred in a play and expects James to shower her with praise; what she gets instead is a cold bucket of reality. The young couple, who’ve recently moved to Harlem in the 1920s with big dreams, are at a crossroads. James, an aspiring writer, has been supporting them and neglecting his craft while Michelle has been trying to break through on stage without much luck. Her solution is to follow their Black expatriate heroes like Josephine Baker to Paris, where she believes they’ll be appreciated, while he’s not ready to pick up and leave. Things get more complicated when James sells his first novel, brokered by his best friend, Christopher (Alexander), whose motives are anything but altruistic. Michelle’s best friend, Simone (Laura E. Rojas), is hardly an angel on her shoulder either.

Elastic Mind Through 9/4: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773-404-7336, greenhousetheater.org, $35-$45 ($25 students with ID at box office only)

For a first effort, Alexander has chosen to dive into the deep end of the pool, but his baby comes out smelling like a rose. He somehow balances marital tensions, racism, artistic ambition, and jealousy in a story that could’ve veered into melodrama and overkill a dozen times over but never does. His talented cast deserves a lot of the credit, but Alexander deserves major kudos for keeping this multileveled ship afloat and not falling back on obvious sentimentality or cheap shock value. I’m excited to see what he writes next.

Introducing his play (directed by Weléla Mar Kindred) before the curtain, Alexander stressed that this is a Black play rather than a Eurocentric one and urged the audience to call out and comment on the action in ways generally frowned upon in traditional theater presentations. And his audience didn’t disappoint. They rooted for James and criticized Michelle one minute, then changed their minds as the couple put each other through torments. Their engagement and participation added to the experience of taking in a production that heralds an exciting new voice on the local scene. 

Read More

Elastic Mind heralds a promising new playwright.Dmitry Samarovon August 24, 2022 at 5:52 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon August 23, 2022 at 9:15 pm

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


State of anxiety

Darren Bailey’s anti-Semitic abortion rhetoric is part of a larger MAGA election strategy. Sad to say, so far it’s worked.


MAGA enablers

Andrew Yang and his third party lead the way for Trump.


Biased driving

Mayor Lightfoot uses NASCAR to lure the “Let’s Go Brandon” crowd to town.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon August 23, 2022 at 9:15 pm Read More »

Get the Chicago Reader in print every other weekChicago Readeron August 24, 2022 at 6:17 pm

Many Reader boxes including downtown and transit line locations will be restocked on the Wednesday following each issue date.

The latest issue

The latest print issue of the Reader is the issue of August 18, 2022.

You can download the print issue as a free PDF.

The next print issue will be the issue of September 1.

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week and distributed free to the 1,100 locations on this map (which can also be opened in a separate window or tab). Copies are available free of charge—while supplies last.

Never miss a copy! Paid print subscriptions are available for 12 issues, 26 issues, and for 52 issues from the Reader Store.

Chicago Reader 2022 print issue dates

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week. Issues are dated Thursday. Distribution usually happens Wednesday morning through Thursday night of the issue date. Upcoming print issue dates through December 2022 are:

9/1/20229/15/20229/29/202210/13/202210/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

Download the full 2022 editorial calendar is here (PDF).

See our information page for advertising opportunities.

2023 print issue dates

The first print issue in 2023 will be published three weeks after the 12/22/2022 issue, the final issue of 2022. The print issue dates through March 2023 are:

1/12/20231/26/20232/9/20232/23/20233/9/20233/23/2023

Related


[PRESS RELEASE] Baim stepping down as Reader publisher end of 2022


Chicago Reader hires social justice reporter

Debbie-Marie Brown fills this position made possible by grant funding from the Field Foundation.


[PRESS RELEASE] Lawyers for Social Justice Reception

Benefitting The Reader Institute for Community Journalism,
Publisher of the Chicago Reader

Read More

Get the Chicago Reader in print every other weekChicago Readeron August 24, 2022 at 6:17 pm Read More »

Sci-fi head-scratcherDan Jakeson August 24, 2022 at 6:12 pm

Organizational consulting is like a cube of lard: it looks like a sweet bite of white chocolate but sits heavy in the stomach. Stupid people are to be avoided, like how a dry foot rejects a wet sock. Working is like drinking salt water. Women with whom men have affairs are martini olives. Playwright and Yellow Rose Theater founder Joseph Zaki’s two-act sci-fi morality play, Gigi’s Party, purports to be an exploration of faith, the future of health care, and bodily autonomy, but it’s more memorable as perhaps the most peculiar collection of head-scratcher analogies and similes to be put onstage.

Gigi’s PartyThrough 9/3: Thu-Fri 7:30 PM, Sat 3 and 7:30 PM, Den Theatre, 1331 N. Milwaukee, 773-697-3830, gigisparty.com, $33 ($22 seniors)

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Gigi (Katherine Wettermann), a not-quite-middle-aged corporate executive, decides to throw herself an assisted-suicide “D Party” far earlier than the 70-to-150-year life expectancy enabled by modern medicine, which has all but eliminated the most common causes of natural death. Her announcement is met with horror by her loving husband (Sean Frett) and a mix of curiosity, conflict, and some respect from her friends and colleagues, including her genetic engineer lover (Kieran O’Connor). Director Kelly Levander’s production touches on significant and well-trodden existential themes common in hard science fiction, and creates some fun 2058 world-building, like the existence of 3D-printed designer apparel. But the performances are rendered so strange by inscrutable plot tangents, gravel-smooth dialogue, and the sort of character choices that feel more at home in a surreal Yorgos Lanthimos movie (at one point, adversaries at a bar inexplicably begin sliding beer bottles back and forth and call out chess moves) than the straightforward play Gigi’s Party is styled as. It certainly leaves audiences with questions. Just not the right kind. 

Read More

Sci-fi head-scratcherDan Jakeson August 24, 2022 at 6:12 pm Read More »

Genius bassist Richard Davis is so ubiquitous he’s almost invisible

Since 2004 Plastic Crimewave (aka Steve Krakow) has used the Secret History of Chicago Music to shine a light on worthy artists with Chicago ties who’ve been forgotten, underrated, or never noticed in the first place.

I can’t rattle off a list of my most beloved guitarists, despite being a so-so guitar player myself, but I can quickly tell you my top ten bassists. One of my favorites has played with famous musicians across many genres, but most folks don’t even recognize his name. As far as I know, my first exposure to the great Richard Davis came through Van Morrison’s landmark 1968 LP, Astral Weeks, with its seamless blend of R&B, pop, blues, folk, and jazz that Morrison called “Celtic soul.” Even my untrained adolescent ears could hear something in Davis’s playing that jumped out at me—his throbbing, luscious double bass seemed to guide the music, and later I learned that he was the de facto bandleader on the sessions. 

Much later, I learned that Davis came up in the Windy City and built important groundwork for his career here. That’s enough for me to claim this brilliant bassist—an exactingly trained virtuoso as well as a telepathically intuitive improviser—for the Secret History of Chicago Music.

Davis was born on the south side on April 15, 1930, and grew up singing bass harmonies in his family’s amateur vocal trio. There were lots of records in their home, and Davis remembers using a windup Victrola in the basement to listen to Lucky Millinder’s “Big Fat Mama,” Lil Green’s “Romance in the Dark,” Billy Eckstine’s “Jelly, Jelly,” and Avery Parrish’s “After Hours.”

Davis picked up the bass at age 15, fairly late in life by the standards of a future professional musician. “I was just enthralled by the sound,” he recalled in a 2013 interview published last year by Allegro, the digital publication of the New York chapter of the American Federation of Musicians. (Davis joined the union in 1955.) “The bass was always in the background, and I was a shy kid,” he said. “So I thought maybe I’d like to be in the background.” 

Davis was lucky enough to attend DuSable High (49th and Wabash), which has since become famous worldwide for producing a staggering array of professional music legends. The hard-as-nails Captain Walter Henri Dyett served as the school’s music director from 1935 to 1962, and his teaching techniques were borderline military-style strict but also hugely successful—he’d previously led the Eighth Regiment Infantry Band of the Illinois National Guard. 

By the time Davis attended DuSable, its alumni included Nat “King” Cole, Dinah Washington, Gene Ammons, and Von Freeman. Among Davis’s contemporaries under Dyett’s tutelage were rock ’n’ roll architect Bo Diddley, free-jazz violinist Leroy Jenkins, bassist Ronnie Boykins, and celebrated sax players Johnny Griffin, John Gilmore, and Eddie Harris.

Davis didn’t have the easiest time studying under Dyett. “He had crude methods but it was out of what you’d call tough love,” he told Jazz Inside magazine. “He told me to sit down once and said that I’d never play the bass, and I did exactly what he probably wanted me to do: I said, ‘I’ll show you one day.’ And 20 years after I graduated, he was still prodding me, making me do things. That’s a teacher.” 

Davis was also extremely driven in school to begin with: “I couldn’t afford lower than 100 percent, because I was black and I had two strikes against me already,” he said. “With that kind of discipline and with the discipline of Walter Dyett, I had nowhere to go but to the top.” Dyett also pushed Davis to study both jazz and classical bass, a versatility that would help him reach the peak of his field. 

After classes in high school, Davis began taking lessons with Chicago Symphony Orchestra bassist Rudolph Fahsbender, another hard-nosed educator. That mentorship lasted nine years, including Davis’s time at the VanderCook School of Music, where he earned a bachelor’s in music education in 1952.

Because Dyett’s classes were known (even in their day) for producing future stars, bandleaders such as Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, and Lionel Hampton sometimes recruited students directly from DuSable. Dyett had taught Davis about older jazz bassists such as Jimmy Blanton, Oscar Pettiford, and Slam Stewart, and this inspired him to start gigging in orchestras and dance bands in the early 50s. During this time, at a burlesque house in Calumet City, Davis made the acquaintance of pianist Sonny Blount, soon to be known far and wide as cosmic innovator and galactic being Sun Ra. 

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

“The first time I met Sonny, my buddies brought him to my house, and he said, ‘I’m not gonna take you to the moon because you’re not ready yet,’” Davis told Allegro. “And I said, ‘Who is this guy?’” Ra planted the seed in Davis to see music “on a global level,” and that far-reaching vision would be a central theme in the bassist’s future work.

In 1953, Davis hooked up with the trio led by famed pianist Ahmad Jamal, and the following year a life-changing opportunity came knocking. Davis knew fellow Chicago jazz bassist and future star arranger Johnny Pate (also a SHoCM subject), who’d been playing in a trio with pianist Don Shirley. Shirley was taking his group to New York, but Pate didn’t want to leave. To solve the problem, the bassists traded bands: Pate joined Jamal, and Shirley took Davis to New York, where he stayed for 23 years.

Richard Davis performs with Sarah Vaughan in Sweden in 1958.

Davis was initially intimidated by the profusion of jazz talent in New York, but he soon found a welcoming community. He landed a gig in Sarah Vaughan’s band in 1957, playing alongside pianist Jimmy Jones and drummer Roy Haynes; over the next few years he’d record four albums with the esteemed singer. In the early 60s Davis’s career exploded, and he worked in ensembles led by luminaries such as Booker Ervin, Andrew Hill (also from Chicago), Cal Tjader, and Eric Dolphy—he appeared on Dolphy’s 1964 LP Out to Lunch!, one of the canonical documents of 60s avant-garde jazz.

Davis had met Dolphy by chance on the subway in 1961, and with Dolphy his playing evolved into newly abstract realms. “When it comes to freer music, the chords didn’t matter that much,” he told Allegro. “It was what you’re hearing around you and what you’re hearing in your own head that shaped the circle of musical events.” 

The title track of the famous Eric Dolphy LP Out to Lunch!, on which Richard Davis plays bass

Echoing the philosophy of Sun Ra, Davis explained what free jazz meant to him: “Limiting yourself to a particular set of notes and chords is in a sense being a slave to the powers that be. We were resisting being imprisoned by chord changes, trying to free ourselves from the restrictions of scales and rhythms. Some people call this free music. Some of us called it our music. Unrestricted, indefinable, and free.”

Richard Davis’s bass takes the lead on this 1967 duo with drummer Elvin Jones.

Davis recorded his own albums as well: he cut the classic Elvin Jones duo Heavy Sounds for Impulse! in 1967, and he stepped out as a bandleader himself on Muses for Richard Davis (recorded for MPS Records in 1969) and The Philosophy of the Spiritual (for Cobblestone in ’71). He joined the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra for several years in 1966, and he continued to back up a staggering variety of fellow jazzers, including Clifford Jordan, Sonny Stitt, Kenny Burrell, Oliver Nelson, Wes Montgomery, Miles Davis, Dexter Gordon, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, and Joe Henderson.

A track from Davis’s 1969 solo recording Muses for Richard Davis, his first under his own name

In this same period, Davis also crossed over into pop and rock, working with the likes of Frank Sinatra (for his 1970 Watertown LP) and Barbra Streisand (on several early albums). Davis became so in demand, with so many jobs on the books, that he often ended up arriving at a session not knowing much about the artist he’d be accompanying.

Such was the case with the masterpiece Astral Weeks. Davis didn’t even get the chance to say hello to Van Morrison at the session. “He came in and went into a booth, and that’s where he stayed, isolated in a booth,” he told Allegro. “He seemed very shy.” 

Richard Davis’s bass plays a prominent role on Van Morrison’s “Sweet Thing,” from Astral Weeks.

This is pretty mind-blowing to hear, given that the synergy between Van the man and the session musicians—including Davis, vibraphonist Warren Smith Jr., and guitarist Jay Berliner—vibrates at such a high level that this heady crossover classic has been topping best-album lists for more than 50 years. Music critic Greil Marcus declared Davis’s playing “the greatest bass ever heard on a rock album.” I can’t help but love Astral Weeks dearly to this day, even though Morrison has proved himself a terrible COVID crank. 

Davis also played on Paul Simon’s “Something So Right,” Janis Ian’s “At Seventeen,” and Bruce Springsteen’s “Meeting Across the River” (from Born to Run). His dizzyingly diversified talent took him likewise into the world of 20th-century classical music, and he played under conductors such as George Szell, Leopold Stokowski, Leonard Bernstein, and Pierre Boulez. He once worked with composer Igor Stravinsky and trumpeter Kenny Dorham in the span of one day.

Richard Davis accompanies Janis Ian on the single “At Seventeen.”

Davis also continued to pursue his other great love: equestrianism. He’d worked in stables as a kid and became an accomplished horseman, competing in dressage and jumping. He ultimately decided that one career was enough and stopped short of getting into trading or racing, but he’s owned and even bred horses—especially after leaving New York for Wisconsin in 1977.

That was the year Dyett’s lessons bore a new kind of fruit when Davis became a teacher himself. At the University of Wisconsin-Madison he took the title “Professor of Bass (European Classical and Jazz), Jazz History, and Combo Improvisation.” His new school and town were overwhelmingly white (a situation Davis wasn’t used to), and he served as an anti-racist advocate on several fronts. He advised the university’s efforts to improve its ability to attract and retain students of color, and he served as its diversity liaison in faculty hiring. He also led Madison’s Institutes for the Healing of Racism—he founded the nonprofit in 2000 and hosted its meetings in his home till 2017.

In 1993, he launched the Richard Davis Foundation for Young Bassists, which employs an all-star staff of veteran teachers to instruct musicians ages three to 18. In 2014, Davis won a Jazz Masters fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. He retired from the university in 2016, and as recently as that year he was playing in Paris as part of a Coltrane tribute led by fellow out-jazz icon Archie Shepp. 

Now in his 90s, Davis remains in Madison, teaching on the side and continuing his work with the Foundation for Young Bassists (its most recent event was in April of last year). “I practice when the mood hits me, depending on what I want to get done,” Davis told Allegro, sounding like a Zen sage. “I’m also always practicing when I’m with my students.” 

Here’s hoping Davis can continue his important work—but even if he decides to relax into his well-deserved retirement, his status as one of the world’s most soulful and virtuosic bassists is already unassailable.

The radio version of the Secret History of Chicago Music airs on Outside the Loop on WGN Radio 720 AM, Saturdays at 5 AM with host Mike Stephen. Past shows are archived here.

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Langston’s legacy

The Black Ensemble Theater continues its four-play season with My Brother Langston, written and directed by Rueben D. Echoles. The 90-minute play zooms into the life story of American poet Langston Hughes (Chris Taylor) with original dialogue, song, dance, and of course, readings of some of his most well-loved poems. 

My Brother LangstonThrough 9/18: Fri 7 PM, Sat 3 and 7 PM, Sun 3 PM, Black Ensemble Theater, 4450 N. Clark, 773-769-4451, blackensembletheater.org, $55

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

The acting in My Brother Langston is strong, especially from the supporting cast, as they take on the roles of numerous characters and figures in Langston’s life such as his stepbrother Gwyn (Nolan Robinson), fellow poet Countee Cullen (André Teamer), his Nana (De’Jah Jervai), and even Zora Neale Hurston (Reneisha Jenkins). The play’s inclusion of music from cherished Black artists such as Billie Holiday and Duke Ellington successfully pulls the audience into the complexity and thrill of the Harlem Renaissance, the era in which Hughes begins to make a name for himself as a poet. (Adam Sherrod leads the four-piece band.)

Various segments of the writer’s life are on the table—from his childhood, complex parental relationships, friendships, his sexuality, and terrifying encounters with racial violence and prejudice. Consistent throughout Hughes’s life experiences is his desire to be heard. His pen is his microphone—a point of connection with humanity at large, a vessel for the hopes and dreams of his fellow Black Americans. This intrinsic desire that Hughes holds is something that Echoles’s writing conveys well. 

This is a very good play and I have no doubt that audiences will enjoy it. My main critique is that I struggled to connect emotionally with the principal character. While I walked out of the theater knowing significantly more about various aspects of Hughes’s life, I kept asking myself: Who really was Langston Hughes? Perhaps that is too simple of a question for such a complex (yet beloved) figure.

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Illinois ride-share drivers demand better pay, safer conditions

For the past six years, David Crane has been a ride-share driver for Uber and Lyft, chauffeuring passengers across the city for less than minimum wage. He often works 12 to 14 hours a day with no breaks in between. Recently, he found himself working 11 days straight to make up for the cost of rising gas prices and rent. 

Now Crane is one of 120,000 app workers—like ride-share or delivery app drivers—nationwide fighting the multibillion-dollar app companies for better pay, safer working conditions, and the right to unionize. 

“Our average pay per minute equals out to right below $14 an hour, which is just about poverty wages right now because of inflation and the cost of gas increasing,” Crane said. “We also need proper representation through a union and better safety.” 

Last week, more than a hundred Illinois app workers gathered in Schiller Woods on the far northwest side to announce they were joining Justice for App Workers, a growing national coalition of ride-share and delivery drivers that started in New York in February. The Illinois coalition includes seven driver groups representing app-based workers: Road Warriors Chicago, Illinois Independent Drivers Guild, Latinos Unidos Uber y Lyft, SOS Uber y Lyft, Rideshare Revolutionaries, Chicago Uber and Lyft Drivers, and Chicago Stolen Car Directory. 

Along with better pay and protections, app workers are also demanding quality healthcare benefits, reliable bathroom access, an end to unfair deactivation, and a 10 percent cap on all commissions to ensure drivers take home a larger percentage of the profit. 

For some ride-share drivers, safety is a top concern. Andy Thomashaw worked as an Uber driver until a few weeks ago when he was carjacked and robbed at gunpoint by one of his passengers. He said it took Uber three days to respond to the incident. That’s when Thomashaw learned he would have to pay for damages with his own money.

“Ride-share drivers don’t know where their pickup is going to be until they accept the ride and they don’t know where they’re going with the passenger until they pick up the passenger,” Thomashaw said. “There’s really no way for the ride-share driver to know who [the passenger] is and that’s very wrong and unsafe.”

Since the incident, Thomashaw said he fears for his life as a ride-share driver and doesn’t plan to do it again. 

Under state and federal law, app workers are not awarded the same legal protections as employees because they’re classified as independent contractors, which is generally defined as a self-employed person who can set their own payment rates. App workers, however, don’t get to decide how much they get paid—the app companies do. 

Crane said the coalition is seeking support from state officials to pass legislation that would allow independent contractors to unionize and create more protections for app-based workers. 

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

“We’re looking for government officials to realize that these companies need to be looked at under a fine-tooth comb,” Crane said. “We need better representation from a government level and from a union representative.”

“Having just got through a global pandemic, now more than ever, it is not enough to thank an essential worker,” state senator Ram Villivalam, a former union organizer whose district includes northwest Chicago and surrounding suburbs, said in a statement to the Reader. “We must enact policies that will positively impact their lives. Gig workers, like all working people, deserve fair wages and dignified working conditions.” 


Photos from the Reader editorial union’s rally on April 21, 2022.


Workers at the pioneering south side space organize against unfair labor practices.


A former cabbie talks to writer Reginald Edmund about Ride Share at Writers Theatre—and the real-life experiences that inspired it.

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