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Sun, surf, summer: time to head to the library

There’s a whole lot of story in history. And so much depends on the perspective of the storyteller.  

What, for example, will the future think it knows of our fraught time? What will be included? What will be omitted? What will be the spin on events like the war in Ukraine or the 2020 presidential election?

Miriam Thaggert has been thinking about this sort of thing since a visit to the Newberry Library’s vast Pullman Company archives in 2014 sent her on a long detour through 19th- and early 20th-century American history. Thaggert, now a literature professor at SUNY Buffalo, had been skimming through the employee records of the famous all-male, all-Black Pullman Company porters for a book she was planning, when she stumbled on something she didn’t expect: an application from a woman. 

It set her off on a different track.

“I had never heard of Pullman maids before,” Thaggert says, but that was the position this woman was seeking. “It made me start to think about what the experiences of Black women in that company might have been like. And that led to questions about the experience of other Black women on the railroad,” passengers as well as workers.

The result, after a return to the Newberry in 2015 for an academic year fellowship and much additional research, is Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad, published this month by University of Illinois Press.

“One of the things I’m hoping to get people to think about is the national narrative we tell about the railroad,” Thaggert says.  

Looking mostly at the years between 1860 and 1925, Thaggert found that railroad travel, romanticized by countless white male writers, was a very different experience for Black women, who were often forced to ride in Jim Crow cars even if they’d paid for first class tickets. (Ida B. Wells sued twice over this.) As passengers at that time—“a period of intense racial activity when Black political and economic advancements precipitated widespread violence against Blacks”—Thaggert writes, they had to worry about possible verbal or physical assaults by other passengers or even by the all-white conductors. Any kind of fuss could lead to ejection from the train or a trip to jail. 

“America’s valued progress narrative, a story so often symbolized by the railroad,” is challenged by the experience of Black women, Thaggert wound up writing. “The nation’s mechanical trajectory ‘forward’ has, embedded within it, the retrenchment of African American social progress.”

Thaggert has curated an exhibit, “Handmaidens for Travelers: The Pullman Company Maids,” on view at the Newberry through September 16. A concise walk through a central chapter of the book, it’s a chance to see actual documents from the archive. These include a page from the company’s detailed Instructions for Maids (No wearing of rouge or powder!), and advertising photographs that show pampered white patrons getting manicures and hairstyles en route.      

On June 29, Thaggert will be back at the Newberry for the Riding Jane Crow book launch and a discussion with University of Pennsylvania history professor Mia Bay, whose own book, Traveling Black: A Story of Race and Resistance, recently won the 2022 Bancroft Prize in history. It’s free and open to the public.

Also, after a three-year COVID suspension, the Newberry’s annual used book fair—the major event of the summer for bargain-hunting bibliophiles—is back. Scheduled for July 29-31, with free admission and “many items priced at $3 or less,” it’ll be smaller than pre-COVID fairs due, in part, to a shorter collection period. But “smaller” is relative: 30,000 to 40,000 books will be offered in the usual dozens of categories, including lots of cooking, history, and fiction.

In conjunction with the book sale, the Newberry’s hosting “a day of storytelling” across the street in Bughouse Square (Washington Park), Saturday, July 30. Celebrating “the power of storytelling and its role in shaping our city,” it’ll include storytellers like Chicago Youth Poet Laureate E’mon Lauren, Lily Be, and Vincent Romero, as well as Dawn Turner, who’ll be receiving the Newberry’s inaugural Pattis Family Foundation Chicago Book Award for her memoir, Three Girls from Bronzeville.

If you’re moved to tell your own story, there’ll be a public open mike. You can also drop in on a performance of 100 Novels by artist Tim Youd, who’s been traveling for a decade, retyping the work of famous authors in locations relevant to the books. Youd will be retyping Nelson Algren’s The Man with the Golden Arm at the Newberry (where Algren researched the book) from July 26 through August 12. He’ll type the entire novel on a single piece of paper, backed by a second sheet of paper, both of which will then be mounted as art objects. There’s a tale looking for a teller there.

Read More

Sun, surf, summer: time to head to the library Read More »

Hot weather, hot shows

Summer is officially here, in case the sweat and lightning bugs weren’t enough of a clue. In addition to the shows and artists we profiled in our summer arts preview issue this week, we’ve got just a few suggestions for other offerings in theater, dance, and opera that look promising—whether you’re looking for a nice air-conditioned theater or a bucolic outdoor setting. 

THEATER PICKS (Kerry Reid)

It Came From Outer Space

“There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” So Hamlet knew about aliens, is what we take away from that. And therefore, it makes perfect sense that Chicago Shakespeare is premiering this musical by Joe Kinosian and Kellen Blair, based on the 1953 sci-fi film. The company offered a digital sneak peek, entitled We Are Out There, last year; now you can see it live at Navy Pier (where, let’s face it, aliens would blend perfectly most days). Laura Braza directs a cast that includes Jonathan Butler-Duplessis, Ann Delaney, and Alex Goodrich. Through 6/24, Chicago Shakespeare, 800 E. Grand, chicagoshakes.com, $50-$60.

Pearl’s Rollin’ with the Blues: A Night with Felicia P. Fields

Fields, one of the bona fide greats in Chicago theater, takes over Writers Theatre in this world premiere, which she created in collaboration with director Ron OJ Parson. (The two previously worked together at Writers in August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom in 2019.) Fields delivers blues classics by Big Mama Thornton, Son House, Howlin’ Wolf, and others, backed by a band headed up by Chic Street Man, as she tells the story of how the blues have influenced her life and career. 6/23-7/24, Writers Theatre, 325 Tudor Ct., Glencoe, writerstheatre.org, $35-$90.

Get Out Alive

Haven Chicago presents a new “multidisciplinary afrogoth” musical by Nikki Lynette that draws on her own experiences dealing with abuse, trauma, and the mental health system. Roger Ellis and Lucky Stiff co-direct, and the cast, in addition to Lynette, features DJ P1, Keeley Morris, and Jacinda Ratcliffe. Over ten years ago, Jessica Hopper wrote in the Reader that “it’s unfair that Chicago MC Nikki Lynette is hip-hop’s other Nikki. Not that there should be just one, or that Nicki Minaj doesn’t deserve her celebrity, but Lynette certainly has what it takes to compete with all the singing-and-dancing rappers who are already getting over on quirk, hooks, and charismatic flow,” adding, “The city should be proud to call her its own, but given that Chicago is where hip-hop careers go to die, let’s hope she gets the hell out.” She’s obviously stayed and survived, and has some stories to tell us about that. Lynette has also adapted the musical into a film that has been making the festival rounds. 7/8-8/6, Den Theatre, 1331 N. Milwaukee, havenchi.org, pay what you can previews 7/8-7/10, regular run $36 ($46 reserved table, industry $31, students $21).

Nikki Lynette in Get Out Alive

2nd Annual BIPOC Play Fest

Perceptions Theatre started life at the beginning of the pandemicwith a strong focus on digital content and new work, as well as with a playreading club. They’re ready to go live with the second iteration of this festival, which will also offer a streaming option for those who find that more convenient. The lineup includes Carlo Zenner’s Mess, about “a Queer Latinx Chicagoan grappling with the disorienting effects of quarantine” and “the pleasures and pains of casual dating”; The Voice Inside My Head by Louis Johnson, in which a middle-aged Black man gunned down by the police reflects in the afterlife upon his accomplishments and the outrage unleashed by his murder; Was It Me? by Andrea J. Fulton, an excerpt from a larger play about Margo, a 49-year-old woman confronting the effects of childhood trauma on the eve of a birthday reunion with old friends; and Kingdom by Nic Bell, an absurdist short work that focuses on “family, duty, free will, and the inevitability of fate.” 7/9-7/10, Studio 2226 Inc., 2226 E. 71st, perceptionstheatre.org for more information and reservations. 

The Devil Wears Prada

Cruella De Vil or Miranda Priestly: who’s the scariest of them all? OK, Miranda didn’t want to make couture out of canines, but as depicted by Meryl Streep in the 2006 film, she’s become cemented in popular imagination as the Lady-Boss from Hell. Now a new high-profile musical based on Lauren Weisberger’s book about the cutthroat world of fashion hits the runway in Chicago before heading to Broadway. Sir Elton John wrote the score, with lyrics by Shaina Taub and a book by Kate Wetherhead. Former Steppenwolf artistic director Anna D. Shapiro directs (her first time helming a musical), and the show stars Beth Leavel as Miranda and Taylor Iman Jones as her besieged assistant, Andy Sachs. Will a show about abusive bosses feel the same in a post-Scott Rudin landscape? You can be among the first to find out! 7/19-8/21, James M. Nederlander Theatre, 24 W. Randolph, broadwayinchicago.com, $33-$110.

Campaigns, Inc.

Just in time for midterms, TimeLine pulls back the curtain on the history of campaign spin with the world premiere of Will Allan’s play, directed by Nick Bowling. Based on the true story of Leone Baxter and Clem Whitaker, who formed the first political consulting firm in U.S. history, Allan’s comedy offers a perhaps-too-late cautionary tale about propaganda (aka “fake news”) through the lens of the married couple who torpedoed author Upton Sinclair’s (The Jungle) chances to become the first Democratic governor of California in 1934. Whitaker and Baxter pioneered the use of direct mail and ad buys to win the hearts and minds of voters, and also deployed oppositional research that allowed them to cherry-pick quotes to put Sinclair (who actually was a socialist) in the worst possible light. Oh, thank god those days are behind us, huh? The company returns to their longtime Lakeview home for this season—the last before they move into their new spiffy Uptown digs. 8/3-9/18, TimeLine Theatre, 615 W. Wellington, timelinetheatre.com.

DANCE PICKS (Irene Hsiao)

New Dances

New Dances returns to the stage, continuing a tradition of bringing Chicago dancers and choreographers together for a rapid-fire period of creative development. Inaugurated 39 years ago by Chicago Repertory Dance Ensemble, and now in its 21st season under the auspices of Thodos Dance Chicago and DanceWorks Chicago, this year features new works by Kaleigh Dent, Brandon DiCriscio, Trey Johnson, MurdaMommy, Marco Pizano, and Taylor Yocum.

“In viewing the works in process over these past few weeks, I see exceptional facets of thought, depth, and intent on the part of the choreographers,” says Melissa Thodos, artistic director of TDC. “It is as if this diverse group of works were growing, seasoning, and gestating in each of the artists’ minds and beings over these past challenging years.”

“Being able to create dance again in person has been jarring and exciting,” says Pizano, whose work combines pedestrian movement with vogue aesthetics. “It has been mind-blowing to see how far [we] pushed our bodies,” says MurdaMommy, who trained her cast in Chicago footwork. “New Dances has been a wonderful experience of making new connections in the Chicago dance community, renewing old ones, and getting deeper in touch with my choreographic voice,” says DiCriscio, who describes his work as “a story of intimate worlds destined to collide, indirectly influenced by a drifting external force.” 6/23-6/25, Athenaeum Theatre, 2936 N. Southport, danceworkschicago.org, thodosdancechicago.org, $30.

Artist Showcase, Mandala Makers Festival 

The Mandala Makers Festival presents a colossal lineup of South Asian dance, music, poetry, comedy, and drag at Indian Boundary Park, near Mandala South Asian Performing Arts’s new home on Devon Avenue. In addition to contemporary works based on classical Bharatanatyam, “the festival also showcases less common forms embedded in South Asian arts, such as Sufi dances, Odissi, and forms from the Caribbean diaspora,” says Mandala associate artistic director Ashwaty Chennat, who curated the event. 

Self-reflection and the persistence of change are themes of some works featured. “Prakriti II continues our dialogue about our relationship to the divisiveness we see in this world,” says Ishti Collective cofounder Kinnari Vora. “It is through movement that we express the ways in which we can cope and move forward. We explore ways to pause and heal, reach for grounding strength, listen and open our minds, shed our egos, bring brevity and find joy in little things and seek empathy and kindness.” 

On remounting the 2014 work She Cannot, Soham Dance Space artistic director Anjal Chande says, “It’s mysterious how the body remembers movements, intentions, associations, while the body also persistently evolves.” June 24-26, Indian Boundary Park, 2500 W. Lunt, mandalaarts.org, free.

Emperor of all he surveys: Matthew Polenzani appears in Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito at Ravinia in August. Courtesy the artist.

OPERA (Deanna Isaacs)

Ravinia Festival Operas

What could be better than moonlight, a Mozart opera, and the CSO? How about two Mozart operas with a favorite conductor? Ravinia Festival’s offering two performances each of Don Giovanni and La clemenza di Tito this summer, both in the venerable Martin Theatre with sound (no video) to the lawn. Former Ravinia music director James Conlon (longtime music director and principal force at LA Opera) returns to the leafy venue to conduct. The Don Giovanni cast includes baritone Lucas Meachem as the predatory title character, bass-baritone Craig Colclough as his hapless servant Leporello, and soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen as Donna Anna, one of his many outraged prey. La clemenza di Tito features two of Chicago’s own opera superstars: tenor Matthew Polenzani as the Roman emperor of the title and soprano Janai Brugger as Servilia, the woman he would make his reluctant queen. The orchestra will be on stage with the singers. Metra’s Union Pacific North line is offering free transportation to and from Ravinia concerts this summer for passengers with concert tickets. Don Giovanni, Thu 8/11 7 PM, and Sat 8/13 1 PM; La clemenza di Tito, Fri 8/12 7 PM and Sun 8/14 1 PM; Martin Theatre seats $125-$140; lawn admission $15; ravinia.org. Public gates open two hours prior to performance.  

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Hot weather, hot shows Read More »

Magic Ride

“I like to go for anything that draws attention and is kinda funky and out there,” says 20-year-old Joey Prette, already a senior stylist at Free People and a musical theater student at Roosevelt University. “Usually I’d be wearing my flower earrings, but I forgot them today,” they say while sporting green, their favorite color. 

Prette likes to thrift and shop at small boutiques such as Big Bud Press, where they got their wide-legged mushroom pants. “They scream ‘me’ and who I am as a person,” they say, adding that mushrooms are really cool and edgy right now. 

Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

True words indeed. An aesthetic being dubbed “weird girl,” or, better yet, “weird person,” is really happening at the moment, and Prette might be channeling it by favoring the trend’s motif du jour. 

Prette’s style has an added charm provided by their monochromatic color choices, making their look pleasantly offbeat. “I love color. If I decide to wear blue, I wear all blue, and pair it with some fun patterns and accessories,” they say.

Another indicator that Prette embodies the now: they ignore gender norms when choosing their outfits, and they claim to wear platforms and heels all the time. “I don’t really shop in the men’s section anywhere, and it shouldn’t matter,” they say. True words indeed.

white platforms Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

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Sun, surf, summer: time to head to the libraryDeanna Isaacson June 22, 2022 at 8:22 pm

There’s a whole lot of story in history. And so much depends on the perspective of the storyteller.  

What, for example, will the future think it knows of our fraught time? What will be included? What will be omitted? What will be the spin on events like the war in Ukraine or the 2020 presidential election?

Miriam Thaggert has been thinking about this sort of thing since a visit to the Newberry Library’s vast Pullman Company archives in 2014 sent her on a long detour through 19th- and early 20th-century American history. Thaggert, now a literature professor at SUNY Buffalo, had been skimming through the employee records of the famous all-male, all-Black Pullman Company porters for a book she was planning, when she stumbled on something she didn’t expect: an application from a woman. 

It set her off on a different track.

“I had never heard of Pullman maids before,” Thaggert says, but that was the position this woman was seeking. “It made me start to think about what the experiences of Black women in that company might have been like. And that led to questions about the experience of other Black women on the railroad,” passengers as well as workers.

The result, after a return to the Newberry in 2015 for an academic year fellowship and much additional research, is Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad, published this month by University of Illinois Press.

“One of the things I’m hoping to get people to think about is the national narrative we tell about the railroad,” Thaggert says.  

Looking mostly at the years between 1860 and 1925, Thaggert found that railroad travel, romanticized by countless white male writers, was a very different experience for Black women, who were often forced to ride in Jim Crow cars even if they’d paid for first class tickets. (Ida B. Wells sued twice over this.) As passengers at that time—“a period of intense racial activity when Black political and economic advancements precipitated widespread violence against Blacks”—Thaggert writes, they had to worry about possible verbal or physical assaults by other passengers or even by the all-white conductors. Any kind of fuss could lead to ejection from the train or a trip to jail. 

“America’s valued progress narrative, a story so often symbolized by the railroad,” is challenged by the experience of Black women, Thaggert wound up writing. “The nation’s mechanical trajectory ‘forward’ has, embedded within it, the retrenchment of African American social progress.”

Thaggert has curated an exhibit, “Handmaidens for Travelers: The Pullman Company Maids,” on view at the Newberry through September 16. A concise walk through a central chapter of the book, it’s a chance to see actual documents from the archive. These include a page from the company’s detailed Instructions for Maids (No wearing of rouge or powder!), and advertising photographs that show pampered white patrons getting manicures and hairstyles en route.      

On June 29, Thaggert will be back at the Newberry for the Riding Jane Crow book launch and a discussion with University of Pennsylvania history professor Mia Bay, whose own book, Traveling Black: A Story of Race and Resistance, recently won the 2022 Bancroft Prize in history. It’s free and open to the public.

Also, after a three-year COVID suspension, the Newberry’s annual used book fair—the major event of the summer for bargain-hunting bibliophiles—is back. Scheduled for July 29-31, with free admission and “many items priced at $3 or less,” it’ll be smaller than pre-COVID fairs due, in part, to a shorter collection period. But “smaller” is relative: 30,000 to 40,000 books will be offered in the usual dozens of categories, including lots of cooking, history, and fiction.

In conjunction with the book sale, the Newberry’s hosting “a day of storytelling” across the street in Bughouse Square (Washington Park), Saturday, July 30. Celebrating “the power of storytelling and its role in shaping our city,” it’ll include storytellers like Chicago Youth Poet Laureate E’mon Lauren, Lily Be, and Vincent Romero, as well as Dawn Turner, who’ll be receiving the Newberry’s inaugural Pattis Family Foundation Chicago Book Award for her memoir, Three Girls from Bronzeville.

If you’re moved to tell your own story, there’ll be a public open mike. You can also drop in on a performance of 100 Novels by artist Tim Youd, who’s been traveling for a decade, retyping the work of famous authors in locations relevant to the books. Youd will be retyping Nelson Algren’s The Man with the Golden Arm at the Newberry (where Algren researched the book) from July 26 through August 12. He’ll type the entire novel on a single piece of paper, backed by a second sheet of paper, both of which will then be mounted as art objects. There’s a tale looking for a teller there.

Read More

Sun, surf, summer: time to head to the libraryDeanna Isaacson June 22, 2022 at 8:22 pm Read More »

Hot weather, hot showsKerry Reid, Irene Hsiao and Deanna Isaacson June 22, 2022 at 8:01 pm

Summer is officially here, in case the sweat and lightning bugs weren’t enough of a clue. In addition to the shows and artists we profiled in our summer arts preview issue this week, we’ve got just a few suggestions for other offerings in theater, dance, and opera that look promising—whether you’re looking for a nice air-conditioned theater or a bucolic outdoor setting. 

THEATER PICKS (Kerry Reid)

It Came From Outer Space

“There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” So Hamlet knew about aliens, is what we take away from that. And therefore, it makes perfect sense that Chicago Shakespeare is premiering this musical by Joe Kinosian and Kellen Blair, based on the 1953 sci-fi film. The company offered a digital sneak peek, entitled We Are Out There, last year; now you can see it live at Navy Pier (where, let’s face it, aliens would blend perfectly most days). Laura Braza directs a cast that includes Jonathan Butler-Duplessis, Ann Delaney, and Alex Goodrich. Through 6/24, Chicago Shakespeare, 800 E. Grand, chicagoshakes.com, $50-$60.

Pearl’s Rollin’ with the Blues: A Night with Felicia P. Fields

Fields, one of the bona fide greats in Chicago theater, takes over Writers Theatre in this world premiere, which she created in collaboration with director Ron OJ Parson. (The two previously worked together at Writers in August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom in 2019.) Fields delivers blues classics by Big Mama Thornton, Son House, Howlin’ Wolf, and others, backed by a band headed up by Chic Street Man, as she tells the story of how the blues have influenced her life and career. 6/23-7/24, Writers Theatre, 325 Tudor Ct., Glencoe, writerstheatre.org, $35-$90.

Get Out Alive

Haven Chicago presents a new “multidisciplinary afrogoth” musical by Nikki Lynette that draws on her own experiences dealing with abuse, trauma, and the mental health system. Roger Ellis and Lucky Stiff co-direct, and the cast, in addition to Lynette, features DJ P1, Keeley Morris, and Jacinda Ratcliffe. Over ten years ago, Jessica Hopper wrote in the Reader that “it’s unfair that Chicago MC Nikki Lynette is hip-hop’s other Nikki. Not that there should be just one, or that Nicki Minaj doesn’t deserve her celebrity, but Lynette certainly has what it takes to compete with all the singing-and-dancing rappers who are already getting over on quirk, hooks, and charismatic flow,” adding, “The city should be proud to call her its own, but given that Chicago is where hip-hop careers go to die, let’s hope she gets the hell out.” She’s obviously stayed and survived, and has some stories to tell us about that. Lynette has also adapted the musical into a film that has been making the festival rounds. 7/8-8/6, Den Theatre, 1331 N. Milwaukee, havenchi.org, pay what you can previews 7/8-7/10, regular run $36 ($46 reserved table, industry $31, students $21).

Nikki Lynette in Get Out Alive

2nd Annual BIPOC Play Fest

Perceptions Theatre started life at the beginning of the pandemicwith a strong focus on digital content and new work, as well as with a playreading club. They’re ready to go live with the second iteration of this festival, which will also offer a streaming option for those who find that more convenient. The lineup includes Carlo Zenner’s Mess, about “a Queer Latinx Chicagoan grappling with the disorienting effects of quarantine” and “the pleasures and pains of casual dating”; The Voice Inside My Head by Louis Johnson, in which a middle-aged Black man gunned down by the police reflects in the afterlife upon his accomplishments and the outrage unleashed by his murder; Was It Me? by Andrea J. Fulton, an excerpt from a larger play about Margo, a 49-year-old woman confronting the effects of childhood trauma on the eve of a birthday reunion with old friends; and Kingdom by Nic Bell, an absurdist short work that focuses on “family, duty, free will, and the inevitability of fate.” 7/9-7/10, Studio 2226 Inc., 2226 E. 71st, perceptionstheatre.org for more information and reservations. 

The Devil Wears Prada

Cruella De Vil or Miranda Priestly: who’s the scariest of them all? OK, Miranda didn’t want to make couture out of canines, but as depicted by Meryl Streep in the 2006 film, she’s become cemented in popular imagination as the Lady-Boss from Hell. Now a new high-profile musical based on Lauren Weisberger’s book about the cutthroat world of fashion hits the runway in Chicago before heading to Broadway. Sir Elton John wrote the score, with lyrics by Shaina Taub and a book by Kate Wetherhead. Former Steppenwolf artistic director Anna D. Shapiro directs (her first time helming a musical), and the show stars Beth Leavel as Miranda and Taylor Iman Jones as her besieged assistant, Andy Sachs. Will a show about abusive bosses feel the same in a post-Scott Rudin landscape? You can be among the first to find out! 7/19-8/21, James M. Nederlander Theatre, 24 W. Randolph, broadwayinchicago.com, $33-$110.

Campaigns, Inc.

Just in time for midterms, TimeLine pulls back the curtain on the history of campaign spin with the world premiere of Will Allan’s play, directed by Nick Bowling. Based on the true story of Leone Baxter and Clem Whitaker, who formed the first political consulting firm in U.S. history, Allan’s comedy offers a perhaps-too-late cautionary tale about propaganda (aka “fake news”) through the lens of the married couple who torpedoed author Upton Sinclair’s (The Jungle) chances to become the first Democratic governor of California in 1934. Whitaker and Baxter pioneered the use of direct mail and ad buys to win the hearts and minds of voters, and also deployed oppositional research that allowed them to cherry-pick quotes to put Sinclair (who actually was a socialist) in the worst possible light. Oh, thank god those days are behind us, huh? The company returns to their longtime Lakeview home for this season—the last before they move into their new spiffy Uptown digs. 8/3-9/18, TimeLine Theatre, 615 W. Wellington, timelinetheatre.com.

DANCE PICKS (Irene Hsiao)

New Dances

New Dances returns to the stage, continuing a tradition of bringing Chicago dancers and choreographers together for a rapid-fire period of creative development. Inaugurated 39 years ago by Chicago Repertory Dance Ensemble, and now in its 21st season under the auspices of Thodos Dance Chicago and DanceWorks Chicago, this year features new works by Kaleigh Dent, Brandon DiCriscio, Trey Johnson, MurdaMommy, Marco Pizano, and Taylor Yocum.

“In viewing the works in process over these past few weeks, I see exceptional facets of thought, depth, and intent on the part of the choreographers,” says Melissa Thodos, artistic director of TDC. “It is as if this diverse group of works were growing, seasoning, and gestating in each of the artists’ minds and beings over these past challenging years.”

“Being able to create dance again in person has been jarring and exciting,” says Pizano, whose work combines pedestrian movement with vogue aesthetics. “It has been mind-blowing to see how far [we] pushed our bodies,” says MurdaMommy, who trained her cast in Chicago footwork. “New Dances has been a wonderful experience of making new connections in the Chicago dance community, renewing old ones, and getting deeper in touch with my choreographic voice,” says DiCriscio, who describes his work as “a story of intimate worlds destined to collide, indirectly influenced by a drifting external force.” 6/23-6/25, Athenaeum Theatre, 2936 N. Southport, danceworkschicago.org, thodosdancechicago.org, $30.

Artist Showcase, Mandala Makers Festival 

The Mandala Makers Festival presents a colossal lineup of South Asian dance, music, poetry, comedy, and drag at Indian Boundary Park, near Mandala South Asian Performing Arts’s new home on Devon Avenue. In addition to contemporary works based on classical Bharatanatyam, “the festival also showcases less common forms embedded in South Asian arts, such as Sufi dances, Odissi, and forms from the Caribbean diaspora,” says Mandala associate artistic director Ashwaty Chennat, who curated the event. 

Self-reflection and the persistence of change are themes of some works featured. “Prakriti II continues our dialogue about our relationship to the divisiveness we see in this world,” says Ishti Collective cofounder Kinnari Vora. “It is through movement that we express the ways in which we can cope and move forward. We explore ways to pause and heal, reach for grounding strength, listen and open our minds, shed our egos, bring brevity and find joy in little things and seek empathy and kindness.” 

On remounting the 2014 work She Cannot, Soham Dance Space artistic director Anjal Chande says, “It’s mysterious how the body remembers movements, intentions, associations, while the body also persistently evolves.” June 24-26, Indian Boundary Park, 2500 W. Lunt, mandalaarts.org, free.

Emperor of all he surveys: Matthew Polenzani appears in Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito at Ravinia in August. Courtesy the artist.

OPERA (Deanna Isaacs)

Ravinia Festival Operas

What could be better than moonlight, a Mozart opera, and the CSO? How about two Mozart operas with a favorite conductor? Ravinia Festival’s offering two performances each of Don Giovanni and La clemenza di Tito this summer, both in the venerable Martin Theatre with sound (no video) to the lawn. Former Ravinia music director James Conlon (longtime music director and principal force at LA Opera) returns to the leafy venue to conduct. The Don Giovanni cast includes baritone Lucas Meachem as the predatory title character, bass-baritone Craig Colclough as his hapless servant Leporello, and soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen as Donna Anna, one of his many outraged prey. La clemenza di Tito features two of Chicago’s own opera superstars: tenor Matthew Polenzani as the Roman emperor of the title and soprano Janai Brugger as Servilia, the woman he would make his reluctant queen. The orchestra will be on stage with the singers. Metra’s Union Pacific North line is offering free transportation to and from Ravinia concerts this summer for passengers with concert tickets. Don Giovanni, Thu 8/11 7 PM, and Sat 8/13 1 PM; La clemenza di Tito, Fri 8/12 7 PM and Sun 8/14 1 PM; Martin Theatre seats $125-$140; lawn admission $15; ravinia.org. Public gates open two hours prior to performance.  

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Hot weather, hot showsKerry Reid, Irene Hsiao and Deanna Isaacson June 22, 2022 at 8:01 pm Read More »

Magic RideIsa Giallorenzoon June 22, 2022 at 8:42 pm

“I like to go for anything that draws attention and is kinda funky and out there,” says 20-year-old Joey Prette, already a senior stylist at Free People and a musical theater student at Roosevelt University. “Usually I’d be wearing my flower earrings, but I forgot them today,” they say while sporting green, their favorite color. 

Prette likes to thrift and shop at small boutiques such as Big Bud Press, where they got their wide-legged mushroom pants. “They scream ‘me’ and who I am as a person,” they say, adding that mushrooms are really cool and edgy right now. 

Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

True words indeed. An aesthetic being dubbed “weird girl,” or, better yet, “weird person,” is really happening at the moment, and Prette might be channeling it by favoring the trend’s motif du jour. 

Prette’s style has an added charm provided by their monochromatic color choices, making their look pleasantly offbeat. “I love color. If I decide to wear blue, I wear all blue, and pair it with some fun patterns and accessories,” they say.

Another indicator that Prette embodies the now: they ignore gender norms when choosing their outfits, and they claim to wear platforms and heels all the time. “I don’t really shop in the men’s section anywhere, and it shouldn’t matter,” they say. True words indeed.

white platforms Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

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Magic RideIsa Giallorenzoon June 22, 2022 at 8:42 pm Read More »

Jays’ hitting coach ejected in pregame exchangeon June 22, 2022 at 9:30 pm

CHICAGOToronto hitting coach Guillermo Martinez was ejected while exchanging the lineup card on Wednesday afternoon before the Blue Jays-Chicago White Sox game.

Video of the incident shows Martinez shaking hands with the four umpires before saying something to get him ejected.

The spat likely stems from Tuesday night’s game, as plate umpire Doug Eddings came under fire for some questionable ball and strike calls. Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker was ejected in that game, a 7-6 win by the White Sox.

After being ejected on Wednesday, Martinez could be seen arguing face-to-face with Eddings before leaving the field.

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Jays’ hitting coach ejected in pregame exchangeon June 22, 2022 at 9:30 pm Read More »

Draft betting roundtable: Is Jabari Smith a lock at No. 1?on June 22, 2022 at 9:49 pm

The 2022 NBA Draft begins on Thursday night as the college basketball’s top prospects await their turn to become a central piece of an NBA franchise.

This year’s draft features plenty of questions regarding the top picks. Will the Orlando Magic pick Auburn sharpshooter Jabari Smith with the No. 1 pick or go with Duke star Paolo Banchero or Gonzaga’s Chet Holmgren? Will the Sacramento Kings decide to trade the No. 4 pick? Is there a prospect outside of the top four who could rise on draft night?

Our experts have you covered with all of the answers to help you make the best wagering decisions for this year’s draft.

All odds courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook

Jabari Smith is the odds-on favorite to be selected No. 1 overall. Is Smith a safe bet to go to the Orlando Magic or is another prospect like Chet Holmgren or Paolo Banchero a better pick?

Doug Kezirian, ESPN Betting Analyst: This is a hard pass for me. While I personally would draft Smith, there is enough buzz surrounding Holmgren and Banchero. Draft betting is pretty wild so I always prefer to avoid laying juice unless I feel extremely confident. Smith should be the guy but there’s no need to force this wager. Banchero’s odds steamed from 14-1 to +175 in a matter of days so the value is all gone. There’s too much noise right now.

Eric Moody, ESPN Betting Analyst: Instead of going with Smith, I would recommend going with Banchero at +175. He is the best available player, according to NBA Draft analysts. Banchero averaged 17.2 PPG, 7.8 RPG, and 3.2 APG in 39 games for Duke. He scored the most points of all true freshmen, ranked sixth in rebounding, and ranked fifth in field goal percentage. The Magic were 29th in PPG (104.8) last season and could use a scorer. With his unique blend of size and agility, Banchero can score at any level.

Paolo Banchero averaged 17.2 PPG, 7.8 RPG, and 3.2 APG in 39 games during his freshman season for Duke. AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

Andre Snellings, ESPN Senior NBA Writer: All the reporting suggests that Smith to the Magic is so widely expected that it would be a major upset for anyone else to be the pick. But, according to ESPN’s NBA Draft Projections, Holmgren and Banchero are tied as the best prospects in the draft, with Smith third. The latter will be a point of discussion on draft night, through their rookie seasons and likely over the course of their career. These three players will always be compared to each other, but for the sake of draft betting, Smith seems like the safest to go to the Magic.

What play offers the best value in this NBA Draft?

Erin Dolan, ESPN Betting Analyst: Keegan Murray over 5.5 (+210). The top three picks (Smith, Holmgren, and Banchero) are seemingly set, despite arguments about the order. That leaves the Sacramento Kings at No. 4 and Detroit Pistons at No. 5. Since the Kings reportedly have considered trading their pick, I think Murray will go over 5.5. He doesn’t fit the typical profile of an athlete that goes in the top five. He’ll be 22 years old next month and the top five picks in the NBA Draft the past two years have all been freshman. Secondly, he scored most of his points at Iowa in the low post and at 6-foot-8 he isn’t tall enough to score there against the top defensive players in the NBA. He averaged 24 PPG and nine RPG during his sophomore season, which is impressive, but it would not surprise me if he is drafted after the No. 5 pick.

Tyler Fulghum, ESPN Betting Analyst: E.J. Liddell over 21.5. Liddell was a great player for Ohio State, but at almost 22 years of age, he’s one of the older prospects in this class. He doesn’t offer elite length or athleticism either. Expect a team to target him near the end of the 1st round or top of the 2nd round.

Kezirian: Bennedict Mathurin under 6.5. I honestly feel this prop will close at 5.5. Mathurin has serious buzz to go fifth and I have heard on two podcasts he’s not falling past sixth. His odds to be the fifth pick have crashed from 20-1 to +240 over the past week. His prop of 6.5 only saw the juice shift. This is a very strong play.

Moody: Jalen Duren under 10.5. Duren is a post-centric player and one of the youngest prospects in this class. He averaged an impressive 12.0 PPG and 8.1 RPG as a freshman with Memphis. Duren recently worked out for the Portland Trail Blazers, who hold the No. 7 pick, but I’d like to see him go to the San Antonio Spurs. They don’t have an immediate need for a center, but the quality of the big men available as well as the uncertainty surrounding Jakob Poeltl‘s contract could lead to them to draft one this year. In a few years, Duren might become quite the force if he can develop and maximize his fundamentals. San Antonio would be a great landing spot for him in a program that nurtures players. Duren’s chances of being drafted early are excellent either way.

Snellings: Shaedon Sharpe under 7.5 (+160). Sharpe had a series of outstanding private workouts that skyrocketed him up draft boards. He was the No. 1-ranked player in his high school class and is one of the youngest top prospects in the draft with incredible physical tools, explosiveness and shooting ability.

What are you looking for when betting on the NBA Draft? Are there any other prospects beyond the top four (Smith, Chet, Paolo, Ivey) that intrigue you for the top 10?

Kezirian: In all drafts, the top of the first round is easier to predict than the bottom. Value sometimes does exist with over/under totals of draft position, but the odds have all shifted dramatically by now. So the best approach is to attack it early and then continue to consume information.

Moody: Drafting for fit is not recommended by most draft analysts. As a result, you should take the best prospect available, since you never know how your roster will look in the years to come. While this is true for the top of the draft, finding the perfect fit for your team in the mid-to-late first round can improve a team’s probability of success. Dyson Daniels, who signed with the G League Elite last summer, intrigues me. The 19-year-old guard offers immediate and near-term value on both offense and defense and the Atlanta Hawks could be a perfect landing spot for him. The Hawks don’t tend to score a lot of points when Trae Young is off the court. Last season, Atlanta scored 119.3 points per 100 possessions played with Young, compared to 109.4 points without him. The addition of Daniels could help fill that void.

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Snellings: I look for informed momentum, fit and a combination of upside and risk/reward vs. each team’s situation. While I believe teams should draft for talent near the top of the draft, if the talent is similar, then fit, upside and risk/reward factor into play. I’d expect a team like the Rockets, for example, to swing for the fences on upside because that’s where their team is. It would make no sense for them to lean into the most NBA-ready player at the expense of upside, because they aren’t ready to win anyway. As for ‘informed momentum’, when it comes to a situation like the three players and teams at the top of this Draft, I think the preponderance of reporting around the expectations of who a team likes plays a significant part in prognosticating where they are.

Sharpe is the prospect that catches my eye the most because he has the highest ceiling. His successful string of workouts indicates that his upside is realistically attainable.

Fulghum: Sharpe is an insane athlete standing 6-foot-5 with a 7-foot wingspan, massive hands and a reported 49-inch vertical leap. Sharpe was widely regarded as the best prospect in the 2023 class before reclassifying to the 2022 class. He didn’t play a single game at Kentucky last season, but NBA GMs and scouts shouldn’t hold that against him. He’s just 19 years old, and his physical traits are reminiscent of Ja Morant. Sharpe has the fifth-shortest odds to be the No. 1 pick, so the market is indicating what teams think of his potential. After dealing CJ McCollum to New Orleans, the Trail Blazers would be wise not to let Sharpe slip past them at No. 7.

Do you expect any surprises in this draft? Prospects who could go higher than their projected draft position on Caesars?

Kezirian: There will always be surprises. The question is where — and I actually think we could see one with the second overall pick. Sam Presti is not afraid to take risks and I would not be shocked if he drafted Jaden Ivey with the No. 2 pick. Ideally he would trade down and still draft Ivey but sometimes there is no one willing to trade up. Presti once reached for Russell Westbrook, who had a very similar draft profile to Ivey. The Purdue guard is 20-1 to go second.

Moody: One name that immediately comes to mind is Ousmane Dieng. The 19-year-old just finished his first season with the NBL’s New Zealand Breakers. At 6-foot-10, 200 pounds and with an over 7-foot wingspan, Dieng offers a lot of upside as a forward in the NBA despite his underwhelming averages. He could possibly emerge as a top-12 pick on Thursday night.

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Draft betting roundtable: Is Jabari Smith a lock at No. 1?on June 22, 2022 at 9:49 pm Read More »

Are progressives or conservatives a greater threat to democracy?

Are progressives or conservatives a greater threat to democracy?

Can democracy survive? (C-Span)

Could both sides be right that the other side is the biggest threat?

Obviously, both sides can’t be right. One side or the other is the biggest threat. But if you watch MSNBC, CNN, FoxNews or loads of other media, you’ll discover that both sides believe that the threat comes exclusively from the other side.

Here are some examples

Steve Bannon is “attempting to insert a lit bomb into the mouth of American democracy.The Five Biggest Threats Our Democracy Faces: from the Brennan Center for Justice.Waking up to the woke threat by Barry Ziman in Washington ExaminerBad News: How Woke Media Is Undermining Democracy by Batya Ungar-Sargon.

It’s tiresome. Annoying. Repeated ad nadeem. And wrong. Here’s the truth: You can find threats to democracy from both sides, serious ones. But you never, ever hear that said in this politically poisonous atmosphere.

Yes, Jan 6 posed a threat to democracy. As we’ve been reminded over and over again by the hyper-partisan, Democratic-controlled “Select” House committee. And yet, that committee itself is a threat to democracy,

Jan. 6 and its aftermath confirm there are degrees of threats. Whoever tried to stop by extra-legal means the confirmation by the Electoral College of Joe Biden as president posed a threat. That’s the truth, whether they did it by inciting a crowd of blockheads to invade the Capitol or by the individuals who menaced legitimately elected officials carrying out their constitutional responsibility,

That’s why I”m for a full exposure of anyone who did that, including former President Donald Trump, the goofy Proud Boys or any freelance rioters. Preferably, the job belongs to a special counsel who is insulated from the obvious left-wing, Democratic bias in the Justice Department that now hobbles the true application of justice. If that means the indictment and trial of a former president, so be it.

As for the “mob” that had marched to the Capitol, as if their lemming-like minds were somehow controlled by Trump: If they didn’t force their way into the Capitol, fight the police and engage in specific law-breaking activities, their peaceful protests ought not to be a threat to democracy. It was their right to assemble, petition the government and speak, or shout, their minds.

And yet…

The Jan. 6 committee is itself a threat to democracy. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi cast aside centuries of precedent by not allowing the minority party (GOP) to select its own members for the “select” committee. She has brazenly excluded the voices of elected representatives of a specific group of people–Republicans in red states–in pursuit of a partisan goal. She has created a show trial by refusing to allow the accused (and already convicted) to cross-examine the witnesses. Pelosi would have been right at home at the Cuban show trials conducted by Fidel Castro.

Castro’s show trial. Maybe the defendants were guilty, but democracy was trashed by holding a show trial in a sports arena with a cheering crowd,

Let me go on. While universal access to the ballot box is an essential element of democracy, the Democratic war against election security is itself a threat to democracy. Claiming that having to have an ID to vote is an effort to deny the vote to black voters is a dangerous charade. Voter fraud is truly a threat to democracy; to ignore it is to reveal crass political motivation.

Now for Trump: He’s a threat to democracy because he doesn’t seem to understand democratic principles. To think that Vice President Mike Pence could single-handedly stymie the Electoral College is a clear symptom that Trump is either ignorant or a true danger. His ego stands in the way of self-government as prescribed in the Constitution, laws, judicial caselaw and deeply ingrained tradition. He ought not run again.

But on the other hand…

One of the biggest threats to democracy was the “Russian hoax.” Democrats, such as Rep. Adam Schiff of California, concocted out of whole cloth a fantasy about Trump being in cahoots with Russia. It wasn’t just an unconscionable attempt to subvert Trump’s election. It involved the political corruption of the FBI, intelligence agencies and the FISA court. (Why hasn’t that court held anyone in contempt for lying to it?)

Speaking of elections. The damage done to their credibility has been extensive thanks to Trump and (to a lesser extent) Stacey Abrams, the defeated Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate. I think there’s plenty of evidence of election fraud, but whether there was enough to overturn an election, I don’t know. And how, for heaven’s sake, would an election be overturned now?

And now for the media: No, Washington Post, while “democracy dies in darkness”–your slogan–thanks to you and your left-wing legacy, corporate, mass and social media colleagues, democracy is dying in ignorance.

Too many examples of destructive bias are available to go into any depth here. By denying, discrediting or ignoring legitimate issues raised by conservatives, Republicans or other people you’ve already judged to be wrong, if not despicable, the left-wing media’s threat to democracy is enormous,

The tilt is obvious to just about everyone, except for the practitioners of what used to be called journalism. As a former journalist, I cannot adequately describe my loathing for how they have corrupted what once was a proud and essential profession. What the hell are they teaching in journalism schools these days? Where the hell are my former “old school” colleagues who understood and tried to practice objective, fair journalism? Do you truly accept this corruption or have you been so cowed by the woke among you that you’re in hiding?

There are more threats to democracy, but I leave them for now to make a plea for an end to the–what?–evilization of politics. Respect is an essential ingredient for a functioning democracy. Ability to listen and.compromise is too. America is, or at least should be, the best example to the world that democracy works. Autocratic regimes in China, Russia, North Korea, Iran and elsewhere are determined to prove that democracy doesn’t.

If we continue on the present path, they’ll be right

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Auburn’s Smith favored to go No. 1 in NBA drafton June 22, 2022 at 8:33 pm

Jabari Smith Jr. is the consensus favorite to be the No. 1 pick, but odds at sportsbooks have been moving on what bookmakers say has become the most-heavily bet NBA draft ever.

Smith, a versatile, 6-10 forward out of Auburn, remains the odds-on favorite to be the No. 1 pick in Thursday’s draft (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN/ABC). Since Monday, his odds have improved from -145 to -280 on at Caesars Sportsbook. Smith’s odds also have been improving at DraftKings, where he was sitting at -275 on Wednesday. The Orlando Magic own the first pick, barring a trade.

Duke‘s Paolo Banchero has the second-best odds of going No. 1 and also has seen increased betting interest this week. Banchero, who was 10-1 on Sunday, is listed at +280 on Wednesday at Caesars Sportsbook, ahead of Gonzaga‘s Chet Holmgren (+500), whose odds have been fading. Holmgren’s odds were as short as +145 earlier this week. Smith, Banchero and Holmgren are the only players with single-digit odds to be the No. 1 pick.

2 Related

The varying prices and odds movement have attracted heavy betting interest, especially from professional bettors. At Caesars Sportsbook, the odds to the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft have attracted five times as much money has was bet on the on the odds to be the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft, according to Eric Fenstermaker, senior trading manager for Caesars Sportsbook.

“It’s the weirdest draft market I think I’ve ever booked,” Fenstermaker, a veteran Nevada bookmaker, told ESPN on Wednesday. “Usually, at this point, there’s clear-cut news on who’s going to be No. 1. But now we’ve got three guys who have each steamed (attracted money from professional bettors) at different times to be the first pick.”

Fenstermaker said a group of sharp bettors “who always beat us on the draft” targeted Holmgren last week, causing his odds to improve significantly. At one point, Holmgren was a co-favorite with Smith to be the No. 1 pick at Caesars Sportsbook. But the action has shifted toward Banchero this week.

Since Sunday afternoon, there had been more bets on Banchero to be the top pick than there had been on any other NBA market offered at Caesars Sportsbook. Online sportsbook PointsBet also reported a surge of betting interest on Banchero to go No. 1. In the past week, Banchero’s odds have moved from 16-1 to 5-2 at PointsBet.

“This is the nature of draft betting, where market movements are as wild as the rumors that drive them,” Jay Croucher, head of trading for PointsBet, said. “We saw similar crazy fluctuations with the number one pick market in the NFL Draft. Someone out there clearly thinks Banchero has a better chance than public perception to go first, but Smith remains the surest bet.”

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Auburn’s Smith favored to go No. 1 in NBA drafton June 22, 2022 at 8:33 pm Read More »