What’s New

Ghost bride

Noel Coward’s 1941 comedy about a socialite writer who finds himself haunted by his vivacious (if annoying) dead wife—while his living wife first questions his sanity, then finds herself in competition with the ghost—has inspired a host of revivals and homages. Consider Robyn Hitchcock’s 1985 song “My Wife and My Dead Wife,” and the criminally hard-to-find 1990 film Truly, Madly, Deeply, starring Alan Rickman and Juliet Stevenson as a dead cellist and his grieving partner.

Blithe Spirit
Through 6/26: Fri-Sat 7:30 PM, Sun 2 PM; Skokie Theatre, 7924 Lincoln, Skokie, eclectic-theatre.com, $38 ($34 students/seniors).

Eclectic Full Contact’s revival of Blithe Spirit at the Skokie Theatre, directed by Michael Woods, is amusing enough, but it shies away from exploring the underlying acid in Coward’s premise: Is marriage itself a kind of living death? It’s not entirely the production’s fault. Coward himself said of his comedy, “There’s no heart in the play. If there was a heart, it would be a sad story.” So in place of heart, we get hijinks, and these are about two-thirds successful. Andrew Pond as haunted Charles Considine, Jessica Lauren Fisher as mischievous dead Elvira, and Jan Slavin as Madame Arcati, the eccentric medium who brings Elvira back into Charles’s life, are all suitably larger than life. But Maiko Terazawa’s Ruth, the even-tempered wife thrown into a tizzy by her dead predecessor’s return, takes a while to find her way into the Cowardian rhythms. Only when she too (spoiler alert!) becomes spectral does Ruth feel like a worthy opponent to Elvira.

Want more stories like this one? Sign up to our daily newsletter for stories by and for Chicago.

Success! You’re on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn’t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.
Processing…

Read More

Ghost bride Read More »

It’s a Lebanese-Armenian family feast at the next Monday Night Foodball

Lebanon and Armenia are separated by vast stretches of Syria and eastern Turkey, but when Mary Eder-McClure and Kat Stuehrk Talo compared notes about the heroic family meals they grew up on, they discovered that similarities in the food they ate shrank the distance.

For one thing, there’s the abundance of generosity. And the stuffed grape leaves.

“Both of our families’ food and table experience is this sensory overload of bowls and plates everywhere,” says Galit pastry chef Eder-McClure, “with meat, rice, cheese, dips, pickles; it’s like a block party of smells and tastes—salty, sweet, acidic—all of that happening at the same time.”  

That’s why it makes perfect sense that Eder-McClure and Stuehrk Talo of Butter Bird Bakery have joined forces for an epic, family-style Lebanese-Armenian feast at the next Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up series at the Kedzie Inn.

The menu, which they dropped last week, doesn’t do justice to the love and effort that’s going into this Foodball. They’re starting out with a lavish mezze spread, including fresh lavash to scoop up an array of pickles and dips with a chunky sumac-spiked Armenian salad and Eder-McClure’s Nana’s tabouli. “Everybody says, ‘My grandma’s is the best,’” she says. “But honestly, my grandma’s is the best.” She’ll also be bringing out sumac-kissed spinach pies, along with Stuehrk Talo’s lahmejun: pizza-like ground beef and tomato flatbreads, reimagined in croissant form.

And then come the grape leaves—the Lebanese variety stuffed with cinnamon and black pepper-spiced beef and lamb, simmered in a lemony broth, side-by-side with the Armenian version, vegetarian stuffed with onions and herbs and served cold.

If you haven’t toppled to the floor by then there’s tender braised and pomegranate-glazed lamb shanks, and rice pilaf with toasted vermicelli, almonds, and bits of sweet apricot. To finish—or more likely, take home for later—a baklavah sampler drawn from both cuisines.

Spinach fatayer Credit: Mary Eder-McClure

“Come hungry,” says Stuerhk Talo, who also suggests you bring your own takeaway containers because, in the spirit of grannies the world over, you will be taking food home with you.

Sounds marvelous, but this is an urgent situation. There is a slim-to-none chance to walk in and order on the spot this Monday, June 13. (I’ll let you know if it’s possible on Sunday.) The first round of tickets to both the 5 and 7:30 PM seatings have already sold out, but Stuerhk Talo and Eder-McClure (a Foodball veteran, formerly with the pozole pop-up Limon y Sal) have released four more spots for each seating. Look alive, get them here!

Meantime, behold a full summer schedule of Monday Night Foodball below:

Lavash Credit: Kat Stuerhk Talo

6/20: Jordan Wimby, aka The Melanin Martha

6/27: Chinese-Viet-inspired barbecue from Charles Wong of Umamicue

7/4: Off for Independence Day

7/11: Dawn Lewis of D’s Roti & Trini Cuisine

7/18: Mazesoba from Mike “Ramen Lord” Satinover

7/25: Asian stoner snacks from SuperHai

8/1: Keralan food from Thommy Padanilam of Thommy’s Toddy Shop

8/8: Oskar Singer aka Whole Grain Hoe (formerly Rye Humor Baking)

8/15: Dylan Maysick of Diaspora Dinners

8/22: Vargo Brother Ferments

Kedzie Inn
4100 N. Kedzie
(773) 293-6368
kedzieinn.com

Read More

It’s a Lebanese-Armenian family feast at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

Home is where the heart is

Samm-Art Williams’s Home, first produced in 1979 with the seminal Negro Ensemble Company and then in a Tony-nominated run on Broadway in 1980, is considered a contemporary American classic, but it doesn’t get revived as much as it probably should. This feels especially self-evident when viewing Tim Rhoze’s stellar production for Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre. Staged simply around a series of three platforms with some shadowy projections on the rear wall, Rhoze and his three-member cast unfold the beating heart of Williams’s story with precision and warmth. 

Home
Through 6/19: Sat 7 PM, Sun 3 PM; Noyes Cultural Arts Center, 927 Noyes, Evanston, fjtheatre.com, $25.

Cephus Miles (Lewon Johnson), a young Black man in 1960s rural North Carolina, finds himself caught up in a series of upheavals (the death of his grandfather and uncle, the loss of the love of his life, imprisonment for defying his draft notice) that drive him north. “Get on the next thing smoking and move to the concrete,” he’s advised.

But what’s fascinating in Williams’s story is that it turns the Great Migration narrative inside out. There isn’t much warmth in the urban sun for Cephus, and his record as an ex-con (no matter how noble the reasons for his resistance) haunts him. (Williams was once a sparring partner for famous conscientious objector Muhammad Ali.) Johnson does a beautiful job embodying the growing anguish of Cephus, as well as his joy and pride in being a good farmer, like his ancestors, and his sheer delight in sharing anecdotes about the folks back home. Rachel Blakes and Tuesdai B. Perry skillfully play a variety of other characters, and Rhoze’s adept staging brings a dreamlike choreopoem feel to several interludes. It’s absolutely absorbing, thought-provoking, and moving throughout.

Want more stories like this one? Sign up to our daily newsletter for stories by and for Chicago.

Success! You’re on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn’t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.
Processing…

Read More

Home is where the heart is Read More »

Bros Before is stupid and horny—and wonderfully queerMicco Caporaleon June 8, 2022 at 3:08 pm

It’s only gay if the swords touch—and Henry Hanson’s short film Bros Before is a whole arsenal of blades. In it, Billy (Radcliffe Adler) and Elijah (Marten Katze) are two trans men who happen to enjoy jerking off together—but, like, no homo. When Billy begins dating Grace (Meadow Meyer), Elijah finds himself wrestling with what their secret ritual means. The title plays off the idea of “bros before hoes,” adding a subtle wink to the time-honored queer tradition of “experimenting” with a same-gender friend only to learn one person is experiencing their desires in a way the other isn’t—or rather, isn’t going to acknowledge after orgasm. Over the course of 19 jam-packed minutes, Hanson plays with the storytelling conventions of rom-coms, reality dating shows, and pornography to tell a comedically rock ‘n’ roll story about unrequited love and some of queer culture’s unspoken taboos.

Hanson came to Chicago five years ago. His childhood was divided between New York and LA, but upon graduating with a cinema studies degree from Oberlin in 2017, he felt called to the Windy City after several friends moved here for the queer community and relative lower cost of living. At 27, this is his debut as a writer and director. Bros Before has been making the festival rounds at places such as Wicked Queer in Boston, Translations in Seattle, and Inside Out in Toronto. Next month, the film will make its official hometown debut at Facets as part of a partnership with Full Spectrum Features that will include a curated selection of similar shorts.

The trailer for Bros Before

Micco Caporale: Tell me a little bit about the germination of the Bros Before story.

Henry Hanson: I really wanted to make something that was inspired by Gregg Araki. For years, I had all these different visuals just waiting for the right story, like displaying prominent text that gives more meaning to the scene or bright colors. The story itself actually came out of a very personal experience where my friends and I had this inside joke that went on for years where they would say that I was gay. I would deny it in these really funny ways that showed that I was obviously gay—like I would come up with this funny logic as to why things I was doing weren’t gay and blah blah blah. But after a while, I realized that it was negatively affecting me. I became so committed to the bit that it sort of fucked with my mind, like I couldn’t actually express being attracted to other men anymore. It’s so ironic. Like, how come I can be visibly trans and medically transitioning and in this totally queer world where everyone I know is gay and trans, and yet I still have this weird hang-up about, like, being gay? That’s so funny and weird. So I wanted to write about that. 

I’ve also always loved dumb rom-coms and boy humor that’s, like, so stupid. I think a bromance is such a funny concept, and I don’t think queer stories fit into straight narrative structures. There’s something about the actual narrative structure of rom-coms that I think is built for a certain type of relationship, so that was part of my motivation: expanding the idea of what a happy ending could be, offering a structure that could be a little bit different. I would love there to be more content that’s made for queer and especially trans people.

Why is it important that Billy and Elijah are both trans?

I’ve seen a lot of movies in recent years made by trans people or about trans issues that feel like they are edutainment for straight people—like begging them to care about us. Not only do I think that’s ineffective propaganda, it’s bad art. Like, what are you even doing? I don’t know, I just wanted to make something that I would want to watch and assumes a trans audience. I think there’s a universality in specificity, but that makes people uncomfortable. I think it’s part of why Americans don’t watch foreign films. They assume they can’t relate, but once you actually watch one, you realize you don’t need to know every single piece of cultural information to think about the story. You can actually learn more about this culture just by being thrown in and gradually having stuff explained to you. I haven’t gotten any play in any venues that weren’t explicitly for queer people, though, and I guess I hope that [Bros Before is] not seen as something that can only appeal to queer people.

Where did you find your actors?

I put my casting call on typical casting call sites like Backstage Post, but there were basically no trans people. I had to use Lex, Instagram, and Twitter—just working my personal networks. I didn’t care if people had previous experience. I just wanted people who were like the characters, and I think that approach worked.

Why do you think it took you so long to write and direct your first film project?

I was holding myself back for a lot of reasons. Obviously, I wouldn’t have been able to make this movie before my transition because it’s so much about being trans. But I also produce a lot of other people’s work. I felt like I was being selfish pursuing my own project. I couldn’t admit to myself what I really wanted to do because I was embarrassed by my taste or what I had to say or that I wanted to make stuff that was stupid and horny. I went through a certain amount of transitioning before I was able to be OK with all that stuff about myself.

I love how specific Elijah’s room got, from the chaotic sharps container to the artwork. It felt so much like it could be any number of my friends’ rooms. Tell me a bit about the production design.

Well, I definitely have to give major props to my production designer, Jade Wong. The Chicago artists we used were Jade’s ideas, like Chloë Perkis and Money Kaos. I think those two’s work totally encapsulates the aesthetics of the film. And there are a few other pieces in there. Martin, who plays Elijah, is primarily a visual artist. So we put one of his prints in there, as well as a few other of my trans friends’. And then there were a lot of printouts from J.D.s, which is an 80s zine from Toronto by G.B. Jones and Bruce LaBruce, who is one of my favorite filmmakers. J.D.s helped start the queercore movement, which is another big inspiration to me. 

Then we had a few other posters that were trying to show that Elijah had evolved from a very specific sort of lesbian culture. That was also Martin’s idea: using specific bands, like, “Oh, Elijah would have a Team Dresch poster.” I think I was trying to give a bit of context as to why he might be struggling with being gay. In the past, his lesbian identity was, like, really important to him. And a lot of times, lesbians can feel like it’s a point of pride to not be with men.

The reality dating show Monogamy House is shown in Bros Before, which Hanson created with local trans filmmaker Mitch Mitchell.

Yeah, I think so much of lesbian identity gets defined in opposition to maleness or masculinity in a way that can be hard to come to terms with later.

Totally. I think a lot of trans men coming out of, like, queer feminist spaces feel very conflicted about becoming “the bad gender.”

And to not only be attracted to the bad gender. It’s like you love the bad gender so much, you want to be it while fucking it.

Exactly. Just double whammy.

Like, “You must really hate women.”

Exactly. And I think that what I wanted to explore in the story was like . . . even though I’m sympathetic to that perspective, I think it’s a bit silly and reductive, and I think it can lead to this sort of weird neutering of trans men and masculinity. Like, “Oh, we’re not men like those men. We’re different!” Or better, or whatever. I kind of wanted to make something where trans guys were those men: disgusting and horny and idiotic and obsessed with their dicks. And I wanted to say, like, that’s also fine. They’re still sympathetic and human. They’re not monsters.

I must admit—and maybe this is my revealing my own biases—the promo of the movie made me think there would be a lot more sex. I was kind of pleasantly surprised there wasn’t. The sex that was there was really sexy, but I also liked how coy it was. Tell me about that balance.

I asked myself, “What do I want to see that would excite me and be sexy but also use sex as part of the story to express something?” John Cameron Mitchell talks about this with Shortbus. For so long, because of the Hays Code [a set of industry guidelines imposed between 1934 and 1968 that aggressively regulated swearing, nudity, and depictions of sexual expression or violence], sex could only be shown through visual metaphor. And now that we can actually show sex, what if we use it to say something else? 

On a similar note, I definitely want to shout out my intimacy choreographer, Kayla Menz. Intimacy coordination is more than a safety practice; it’s an art form. Kayla helped stylize and choreograph the sex scenes, but she also found moments where intimacy could be added to the script, like a fake-out kiss on Billy and Grace’s first date. She coached all three actors on subtle things that never would have occurred to me and really helped the movie work while keeping everyone comfortable.

Want more stories like this one? Sign up to our daily newsletter for stories by and for Chicago.

Success! You’re on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn’t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.
Processing…

Read More

Bros Before is stupid and horny—and wonderfully queerMicco Caporaleon June 8, 2022 at 3:08 pm Read More »

It’s a Lebanese-Armenian family feast at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon June 8, 2022 at 3:38 pm

Lebanon and Armenia are separated by vast stretches of Syria and eastern Turkey, but when Mary Eder-McClure and Kat Stuehrk Talo compared notes about the heroic family meals they grew up on, they discovered that similarities in the food they ate shrank the distance.

For one thing, there’s the abundance of generosity. And the stuffed grape leaves.

“Both of our families’ food and table experience is this sensory overload of bowls and plates everywhere,” says Galit pastry chef Eder-McClure, “with meat, rice, cheese, dips, pickles; it’s like a block party of smells and tastes—salty, sweet, acidic—all of that happening at the same time.”  

That’s why it makes perfect sense that Eder-McClure and Stuehrk Talo of Butter Bird Bakery have joined forces for an epic, family-style Lebanese-Armenian feast at the next Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up series at the Kedzie Inn.

The menu, which they dropped last week, doesn’t do justice to the love and effort that’s going into this Foodball. They’re starting out with a lavish mezze spread, including fresh lavash to scoop up an array of pickles and dips with a chunky sumac-spiked Armenian salad and Eder-McClure’s Nana’s tabouli. “Everybody says, ‘My grandma’s is the best,’” she says. “But honestly, my grandma’s is the best.” She’ll also be bringing out sumac-kissed spinach pies, along with Stuehrk Talo’s lahmejun: pizza-like ground beef and tomato flatbreads, reimagined in croissant form.

And then come the grape leaves—the Lebanese variety stuffed with cinnamon and black pepper-spiced beef and lamb, simmered in a lemony broth, side-by-side with the Armenian version, vegetarian stuffed with onions and herbs and served cold.

If you haven’t toppled to the floor by then there’s tender braised and pomegranate-glazed lamb shanks, and rice pilaf with toasted vermicelli, almonds, and bits of sweet apricot. To finish—or more likely, take home for later—a baklavah sampler drawn from both cuisines.

Spinach fatayer Credit: Mary Eder-McClure

“Come hungry,” says Stuerhk Talo, who also suggests you bring your own takeaway containers because, in the spirit of grannies the world over, you will be taking food home with you.

Sounds marvelous, but this is an urgent situation. There is a slim-to-none chance to walk in and order on the spot this Monday, June 13. (I’ll let you know if it’s possible on Sunday.) The first round of tickets to both the 5 and 7:30 PM seatings have already sold out, but Stuerhk Talo and Eder-McClure (a Foodball veteran, formerly with the pozole pop-up Limon y Sal) have released four more spots for each seating. Look alive, get them here!

Meantime, behold a full summer schedule of Monday Night Foodball below:

Lavash Credit: Kat Stuerhk Talo

6/20: Jordan Wimby, aka The Melanin Martha

6/27: Chinese-Viet-inspired barbecue from Charles Wong of Umamicue

7/4: Off for Independence Day

7/11: Dawn Lewis of D’s Roti & Trini Cuisine

7/18: Mazesoba from Mike “Ramen Lord” Satinover

7/25: Asian stoner snacks from SuperHai

8/1: Keralan food from Thommy Padanilam of Thommy’s Toddy Shop

8/8: Oskar Singer aka Whole Grain Hoe (formerly Rye Humor Baking)

8/15: Dylan Maysick of Diaspora Dinners

8/22: Vargo Brother Ferments

Kedzie Inn
4100 N. Kedzie
(773) 293-6368
kedzieinn.com

Read More

It’s a Lebanese-Armenian family feast at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon June 8, 2022 at 3:38 pm Read More »

Home is where the heart isKerry Reidon June 8, 2022 at 3:36 pm

Samm-Art Williams’s Home, first produced in 1979 with the seminal Negro Ensemble Company and then in a Tony-nominated run on Broadway in 1980, is considered a contemporary American classic, but it doesn’t get revived as much as it probably should. This feels especially self-evident when viewing Tim Rhoze’s stellar production for Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre. Staged simply around a series of three platforms with some shadowy projections on the rear wall, Rhoze and his three-member cast unfold the beating heart of Williams’s story with precision and warmth. 

Home
Through 6/19: Sat 7 PM, Sun 3 PM; Noyes Cultural Arts Center, 927 Noyes, Evanston, fjtheatre.com, $25.

Cephus Miles (Lewon Johnson), a young Black man in 1960s rural North Carolina, finds himself caught up in a series of upheavals (the death of his grandfather and uncle, the loss of the love of his life, imprisonment for defying his draft notice) that drive him north. “Get on the next thing smoking and move to the concrete,” he’s advised.

But what’s fascinating in Williams’s story is that it turns the Great Migration narrative inside out. There isn’t much warmth in the urban sun for Cephus, and his record as an ex-con (no matter how noble the reasons for his resistance) haunts him. (Williams was once a sparring partner for famous conscientious objector Muhammad Ali.) Johnson does a beautiful job embodying the growing anguish of Cephus, as well as his joy and pride in being a good farmer, like his ancestors, and his sheer delight in sharing anecdotes about the folks back home. Rachel Blakes and Tuesdai B. Perry skillfully play a variety of other characters, and Rhoze’s adept staging brings a dreamlike choreopoem feel to several interludes. It’s absolutely absorbing, thought-provoking, and moving throughout.

Want more stories like this one? Sign up to our daily newsletter for stories by and for Chicago.

Success! You’re on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn’t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.
Processing…

Read More

Home is where the heart isKerry Reidon June 8, 2022 at 3:36 pm Read More »

Puppet revelationsJack Helbigon June 8, 2022 at 3:24 pm

Puppets are cool, but they are also creepy. Very creepy. Even the cute ones, like Kermit the Frog or Ollie the Dragon. There is just something deeply unnerving about how puppets seem like autonomous beings, even when their puppeteers are right there on stage with them. I think there is something deep and primal in us—something perhaps connected to the magical thinking of childhood—that wants us to believe the puppet is alive, and the puppeteer is just a servant to the puppet.

Hand to God
Through 7/10: Wed 1:30 and 7 PM, Thu 7 PM, Fri 8 PM, Sat 2 and 8 PM, Sun 1 and 5:30 PM; Copley Theatre, 8 E. Galena, Aurora, 630-896-6666, paramountaurora.com, $67-$74.

This creepy power is at the center of Robert Askins’s well-written Hand to God, about a mother and teenage son dealing—rather badly—with the recent death of the son’s father. The traumatized son is morbidly obsessed with the puppet he is creating for his church youth group (led by his mother). And his mother is clearly unhinged, at times too repressed and controlling, and at other times out of control and self-destructive.

I don’t want to go into more detail; I don’t want to spoil Askins’s tale. I will just say that, at a certain point, the son’s puppet starts voicing all the dark thoughts the son has been repressing, and then all hell breaks loose.

Directed by Trent Stork, the production is as close to perfect as you want live theater to be (part of the charm of live theater is its imperfection, in the hint of the chaos and possibility for disaster in real time that always hovers in the shadows). The story unfolds gracefully, building over the course of the evening, until the show’s dramatic ending.

It helps that the casting is terrific. August Forman is particularly strong as the troubled son. Likewise, Felicia Oduh does a star turn as Forman’s best friend. Jonathan Berg-Einhorn’s set design is inspired.

The show’s press materials compared the play to Avenue Q (which is funnier) and to Little Shop of Horrors (which has better music), but the comparison is misleading and unfair. This play is sui generis, a thing in itself: moving and powerful. And in the end, a revelation.  

Want more stories like this one? Sign up to our daily newsletter for stories by and for Chicago.

Success! You’re on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn’t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.
Processing…

Read More

Puppet revelationsJack Helbigon June 8, 2022 at 3:24 pm Read More »

Ghost brideKerry Reidon June 8, 2022 at 3:14 pm

Noel Coward’s 1941 comedy about a socialite writer who finds himself haunted by his vivacious (if annoying) dead wife—while his living wife first questions his sanity, then finds herself in competition with the ghost—has inspired a host of revivals and homages. Consider Robyn Hitchcock’s 1985 song “My Wife and My Dead Wife,” and the criminally hard-to-find 1990 film Truly, Madly, Deeply, starring Alan Rickman and Juliet Stevenson as a dead cellist and his grieving partner.

Blithe Spirit
Through 6/26: Fri-Sat 7:30 PM, Sun 2 PM; Skokie Theatre, 7924 Lincoln, Skokie, eclectic-theatre.com, $38 ($34 students/seniors).

Eclectic Full Contact’s revival of Blithe Spirit at the Skokie Theatre, directed by Michael Woods, is amusing enough, but it shies away from exploring the underlying acid in Coward’s premise: Is marriage itself a kind of living death? It’s not entirely the production’s fault. Coward himself said of his comedy, “There’s no heart in the play. If there was a heart, it would be a sad story.” So in place of heart, we get hijinks, and these are about two-thirds successful. Andrew Pond as haunted Charles Considine, Jessica Lauren Fisher as mischievous dead Elvira, and Jan Slavin as Madame Arcati, the eccentric medium who brings Elvira back into Charles’s life, are all suitably larger than life. But Maiko Terazawa’s Ruth, the even-tempered wife thrown into a tizzy by her dead predecessor’s return, takes a while to find her way into the Cowardian rhythms. Only when she too (spoiler alert!) becomes spectral does Ruth feel like a worthy opponent to Elvira.

Want more stories like this one? Sign up to our daily newsletter for stories by and for Chicago.

Success! You’re on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn’t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.
Processing…

Read More

Ghost brideKerry Reidon June 8, 2022 at 3:14 pm Read More »

NBA Finals Throwback: Our Favorite Chicago Bulls Championship MomentsDrew Krieson June 8, 2022 at 3:51 pm

The NBA Finals is well underway this year with a soon-to-be classic series between the Golden State Warriors and Boston Celtics. Through two games, the series is tied at 1-1 as the teams head out east to the TD Garden. All the action in games one and two has made the series a must-watch. And honestly, minus the Nets and Boston series, this entire NBA playoffs has been about the same. But, despite not having a dog in the fight anymore, all this basketball excitement has us reminiscing about our favorite moments from the Chicago Bulls championships of years’ past.

With the G.O.A.T. Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Horace Grant, Dennis Rodman, Steve Kerr, and all the other big-time supporting cast members on those 90s, there are plenty of top-tier highlights to look back on. So, without wasting anymore time, let’s get into our favorite games and moments from the Chicago Bulls championships.

Advertisement

The Shrug

You really don’t need too many words to describe this iconic moment from the second of the Chicago Bulls championships. Whether you witnessed it live 30 years ago, watched it in a re-run, or saw it in the Last Dance documentary, chances are you won’t ever forget, “The Shrug”.

Advertisement

After hearing all the media noise and comparisons to Clyde Drexler, Michael Jordan had something to prove in game one of the 1992 NBA Finals. Unfortunately for the Trailblazers, this meant that Jordan – a 27% three-point shooter that season – would set a NBA Finals record for threes made in one half with six. By the time the sixth one dropped, Jordan could only react one way. And thus, the shrug was born.

The First Chip

The moment that started it all, the first chip. The first of the Chicago Bulls championships came in 1991 when the good guys beat the purple and gold in five games.

After losing game one, the Bulls would go on to sweep Magic Johnson’s Lakers and solidify beginning of their dynasty. While everyone in Chicago had reason to celebrate, no one could’ve been happier than Michael Jordan. It was pretty evident after the game, and everyone has seen that classic photo of him holding the Larry O’Brien trophy with his dad James embracing him. It was quite the championship moment, because after 7 season, Jordan finally got his.

Advertisement

The First 3-Peat

In the spirit of firsts, this next moment is another one that’s near and dear to our hearts. The cool part about this one? It didn’t solely involve the G.O.A.T.

With 14.1 seconds remaining in game 6 of the 1993 NBA Finals, the Bulls headed into a timeout down 2 against the Suns. They had a bit of a safety net with a 3-2 series lead, but no on wanted this one to go to seven. 

The Bulls had possession, and Jordan was set to make the inbound pass. He quickly dished it out and received it right back in his hands. After a couple passes, the ball was in the paint. 7 seconds left on the clock.

Practically every Suns defender was around the basket. And only four Bulls players were anywhere near them, which meant one thing: some guy was wide open. That guy, just so happened to be Bulls’ sharpshooter John Paxson. At the 5.3 second mark, the ball left Paxson’s hands. SPLASH!

3.9 seconds of playing time later, the Bulls would win their first 3-peat.

The Last Shot

“The Last Shot”. A blown call. A light push-off. Whatever you want to call it, the last shot Michael Jordan took is one of our all time favorite moments from the six Chicago Bulls championships. 

It meant a lot more than two points in the box score. Obviously, it was the most important two points of the series. It was the dagger that gave the Bulls their sixth ring of the decade. But, it also served as the symbolic dagger to the Bulls dynasty. After it went in, the work was done. The team achieved their second three-peat. A feat no other dynasty had done before, or since. The “Last Dance” that was their final season was over. And Michael Jordan’s time as a Bull was over. As was Scottie’s. As was Rodman’s and Phil Jackson’s. 

The last shot is truly, one of the best moments from the Chicago Bulls championships. And we wouldn’t have it any other way!

Featured image Credit: Chicago Bulls’ Instagram

Read More

NBA Finals Throwback: Our Favorite Chicago Bulls Championship MomentsDrew Krieson June 8, 2022 at 3:51 pm Read More »

Cannabis, Comedy, and Mental Health

Photo Credit: TJ Sopoci

Cannabis and creativity are often associated with one another. Many people in the arts have claimed that using the plant helps open their mind and can be beneficial to divergent ways of thinking. We decided to explore the relationship between cannabis and comedy with comedian, writer, journalist, and dog mom Lauren Vino. Nature’s Grace and Wellness Coordinator and Field Market Associate Alia Reichert Sparked the Conversation with Vino to learn more about how the pandemic has impacted the intersections between mental health, cannabis, and comedy over the past few years.

AR: Lauren, being a stand-up comedian and writer during the last few years must have been stressful. How has the pandemic impacted the comedy scene, your funny bone, and your mental health?

LV: I think at first there was a sense of relief from not having to “hustle,” and do two or three sets after a full day of writing at my day job. I have always identified as a writer and performer, so there was something nice about being able to focus on writing. But after a few months of that, I really missed having the creative outlet of getting on stage, and interacting with crowds and people in general.

AR: What made you decide to become a stand-up comedian?

LV: I never really made a conscious decision to become a comedian. It was very non-linear. It was just something I always wanted to try and never really had a reason to stop doing. I have taken breaks to focus on different writing projects, and I ebb and flow in terms of my creative focuses.

AR: Is comedy your go-to strategy or tool that helps you maintain your mental health?

LV: In my experience, performing in the comedy space has not been a way to maintain my mental health. I’ve seen how stand-up has a way of reinforcing unhealthy behaviors and justifying it as art, as in other creative communities as well. But that doesn’t mean comedy and mental health can’t co-exist. There is a huge link between creativity and mental health.

I often recommend that comedians work on their mental health as much as they can offstage. So that when you craft jokes about certain topics, like depression, you don’t destabilize yourself further. Otherwise, crowds can usually tell and are not comfortable. Bombing [a set] can destabilize a person further.

AR: Do you feel using cannabis helps you to be more creative when you are writing your jokes or articles, or is it helpful for you in other ways?

LV: I think using cannabis changes your perspectives. At least for me, writing jokes is mostly trying to come at ideas from surprising angles, so thinking of as many angles as possible is super helpful. I’ve heard the saying “write high, edit sober” but I don’t believe that should be the case every time. It’s definitely more balance and situation dependent. For myself and many other people, cannabis can help with getting in the zone, reaching a flow state, or the ideal mindset for creativity. It’s probably because it helps you write without judging yourself. However, if someone isn’t an experienced cannabis user they might have a different experience and be unable to focus on the writing. I think there is something grounding and mindful about smoking in general, but a lot of that can be achieved through breathing exercises, like 5-7-8 breathing. I’ve found it helpful to combine smoking or vaping with breathwork, yoga, or other low-impact exercise. The goal is to write and edit from different perspectives while achieving some sense of flow.

AR: What do you think needs to be changed or improved to help people with their mental health?

LV: From a peer perspective, I think the best any of us can do on an individual level is to try to take care of ourselves with the basics—sleep, eat, treat the people you love well, and do something with your life that matters in some way. I try my best to communicate helpful information on a peer-to-peer level. However, I understand that the greater issues with mental-health systems are something I’m unable to fix individually. It takes constant advocacy and bigger changes. I tend not to dwell on it because that’s a healthy boundary I’ve set for myself. But I know it’s a field that brings other people a great sense of purpose and happiness. It’s all dependent on the individual.

AR: Laughter has been said to be one of the best medicines. Where can we catch your upcoming performances?

LV: I’ll be at the Laugh Factory June 10th at 7:30 and 9:30 pm, and The Beat Kitchen on June 14th at 9:00 pm.

 AR: Thanks for your time, Lauren. Lastly, do you have a Mindful Message you’d like to share that helps you Spark your day? A Mindful Message is a quote, mantra, saying, or affirmation that helps you.

LV: In the movie Meatballs, Bill Murray’s character gives a pump-up speech to boost morale, but the thing is his team [of summer campers] sucks and is definitely going to lose. He ends up getting the kids pumped up and chanting, “It just doesn’t matter!” It sounds negative, but it can be really helpful because we sometimes get really worked up over stuff that doesn’t matter. Being able to acknowledge that and make fun of it is very liberating.

Be sure to follow @naturesgraceil on InstagramTwitter, and Facebook.

Read More

Cannabis, Comedy, and Mental Health Read More »