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‘Blue Heaven’ review: a divine celebration of blues music, icons who created it

As the cast of “Blue Heaven” takes the stage in Black Ensemble Theater’s 90-minute freight train of blues music, the vibe is part juke-joint and part revival meeting.

Either way, the production — by writer-director Daryl D. Brooks — will have you stomping and singing courtesy of the all-stops-out rendition of “Let the Good Times Roll” as covered by an iconic quintet: Howlin’ Wolf (Lyle Miller), Big Mama Thornton (Miciah Lathan), Muddy Waters (Dwight Neal), Stevie Ray Vaughan (Billy Rude) and B.B. King (Aaron Reese Boseman).

‘Blue Heaven’

In real life, the stars never performed all together. But they do at Pearly’s, the otherworldly on-stage “venue” open through Nov. 27 at Black Ensemble Theater. Backed by an unstoppable four-person band led by keyboardist Adam Sherrod, the cast delivers some two dozen numbers that capture the entire emotional spectrum filtered through the blues, from the bump and grind of Neal’s take on “Hoochie Coochie Man” to the righteous rage of Lathan’s “Hound Dog.” (Lathan prefaces the number with a teasing “Are you ready?” to the audience. No. No you are not. She’s that good.)

Brooks’ script frames the music through a motif of forgiveness. He has the legendary vocalists gathered a Pearly’s, which set designer Sydney Lynn Thomas has created as a sort of way-off-the-highway, moonlit dancehall. Between the name of the place and the repeated chatter about how “the big guy” might take in the performance at hand, it doesn’t take long to deduce Pearly’s isn’t a place anywhere near here. (The mildest of spoilers clue is right there in the show’s title.)

We are indeed in blues heaven, from the moment Miller’s Howlin’ Wolf stomps the stage with the growling, harmonica-infused opener “Smokestack Lighting.” He’s soon joined by Lathan and his killer rendition of “Little Red Rooster.”

The show’s miniscule plot takes shape with the arrival Boseman’s B.B. King. Brooks’ framing device involves the others in the band teaching King the power of forgiveness — a lesson he needs to internalize to enter the part of blues heaven that’s beyond the gates of Pearly’s. The assembled go about teaching King the concept through song and their life stories.

Dwight Neal star as Muddy Waters in “Blue Heaven.”

Alan Davis

Brooks uses the forgiveness theme to briefly touch on cultural appropriation. “Hound Dog,” for example, was a Big Mama Thornton tune long before Elvis ever sang a note of it. But at Pearly’s, the emphasis is on letting go of the anger and making way for the celebratory concert that’s the afterlife birthright of the artists.

“Celebratory” isn’t the right word given the infinite variations on heartbreak that the blues conveys so acutely. For the first half of “Blue Heaven,” the music leans into the breakage. Rude’s “Born Under a Bad Sign” is a wave of anguish propelled with the determination of somebody who has learned how to survive it. When Neal digs into the powerful, throaty depths of “I Am the Blues,” you can feel the weight of all the world in his voice.Boseman stops the show with “There Must be a Better World Somewhere,” an alternately hopeful and despairing number that ultimately swings toward the former and ushers in a party mood.

Costume designer Marquecia Jordan helps switch things up by giving everyone a glow-up costume change, replacing the mostly muted garb of the show’s first half with a bevy of the sharp suits and bedazzled gowns. Even the band dons fancy new duds.

One of the many joys of the production lies in watching Sherrod keep that band (guitarist Oscar Brown Jr, bassist Mark Miller, drummer Myron Cherry) on point. There’s a flow of communication all but shimmering between Sherrod and the other musicians, as well as the cast members. In many Black Ensemble Theater shows, the band is high above the stage and hard to see. Here’s, it’s integrated into the onstage set and it’s to the show’s benefit. Sherrod watches the vocalists with laser focus and keeps the band’s every breath in synch. It makes for a seamless, thrillingly fluid sound.

Reddrick’s dialogue mostly provides some bits of interesting biographical material, but little more. It doesn’t matter. If you’re a fan of the blues, you’re a fan of this show. Scratch that. If you’re a fan of music, you’re a fan of this show.

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Chicago Bears: Bringing in a new WR will really help Justin FieldsVincent Pariseon November 1, 2022 at 7:07 pm

The Chicago Bears have a weak offense because the talent isn’t there yet. Justin Fields has taken many big steps so far and looks like someone that can be a start in this league. However, he needs some help. They made an attempt to get him some help on Tuesday afternoon.

In a trade, the Chicago Bears added Chase Claypool from the Pittsburgh Steelers. They have up some draft capital to get him but they felt that adding another good wide receiver was worth a deal like that. It just might be.

Fields needs some help. Darnell Mooney and both running backs are good but they need much more in order for Fields to take a big step. Adding someone like Claypool to the mix will really help them in certain situations. Fields now has another good player to throw to.

Claypool was drafted in the second round (49th overall) in the 2020 NFL Draft out of Notre Dame. This was six picks after the Chicago Bears drafted Cole Kmet (also out of Notre Dame). Now, these two are reunited in the same offense once again.

The second-round pick that Chicago traded to Pittsburgh for WR Chase Claypool is its own pick, not the second-round pick that the Bears received from the Ravens for Roquan Smith, per source. https://t.co/tRA87SpD8W

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) November 1, 2022

The Chicago Bears are doing what they can to help Justin Fields grow his game.

It is tough to see the Bears give up a valuable draft pick but Claypool can really help Justin Fields grow this year and next year. We don’t know what either of their statuses will be after that point but there is hope that they will both be stars.

Claypool isn’t an elite receiver or anything like that just yet but he has only had a bad version of Ben Roethlisberger, Mitch Trubisky, and Kenny Pickett throwing him footballs. You’d like to think that Justin Fields will help him grow as a receiver just as much.

This is a big trade for the Bears. It came right after the Bears traded Roquan Smith and Robert Quinn in the few days prior. They clearly know that the idea is for the offense to take big steps. They know they are going to get the defense going again but the offense needs to develop.

It is nice to see that they felt the need to give Fields some more help before the season was over. A lot can be learned between now and the end of the year. Hopefully, this is the beginning of what makes Justin Fields truly become a star.

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Chicago Bears: Bringing in a new WR will really help Justin FieldsVincent Pariseon November 1, 2022 at 7:07 pm Read More »

Performance art on film, 1919, and more

Steppenwolf for Young Adults brings its acclaimed production of 1919, J. Nicole Brooks’s stage adaptation of Eve L. Ewing’s poems about the “Red Summer” race riots and white supremacy in America, from their Halsted Street venue to a short tour this week with Chicago Park District’s “Night Out in the Parks” program, starting tonight at 6 PM at Mandrake Park (3858 S. Cottage Grove). The performances are all free and all at 6 PM; after tonight, the schedule is Wed 11/2, South Shore Cultural Center (7059 S. South Shore); Thu 11/3, Calumet Park (9801 S. Ave. G); Fri 11/4, Hamilton Park (513 W. 72nd); Sat 11/5, Austin Town Hall (5610 W. Lake). For more information, see chicagoparkdistrict.com. (KR)

Some music options for tonight:

The Dave Specter Band and Brother John Kattke are featured at tonight’s WDCB Bluesday Tuesday event at FitzGerald’s (7 PM, 6615 Roosevelt, Berwyn, $15, 21+, tickets at Ticketweb).The Chicago Symphony Orchestra welcomes award-winning Macedonian pianist Simon Trpčeski to Symphony Center tonight, where Trpčeski will tackle Grieg’s Piano Concerto; the program also includes composer Nokuthula Ngwenyama’s Primal Message, a composition inspired by the 1974 Aricebo interstellar radio transmission. (7:30 PM, 220 S. Michigan, $39-$150, all-ages, tickets at the CSO’s website). The Mississippi-born blues guitarist Jarekus Singleton visits SPACE (8 PM, 1245 Chicago Ave., Evanston, $15-$25, all-ages, tickets at Eventbrite). Check out Reader contributor David Whiteis’s review of Singleton’s 2014 album Refuse to Lose here. Fulton Street Collective presents the Keith Hall Trio (featuring Andrew Rathbun and Carlo De Rosa) in a record release show at Hubbard Street Lofts (8 PM, 1821 W. Hubbard, free, all-ages, reservations requested at Eventbrite). Metal Shop, a regular night of metal tunes, giveaways, and drink specials at Delilah’s, features DJ Grant from Bucket O’Blood Records tonight as he pays tribute to the legendary band Motörhead (9 PM-2 AM, 2771 N. Lincoln, no cover, 21+). (SCJ)

School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) Galleries hosts Conversation in the Form of a Hedge Lay and a Cow Lick, a free online presentation featuring a “carefully scored conversation and screening” of Winterage: Last Milk. Winterage is an art film that looking at the history of a farm in rural Derbyshire, UK, infusing performance with animation and observational footage. SAIC professor Mark Jeffery (a performance artist, former member of the Goat Island Performance Group, and cofounder of performance and technology group ATOM-r) collaborated with UK-based interdisciplinary artist Lucy Cash on the film, and they will be joined by writer and code artist Judd Morrissey and theater artist and writer Sara Jane Bailes for the event. It starts at 4:30 PM today; registration through Eventbrite is required to receive the Zoom link. (SCJ)

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Performance art on film, 1919, and moreSalem Collo-Julin and Kerry Reidon November 1, 2022 at 5:46 pm

Steppenwolf for Young Adults brings its acclaimed production of 1919, J. Nicole Brooks’s stage adaptation of Eve L. Ewing’s poems about the “Red Summer” race riots and white supremacy in America, from their Halsted Street venue to a short tour this week with Chicago Park District’s “Night Out in the Parks” program, starting tonight at 6 PM at Mandrake Park (3858 S. Cottage Grove). The performances are all free and all at 6 PM; after tonight, the schedule is Wed 11/2, South Shore Cultural Center (7059 S. South Shore); Thu 11/3, Calumet Park (9801 S. Ave. G); Fri 11/4, Hamilton Park (513 W. 72nd); Sat 11/5, Austin Town Hall (5610 W. Lake). For more information, see chicagoparkdistrict.com. (KR)

Some music options for tonight:

The Dave Specter Band and Brother John Kattke are featured at tonight’s WDCB Bluesday Tuesday event at FitzGerald’s (7 PM, 6615 Roosevelt, Berwyn, $15, 21+, tickets at Ticketweb).The Chicago Symphony Orchestra welcomes award-winning Macedonian pianist Simon Trpčeski to Symphony Center tonight, where Trpčeski will tackle Grieg’s Piano Concerto; the program also includes composer Nokuthula Ngwenyama’s Primal Message, a composition inspired by the 1974 Aricebo interstellar radio transmission. (7:30 PM, 220 S. Michigan, $39-$150, all-ages, tickets at the CSO’s website). The Mississippi-born blues guitarist Jarekus Singleton visits SPACE (8 PM, 1245 Chicago Ave., Evanston, $15-$25, all-ages, tickets at Eventbrite). Check out Reader contributor David Whiteis’s review of Singleton’s 2014 album Refuse to Lose here. Fulton Street Collective presents the Keith Hall Trio (featuring Andrew Rathbun and Carlo De Rosa) in a record release show at Hubbard Street Lofts (8 PM, 1821 W. Hubbard, free, all-ages, reservations requested at Eventbrite). Metal Shop, a regular night of metal tunes, giveaways, and drink specials at Delilah’s, features DJ Grant from Bucket O’Blood Records tonight as he pays tribute to the legendary band Motörhead (9 PM-2 AM, 2771 N. Lincoln, no cover, 21+). (SCJ)

School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) Galleries hosts Conversation in the Form of a Hedge Lay and a Cow Lick, a free online presentation featuring a “carefully scored conversation and screening” of Winterage: Last Milk. Winterage is an art film that looking at the history of a farm in rural Derbyshire, UK, infusing performance with animation and observational footage. SAIC professor Mark Jeffery (a performance artist, former member of the Goat Island Performance Group, and cofounder of performance and technology group ATOM-r) collaborated with UK-based interdisciplinary artist Lucy Cash on the film, and they will be joined by writer and code artist Judd Morrissey and theater artist and writer Sara Jane Bailes for the event. It starts at 4:30 PM today; registration through Eventbrite is required to receive the Zoom link. (SCJ)

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Performance art on film, 1919, and moreSalem Collo-Julin and Kerry Reidon November 1, 2022 at 5:46 pm Read More »

What the Chicago Bears’ trade for Chase Claypool says about Poles’ planRyan Heckmanon November 1, 2022 at 6:06 pm

With the NFL trade deadline passing Tuesday afternoon, all eyes were on Ryan Poles and the Chicago Bears to see if another move would be made.

Already, the Bears have made two enormous trades, shipping off both Robert Quinn and Roquan Smith to the Philadelphia Eagles and Baltimore Ravens, respectively.

In those deals, the Bears acquired extra second, fourth and fifth-round picks — one of each.

Tuesday, Poles and the Bears weren’t done, though. One of their most impactful moves came when it was announced that Chicago was dealing for former Notre Dame standout and second-round pick, wide receiver Chase Claypool.

The #Bears are trading a 2023 second-round pick to the #Steelers for WR Chase Claypool, as @FieldYates said. A big move for Chicago to help Justin Fields.

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) November 1, 2022

General manager Ryan Poles is finally giving fans a visible reason to believe he has a plan for the Chicago Bears.

For those fans who have questioned Poles’ methods over his first year in Chicago, this is a welcomed move. There are fans who have remained steadfast in the idea that Poles is in play for 2023 and beyond, which is correct. However, this move is one that solidifies a lot of things.

First of all, Claypool has one more year on his rookie contract. He’s coming from the Pittsburgh Steelers who, historically, can draft wide receivers with the best of them. However, they don’t always hang onto them long-term.

With Claypool never being a true number one wide receiver, this gives the Bears a huge advantage, contractually speaking.

The Bears have plenty of cap space next year (around $100 million) and, with that, will likely extend Claypool if Poles is smart. Trading a second-round pick for any player would require that, first, the receiving team is in on that player for the long haul.

If that’s true, then Poles should absolutely look to extend Claypool before the 2023 season — or, before Claypool’s price goes way up.

In the end, that’s the likely scenario.

Secondly, this trade also shows us that Poles is, in fact, dedicated to Justin Fields.

You do not trade a second rounder for a wide receiver if you do not believe you have the quarterback in place. After all, this league is all quarterback-driven. A team has to have their franchise quarterback in place in order to make moves that affect the future of the franchise.

That is exactly what Poles is telling us with this deal. He believes in Justin Fields.

So, all of the nonsensical takes you have read that are nothing but speculative narratives are dead wrong. Poles is in for the long haul with Fields, and everyone doubting that a few months ago should now be eating crow after the past couple of weeks.

This Claypool trade is great for Fields, for the Bears, and for the future of this franchise.

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What the Chicago Bears’ trade for Chase Claypool says about Poles’ planRyan Heckmanon November 1, 2022 at 6:06 pm Read More »

BREAKING: Chicago Bears Trade For WR Chase Claypool

Chicago Bears trade for Chase Claypool

The Chicago Bears had been sellers in the trade market until Tuesday afternoon. The Bears traded All-Pro linebacker Roquan Smith Monday. According to Field Yates, the Bears traded for wide receiver Chase Claypool with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

BREAKING: The Bears are trading for Steelers WR Chase Claypool, per source.

— Field Yates (@FieldYates) November 1, 2022

The trade should help the offense as it builds around Justin Fields. Claypool was a former second-round draft pick out of Notre Dame.

Per Adam Schefter, the Bears are trading a second-round pick to the Steelers. The Bears received a second and fifth-round pick for Smith in Monday’s trade.

This is a big move for the Bears. Claypool has over 2,000 yards receiving and 12 touchdowns in his first two-and-a-half seasons in the NFL. That has come with the Steelers having a quarterback carousel. Claypool was a heavily coveted wide receiver trade target.

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Nets fire coach Steve Nash after poor start, more controversy

NEW YORK — Steve Nash is out as Brooklyn Nets coach after a disappointing start and more controversy surrounding Kyrie Irving.

The Nets announced Tuesday that they had parted ways with the Hall of Fame point guard, a day after they beat Indiana to improve to 2-5.

Nash made it to this season after Kevin Durant said he wanted him out this summer, but not much longer. The Nets have been another mess, with bad play on the court and bad headlines off it.

The biggest — again — was created by Irving, who posted a link to an antisemitic work on his Twitter page last week, drawing criticism from Nets owner Joe Tsai.

“Since becoming head coach, Steve was faced with a number of unprecedented challenges, and we are sincerely grateful for his leadership, patience and humility throughout his tenure,” general manager Sean Marks said in a statement.

“Personally, this was an immensely difficult decision; however, after much deliberation and evaluation of how the season has begun, we agreed that a change is necessary at this time.”

Nash led the Nets to a 92-62 record and the playoffs in both full seasons, his first as an NBA coach. But they lost Irving and James Harden to injuries during their second-round loss to Milwaukee in 2021, then were a first-round flop last season after trading Harden during the middle of the season.

Most of their problems during the latter season were caused by Irving being unavailable for most of their home games because he refused to get vaccinated for the coronavirus, as mandated at the time in New York City.

Nash handled it all as best as possible, but apparently not good enough for his best player. Durant said he wanted to be traded this summer if the Nets didn’t fire Marks and Nash, but Tsai stood by them and Durant eventually pulled back his request.

But things started poorly this season and Nash gave some his hardest criticism of the team during his tenure after their loss to Indiana on Saturday night. Much of that was ignored because the focus was on Irving’s combative news conference defending his tweet, and the Nets beat the Pacers in the rematch Monday to end a four-game skid.

But Nash’s tenure ended anyway a day later, hours before Brooklyn is set to host the Bulls (6:30 p.m., TNT).

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Bears trade for Steeler WR Chase Claypool, give up 2nd-round pick: report

The Bears are finally bringing in some proven help at wide receiver.

They acquired Steelers standout Chase Claypool for a second-round pick hours before the 3 p.m. trade deadline Tuesday.

Claypool fell out of favor with the Steelers after they drafted him in the second round out of Notre Dame in 2020, but should provide an instant boost to the Bears. He has 32 catches for 311 yards and a touchdown this season. Darnell Mooney is the Bears’ leading receiver at 364 yards, but no one else has more than 165.

Claypool, 24, was a force in his first two seasons: In 31 games, he caught 121 passes for 1,733 yards and 11 touchdowns, plus he ran 24 times for 112 yards and two touchdowns.

The Bears had an extra 2023 second-round pick from trading linebacker Roquan Smith to the Ravens on Monday, so they still have at least one pick in each of the first five rounds of the upcoming draft.

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Source: Steelers trading WR Claypool to Bearson November 1, 2022 at 6:42 pm

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Why Bears fans should feel good about their future (1:02)Keyshawn Johnson details why he is optimistic about the Bears’ future. (1:02)

The Chicago Bears are acquiring wide receiver Chase Claypool in a trade with the Pittsburgh Steelers, a source told ESPN’s Field Yates on Tuesday.

The Bears are getting a second-round pick in return, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The 2020 second-round pick has caught 32 passes for 311 yards and a touchdown for the Steelers this season.

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Report: White Sox to appoint Royals’ Pedro Grifol as Manager

Per reports, Pedro Grifol is expected to be named the new Manager of the Chicago White Sox.

The Chicago White Sox are expected to name Kansas City Royals coach Pedro Grifol as the next manager of the team, Buster Olney reports. Olney adds that the club could announce the decision later this week.

Pedro Grifol, longtime coach with the Royals, is expected to be the next White Sox manager, an announcement that could come later this week.

Pedro Grifol, 52, just completed his 10th season as a member of the Royals’ coaching staff. He served, for the past three years as the team’s bench coach, and prior to that he was K.C.’s quality control coach, catching coach, hitting coach, and special assignment coach.

He’s also spent extensive time in the Mariners organization, where he spent three seasons as a minor league manager before being named the club’s coordinator of minor league instructor and, eventually, director of minor league operations.

Prior to his work with the Mariners and Royals organizations, Grifol had a nine-year playing career. Selected by the Twins out of Florida State University in the sixth round of the 1991 draft, Grifol spent five seasons as a catcher in the Twins’ system and another four in the Mets’ system. He reached Triple-A with both clubs but never cracked the Majors before ending his playing career following the 1999 season.

While this will be Grifol’s first managerial gig in the Majors, he has long been seen as a future manager. He also interviewed with the Marlins this offseason and has previously interviewed with the Tigers in 2020, the Giants in 2019 and the Orioles in 2018.

Miguel Cairo, Houston Astros bench coach Joe Espada, former White Sox coach, Ozzie Guillen and New York Yankees bench coach Carlos Mendoza were among those who interviewed for the White Sox vacancy.

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