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2022-23 NBA Betting Preview: Why you should take the over on Nets’ starson October 7, 2022 at 8:14 pm

Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant look on against New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden in New York on April 6. Sarah Stier/Getty Images

The 2022-23 season is quickly approaching, and our betting experts have got you covered. Over the next two weeks, we look at how to approach some of the top teams in league and give out some futures best bets ahead of tipoff.

NBA senior writer Andre Snellings breaks down the Brooklyn Nets and their star players as options to bet this season.

Here is the best case, worst case and betting analysis for this year’s Nets team.

NBA betting preview schedule

Thursday: The case for the Boston Celtics and Golden State WarriorsToday: The case for the Brooklyn Nets and Milwaukee BucksMonday: The case for the Philadelphia 76ers and Los Angeles LakersTuesday: Who to bet for MVPWednesday: Betting win totals and awardsOct. 17: Social media and bettingOct. 18: NBA title odds and favorites

Best case: The Nets have been among the betting favorites in each of the two seasons leading up to this one, and this season they still have the fifth-lowest odds to win the title at +800. Their best case scenario is that they actually win the chip. Kevin Durant is a former MVP, and both Kyrie Irving and Ben Simmons have been All-NBA performers in their careers. In the 2020-21 season, the last time that both Simmons and Irving played the majority of the season for their respective teams, Simmons helped anchor the 76ers to the No. 2 defensive rating in the NBA, while Irving and Durant led the Nets to the No. 1 offensive rating. If the team meshes and stays healthy, it’ll have the potential to repeat as the top offense with a much more competitive defense than it’s fielded during the Durant/Irving era.

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Worst case: This is unfortunately easy to imagine. After missing his entire first season with the Nets while recovering from a torn Achilles tendon, Kevin Durant went on to miss 64 games of the 154 Nets games over the next two seasons. During that same three-season span, Irving has missed 133 of the Nets’ 226 games for various reasons, including 53 games missed last season alone due to off-court decisions. And Simmons sat out all 82 games last season, first due to mental health concerns and an acrimonious relationship with the 76ers, and later due to a back injury with the Nets. The worst-case scenario, for the Nets, is for their star players to continue missing large chunks of time and for the team, that was in the play-in game last season, to miss the postseason entirely.

The bets: Kevin Durant over 27.5 PPG, Kyrie Irving over 26.5 PPG for season

Betting spin: Because of the high degree of uncertainty in team outcomes, the best bets for the Nets all revolve around individual per-game performances. Kevin Durant’s scoring average over/under is set at 27.5 PPG (-115), while Kyrie Irving’s is set at 26.5 PPG (+100 over, -130 under). Durant averaged 29.9 PPG last season, and has averaged 28.7 PPG during his entire Nets tenure. Similarly, Irving has averaged 27.1 PPG for the Nets and 27.4 PPG last season. Both achieved those averages while playing quite a bit of minutes next to another high-volume/high-usage scorer in James Harden. This season, with Simmons as the floor general who doesn’t need many shots, both Durant and Irving have a good chance to increase their previous averages and go over those lines.

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2015 Wild Card Game, Jake Arrieta leads Cubs

Seven years ago today, Jake Arrieta and the Chicago Cubs defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 2015 Wild Card Game.

Jake Arrieta was one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball in 2015. With him on the mound, it felt like the Cubs could’ve beaten anyone in a winner-take-all game. Unfortunately for the Pittsburgh Pirates, they ran straight into the buzzsaw that was Jake Arrieta.

Before the game, Jake Arrieta sent a tweet that perfectly encapsulated how much confidence he had going into that matchup.

7 yrs ago since one of the greatest playoff performances & tweets of all time https://t.co/wHWG0NKbB3

Naturally, Jake Arrieta threw a complete game shutout as the Cubs won 4-0. Arrieta finished the game with 11 strikeouts and allowed only four hits. The Cubs seemed to be in command for the entire game. Momentum swung hugely in the Cubs’ direction early on when Kyle Schwarber hit one of the most colossal home runs in franchise history.

Kyle Schwarber had maximum swag from the start.
Wild Card Game: boom. https://t.co/s9KCux20Vr

Rookie Kyle Schwarber drove in three runs in this game – his first playoff game. Dexter Fowler managed to score three times, including a solo home run in the 5th inning. Sadly, these two players would collide with each other at the beginning of the following season. That would cause Schwarber to miss nearly all of 2016 with an ACL tear until his triumphant World Series return.

The Pittsburgh Pirates have not returned to the playoffs since this game. For the Cubs, this game was their first playoff win since 2003. This core went on to make the playoffs in each of the next three seasons and then again in 2020. Of course, the Cubs would win the World Series the following year in 2016. The legendary 2015 Wild Card Game is where this memorable playoff run all began.

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In misguided White Sox world, it’s all about Jerry Reinsdorf’s whims

Now that Tony La Russa has resumed his retirement, the White Sox can go back to being … the White Sox.

Does that make you feel any better?

It apparently delights Rick Hahn, whom we all know had nothing to do with the disastrous decision to bring back La Russa, but can be held accountable for stockpiling first basemen and designated hitters in a misguided survivalist tactic. Facing questions this week about his own job security, Hahn broke into more of a smile than a sweat.

“If it ever got to the point where I felt like I wasn’t the right person in my role, I’d step aside,” Hahn said. “And I’m lucky enough, again, to have the support [from chairman Jerry Reinsdorf].”

Ah, there it is, the support of Jerry Reinsdorf. In the sports world, this is the golden ticket that only a precious few enjoy. Their paychecks carry the logos of the Bulls and White Sox. Hahn and Ken Williams –remember him? –get a free pass because Reinsdorf adores them.

Forget a fanbase that was enraged this season after enduring a flawed rebuild that was six years in the making. For all that pain and cash, the Sox went .500 in baseball’s weakest division. Those angry fans surely will show their frustration in the form of empty seats at Guaranteed Rate Field in 2023. Hahn and Williams are liked by Jerry –in the same way La Russa was treasured –so they’re safe. Fans will just have to wear it.

Reinsdorf surprisingly broke down two years ago and cut loose John Paxson and Gar Forman –the Bulls’ equivalent of Williams and Hahn. That reluctant move came at the urging of son Michael, who handles business for Jerry on the Bulls side in a role that remains vacant on the Sox side.

So Hahn and Williams will be rolling along next spring training in their respective golf carts, snickering and ducking responsibility along the way.

“There’s only 30 of these jobs and I’m fortunate enough to be able to do this in my hometown,” Hahn said. “Whether we won this division by 10 games or lost it by 10 games, I’m ridiculously blessed to be able to have this opportunity.”

In the Sox’ messed-up world, winning the division by 10 games or losing it by 10 really doesn’t matter either way.

You certainly can’t fault Hahn for hiring La Russa. That was 100% Reinsdorf’s decision. But Hahn gets blame for assembling a fundamentally flawed roster that couldn’t stay healthy and was exposed for being dangerously shallow.

He laid out this week a make-good plan that includes promised change for next season. Raise your hand if you believe those changes will lead to success.

Hahn has been with the Sox since 2002 and became general manager in 2013, when Williams was kicked upstairs to a loosely defined role as executive vice president. Hahn’s a likable guy with an impressive resume that includes New Trier High School, Michigan undergrad and a law degree from Harvard.

When major-league teams were scrambling to replicate the Boston Red Sox’ recipe for success under then-general manager Theo Epstein, an Ivy League diploma weighed more heavily than a baseball background.

Hahn, who also has an MBA from Kellogg, was originally tasked with handling contracts. Agents preferred dealing with him over Williams. General managers –after Williams’ disastrous Shouldergate deal with the Blue Jays –also gravitated toward Hahn.

When Hahn became a hot Ivy League wunderkind in baseball circles –being courted by the Cardinals and Pirates –Reinsdorf fought off the suitors by giving him the GM title before the 2013 season.

On the Chicago sports landscape, every other major-league team –Cubs, Bears, Blackhawks, Bulls, Sky and Fire — have changed general managers during Hahn’s tenure. And what has he done to deserve such solid job security?

Hahn had losing seasons from 2013 to 2019, a winning record in the pandemic-shortened forgettable 2020 season (35-25), one division title in 2021 (93-69) and a 2-5 postseason record. Overall, the Sox have gone 700-817 (a .461 winning percentage) during Hahn’s tenure. Evidently, only the pandemic could make the Sox look good.

And now Hahn is again telling Sox fans: Don’t stop believin’.

“I’m not looking to stand up here with a blindfold and a cigarette just for fun,” he said during La Russa’s going-away party. “We have to believe that we’re capable of getting ourselves to the level we need and be able to critically look at things that we didn’t do well in the past …”

And?

“Find a way to get better,” he continued, “and have faith in ourselves that we’re the right people.”

Jerry couldn’t have said it any better.

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‘The Notebook’ review at Chicago Shakespeare Theater: Superb score, writing, cast

First, I must express a bit of shock.I simply was not expecting to fall in love with “The Notebook,” the new musical version of Nicholas Sparks’ 1996 over-the-top romantic novel, turned into a solid film of romantically saturated colors by director Nick Cassavetes, starring Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams.

But I have.

I was expecting teary and hoping for sincere.But I also must admit that, with a writer — Bekah Brunstetter, best known for her work on the shamelessly manipulative TV soap opera “This Is Us” –and a first-time theater composer, Ingrid Michaelson, arguably best known for the slew of songs that featured on the TV soap opera “Grey’s Anatomy” — I thought this musical version might aggressively aim for the tear ducts from start to finish.

‘The Notebook’

For the unfamiliar, “The Notebook” tells the story of Allie and Noah, each played here by three different performers to represent the characters — as the teenagers Younger Allie and Younger Noah (Jordan Tyson and John Cardoza); in their late 20s as Middle Allie and Middle Noah (Joy Woods and Ryan Vasquez); and as Older Allie and Older Noah, elderly inhabitants of a nursing home (Maryann Plunkett and, at opening night, Jerome Harmann-Hardeman understudying for John Beasley).

The nursing home setting forms the frame, with Noah reading to Alzheimer’s patient Allie every day from the titular notebook that tells their own story, hoping for flashes that Allie remembers.The younger performers then play that history out, with the differently aged versions of the characters often onstage simultaneously.

Taking this time-spanning romance of a love that overcomes barriers of class differences, parental resistance, long-term separation, competing relationships, and even severe dementia, and setting it all to music on a big stage certainly runs the risk of going really sappy, really fast.

Older Allie (Maryann Plunkett, from left), Middle Allie (Joy Woods), and Younger Allie (Jordan Tyson) are shown in a scene from the stage musical adaptation of “The Notebook” at Chicago Shakespeare Theater.

Liz Lauren

But what we see at Chicago Shakespeare is a pre-Broadway production that is not just safe for the skeptical. It’s a significant leap in artistic quality over its sources, which it respects, while also providing a clear, resonant, and unique voice of its own.

Brunstetter (who has also written well-respected plays like “The Cake”) and Michaelson (the very model of an indie singer-songwriter) adapt — in the best sense of the word — “The Notebook” into what feels like a deeply personal expression.

The book and score blend together so seamlessly that you can’t always tell them apart, and rather than amping this tale up to the larger-than-life, they go the opposite direction, making this more of a chamber musical about ordinary humans that also works, under the direction of Michael Greif and Schele Williams. They are assisted by an ace design team, at the Broadway scale, with mostly simple flourishes but also an impressive onstage rainstorm.

Younger Noah (John Cardoza, from left), Older Noah (John Beasley) and Middle Noah (Ryan Vasquez) in “The Notebook.”

Liz Lauren

Michaelson’s songs are just beautiful, her lyrics poetic and specific and only seemingly simple, bringing us instantly, for example, into Allie’s feelings when she sees Noah on the front page of a newspaper after a decade apart: “What happens to a person who forgets how to breathe?/ Who forgets who she is/ Who forgets where she is…”

With every solo and duet, every cast member feels emotionally connected to the moment with every word and note.It helps too, of course, that they are stellar singers.

There are so many extraordinarily smart choices here that I can’t even list them.But take, for example, the challenge of a character with Alzheimer’s, played with wondrous exactitude by Plunkett, in a romantic musical.How can she sing about her confusion when anything she’d sing would be too articulate to convey confusion?The brilliant choice:have her younger selves sing it for her: “Is it time for dinner/ Is it time for forever/ I didn’t know the last time I’d leave the house/ Was the last time I’d leave the house.”

That song, “I Wanna Go Back,” is so poignant, and also so restrained, that it should be studied carefully for the way Michaelson differentiates sentiment and sentimentality, a quality this entire show excels at.

And kudos to Greif and Williams for the cross-racial casting choices even with the same character at different ages.Once we’re settled comfortably into the theatrical device, it becomes an underlying expression of the universality of this specific work.

That choice, as well as the contemporary sound and a gentle updating of the time periods, makes “The Notebook” aesthetically very current and fresh.

And likely, hopefully, very lasting.

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Top moments of 2022 for Chicago Cubs

We’re looking back at some of the most memorable moments from the Chicago Cubs 2022 campaign.

MLB’s regular season has come to an end. The Chicago Cubs have played their final game until next Spring Training. Many fans are already looking toward next season, but it’s important to appreciate some of the memorable moments of 2022. Many would consider this season a disappointment, and by most metrics, it probably was. At the end of the day, the team performed about how they were expected to. Many projections and betting lines had the Cubs winning around 75 games before the season. Ultimately, they wrapped up their season with a record of 74-88.

Although this season wasn’t one that fans dream of, there were definitely several positive moments and takeaways that fans should appreciate.

Christopher Morel’s debut and on-base streak

Fans won’t soon forget rookie Christopher Morel’s debut back in May. Morel sent a home run onto Waveland in his first major league at-bat.

The Friendly Confines can’t contain Christopher Morel. https://t.co/GUh9loc1jo

Morel broke onto the scene with this home run, but he didn’t stop there. The Cubs rookie got on base in 22 straight games to start his career. According to Jesse Rogers, this hasn’t been accomplished since 2003.

Ian Happ and Willson Contreras rep the Cubs at the All-Star Game

A lot of noise surrounded Ian Happ and Willson Contreras in the first half. As the trade deadline got closer, that noise seemed to become louder. Happ and Contreras were recognized as All-Stars for 2022 and respesented the Cubs in Los Angeles. Around the same time, it seemed these two players were nearing the end of their time with the Chicago Cubs.

One of the “bigger-than-baseball” moments of the MLB season came when Willson Contreras and his brother William represented the National League together as All-Stars.

Willson Contreras (C) and William Contreras (DH) will be the first brothers to start the All-Star Game for the same league (NL) in the same year for the first time since Roberto Alomar and Sandy Alomar Jr. did it in 1992.
H/T @MLB https://t.co/RGsxwGbEU4

The Cubs at the Trade Deadline

Many fans were shocked to find out that the Cubs had not dealt either Happ or Contreras at the trade deadline. Fans were happy to welcome back two of their longest-tenured players to Wrigley.

Wrigley faithful welcomes Ian Happ back in left field. 🙌🏼
(📸: @WatchMarquee) https://t.co/p8o48R2hNc

Thankfully, the Cubs were still able to pull off some promising trades. Perhaps the biggest trade they made was with the New York Yankees. The Cubs received pitching prospect Hayden Wesneski for the young reliever Scott Effross.

Hayden Wesneski’s debut

Naturally, the next big moment of this season came when newly acquired Hayden Wesneski made his debut. Cubs fans were introduced to Wesneski’s strikeout strut back in early September. In fact, they got to see it eight times that night when he pitched five innings of shut-out ball and recorded the win.

Hayden Wesneski’s big league debut:
5 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 8 K
and the W. https://t.co/CIwwpmufCk

Later that month, Wesneski even recorded an immaculate inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Pat Hughes Hall of Fame induction

One of the more memorable off-the-field moments came when longtime Cubs radio broadcaster, Pat Hughes, was informed that he will be inducted into the Chicago Cubs Hall of Fame. Back in late August, Hughes was surprised with this news on-air by Crane Kenney.

Pat Hughes finds out he’s being inducted into the Chicago Cubs Hall of Fame: https://t.co/gKgQoOdMLh

Pete Crow-Armstrong turns heads

After coming over from the New York Mets at last year’s deadline, prospect Pete Crow-Armstrong quickly shot to the top of the Cubs pipeline. Crow-Armstrong had no shortage of web gem plays out in centerfield for South Bend and Myrtle Beach. PCA also slashed .312/.376/.520 in 2022 with 16 homers and perhaps even more impressively, 10 triples.

ANOTHER DAY ANOTHER PETE-CROW ARMSTRONG HIGHLIGHT 🔥
(📸: @ballskwok) https://t.co/46W8iL6ZqQ

Cubs win at Field of Dreams

The Chicago Cubs faced the Cincinnati Reds in the 2nd annual Field of Dreams game. Unfortunately, the MLB isn’t expected to continue this yearly matchup for the time being. With Drew Smyly on the mound, the Cubs defeated the Reds 4-2 with a strong performance from Nick Madrigal and others.

Seiya Suzuki’s inside-the-park home run

One of the more chaotic plays of the 2022 season came on Independence Day in Milwaukee. Seiya Suzuki hit an inside-the-park homer off Josh Hader. Hader has been one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball the past few seasons, so this play came as a shock to everyone.

Go-ahead inside-the-park home run for Seiya Suzuki! https://t.co/hLqj5Idd4i

Cubs beat Pirates 21-0

Way back in April, the Chicago Cubs decimated the Pittsburgh Pirates. The score of 21-0 had several historical implications according to ESPN. Perhaps the craziest part about this onslaught from the Cubs was that they still managed to lose the series.

The Cubs’ 21-0 win over the Pirates ties the 3rd-largest shutout win in MLB’s modern era (since 1900). It’s the largest shutout victory in Cubs history. https://t.co/7q8SyrCeZz

Optimism for 2023

It’s important to take some positives away from this season. The Cubs starting pitchers were dominant in the second half, and young players like Nico Hoerner, Justin Steele, Christopher Morel, and others showed great promise. The Chicago Cubs currently have the 9th-ranked farm system. These reinforcements will be huge for this club that went 39-31 in the second half this year.

Marcus Stroman recently stated that the Cubs are just a few pieces away from competing, and many expect the Cubs to spend quite generously this offseason. Hopefully, when Spring Training begins, the team will have bolstered its roster in more ways than one.

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Three players the White Sox should look to trade this offseason

Three players that the Chicago White Sox should look into trading this upcoming offseason

The White Sox are headed towards arguably their most important offseason in the past decade, yes even more important than last year. After a disappointing year, the White Sox are now at a crossroad where a few key moves could either make them contenders again or give them a jump start toward mediocracy. Now, whether White Sox fans trust this front office to make the right choices or not, they are in position where they have assets they could trade to acquire quality players to can compliment the roster, key word here is compliment, remember that. Here’s three players the White Sox have that can be used as trade assets this offseason.

LF/1B Andrew Vaughn

The White Sox in the 2022 were not the best defensive team in the league, specifically their outfield play was subpar. Given injuries to various players the team scramble to fill the position with players like Andrew Vaughn. The 25 year old, natural first baseman, played a whopping 84 games in the outfield and posted a -26.7 defensive rating. Taking the defense aspect of Vaughn aside, he’s still a above average hitter in the league. He just happened to play on the same team as Jose Abreu and Gavin Sheets who are also first baseman. Posting a .271/.321/.429 slash line and an wRC+ of 113, the White Sox could use Vaughn to acquire a better defensive player that could fix their issues in the outfield.

Think of the trade where the White Sox dealt Carlos Lee for Scott Podsednik and Luis Vizcaino. Yes, on paper the Sox lost this deal in terms of talent but them acquiring Podsednik made the Sox a better defensive team and gave them a player that can get on base and create runs by playing “small ball.” This is a similar situation, Vaughn is a good hitter that can be great but you already have Gavin Sheets and Yasmani Grandal that take up that first baseman and DH spot. If the team also decides to bring back Jose Abreu, Vaughn can become flexible to get a player that can fix their defensive woes.

3B Yoan Moncada

When it comes to players taking a step back, Moncada fits the bill here. Coming off arguably his worst season of his career, the 27-year-old third baseman struggled to find his groove all season. Whether it was injuries or trying to get something going, Moncada posted a dismal .212/.273/.353 slash line and below league average wRC+ of 76. The Sox may be selling low here but a young third baseman that has potential that desperately needs a change in scenery could get the team a quality starter or a couple of promising players.

Its a 50/50 shot where there’s no wrong answer yet in whether the Sox should Moncada but should the right offer be presented at the table they should really consider moving him. Especially after a good two week run to end the season.

SP Lucas Giolito

The third option was a hard one, having bloated contracts that no team would want to acquire (Grandal, Lance Lynn) the most intriguing option here is Lucas Giolito. Amid a struggling season, the White Sox could decide to part ways with the 28-year-old former all-star. While the past season showed struggles the Sox could still sell high on Giolito just based on the potential alone. Depending on this option could dictate where the direction of the team goes, you can trade Giolito for pieces on the roster that can help, or acquire prospects that can provide a more balance future.

Thanks to the emergence of Dylan Cease, the Sox can make Giolito expendable for the right price of course but they can benefit from the fact that Giolito is still on a team friendly contract and has a potential comeback season in a new uniform. The other side of the coin is the Sox bet on Giolito to bounce back and have two quality starters in the front end of the rotation.

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Indigenous culture, Nnamdï’s Pancake Haus, Refuge, and more

Today kicks off the American Indian Center’s 69th Annual Chicago Powwow, which runs through Sunday (10/9). From 10 AM-6 PM each day, thousands will gather at Schiller Woods (events in Groves 12 and 13, entrance on Irving Park west of Cumberland) to share and reflect on Indigenous culture, preserving its heritage while contemplating its future. Expect art, food, vendors, and dancing—lots of dancing. There will be several dance contests throughout the weekend, as well as noncompetitive dance and musical performances. Tickets are $15 per day ($10 for children, seniors, and military personnel), or $35 for the weekend. Children five and under get in free. Group rates are available. Go to the center’s website for more information and a full schedule of events. (MC)

Indie music sensation Nnamdï is celebrating the release of his latest album in the most Nnamdï way possible: with a pancake party at House of Vans (113 N. Elizabeth). The pancake party—titled Nnamdï’s Pancake Haus—is an homage to the DIY venue he and his brother ran in their parents’ basement during the 2010s. Bands would play while the brothers served up pancakes. In this iteration, pancakes will be provided by Babycakes along with coffee by Dark Matter. In fact, Dark Matter is unveiling a special-edition Nnamdï blend: Please Have a Sip. At 7 PM, the night kicks off with a playback of Nnamdï’s new album followed by a round of musical chairs hosted by Nnamdï himself. Then Paper Mice perform, Ryan the Person DJs, and some sort of variety hour ensues (oooo!). This is free fun for all ages—but advance registration is required. (MC)

Theo Ubique Cabaret Theatre kicks off its season with the midwest premiere of Refuge by Satya Jnani Chávez and Andrew Rosendorf. The multidisciplinary bilingual musical piece (translation by Mari Meza-Burgos) uses magical realism in telling the story of a Honduran girl making the treacherous border crossing into Texas. Chávez and Valen-Marie Santos codirect, and Adolfo Romero created the original puppet designs in the show. The show opens in previews tonight at 7:30 PM at the company’s Howard Street Theatre (721 Howard, Evanston) and continues through 11/13, Thu-Sat 7:30 PM, Sun 6 PM. Tickets are $40 during previews, $55-$60 during the regular run ($5 discount for seniors). A three-course meal from Taco Diablo can be added on for $30, but must be ordered at time of ticket purchase. For reservations, visit theo-u.com. (KR)

Another music-filled Friday is possible as the city is filled with sound choices this weekend. After you’ve downloaded some of our recommended choices on Bandcamp (today is a Bandcamp Friday, which means that until midnight the streaming platform gives back sales revenue directly to the artists and record labels that use the service), consider these concerts for tonight . . .

In Logan Square, Music Fest Chicago seeks to highlight independent musicians with a series of shows throughout the weekend at Cafe Mustache (2313 N. Milwaukee), Easy Does It (2354 N. Milwaukee), and Cole’s Bar (2338 N. Milwaukee). All events are open to those 21+, and you can purchase an all-access pass at the Cole’s website. Daily schedules are available at the Music Fest Chicago Instagram; tonight’s highlights include Cordoba (8 PM at Cole’s), E. Woods (8:20 PM at Easy Does It), the Lipschitz (8:50 PM at Cole’s), Sacha Mullin (9 PM at Cafe Mustache), and Brittney Carter (11:45 PM at Cole’s).

More options: the World Music Festival continues its ten-day run tonight with a free rock, ska, and marimba-infused show from Son Rompe Pera, Malafacha, and DJ Kinky P (9 PM at Reggies Rock Club, 2105 S. State, open to those 18+). Check out more about the bands at our World Music Festival guide, where you can also preview what’s on tap for Saturday and Sunday. The Claudettes celebrate the release of their latest album, The Claudettes Go Out!, by going out and playing a show at the Hideout tonight (9:30 PM, 1354 W. Wabansia, 21+); tickets are available here. And Rhea the Second continues a residency at Golden Dagger (2447 N. Halsted) tonight. She’ll be joined by S-O-S, Christian JaLon, and DJ Legit (8 PM, open to 21+). (SCJ)

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Farewell to Eclipse and Underscore

Covering theater in Chicago is sometimes about writing valedictions for companies that have decided it’s time to fold up the tent. In the past couple of weeks, two such announcements came through. Underscore Theatre announced in late September that they were closing permanently. (During the pandemic, the company gave up their storefront rental space at Clark and Montrose.) Known primarily for new musicals, such as 2019’s charming The Ballad of Lefty & Crabbe (by Brian Huther, Ben Auxier, and Seth Macchi), the company’s last full production was Annabelle Lee Revak’s Notes & Letters in May at the Richard Christiansen Theater at Victory Gardens Biograph—one of an impressive 16 world premieres Underscore launched during their 11-year history. 

The company was also lauded for its annual Chicago Musical Theatre Festival, the last of which was held in February 2020, just ahead of the COVID-19 shutdown. That will live on under the aegis of Kokandy Productions

In a press release announcing the closure, Underscore’s founding artistic director and board member Alex Higgin-Houser said, “While Underscore is closing its doors, our mission isn’t over. When we founded this company over a decade ago, it was with the goal of making Chicago a hub for new musicals. We’re thrilled Kokandy Productions is committed to carrying the torch of new musicals into the future by taking the reins of the Chicago Musical Theatre Festival.” 

Founding executive director and board vice president Laura Stratford noted in the press announcement that the company had done a long-term planning process during the shutdown, and determined that “to maintain a sustainable future, our model would need to undergo a dramatic shift, especially as the community continues to recover from the ongoing impact of COVID-19. Artistic Director Whitney Rhodes and Executive Director J. Sebastian Fabál recognized that what would be required to make these changes was beyond the capacity and resources of what a part-time role could allow, and both made the difficult decision to step down.” At that point, the board decided that leaving the festival in other hands and shutting down was the wisest choice.

Eclipse Theatre Company announced Monday that they were closing after 28 seasons as a stalwart of the non-Equity scene. Founded in 1992, the company originally focused on new work, much of it by playwright Stephen Serpas and featuring actors (mostly graduates from DePaul’s Theatre School) known as “the Dog Boys.” (The late legendary casting director Jane Alderman was an early champion of the company.)

But beginning in 1997, the company shifted its mission to mirror that of New York’s Signature Theatre, which focuses on one playwright for an entire season (both older and newer works). The first playwright presented under the new model was French surrealist Jean Cocteau; the last was contemporary American writer Christopher Durang. (They had announced a season of work by England’s Caryl Churchill for 2020, but that obviously never happened.) In between, there were seasons dedicated to canonical American writers such as Eugene O’Neill, Arthur Miller, and Neil Simon, as well as contemporary playwrights such as Lynn Nottage, Kia Corthron, and Pearl Cleage.

The company was itinerant for most of its history. They had a storefront space in Bucktown early on, but that was gutted by fire in 1998. Most recently, they had been producing at the Athenaeum Theatre.

Steve Scott, a longtime Eclipse ensemble member—and a producer for 37 years at the Goodman—talked to me earlier this week about the decision to close down. Scott joined Eclipse right around the time the “one playwright, one season” model took effect. For the last few years, he was also part of the committee of five that selected the playwrights and plays for the season. 

Though he acknowledges that the COVID shutdown had an impact on the decision, Scott notes, “It was getting harder to [continue] even before then. You know, these companies have lots of really young people who want to become part of the company. And as those young people age and get lives, they decide that they don’t necessarily want to work for nothing. It was getting harder to keep a core company together. We were starting to have some issues, I think even before COVID. But COVID was such a hard time for so many of the company members. They really couldn’t focus on doing anything with Eclipse. I mean, we proposed several online projects, but people were too busy trying to live, you know?”

Scott adds, “It was just a whole number of events, and we finally said, ‘Let’s go out on a high note rather than kind of doing some half-ass production just to keep our name going.ʼ” 

Having a model built around a different playwright every season meant that ensemble members might not be appropriate to cast that year. I remember talking to then-artistic director Anish Jethmalani, when the company was producing a season of works by Black American writer Cleage in 2007. Jethmalani acknowledged that they didn’t have enough Black members of the ensemble to cast in the shows, and so a lot of the Eclipse actors wouldn’t be used that season. 

Scott says, “Actors join the company because they want to act and they will build sets and do props too. But if they can’t act for a year or two, then they kind of start losing interest. We were constantly bringing new people into the company, but we were also kind of losing people through attrition or because they went on to bigger and better things. So that was a challenge, especially in the last ten years, I think, to kind of keep the company together and to augment the company as we needed to do the writers that we wanted to do.”

Admirably, the seasons Eclipse put together weren’t just “greatest hits” packages. For example, their 2014 Nottage season did include her Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Ruined and her acclaimed play, Intimate Apparel, but also a rarely produced early play, Mud, River, Stone. The Cleage season included 2 by Pearl, a pair of mostly unknown one-acts (Hospice and Late Bus to Mecca). The 2017 Corthron season featured the world premiere of Megastasis.

“We knew a lot of people had no idea who [Kia Corthron] was,” Scott says. “But she was a playwright that a lot of people in the company felt passionate about. So some of the star playwrights probably sold better, but some of the lesser-known playwrights I think were kind of dear to our heart in many ways.”

“The idea was always to do some of their signature works, but also do some of their much lesser known works so that audiences could have a feel for the body of their work and what their work accomplished,” notes Scott. “And we augmented that with offstage programs, with discussions with playwrights—if they were still around, and we could get them to come to Chicago—with readings of lesser-known plays. As much as a small non-Equity company can do, it was kind of an immersive experience into the world of that playwright.”

Eclipse also presented the annual Corona Award to an artist in the community. Though devised as an add-on for their annual benefit, Scott notes that it became a way of “honoring people, a lot of whom haven’t been honored by anybody else for their work, especially their work with non-Equity theaters and the non-Equity community. But it was a nice way of honoring people and getting friends of those people to know more about Eclipse, which helped a great deal. The very last event we did was the Corona Awards in March of 2020. I mean it was right at the start of the week that everything shut down. And one of my proudest moments in my entire career was being able to honor Mary Ann Thebus, who had been overlooked by the Jeff Awards, by everybody else, and giving her a real thrill.” (Thebus died in February of this year. She received several Jeff nominations, but never won.)

Scott notes that the one playwright, one season idea is up for grabs for any other company that may want to pick up that torch. “Hopefully somebody will come along and want to do it again.”

Black Theater Alliance Awards and a special Jeff for Chuck Smith

This past Tuesday, the Black Theater Alliance/Ira Aldridge Awards were presented at Columbia College Chicago. (Aldridge was a 19th-century American-born actor, widely regarded as the first Black American tragedian, who spent much of his career in England.)

Best production was Congo Square’s What to Send Up When It Goes Down, which just opened in a remount at Lookingglass Theatre last week. Invictus Theatre won best ensemble for their production of Ruined. Tyla Abercrumbie’s Relentless with TimeLine Theatre won best new writing of a play, and Michelle Bester’s Grandma’s Jukeboxat Black Ensemble won best new writing of a musical. Other companies and productions honored included Shattered Globe’s Rasheeda Speakingfor Deanna Reed-Foster’s performance; Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre’s Homefor Lewon Johnson’s acting; and the now-defunct House Theatre of Chicago for William Anthony Sebastian Rose II’s performance in their final production, The Tragedy of King Christophe.

The BTAAs were established by Columbia College alum Vincent Williams in 1995. As longtime Reader contributor and Columbia College faculty member Albert Williams (no relation) notes for the college’s “Green Room” blog, several of this year’s recipients (including Abercrumbie, who is also known for her acting work on the Showtime series The Chi) have Columbia College connections. 

Chuck Smith Courtesy the Jeff Awards

The Jeff Awards will be presented on October 17 at Drury Lane Theatre in suburban Oakbrook Terrace. But ahead of the ceremony, the committee announced that longtime Chicago director Chuck Smith will receive a lifetime achievement award. Smith, who cofounded the seminal Chicago Theater Company at the Parkway Community Center on the south side in 1984 (with an emphasis on work by Black writers and artists) and was a resident director at the Goodman for many years, also facilitated the annual Theodore Ward Prize for best new play by a Black writer, administered through Columbia College, for 20 years. (Ward, whose 1938 play Big White Fog was an early groundbreaking work in Chicago, was a mentor and teacher for Smith.)

Most recently, Smith directed a remount of August Wilson’s Gem of the Oceanat the Goodman this past winter. 

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Indigenous culture, Nnamdï’s Pancake Haus, Refuge, and moreMicco Caporale, Salem Collo-Julin and Kerry Reidon October 7, 2022 at 4:01 pm

Today kicks off the American Indian Center’s 69th Annual Chicago Powwow, which runs through Sunday (10/9). From 10 AM-6 PM each day, thousands will gather at Schiller Woods (events in Groves 12 and 13, entrance on Irving Park west of Cumberland) to share and reflect on Indigenous culture, preserving its heritage while contemplating its future. Expect art, food, vendors, and dancing—lots of dancing. There will be several dance contests throughout the weekend, as well as noncompetitive dance and musical performances. Tickets are $15 per day ($10 for children, seniors, and military personnel), or $35 for the weekend. Children five and under get in free. Group rates are available. Go to the center’s website for more information and a full schedule of events. (MC)

Indie music sensation Nnamdï is celebrating the release of his latest album in the most Nnamdï way possible: with a pancake party at House of Vans (113 N. Elizabeth). The pancake party—titled Nnamdï’s Pancake Haus—is an homage to the DIY venue he and his brother ran in their parents’ basement during the 2010s. Bands would play while the brothers served up pancakes. In this iteration, pancakes will be provided by Babycakes along with coffee by Dark Matter. In fact, Dark Matter is unveiling a special-edition Nnamdï blend: Please Have a Sip. At 7 PM, the night kicks off with a playback of Nnamdï’s new album followed by a round of musical chairs hosted by Nnamdï himself. Then Paper Mice perform, Ryan the Person DJs, and some sort of variety hour ensues (oooo!). This is free fun for all ages—but advance registration is required. (MC)

Theo Ubique Cabaret Theatre kicks off its season with the midwest premiere of Refuge by Satya Jnani Chávez and Andrew Rosendorf. The multidisciplinary bilingual musical piece (translation by Mari Meza-Burgos) uses magical realism in telling the story of a Honduran girl making the treacherous border crossing into Texas. Chávez and Valen-Marie Santos codirect, and Adolfo Romero created the original puppet designs in the show. The show opens in previews tonight at 7:30 PM at the company’s Howard Street Theatre (721 Howard, Evanston) and continues through 11/13, Thu-Sat 7:30 PM, Sun 6 PM. Tickets are $40 during previews, $55-$60 during the regular run ($5 discount for seniors). A three-course meal from Taco Diablo can be added on for $30, but must be ordered at time of ticket purchase. For reservations, visit theo-u.com. (KR)

Another music-filled Friday is possible as the city is filled with sound choices this weekend. After you’ve downloaded some of our recommended choices on Bandcamp (today is a Bandcamp Friday, which means that until midnight the streaming platform gives back sales revenue directly to the artists and record labels that use the service), consider these concerts for tonight . . .

In Logan Square, Music Fest Chicago seeks to highlight independent musicians with a series of shows throughout the weekend at Cafe Mustache (2313 N. Milwaukee), Easy Does It (2354 N. Milwaukee), and Cole’s Bar (2338 N. Milwaukee). All events are open to those 21+, and you can purchase an all-access pass at the Cole’s website. Daily schedules are available at the Music Fest Chicago Instagram; tonight’s highlights include Cordoba (8 PM at Cole’s), E. Woods (8:20 PM at Easy Does It), the Lipschitz (8:50 PM at Cole’s), Sacha Mullin (9 PM at Cafe Mustache), and Brittney Carter (11:45 PM at Cole’s).

More options: the World Music Festival continues its ten-day run tonight with a free rock, ska, and marimba-infused show from Son Rompe Pera, Malafacha, and DJ Kinky P (9 PM at Reggies Rock Club, 2105 S. State, open to those 18+). Check out more about the bands at our World Music Festival guide, where you can also preview what’s on tap for Saturday and Sunday. The Claudettes celebrate the release of their latest album, The Claudettes Go Out!, by going out and playing a show at the Hideout tonight (9:30 PM, 1354 W. Wabansia, 21+); tickets are available here. And Rhea the Second continues a residency at Golden Dagger (2447 N. Halsted) tonight. She’ll be joined by S-O-S, Christian JaLon, and DJ Legit (8 PM, open to 21+). (SCJ)

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Indigenous culture, Nnamdï’s Pancake Haus, Refuge, and moreMicco Caporale, Salem Collo-Julin and Kerry Reidon October 7, 2022 at 4:01 pm Read More »

Farewell to Eclipse and UnderscoreKerry Reidon October 7, 2022 at 4:32 pm

Covering theater in Chicago is sometimes about writing valedictions for companies that have decided it’s time to fold up the tent. In the past couple of weeks, two such announcements came through. Underscore Theatre announced in late September that they were closing permanently. (During the pandemic, the company gave up their storefront rental space at Clark and Montrose.) Known primarily for new musicals, such as 2019’s charming The Ballad of Lefty & Crabbe (by Brian Huther, Ben Auxier, and Seth Macchi), the company’s last full production was Annabelle Lee Revak’s Notes & Letters in May at the Richard Christiansen Theater at Victory Gardens Biograph—one of an impressive 16 world premieres Underscore launched during their 11-year history. 

The company was also lauded for its annual Chicago Musical Theatre Festival, the last of which was held in February 2020, just ahead of the COVID-19 shutdown. That will live on under the aegis of Kokandy Productions

In a press release announcing the closure, Underscore’s founding artistic director and board member Alex Higgin-Houser said, “While Underscore is closing its doors, our mission isn’t over. When we founded this company over a decade ago, it was with the goal of making Chicago a hub for new musicals. We’re thrilled Kokandy Productions is committed to carrying the torch of new musicals into the future by taking the reins of the Chicago Musical Theatre Festival.” 

Founding executive director and board vice president Laura Stratford noted in the press announcement that the company had done a long-term planning process during the shutdown, and determined that “to maintain a sustainable future, our model would need to undergo a dramatic shift, especially as the community continues to recover from the ongoing impact of COVID-19. Artistic Director Whitney Rhodes and Executive Director J. Sebastian Fabál recognized that what would be required to make these changes was beyond the capacity and resources of what a part-time role could allow, and both made the difficult decision to step down.” At that point, the board decided that leaving the festival in other hands and shutting down was the wisest choice.

Eclipse Theatre Company announced Monday that they were closing after 28 seasons as a stalwart of the non-Equity scene. Founded in 1992, the company originally focused on new work, much of it by playwright Stephen Serpas and featuring actors (mostly graduates from DePaul’s Theatre School) known as “the Dog Boys.” (The late legendary casting director Jane Alderman was an early champion of the company.)

But beginning in 1997, the company shifted its mission to mirror that of New York’s Signature Theatre, which focuses on one playwright for an entire season (both older and newer works). The first playwright presented under the new model was French surrealist Jean Cocteau; the last was contemporary American writer Christopher Durang. (They had announced a season of work by England’s Caryl Churchill for 2020, but that obviously never happened.) In between, there were seasons dedicated to canonical American writers such as Eugene O’Neill, Arthur Miller, and Neil Simon, as well as contemporary playwrights such as Lynn Nottage, Kia Corthron, and Pearl Cleage.

The company was itinerant for most of its history. They had a storefront space in Bucktown early on, but that was gutted by fire in 1998. Most recently, they had been producing at the Athenaeum Theatre.

Steve Scott, a longtime Eclipse ensemble member—and a producer for 37 years at the Goodman—talked to me earlier this week about the decision to close down. Scott joined Eclipse right around the time the “one playwright, one season” model took effect. For the last few years, he was also part of the committee of five that selected the playwrights and plays for the season. 

Though he acknowledges that the COVID shutdown had an impact on the decision, Scott notes, “It was getting harder to [continue] even before then. You know, these companies have lots of really young people who want to become part of the company. And as those young people age and get lives, they decide that they don’t necessarily want to work for nothing. It was getting harder to keep a core company together. We were starting to have some issues, I think even before COVID. But COVID was such a hard time for so many of the company members. They really couldn’t focus on doing anything with Eclipse. I mean, we proposed several online projects, but people were too busy trying to live, you know?”

Scott adds, “It was just a whole number of events, and we finally said, ‘Let’s go out on a high note rather than kind of doing some half-ass production just to keep our name going.ʼ” 

Having a model built around a different playwright every season meant that ensemble members might not be appropriate to cast that year. I remember talking to then-artistic director Anish Jethmalani, when the company was producing a season of works by Black American writer Cleage in 2007. Jethmalani acknowledged that they didn’t have enough Black members of the ensemble to cast in the shows, and so a lot of the Eclipse actors wouldn’t be used that season. 

Scott says, “Actors join the company because they want to act and they will build sets and do props too. But if they can’t act for a year or two, then they kind of start losing interest. We were constantly bringing new people into the company, but we were also kind of losing people through attrition or because they went on to bigger and better things. So that was a challenge, especially in the last ten years, I think, to kind of keep the company together and to augment the company as we needed to do the writers that we wanted to do.”

Admirably, the seasons Eclipse put together weren’t just “greatest hits” packages. For example, their 2014 Nottage season did include her Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Ruined and her acclaimed play, Intimate Apparel, but also a rarely produced early play, Mud, River, Stone. The Cleage season included 2 by Pearl, a pair of mostly unknown one-acts (Hospice and Late Bus to Mecca). The 2017 Corthron season featured the world premiere of Megastasis.

“We knew a lot of people had no idea who [Kia Corthron] was,” Scott says. “But she was a playwright that a lot of people in the company felt passionate about. So some of the star playwrights probably sold better, but some of the lesser-known playwrights I think were kind of dear to our heart in many ways.”

“The idea was always to do some of their signature works, but also do some of their much lesser known works so that audiences could have a feel for the body of their work and what their work accomplished,” notes Scott. “And we augmented that with offstage programs, with discussions with playwrights—if they were still around, and we could get them to come to Chicago—with readings of lesser-known plays. As much as a small non-Equity company can do, it was kind of an immersive experience into the world of that playwright.”

Eclipse also presented the annual Corona Award to an artist in the community. Though devised as an add-on for their annual benefit, Scott notes that it became a way of “honoring people, a lot of whom haven’t been honored by anybody else for their work, especially their work with non-Equity theaters and the non-Equity community. But it was a nice way of honoring people and getting friends of those people to know more about Eclipse, which helped a great deal. The very last event we did was the Corona Awards in March of 2020. I mean it was right at the start of the week that everything shut down. And one of my proudest moments in my entire career was being able to honor Mary Ann Thebus, who had been overlooked by the Jeff Awards, by everybody else, and giving her a real thrill.” (Thebus died in February of this year. She received several Jeff nominations, but never won.)

Scott notes that the one playwright, one season idea is up for grabs for any other company that may want to pick up that torch. “Hopefully somebody will come along and want to do it again.”

Black Theater Alliance Awards and a special Jeff for Chuck Smith

This past Tuesday, the Black Theater Alliance/Ira Aldridge Awards were presented at Columbia College Chicago. (Aldridge was a 19th-century American-born actor, widely regarded as the first Black American tragedian, who spent much of his career in England.)

Best production was Congo Square’s What to Send Up When It Goes Down, which just opened in a remount at Lookingglass Theatre last week. Invictus Theatre won best ensemble for their production of Ruined. Tyla Abercrumbie’s Relentless with TimeLine Theatre won best new writing of a play, and Michelle Bester’s Grandma’s Jukeboxat Black Ensemble won best new writing of a musical. Other companies and productions honored included Shattered Globe’s Rasheeda Speakingfor Deanna Reed-Foster’s performance; Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre’s Homefor Lewon Johnson’s acting; and the now-defunct House Theatre of Chicago for William Anthony Sebastian Rose II’s performance in their final production, The Tragedy of King Christophe.

The BTAAs were established by Columbia College alum Vincent Williams in 1995. As longtime Reader contributor and Columbia College faculty member Albert Williams (no relation) notes for the college’s “Green Room” blog, several of this year’s recipients (including Abercrumbie, who is also known for her acting work on the Showtime series The Chi) have Columbia College connections. 

Chuck Smith Courtesy the Jeff Awards

The Jeff Awards will be presented on October 17 at Drury Lane Theatre in suburban Oakbrook Terrace. But ahead of the ceremony, the committee announced that longtime Chicago director Chuck Smith will receive a lifetime achievement award. Smith, who cofounded the seminal Chicago Theater Company at the Parkway Community Center on the south side in 1984 (with an emphasis on work by Black writers and artists) and was a resident director at the Goodman for many years, also facilitated the annual Theodore Ward Prize for best new play by a Black writer, administered through Columbia College, for 20 years. (Ward, whose 1938 play Big White Fog was an early groundbreaking work in Chicago, was a mentor and teacher for Smith.)

Most recently, Smith directed a remount of August Wilson’s Gem of the Oceanat the Goodman this past winter. 

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Farewell to Eclipse and UnderscoreKerry Reidon October 7, 2022 at 4:32 pm Read More »