2017-01-22

Chi, IL LIVE Shows On Our Radar:

ChiIL Mama's reviews from 3 puppet shows Friday, 2 recommended that we're going to see today (Sunday 1/22), and more upcoming shows we're catching this week. New show times are being added throughout the fest, if possible, when shows sell out, so check back early and often.

Updated listings are HERE.





REVIEWS:

It was truly a treat to see Cendres at Victory Gardens on Friday night at the press kick off for the 2017 Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival. This visually stunning, wordless wonder adeptly uses a giant wolf, raging fires, an alcoholic with writers block and a metalhead arsonist's exploits to explore human nature and addiction. This production incorporates small puppets, multimedia screen work, shadow puppets, human actors, life sized puppets and humans manipulated as puppets. Highly recommended.

Blair Thomas & Co. presents France's

Plexus Polaire performing Cendres (Ashes)

at the Victory Gardens Začek McVey Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago

Friday through Sunday, January 20-22 at 7 p.m.

Tickets: $35; $25 student/senior

Run time: 60 minutes

Video

Cendres (Ashes) is an emotional thriller straddling fiction and reality, equally remarkable and disturbing. Based on the book by Gaute Heivoll, the production tells the true story of a Norwegian arsonist. When Heivoll compares this event to his own life, ambiguous and subtle parallels emerge. Behind multiple house fires lies an intimate narrative, one that examines the mad fire at the bottom of every human being.

Since 2008, Yngvild Aspeli, Norwegian director of Plexus Polaire, meets in her shows a true team in confidence and complicity dedicated to the artistic creation. Through images and words, sounds and gestures, imagination and substance, Plexus Polaire gives life to the most deeply buried feelings.



Kafka fans will enjoy this quirky production despite it's dark subject matter including beatings, abuse, and depression. This production incorporates human actors, life sized puppets, small box puppets, wacky contraptions and Kafka's diary. Recommended.

Blair Thomas & Co. presents Michael Montenegro in

Kick the Klown Presents a Kakafination of Kafka

at the Victory Gardens Richard Christiansen Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago

Thursday through Saturday, January 19-21 at 9 p.m., Sunday, January 22 at 2 p.m.

Tickets: $25; $20 student/sennior

Run time: 60 minutes

Video

Utilizing an astonishing variety of puppetry and mask techniques, Kick (an unfortunately named "klown") performs a series of pieces inspired by the writings of the hysterically lugubrious Franz Kafka. Between these darkly comic works, Kick also explores his own father issues through interactions with a huge shoe.

This is the second collaboration between Evanston-based master puppeteer Michael Montenegro and Neo-Futurist director and writer Greg Allen who lovingly refer to themselves as "Dim Bulb and The Bastard."

Montenegro is artistic director of Theatre Zarko which has produced numerous original puppet theater works including He Who, Haff (The Man), Sublime Beauty of Hands, Klown Kantos and Iktu Blas. Over the past 20 years, Montenegro has developed a unique style of puppet and mask theater in the Chicago community as a solo artist and a collaborator. His projects include commissions by the Lookingglass Theatre Company for Argonautica, directed by Mary Zimmerman; by Next Theatre for The War With the Newts and The Long Christmas Ride Home; and by Writers' Theatre for The Puppetmaster of Lodz, which garnered a Jeff Award for puppet design. His show Drunken Half-Angel at the 2015 Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival was a sold-out success. sacredembellishments.com

Missing Links? Don't. Highly recommended! Embrace your inner nasty and get out and see this amazing showcase. This 11pm late night cabaret is running every Friday and Saturday of the fest. Each night is a different lineup and includes local Chicago talent and international performers with excerpts of their longer festival entries. We went Friday and caught a stellar array of acts.

What we love: collectible buttons for tickets, seats AND floor pillows, Links Hall lobby bar for socializing before and/or after the show, and a chance to catch lots world class talent in one venue at a time that doesn't conflict with other shows.

Links Hall and Rough House present

Nasty, Brutish & Short: A Puppet Cabaret

at Links Hall, Studio B, 3111 N. Western Ave., Chicago

Friday and Saturday, January 20 and 21 and January 27 and 28 at 11 p.m.

Run time: 1hour 20 minutes

Tickets: $10; $8 student/senior

Family friendly? No

Hit Links Hall for late night cabarets featuring short works by international festival artists, regional puppeteers and local talent. End your evening with a tasty selection of the raucous, raunchy, dark, sassy, sad and hilarious!

The program provides a late-night hang out spot for the whole festival, an opportunity for out-of-town talent to bring shorter works, and a space for local artists. Each show features at least two mainstage festival artists bringing secondary short works, and at least two Nasty, Brutish & Short contributors.

We caught a little excerpt of this show during Friday's Nasty, Brutish & Short: A Puppet Cabaret and it's hilarious! Who would have though garbage bags full of bags could have SO much personality?! Check it out.

Adventure Stage Chicago presents Théâtre Puzzle performing

Plastique(Plastic)

at Adventure Stage Chicago, 1012 N. Noble St., Chicago

Saturday and Sunday, January 21 and 22 at 3 p.m.

Monday, January 23, 7 p.m. - Industry Night

Tickets: $17; $12 ages 14 and under; $10 with industry ID on January 22

Run time: 40 minutes

Family friendly

Video

What's more surprising than a plastic-bag-world, where funny and colorful creatures appear and transform? They fill up, they empty out, they fly, they get bored, and they resemble us a little bit. With Plastique, Théâtre Puzzle brings to Adventure Stage a multicolored performance with unusual puppets, humor and unexpected situations.

On Saturday, January 21 at 4:30 p.m., join Théâtre Puzzle and ASC for an exclusive puppetry workshop and explore the magic of found objects as dramatic tools. Tickets are $17 for adults and youth. Limited space available. Reserve in advance at adventurestage.org or call (773) 342-4141.

Created in Bulgaria and established in Montreal since 2004, Théâtre Puzzle presents a unique style by mixing various genres, traditional and contemporary. Combining dramatic theater, object theater, and puppetry, Théâtre Puzzle is distinguished by the colored amalgam of styles and the variety of means of expression it offers. Granting the audience the freedom to interpret the unspoken and the free association of ideas, allowing them to feel what is not explicitly told, this is the artistic peculiarity of the company. puzzletheatre.com

UPCOMING:

ChiIL Mama's Chi, IL Picks List. We'll be out to catch all of the following puppet fest presentations this week. Check back soon for our full reviews.

This afternoon, ChiIL Mama is elated to be catching the final presentation of the highly acclaimed Silencio Blanco at the MCA Stage-Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. We had the great pleasure of catching an excerpt in Nasty, Brutish and Short, Links Hall's late night showcase at 11pm last Friday.

MCA Stage-Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago presents

Silencio Blanco,

via Santiago, Chile, performing Chiflón el Silencio del Carbón (Chiflón Silence of the Coal)

at the MCA Chicago Edlis Neeson Theatre, 220 E. Chicago Ave., Chicago

January 19-22: Thursday through Saturday at 7:30 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.

Tickets: $30

Run time: 50 minutes

Video

A shaft collapses. A young miner, to keep working, must travel to Chiflón del Diablo, one of the most dangerous mines in Chile. Using white marionettes constructed of newspaper, this stunning North American debut ominously builds the violence of the global economy and affects a montage of sensations that are indisputably human. It is performed in silence. Based in part on the story of El Chiflón del Diablo by distinguished Chilean author Baldomero Lillo, and devised during trips to the mining town of Lota, Chiflón, El Silencio del Carbón reflects a deep creative process. By not using text or dialogue Chiflón connects with a broad public, with no cultural, social or age limit.

Silencio Blanco is a collective of seven puppeteers based in Santiago, Chile. The co-founders, Santiago Tobar and Dominga Gutiérrez, work with white marionettes constructed with a newspaper base. In their montage, human sensations are represented through everyday situations and familiar gesture movements. Bunraku and marionette puppeteers transmit the human movement through the puppet, provoking illusion and suspended belief so that it appears as if even the heartbeat of the characters can be heard. silencioblanco.cl/inicio

This evening, ChiIL Mama and the whole family are beyond excited to be catching the press opening of Diamond Dogs at The House Theatre. This one will be running for a while, beyond the puppet fest. We're long time fans of House Theatre's creative collaborations and stunning sci-fi and fantasy originals and adaptations.

The House Theatre of Chicago presents Diamond Dogs

at the Chopin Theatre, 1543 W. Division St., Chicago

January 19-22 and January 26-29: Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 7 p.m.

Tickets: $15-$30

Run time: 2 hours

Diamond Dogs is a classic deadly-maze story set in Alastair Reynolds's Revelation Space Universe. Follow a future team of humans and transhumans as they investigate a mysterious alien tower, bent on brutally punishing all intruders. Body modification is the norm in the 26th century, and award-winning puppet designer Mary Robinette Kowal articulates and re-shapes actors' human forms into powerful mechanized players battling for their lives. Blood will spill.

The House is Chicago's premier home for intimate, original works of epic story and stagecraft. Founded and led by Artistic Director Nathan Allen and driven by an interdisciplinary ensemble of Chicago's next generation of great storytellers, The House aims to become a laboratory and platform for the evolution of the American theatre as an inclusive and popular art form. The House is now celebrating their 15th anniversary year of original work, continuing its mission to unite Chicago in the spirit of Community through amazing feats of storytelling.thehousetheatre.com

Blair Thomas & Co., Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, the Chicago Park District's Night Out in the Parks series and Navy Pier present the

Festival Neighborhood Tour

The Festival Neighborhood Tour fosters an appreciation of puppetry in every corner of the city by presenting three Festival artists - Schroeder Cherry, Interstate Arts and Magali Chouinard - in six neighborhood locations, for a total of 18 performances.

These free events invite families to sample shows or share a full day of puppetry. Each show runs 40-45 minutes. Audiences are invited to meet the artists after each performance. This event is family friendly.

At Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand Ave., Chicago

Saturday, January 21

Tickets: Free to the public, no reservations required

At the Chicago Cultural Center, Preston Bradley Hall, 78 E. Washington St., Chicago

Sunday, January 22 at 11 a.m. (Interstate Arts), 1 p.m. (Magali Chouinard) and

3 p.m. (Schroeder Cherry)

Tickets: Free to the public, no reservations required

At Garfield Park Conservatory, Jensen Room, 300 N. Central Park Ave., Chicago

Wednesday, January 25 at 4:30 p.m. (Schroeder Cherry), 5:30 p.m. (Interstate Arts) and 6:30 p.m. (Magali Chouinard)

garfieldconservatory.org or (312) 746-5100

Tickets: Free to the public. RESERVATIONS REQUIRED. Reserve online at chicagopuppetfest.org.

At Calumet Park, 9801 S. Ave. G, Chicago

Thursday, January 26 at 11:30 a.m. (Magali Chouinard), 12:30 p.m. (Interstate Arts) and 1:30 p.m. (Schroeder Cherry)

chicagoparkdistrict.com/parks/Calumet-Park or (312) 747-6039

Tickets: Free to the public, no reservations required

At Marquette Park, 6700 S. Kedzie Ave., Chicago

Friday, January 27 at 5 p.m. (Schroeder Cherry), 6 p.m. (Magali Chouinard) and

7 p.m. (Interstate Arts)

chicagoparkdistrict.com/parks/Marquette-Park or (312) 747-6469

Tickets: Free to the public, no reservations required

At Hamilton Park, 513 W. 72nd St., Chicago

Saturday, January 28 at 1 p.m. (Magali Chouinard), 2 p.m. (Interstate Arts) and

3 p.m. (Schroeder Cherry)

chicagoparkdistrict.com/parks/Hamilton-Park or (312) 747-6174

Tickets: Free to the public, no reservations required

In The White Woman, Montreal's Magali Chouinard takes a tender look at how solitude can be a special place, a place where we discover and rediscover ourselves. By daring to be silent, to move slowly and deliberately, and by steering away from a linear narrative, Chouinard invites audiences to invest themselves in an otherworldly visual poem.

Magali Chouinard is a multidisciplinary artist. The female body, movement, presence and interiority lie at the heart of her poetic and visual research. Thirty years of exploration - drawing, sculpture, installation art, performance and writing - have been converging since 2008 towards the art of puppetry and its ability to bring movement to her visual landscape. Her theatre of images is both unique and striking. magalichouinard.com  Video

Designed for families and kids, PLAY with your food by Detroit-based Interstate Arts mixes hilarious and bizarre live performers with sweet and spectacular puppets of all sizes in celebration of the universal human experience of eating. This original piece invites audiences to learn urban gardening and cooking how-tos, hear from a chatty muffin and get down with the sweet sound of a veggie synthesizer.

Interstate Arts' mission is to bring creativity to the center of everyday life through interdisciplinary and collaborative art projects. Founded by Shoshanna Utchenik in 2005 as an umbrella for work exploring America's myths, illusions, and the potential for change, I-A has outfitted a delivery truck for playdough production and ephemeral public sculpture, created a giant cardboard village and Cardboard-Challenge Arcade, established an annual Dia de los Muertos ritual celebrating lost loved ones at a Detroit elementary school, and questioned the reality and metaphor of borders with a kick-off parade for the Porous Borders Festival. interstatearts.com

In Underground Railroad, Not A Subway, Schroeder Cherry shares the story of a young boy who escapes slavery and runs North, encountering free blacks, sympathetic whites and slave catchers along the way. Will he make it? This

45-minute presentation is performed with a variety of puppets constructed by Schroeder Cherry: rod puppets, hand puppets and wood cutouts.

A native of Washington, D.C., Baltimore's Schroeder Cherry played with puppets as a kid. In college he tried puppetry to see how he would respond to his childhood interest. He apprenticed to a puppetmaster in Chicago while in college, then joined a troupe before setting out on his own. Schroeder has performed original shows with puppets in museums, libraries and cultural centers for adults and children across the U.S. Other performances include Can You Spell Harlem? and The Land of Primary Color. Most recently the puppet "Tevin" performed during Baltimore's Light City Festival.  Video

*Dates, times or programs are subject to change. Please call (312) 554-9800 for the most up-to-date information.

Links Hall and Rough House present Immaculate, Poignant & Medium Length

at Links Hall, Studio B, 3111 N. Western Ave., Chicago

Monday through Wednesday, January 23 through 25 at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets: $15; $12 student/senior

Run time: 1 hour

Family friendly? No

In this sister show to Nasty, Brutish & Short, four respected local innovators present medium-length puppet productions including:

Adventure Stage Chicago and Blair Thomas & Co. present Open Eye Figure Theatre of Minneapolis performing The Sorcerer's Apprentice

at Adventure Stage Chicago, 1012 N. Noble St., Chicago

School performances: Wednesday through Friday, January 25-27 at 10:30 a.m. (call (773) 342-4141 for tickets and information)

Public performances: Friday, January 27 at 7 pm., Saturday, January 28 at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m.

Tickets: $17; $12 ages 14 and under

Run time: 60 minutes

Family friendly

Video

Open Eye Figure Theatre's adaptation of The Sorcerer's Apprentice for the marionette stage is a look at youth, aging and the allure of power. Creator Michael Sommers uses Goethe's 1797 poem "Der Zauberlehrling" as inspiration, expanding on the young apprentice's mishaps and mistakes in this original work with a unique Open Eye approach. With its highly designed production, original score and masterful puppetry, this show appeals to both adults and children.

Open Eye Figure Theatre is nationally recognized for bringing a visual feast of evocative figure theater to the stage. The Sorcerer's Apprentice was created by Michael Sommers who serves as Artist-in-Residence and is Co-Founder of Open Eye. He is recognized as one of the country's most ingenious theater artists and is Associate Professor in the Department of Theatre Arts and Dance at the University of Minnesota. Sommers' numerous awards include two Bush Fellowships, two McKnight Theatre Fellowships, a Ford Fellowship and the Bush Enduring Vision Award. Most recently he received the Doris Duke Impact Award. His signature work includes A Prelude to Faust, Elijah's Wake, Strumply Peter, The Clumsy Man, The Holiday Pageant and many others.openeyetheatre.org

Blair Thomas & Co. presents Feathers of Fire: A Persian Epic, conceived, designed and directed by Hamid Rahmanian, in association with Pasfarda Art & Culture Exchange

at the Studebaker Theatre in the Fine Arts Building, 410 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago

Thursday and Friday, January 26 and 27 at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, January 28 at

3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, January 29 at 3 p.m.

Tickets: $40; $30 student/senior

Run time: 70 minutes

Family friendly

Video

Feathers of Fire: A Persian Epic is a visually breathtaking cinematic shadow play for all ages, created by Hamid Rahmanian in collaboration with Larry Reed. The play unfolds an action-packed magical tale of star-crossed lovers from the 10th-century Persian epic "Shahnameh" ("The Book of Kings".) Inspired by Iranian visual traditions, Rahmanian uses puppets, costumes, masks, scenography and digital animation to bring the story to life on a cinema-sized screen. The show features original music by Loga Ramin Torkian and Azam Ali.

Hamid Rahmanian is an Iranian-American filmmaker and graphic artist. After an early career at Disney Feature Animation Company, Rahmanian started his own production firm, Fictionville Studio, in 1998. Fictionville Studio films have played festivals in LA, Toronto, Venice, and New York and garnered major international awards. Rahmanian's films have been used in the social service sector to combat negative stereotypes about Iranians, to promote anti-capital punishment laws in the US, and to raise funds and awareness for the plights of disadvantaged women and girls around the world. Several of Rahmanian's works have been broadcast internationally on PBS, Sundance, IFC, BBC, DR2 and Al Jazeera.

Rahmanian's most recent project is the illustration and adaptation of the 10th-century Persian epic poem "Shahnameh" by Ferdowsi. "Shahnameh: The Epic of the Persian Kings" is a best-selling, 600-page art book published by The Quantuck Lane Press and distributed by W. W. Norton & Company. kingorama.com/feathersoffire

Links Hall presents Rough House's Ubu The King

at Links Hall, Studio B, 3111 N. Western Ave., Chicago

Thursday through Saturday, January 26-28 at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets: $15; $12 student/senior

Run time: 90 minutes

Video

Ubu The King brings Alfred Jarry's seminal satire Ubu Roi to life in all its absurd, grotesque glory. In the hands of five power hungry puppeteer-performers, loveable tyrant Pa Ubu murders, lies, and farts his way up to the Polish throne - and back down again. Beautifully designed and meticulously realized, Ubu is ridiculous, heartbreaking and spectacular.

Chicago-based Rough House is committed to connecting individuals and communities through art that celebrates the weird things that make us unique, and the weirder things that bring us together. Rough House creates theater that captures the heart through the eye. Its shows use puppetry, music, and human performance to tell stories that are intimate, strange and sincere. roughhousetheater.com

Chicago Children's Theatre presents Manual Cinema's world premiere Magic City

at Chicago Children's Theatre, The Station, 100 S. Racine Ave., Chicago

Friday, January 27 at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.; Saturday, January 28 at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.; Sunday, January 29 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Tickets: $25

Run time: 60 minutes

Family friendly

Video

With their newest work, Manual Cinema transforms Edith Nesbit's novel The Magic City into a live, cinematic shadow puppet experience. When a young girl moves into a new home, she entertains herself by building a city using household objects. Through some magic, she finds herself inside the city, surrounded by life. Using overhead projectors, paper shadow puppets, live actors in silhouette, miniature toy theater and a live music ensemble, Manual Cinema's Magic City modernizes the novel, building and illuminating a miniature city onstage that the audience explores themselves after every performance.

Chicago Children's Theatre is the lead commissioner of Magic City. Manual Cinema is a Chicago-based performance collective, design studio, and film/video production company founded in 2010 by Drew Dir, Sarah Fornace, Ben Kauffman, Julia Miller and Kyle Vegter. Manual Cinema combines handmade shadow puppe

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