Spiegel Slings Mud, Sun-Times Pitches In It’s come to this: Big business doesn’t just say no to Chicago anymore. It says no and thumbs its nose at City Hall on the way out the door. And the press seconds the insult. Spiegel pulled the latest vanishing act, deciding to move its distribution center and 2,000 […]
Tag: Vol. 21 No. 50
Issue of Sep. 24 – 30, 1992
Santiago
SANTIAGO Latino Chicago Theater Company Santiago is what not-for-profit theater should be about. The Latino Chicago Theater Company’s production of Manuel Pereiras Garcia’s tremendously difficult play rarely comes entirely into focus. It’s an evening full of loose ends and inconsistent choices. But the material that director Juan A. Ramirez and his cast of six have […]
Polish Film Festival
The Polish Film Festival, which is being presented by the Art Institute’s Film Center and the Polish Museum of America, continues from Friday, September 25, through Monday, September 28. Screenings will be at the Copernicus Center, 5216 W. Lawrence, and at the Film Center, Columbus Drive at Jackson. Tickets are $5. For more information call […]
Restaurant Tours: terrific tapas, low-priced and downtown
My friend Poppy told her date she was taking him to a tapas bar for his birthday. He thought she said topless, so he was disappointed when they got there and all he saw were lots of little dishes. She said she thought a tapas bar was the perfect place to take a man because […]
Eddie Shaw & the Wolf Gang/Jimmy Dawkins
This summit of west-side blues legends promises to bring back as many memories as it generates. Tenor saxophonist Shaw’s style–raucous roadhouse honks ascending into free-form screams, all anchored by a soulful sense of melodic. development–has changed little since the days when he was Howlin’ Wolf’s sax player, but his voice has strengthened and his repertoire […]
News of the Weird
Lead Story In May Dr. Charles G. Moertel of the Mayo Clinic called “unconscionable” what he found from a study of the drug levamisole, the first effective medicine for colon cancer. According to Moertel, Johnson & Johnson, which developed the drug in the 1960s, charges $1,495 for the amount needed to treat a person for […]
The Circus of Dr. Lao
THE CIRCUS OF DR. LAO Next Theatre Company Charles G. Finney’s 1935 novel The Circus of Dr. Lao is about magic. Not silly, la-la magic, not the phony stuff Ringling Brothers manufactures, but the stuff you wish the circus had–odd, unnerving magic that’s sickeningly real. Finney, who was an infantryman in China in the 1920s, […]
Sneakers
Robert Redford plays a 60s radical hired to penetrate and test security systems with an eccentric team of experts–including a CIA veteran (Sidney Poitier), a computer whiz (River Phoenix), a gadget man (Dan Aykroyd), and a blind audio expert (David Strathairn). Forced to participate in a covert operation, they wind up enlisting the hero’s former […]
Welcome to Chicago
What’s Behind the Success of the Tibetan Resettlement Project?
McCarter’s Hot Air
To the editors: I want to commend Bryan Miller for her recent cover interview with William McCarter (September 4). Not only were her questions pertinent, but she also followed through and did not merely accept McCarter’s attempts at clouding the issues. Miller also deserves kudos simply for enduring the unbearable rush of hot air that […]
Bono saved from drowning
Just where does the Zoo TV Outside Broadcast Tour come from? Nothing U2 has ever done–nothing any rock group has ever done–prepares one for how gripping it is as music, how compelling it is as theater, how apropos it is as pop artifact, and how knowing it is about the culture. It takes all the […]
Urban Scenes/Creole Dreams
URBAN SCENES/CREOLE DREAMS David Rousseve/Reality at the Blackstone Theatre September 18 and 19 I don’t know what to do with Urban Scenes/Creole Dreams. It’s too big to ignore, too well-meaning to write off. Blessed with a large, talented cast, it stands head and shoulders above most other “entertainments,” yet it doesn’t quite accomplish what it […]
You’re Watching Channel 11–But Why?
To the editors: [Re: “William McCarter Answers,” September 4] Don’t you think your memorial service and accompanying eulogy to William McCarter, WTTW’s man behind the controls, is a bit premature? He looks healthy and isn’t ancient or ailing. You must wait before you praise Caesar when the body is still warm. And look, Bryan Miller, […]
Ulysses: What I Did June 4
ULYSSES: WHAT I DID JUNE 4 at Cafe Voltaire September 10, 11, 17, 18, 24, and 25 Mark McCarthy has a great postmodern premise in Ulysses: What I Did June 4: take the basic structure of James Joyce’s Ulysses, which is itself based on Homer’s Odyssey, and use it as the spine for a semiautobiographical […]
Balanchine’s Retreat
BALLET CHICAGO at the Dance Center of Columbia College September 16-19 George Balanchine, asked once how he created his dances, said “I just give my dancers what they are good at.” His answer was modest, but I tend to take him at his word. Finding the movements a dancer does well and having him or […]