JENNIFER LARMORE Last year at age 37, roughly a decade after her debut with a regional company in France, Atlanta-born mezzo-soprano Jennifer Larmore finally took her first bows at New York’s Metropolitan Opera. On Friday, she’ll make her first local appearance, in a solo recital at the University of Chicago–a belated homecoming for this longtime […]
Tag: Vol. 26 No. 7
Issue of Nov. 21 – 27, 1996
Calendar Photo Caption
Like much of Kim Dingle’s art, this tattooed, porcelain pugilist in a frilly dress depicts what art critic Anne Ayres calls a “vision of a bizarre, ordinary, grotesque, cheerful, dubious, matter-of-fact American childhood.” Priss is part of a series that revisits the American West and populates it with pugnacious, prepubescent girls. The Los Angeles-based painter, […]
Spot Check
Stella 11/22, Beat Kitchen Curt Perkins’s pensive, detached bellow on this quartet’s upcoming debut for Beggars Banquet briefly fooled me into thinking Mark Hollis of Talk Talk (whose most interesting work came after his early-80s techno-pop hits) had returned in a harder-edged guitar-band context. But on closer inspection, it turns out that this band has […]
The Last Good Moment of Lily Baker
THE LAST GOOD MOMENT OF LILY BAKER, Mary-Arrchie Theatre. It would be a challenge for any company to make Russell Davis’s atrophied play engaging, given the playwright’s penchant for excessive exposition and his jumbled point-and-click style, which jumps from Hollywood melodrama to TV sitcom to metaphor-soaked naturalism with slight regard for structural integrity. While Kay […]
The Straight Dope
If the earth stopped spinning would we fall off of it? Which way would we fall if we did? Or would there just be less gravity? –Grant Shepard, age seven, Oak Park, Illinois You gotta be prepared for anything, kid. If you’d asked this a couple years ago I would have said, “The earth stop […]
Dancing Across State Lines
The last couple of dances that Zephyr Dance Ensemble artistic director Michelle Kranicke has choreographed have had an understated elegiac quality, a sorrow that insinuates itself into every movement. Her new Memory Slipped conveys a feeling of quiet abandonment, perhaps the feeling of a woman with two children asleep in the house gazing at the […]
Madame Butterfly
Translating opera into film requires a director who can grasp the narrative stripped of music, then come up with a visual strategy that sustains the emotional resonances and rhythms of the music. Few reach the standard set by Ingmar Bergman and Joseph Losey in their thoughtful and visually imaginative adaptations of two of Mozart’s masterpieces. […]
Fight From The Inside
Stereolab/Emperor Tomato Ketchup/(Elektra)/Rage Against The Machine/Evil Empire/(Epic)
Betrayed
Bart’s sister killed their mother, Then she blamed it on her brother. Now her debt remains unpaid, Look’s like Bart has been Betrayed.
Chi Lives: Zeek Sheck’s talking cure
About ten times a month Rose Meyers will receive a letter from a stranger detailing what’s often a pretty weird problem. “I feel like I am being lit on fire from behind,” a recent one said. “It’s horrible. I can smell my flesh burning, and my backside gets hot. Sometimes I can hear my hair […]
Field & Street
The storm that hit the day before Halloween marked the end of the soft autumn days that provide Chicago with its annual taste of perfect weather. The seasonal shift announced itself at my house about 3 AM, when the wind blew a large packing box into the fence under my bedroom window. I awoke expecting […]
Zine-O-File
PERIOD ATTIRE OPTIONAL: THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF THE LITERARY SOIREE By Holliston Black Not having a television? Why cast the matter in terms of not doing something? The tone is defensive, sulky. Does one characterize a person going about the business of life in a sensible way as “not a blithering idiot”? There are […]
Bonnie & Clyde-Wanted
Bonnie & Clyde–Wanted, Feral Theatre Company, at the Organic Theater Greenhouse, Lab Theater. Playgoers who fondly recall the extravagant passion and violence of Arthur Penn’s romantic 1967 film need fear no competition from Feral Theatre’s Bonnie & Clyde–Wanted. This work, jointly devised by the company, acquaints us at great length with the domestic problems of […]
Moonshine Willy
Moonshine Willy The large number of bands joining rock ‘n’ roll to country and western belies the difficulty of doing it. Some bands (such as Son Volt) lapse into stuffy, joyless reverence, while others (such as the now-defunct Texas Rubies) wallow in campy caricature. Moonshine Willy avoids these pitfalls. The Chicago-based quintet’s arrangements combine bluegrass […]