Year in Review — 2025’s Best Non-musicals

#1 Angels in America, Parts 1 & 2 – Invictus

Michael D. Graham (Roy Cohn) and Joe Bushell (Joe Pitt)

Invictus has received significant praise for its ambitious staging of Tony Kushner’s 1993 Pulitzer Prize winner, which will likely dominate the 2026 non-equity Jeff Awards. The script itself is one of American theater’s greatest masterpieces, melding the realism of 1980’s America with delusions involving ghosts and an angelic prophet. What I remember most is the perfect cast of eight performing more than 20 roles. If forced to name a standout, I would pick Michael D. Graham as Roy Cohn, who hints as Cohn’s self-hatred even as he brags about being the most powerful AIDS victim in America.

#2 Mr. Wolf – Steppenwolf

Caroline Neff (Julie), Kate Arrington (Hana), Namir Smallwood (Michael) & Emilie Maureen Hanson (Theresa)

Steppenwolf might have experienced some difficulty promoting this play, which centers on a girl named Theresa (Emilie Maureen Hanson), who returns to her family as a teenager after being abducted as a child. I saw it twice to explore the dynamic characters and powerful dialogue created by playwright Rajiv Joseph. In particular, Theresa is a marvel of complexity – a 16-year-old whose narrow worldview has been shaped by interactions with just one person. Ensemble members Kate Arrington (Hana), Tim Hopper (Mr. Wolf), Caroline Neff (Julie), and Namir Smallwood (Michael) round out the stacked cast.

Continue reading “Year in Review — 2025’s Best Non-musicals”
Year in Review — 2025’s Best Non-musicals

Grey House – Broadway’s Lyceum Theater (7/19/23)

World premier plays transfer from Steppenwolf or the Goodman to New York on a fairly regular basis, and it is always fun for Chicago theater fans to know that we saw it first. However, seeing an exceptional show like Grey House make that transfer is even more exciting given that it premiered at Red Orchid, a quintessential storefront theater – its performance space on Wells is so intimate that a large percentage of the audience could touch the actors by extending their arms.

Continue reading “Grey House – Broadway’s Lyceum Theater (7/19/23)”
Grey House – Broadway’s Lyceum Theater (7/19/23)