the side project Extends WHATEVER Through 8/23
By: Tyler Peterson Aug. 05, 2015
the side project's World Premiere production of Robert Tenges' Whatever has been extended two weeks, and will now close Sunday, August 23, 2015. The company's Artistic Director Adam Webster made the announcement Monday. The Chicago Tribune gave the production 3-1/2 stars, saying "Small word choices reveal universes." New City said "Webster and his crackerjack cast execute with deft attention to detail."
The performance schedule for the two-week extension will be Thursdays and Fridays at 7:30 pm., Saturday, August 15 at 8:30 pm, Saturday, August 22 at 7:30 pm and Sundays, at 2:00 pm. Tenges, a Chicago-based playwright and artist with New York City's The New Group, has a long-standing history with the side project and Artistic Director Adam Webster, including three past world premieres, starting with 2005's Strangers Knocking, which the Chicago Tribune's Chris Jones named as one of the 20 best Chicago productions of 2005. In Whatever, running July 9-August 9 at the side project theatre, 1439 W. Jarvis in Rogers Park, two suburban teenagers - one facing an abortion, the other bucking his anger-management medications - try to navigate love, anger, and the bewildering adults who orbit their world. The cast will include Grace Melon (Redtwist's I and You) and Aaron Lockman as the two teens and Josh Odor, Kirsten D'Aurelio, Mike Rice, Shawna Tucker, and Bryan Breau as the adults. The production team includes Crystal Jovae Mazur (costumes), Becca Jeffords (lights), Stephen Gawrit (sound), Holly McCauley (props), Roxie Kooi (stage manager), and Brian Ruby (production coordinator).Windy City Times reviewer Zach Zimmerman praised Webster/Tenges' relationship in his 2013 review of Elsewhere -- "Both Webster and Tenges have learned what resonates in the intimate space: subtle, realistic staging, language and emotion" -- while TimeOut's Suzanne Scanlon praised the suitability of the playwright/director/space for each other: "The snug side-project space only intensifies this moving, very intimate and at times disturbing production...as well as the tight pacing, heightening the sense of frenetic urgency." Kerry Reid, writing for the Chicago Reader, said of the 2010 world premiere of People We Know - "Tenges excels at truthy dialogue dipped in acid, and Adam Webster's cast of six could hardly be better at landing his lines with razor precision.

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