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Articles by Nancy Malitz

Beethoven from Andsnes and Uchida contrasts physical prowess with aura of poetic ferocity

Mar 19, 2014 – 8:32 am
Leif Ove Andsnes (Mostly Mozart Festival)

Review: Leif Ove Andsnes’ physically exuberant all-Beethoven program at Orchestra Hall — an ingenious traversal from Op. 22 to Op. 101, from Beethoven at age 30 to Beethoven at 46 — followed one week after the Japanese-British pianist Mitsuko Uchida’s fiercely poetic reading of the “Diabelli” Variations. It was the second time this season that the series has offered such back-to-back interpretive contrasts of a single composer.

For two Chicago Symphony oboists, Ray Still was virtuoso career model, inspiring teacher

Mar 13, 2014 – 9:25 am
Ray Still, during his tenure as principal oboe of the Chicago Symphony, rehearsing onstage (facebook.comraystilloboist)

Report: The legacy of Ray Still as an unforgettable musician is preserved not only in the dozens of recordings he made through four decades as principal oboe of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, but also in the vivid memories of musicians whose lives he influenced, among them Eugene Izotov and Michael Henoch, the CSO’s current principal oboe and assistant principal.

Maestro Davis, two stellar singers lead mixed Lyric Opera revival of Mozart’s ‘Clemenza’

Mar 7, 2014 – 3:37 pm
The emperor's extraordinary show of mercy is lauded in the opera, but director David McVicar suggests it may incite revolt. Lyric Opera Chicago 'La Clemenza di Tito' 3-2014.(© Todd Rosenberg)

Review: Mozart died in 1791 just months after writing “La Clemenza di Tito,” about the first-century Roman emperor Titus and his struggle to rule with generosity of spirit. Performances are still a rarity, and the most successful aspect of the production at the Lyric Opera of Chicago is the unmistakable fineness of the music itself. ★★★

Ellington left his ‘Queenie Pie’ dream in scraps, and COT bucks odds in bid to make it whole

Feb 23, 2014 – 4:28 pm
Karen Marie Richardson is 'Queenie Pie' at Chicago Opera Theater 2014 (Liz Lauren)

Review: The Chicago Opera Theater and the Chicago Jazz Orchestra production of Duke Ellington’s late-in-life and largely unfinished Harlem street opera “Queenie Pie” became the casualty of an electrical fire that has temporarily shut down the Harris. The delay adds a footnote to the saga of frustrated restoration attempts that have dogged “Queenie Pie” and left its unfulfilled potential as much in limbo as ever. ★★

‘Gypsy’ at Chicago Shakespeare: This Rose puts fresh blush on Sondheim’s star-gazer

Feb 18, 2014 – 11:00 pm
Rose (Louise Pitre) insists that 'Everything's Coming Up Roses' to the amazement of Herbie (Keith Kupferer) and Louise (Jessica Rush). (Michael Brosilow)

Review: Chicago Shakespeare Theater has given us a “Gypsy” for our own time, one that embraces the difference that 55 years have made since the brassy blockbuster first strutted onto the stage. As directed by Gary Griffin, it’s a gritty roadshow musical with a surprisingly contemporary and tender heart. ★★★★★

Slick as a shave, only a lot funnier, Lyric Opera delivers brilliant ‘Barber of Seville’

Feb 13, 2014 – 8:41 am
The Barber of Seville Lyric Opera of Chicago 2014 (Dan Rest)

Review: There is still no opera funnier or feistier than Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville,” at 198 years and counting. When it works, its comedy seems as effortless as a flick of the wrist. Top to bottom, the Lyric Opera of Chicago has accomplished this trick in a sophisticated new production that owes a great deal to the precise funny bones of conductor Michele Mariotti, director Rob Ashford and designer Scott Pask – all in their company debuts. ★★★★★

From an exotic lark for cellos to MusicNOW, CSO ventures bring heat to frosty cityscape

Feb 7, 2014 – 9:56 am
Giovanni Sollima and  Yo-Yo Ma perform world premiere of Sollima's 'Antidotum Tarantula XXI' with Chicago Symphony Orchestra Jan. 30, 2014 (Todd Rosenberg)

Review: The Chicago Symphony Orchestra and its au courant offshoot MusicNOW introduced four contemporary works to Chicago in the space of a single week, including the world premiere of a double cello concerto featuring Yo-Yo Ma and cellist-composer Giovanni Sollima. It’s been cold in Chicago, but it feels like spring with a Riccardo Muti residency in full bloom.

Lyric Opera’s diamond anniversary will spotlight Fleming and Serjan amid stellar cast of singers

Jan 27, 2014 – 3:09 pm
Tatiana Serjan, soprano

Report: Russian dramatic soprano Tatiana Serjan, who riveted audiences as Riccardo Muti’s Lady Macbeth with the Chicago Symphony in 2013, will return to the Windy City next January at the Lyric Opera of Chicago to sing another knife-wielder, Floria Tosca, the tempestuous diva who tries to outwit a tyrant and foil her lover’s assassination. The Lyric’s 60th anniversary season, announced Jan. 27, also will feature soprano and Lyric creative consultant Renée Fleming in a signature role as Countess Madeleine in Richard Strauss’ final opera, “Capriccio.”

Joining revival of Soviet composer Weinberg, Lyric plans Holocaust opera ‘The Passenger’

Jan 20, 2014 – 6:45 pm
'The Passenger,' by Mieczysław Weinberg, Bregenz production, coming to Lyric Opera Chicago in 2015

Report: Mieczysław Weinberg, perhaps the best Soviet composer you never heard of, was the “other story” at a Lyric Opera of Chicago press conference Jan. 17 when a new Wagner “Ring” Cycle was announced. But Weinberg’s recently revived opera, “The Passenger,” inspired by a Holocaust novel, is making the international rounds and will arrive at the Chicago Lyric in early 2015, as excitement grows for this prolific composer and esteemed friend of Shostakovich.

Showing 2020 vision, Lyric Opera reveals plan for new production of Wagner’s ‘Ring’ Cycle

Jan 17, 2014 – 11:08 am

Report: With headliners Christine Goerke and Eric Owens — two breakthrough American Wagner singers that everyone is seeking – Lyric Opera of Chicago announced Friday that it will embark on a new David Pountney production of the “Ring” Cycle starring Owens as the great god Wotan and Goerke as Brünnhilde, his beloved Valkyrie daughter. The cycle’s four operas are to be unveiled one by one in consecutive seasons beginning in 2016-17, and then in total-immersion festival form, over the course of three weeks in April 2020.

Chicago Symphony on Tour: It’s a red-carpet welcome and rave reviews in Spain’s Canarias

Jan 15, 2014 – 4:51 pm
Auditorio_de_Tenerife (Wiki Commons)

Report: The sail-like hall on the shore of Tenerife, one of Spain’s Canary Islands off the African coast, was home for two concerts by the touring Chicago Symphony Orchestra this week. The famous archipelago is celebrating the 30th anniversary of its winter music festival, where music director Riccardo Muti and the CSO were headliners. Now, they’re off to Germany.

Lyric Opera’s ‘Butterfly,’ with spellbinding new cast, beautifully frames a soprano’s fine art

Jan 13, 2014 – 6:46 am
Stefano Secco, Patricia Racette, Madam Butterfly at Lyric Opera Chicago Jan. 2014 (c. Dan Rest)

Review: Soprano Racette may not look like a fragile 15-year-old Japanese bride, but then few dramatic sopranos who specialize in Italian opera do. Yet Racette is one of those singing actresses who can make you believe just about anything, so sincere is her art and so particular her skills. ★★★★

Chicago Symphony on Tour: Flight snafu resolved, musicians open series in Canary Islands

Jan 10, 2014 – 11:59 am
Alfredo Kraus Auditorium. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Canary Islands (Wiki Commons)

Report: Music director Riccardo Muti and the CSO are set to give four performances in the Canary Islands Jan. 10-14. Spain’s idyllic archipelago off the northwest coast of Africa offers architecturally striking concert halls. But the touring musicians were no less subject to travel woes in Chicago’s frigid winter than the rest of us, missing their Madrid connection.

Bernard Rands work inspired by Beckett poetry renews composer’s time-honored link to CSO

Dec 20, 2013 – 1:42 pm
Composer Bernard Rands (BernardRands.com)

Interview: For many, “…where the murmurs die…” will constitute a first Rands encounter. Indeed, this intimate marvel from 1993 is the perfect piece for it, whether one hears it shimmer in the live acoustical space of Orchestra Hall or through a pair of earphones.

Pianists Schiff and Denk offer distinctive views of Bach in Partita and ‘Goldberg’ programs

Oct 30, 2013 – 2:47 pm

Review: The mind-blowing early treat this piano recital season has been successive Bach concerts that would have left the composer himself impressed by the feats of memory and endurance on display — Hungarian pianist András Schiff performing all six Partitas and American pianist Jeremy Denk performing the 30 “Goldberg” Variations at Symphony Center.

Lyric’s snake-bitten ‘Otello’ loses its star tenor when ailing Botha cancels final 2 performances

Oct 28, 2013 – 11:11 am
Johan Botha as Otello in Verdi's 'Otello' at Lyric Opera of Chicago 10-2013 (Dan Rest)

Report: First, the German bass-baritone Falk Struckmann, singing the role of the evil Iago in Verdi’s “Otello,” lost his voice suddenly to an allergy flare-up during opening night of the Lyric Opera’s 59th season, causing a frantic search for the understudy. Now it’s the Otello’s turn. Johan Botha has dropped out of the production’s remaining performances. The South African heldentenor, plagued by severe back pain, has returned to Vienna for treatment. American heldentenor Clifton Forbis replaces him for performances Oct. 29 and Nov. 2.

‘We Will Rock You’ wraps Queen in sweet vibe for supercharged romp back to bohemian roots

Oct 26, 2013 – 10:16 am
Ruby Lewis and Brian Justin Crum in We Will Rock You Broadway in Chicago 2013 (Paul Kolnick)

Review: The first rule regarding “We Will Rock You,” winding up a whistle-stop week at Chicago’s Cadillac Palace at the beginning of an eight-month U.S. tour: If you’re not a Queen fan, you need to bone up. Not that this is difficult. ★★★

Composers’ imaginative new worlds of sound infuse MusicNOW concert with energy, flair

Oct 22, 2013 – 1:53 pm
Benedict Mason 'Delta River' at Chicago Symphony MusicNOW concert Oct. 21, 2013 (Todd Rosenberg)

Review: This just in from Chicago Symphony’s new music series: Benedict Mason’s multimedia “Delta River” with odd-lot Far East film, Donnacha Dennehy’s “Stainless Staining” for pianos of special resonance, and Anders Hillborg’s “Vaporized Tivoli,” which hints at a circus gone bad. ★★★★

Relive Chicago Symphony’s Verdi Requiem: Chicago On the Aisle offers clickable concert

Oct 10, 2013 – 4:53 pm
Chicago Symphony Orchestra command truck for Verdi Requiem simulcast Oct. 20, 2013 (Todd Rosenberg)

UPDATE: Get your finest audio headphones ready: A video on demand is now available here of the CSO’s first-ever simulcast — Giuseppe Verdi’s Requiem with Riccardo Muti conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, soprano Tatiana Serjan, mezzo-soprano Daniela Barcellona, tenor Mario Zeffiri and bass Ildar Abdrazakov.

Lyric Opera’s storm-tossed ‘Otello’ weathers sudden cast change not even Iago could plot

Oct 8, 2013 – 9:46 pm
Chorus Master Michael Black

Review: Villainous Iago’s creed, which holds that man is the sport of unjust fate, must be on the minds of impresarios everywhere when opening night emergencies befall. So it was at the Lyric Opera’s gala opener Oct. 6, when the Iago of Verdi’s “Otello,” Falk Struckmann, made it only through Act 1. Valiant standby Todd Thomas made the save. The Lyric announced that Struckmann will sing Oct. 9. ★★★

Russian soprano’s venomous Lady Macbeth sets tone in Chicago Symphony’s Verdi thriller

Sep 30, 2013 – 3:15 pm
Dramatic coloratura soprano Tatiana Serjan as Lady Macbeth with Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus Sept. 28, 2013 (© Todd Rosenberg)

Review: Tatiana Serjan is a flat-out thrilling soprano who exudes the temperament of a lioness. She is a Lady Macbeth in her early prime. There isn’t a better place to be this week than Chicago’s Orchestra Hall, where the Russian-born Serjan sings in Verdi’s “Macbeth” under ideal conditions — in concert with other emerging opera stars and the superb forces of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus under Riccardo Muti. ★★★★★

Muddling the stakes, Chicago Opera Theater drives one through the heart of Verdi’s ‘Joan’

Sep 28, 2013 – 4:52 pm
Joan of Arc struggles with the devil's emissaries in Verdi's 'Giovanna d'Arco' Chicago Opera Theater 2013 (Liz Lauren)

Review: Does the middling label “lesser,” in the habitually repeated rankings of Verdi operas, give presenters a green light to “fix” things that may not be broken? Stage director David Schweizer fell into that trap with the Chicago Opera Theater production of “Giovanna d’Arco.” From a musical standpoint, Verdi’s Joan of Arc opera was a stunning achievement by the 31-year-old composer. COT conductor Francesco Milioto got that. Schweizer, not so much. ★★

Theater 2013-14: B’way in Chicago spotlights ‘Phantom,’ ‘Wicked’ and new Motown musical

Sep 9, 2013 – 10:29 am
Earl Carpenter and Katie Hall in The Phantom of the Opera - UK Tour (Alastair Muir)

13th in a series of season previews: Even as “The Book of Mormon” nears the end of its Windy City run, Broadway in Chicago is preparing for three more hit musicals — a new UK touring import for the 27-year-old “The Phantom of the Opera,” the 10th anniversary tour of “Wicked” and the first national tour of “Motown the Musical,” the story of Detroit vinyl mogul Berry Gordy, who made famous The Supremes, The Four Tops, Stevie Wonder and The Jackson 5. There’s also a local angle in this season’s lineup of shows.

Theater 2013-14: ‘The Mountaintop,’ Dr. King poised at mortal precipice, opens at Court

Sep 5, 2013 – 2:29 pm
David Alan Anderson, as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in "The Mountaintop" by Katori Hall at Court Theatre 2013

11th in a series of season previews: “It’s been a long while since I read a play and without hesitation said, ‘We have to do this,’” says Court Theatre artistic director Charles Newell about Katori Hall’s “The Mountaintop,” which imagines Martin Luther King’s last night on earth. King had given a speech that day in Memphis in which he famously touched on a premonition that he would die soon. Hall’s play catches up with him a few hours later in his hotel room, a weary man who strikes up a conversation with the chamber maid.

Theater 2013-14: Fantasy ‘Old Man, Old Moon’ opens Writers’ season; new home draws near

Sep 3, 2013 – 2:53 pm
PigPen Theatre's 'The Old Man and the Old Moon,' an off-Broadway hit in 2012, is being re-mounted and re-thought with Stuart Carden at Writers' Theatre

Ninth in a series of season previews: As artistic director Michael Halberstam began putting together the 2013-14 season at Writers’ Theatre with associate artistic director Stuart Carden, one coincidence seemed too good to be true: Halberstam’s right-hand man had been the teacher, at Carnegie-Mellon University, of an eclectic group of seven buddies called the PigPen Theatre Co., who were the buzz of Greenwich Village for their folksy fable called “The Old Man and the Old Moon.” The charming off-Broadway saga now comes to Writers’.

‘Hamlet’ at American Players Theatre: Agony and wit, and clear view of a timeless tragedy

Sep 1, 2013 – 5:49 pm
Matt Schwader is Hamlet at the American Players Theatre 2013 (Carissa Dixon)

Review: As summer turns into fall, it’s worth making time to catch Chicago actor Matthew Schwader as that restlessly inquisitive and acid wit, Hamlet, who comes magisterially unhinged in Shakespeare’s masterwork. “Hamlet” is enjoying a gloriously long reign at American Players Theatre in Spring Green, WI. ★★★★★

As ‘Book of Mormon’ ends Chicago mission, tears of laughter run to Sal Tlay Ka Siti

Jul 15, 2013 – 2:35 pm
The Book of Mormon ChicagoANNE GAREFINO	SCOTT RUDINROGER BERLIND	SCOTT M. DELMAN	JEAN DOUMANIAN ROY FURMAN	IMPORTANT MUSICALS	STEPHANIE P. McCLELLAND KEVIN MORRIS	JON B. PLATT	SONIA FRIEDMAN PRODUCTIONSEXECUTIVE PRODUCER STUART THOMPSONPRESENTBOOK, MUSIC AND LYRICS BYTREY PARKER, ROBERT LOPEZ AND MATT STONEWITHNIC ROULEAU	BEN PLATT SYESHA MERCADO	PIERCE CASSEDY	JAMES VINCENT MEREDITHCHRISTOPHER SHYER	DAVID ARON DAMANE J. CASEY BARRETT	TALLIA BRINSON	ROB COLLETTI	PATRICE COVINGTON CAMILLE EANGA-SELENGE	JAKE EMMERLING	MIKE EVARISTE DONELL JAMES FOREMAN	BRADLEY D. GALE	ERIC GIANCOLA	DARIUS HARPER ERIC HUFFMAN	COREY HUMMERSTON	ERIC JACKSON	EMILY JENDA NICK LAUGHLIN	STEPHEN MARK LUKAS	PARIS ALEXANDER NESBITTMONICA L. PATTONSCENIC DESIGNSCOTT PASKHAIR DESIGNJOSH MARQUETTEDANCE MUSIC ARRANGEMENTSGLEN KELLYTOUR BOOKING AGENCYTHE BOOKING GROUP/ MEREDITH BLAIRJOHN PINTO JR.	JON-MICHAEL REESETRAVIS ROBERTSONSOUND DESIGNBRIAN RONANPRODUCTION STAGE MANAGERGLYNN DAVID TURNERASSOCIATE PRODUCERELI BUSHGENERAL MANAGEMENTSTP/DAVID TURNER12 PLAYBILLCESSALEE STOVALLCOSTUME DESIGNANN ROTHORCHESTRATIONSLARRY HOCHMAN & STEPHEN OREMUSMUSIC DIRECTORJOHN SAMORIANPRESS AND MARKETINGALLIED LIVEHARDY WEAVERLIGHTING DESIGNBRIAN MacDEVITT CASTINGCARRIE GARDNERMUSIC COORDINATORMICHAEL KELLERPRODUCTION MANAGEMENTAURORA PRODUCTIONSMUSIC SUPERVISION AND VOCAL ARRANGEMENTSSTEPHEN OREMUSCHOREOGRAPHED BYCASEY NICHOLAWDIRECTED BYCASEY NICHOLAW AND TREY PARKERcast(in order of appearance)Mormon.......................................................................................................................Hardy Weaver Moroni ...................................................................................................................... Pierce Cassedy Elder Price..................................................................................................................... Nic Rouleau Elder Cunningham ..............................................................................................................Ben Platt Missionary Voice.................................................................................................. Christopher Shyer Price?s Dad ........................................................................................................... Christopher Shyer Cunningham?s Dad................................................................................................... J. Casey Barrett Mrs. Brown ............................................................................................................Monica L. Patton Guards...................................................................................................Darius Harper, Eric Jackson Mafala ......................................................................................................... James Vincent Meredith Nabulungi................................................................................................................Syesha Mercado Elder McKinley ......................................................................................................... Pierce Cassedy Joseph Smith ........................................................................................................ Christopher Shyer General..............................................................................................................David Aron Damane Mission President................................................................................................. Christopher Shyer Ensemble..............................J. Casey Barrett, Tallia Brinson, Patrice Covington, Jake Emmerling,Mike Evariste, Donell James Foreman, Bradley D. Gale, Darius Harper, Eric Huffman, Corey Hummerston, Eric Jackson, Monica L. Patton, John Pinto Jr., Jon-Michael Reese, Cessalee Stovall, Hardy WeaverUnderstUdiesFor Elder Price: Bradley D. Gale For Elder Cunningham: Nick Laughlin For Mafala Hatimbi: Mike Evariste, Eric Jackson For Nabulungi: Tallia Brinson, Camille Eanga-Selenge For McKinley/Moroni: Eric Huffman, Hardy Weaver For Price?s Dad/Joseph Smith/ Missionary President/et al: J. Casey Barrett, Hardy Weaver For General: Mike Evariste, Eric JacksonStandby for Elder Price: STEPHEN MARK LUKAS Standby for Elder Cunningham: RoB CoLLETTIswingsCAMILLE EANGA-SELENGE, ERIC GIANCoLA, EMILy JENDA, NICK LAUGHLIN, PARIS ALExANDER NESBITT, TRAVIS RoBERTSoNDance Captain: Eric Giancola Assistant Dance Captain: Travis Robertson

Review: This you can believe: “The Book of Mormon,” Chicago’s sit-down production of the hit Broadway show that is totally outrageous and equally endearing, will end its run at Bank of America Theatre on Oct. 6 so that a national tour with the same cast can commence. Broadway in Chicago is already promising a return, after visits to Denver, San Francisco, Los Angeles and other cities, but not until sometime in the 2014-15 season. ★★★★

As Mary-Arrchie spins Williams’ ‘Menagerie,’ memory play is filtered through glass darkly

Jul 2, 2013 – 6:56 am
Hans Fleischmann directs Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie Mary-Arrchie Theatre at Theatre Wit credit Emily Schwartz

Review:;One of the delights of this 2013 Chicago summer is a gently revisionist production of Tennessee Williams’ “The Glass Menagerie” by Marie-Arrchie Theatre, conceived and directed by Hans Fleischmann, who also plays the role of Tom. After selling out last fall at Angel Island and transferring to Theater Wit in May, the show has extended its run to July 28. ★★★★★

Kalmar, Grant Park Orchestra unveil exotic mix of classical traditions from the East and West

Jun 24, 2013 – 1:51 pm
Iris dévoilée" tryptich with Meng Meng, Yang Wei and Wu Yanyu at Grant Park Music Festival photo credit Norman Timonera

Something wonderful in music is going on at Millennium Park, where the promise of free classical music concerts on the lawn and picnic-friendly crowds might suggest an occasion for pops programming. But principal conductor Carlos Kalmar, to his extraordinary credit, has realized that a relaxed crowd is likely to be a receptive one, and Grant Park Orchestra’s musical nights offer discoveries such as “”Iris dévoilée,” an East meets West symphonic poem by the Chinese-French composer Qigang Chen.

Van Zweden, Chicago Symphony bring heat with torrid Bartók concerto, Mozart and Bates

Jun 1, 2013 – 12:01 pm
Jaap van Zweden, guest conductor, Chicago Symphony Orchestra 05-2013 credit Todd Rosenberg

Review: On the last day of May, full summer beckoning, Dutch conductor Jaap van Zweden led the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a performance of fresh abundance, showcasing the virtuosity of the CSO musicians themselves in Béla Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra, and also turning the spotlight on two youthful artists of distinction — composer Mason Bates and pianist David Fray. ★★★★