Articles tagged with: Noah Haidle
‘Smokefall’ at Goodman: Revisiting a family frayed at seams, blessed with magical hope
![‘Smokefall’ at Goodman: Revisiting a family frayed at seams, blessed with magical hope The Colonel (Mike Nussbaum) dotes on his granddaughter Beauty (Catherine Combs) in 'Smokefall' at Goodman Theatre. (Liz Lauren)](https://chicagoontheaisle.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/The-Colonel-Mike-Nussbaum-dotes-on-his-granddaughter-Beauty-Catherine-Combs-in-Smokefall-at-Goodman-Theatre.-Liz-Lauren-125x125.jpg)
Review: Mike Nussbaum, irrepressible at age 90, is like great Bordeaux wine. Need I amplify that? Chicago’s prince of perdurable actors is the single best reason – among many good ones – to catch Goodman Theatre’s almost-instant revival of “Smokefall,” Noah Haidle’s fine-stitched play about family, its profound fractures and its potential for healing. ★★★★★
Theater 2014-15: World premieres, ‘Smokefall’ reprise crown plans for Goodman’s 90th year
![Theater 2014-15: World premieres, ‘Smokefall’ reprise crown plans for Goodman’s 90th year Feature 1](https://chicagoontheaisle.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Feature-1-125x125.jpg)
14th in a series of season previews: Goodman Theatre has a bountiful 90th season in store, punctuated by a pair of world premieres, an early remounting of Noah Haidle’s “Smokefall” from last season — with returning featured actor Mike Nussbaum, also 90! — and a revival of August Wilson’s “Two Trains Running” that will be enhanced by several related events.
‘Smokefall’ at Goodman: Behind worldly veil, tears and contentment fuse into force of life
![‘Smokefall’ at Goodman: Behind worldly veil, tears and contentment fuse into force of life Mike Nussbaum at the center of a conflicted birthday party in 'Smokefall' by Noah Haidle at Goodman Theatre. (Liz Lauren)](https://chicagoontheaisle.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Mike-Nussbaum-at-the-center-of-a-conflicted-birthday-party-in-Smokefall-by-Noah-Haidle-at-Goodman-Theatre.-Liz-Lauren-125x125.jpg)
Review: Life sucks, and then you die. If that dark existential view sometimes can seem like the only certainty, taxes being at least negotiable, it is repudiated – with gentleness and magical wit — in Noah Haidle’s new play “Smokefall,” presented in its “co-world premiere” at Goodman Theatre. ★★★★★