"MotherStruck!," written and performed by Staceyann Chin, co-produced in New York by Rosie O'Donnell, Robert Dragotta and Culture Project, and originally directed by Emmy, Tony and Grammy Award-winner Cynthia Nixon begins Greenhouse Theater Center's "Solo Celebration" at the Greenhouse (2257 N Lincoln Ave). This audaciously funny and powerful off-Broadway hit explores Chin's deeply personal journey to motherhood, as a single woman, lesbian and activist who does not have health insurance or a serious, stable financial set-up. Performances begin June 11; The press performance will be June 15 at 7:30 p.m.
"The intention of curating this 'Solo Celebration' has always been to celebrate solo performers and the innovative ways in which they tell their stories using only a single voice," said Artistic Director of the Greenhouse Theater Center, Jacob Harvey. "
Staceyann Chin's 'MotherStruck!' is a unique and captivating hybrid of personal narrative, spoken word, and sociopolitical commentary that she illuminates with her electrifyingly ferocious performance."
"MotherStruck!" was originally staged at New York City's
Culture Project and received critical acclaim for its bold and unapologetic look at motherhood, Chin's decision to leave conservative Jamaican society to live authentically as a lesbian and her lifelong fight to persevere against assault, bigotry and the fear of becoming an unfortunate statistic. Charles Isherwood of the New York Times praised Chin for her performance saying "Ms. Chin has such a magnetic presence, with deep brown eyes that seem to give out light, that you might almost believe that she was unspooling her story for you alone, in your own living room or maybe hers."
Staceyann Chin (Performer/Playwright) is the recipient of the 2007 Power of the Voice Award from The Human Rights Campaign, the 2008 Safe Haven Award from Immigration Equality, the 2008 Honors from the Lesbian AIDS Project, the 2009 New York State Senate Award and the 2013 American Heritage Award from American Immigration Council. She identifies as Caribbean and Black, Asian and lesbian, woman and resident of New York City. A proud Jamaican National, Chin has been featured on the "
Oprah Winfrey Show." Widely known as co-writer and original performer in the Tony award-winning,
Russell Simmons "Def Poetry Jam" on Broadway, her poetry has garnered acclaim at the Nuyorican Poets' Café, one-woman shows Off-Broadway, writing-workshops in Sweden, South Africa, and Australia. Her other one-woman shows, "Hands Afire," "Unspeakable Things" and "Border/Clash" all opened to rave reviews at the
Culture Project in New York. She is the author of the memoir," The Other Side of Paradise."
The performance schedule for "Motherstruck!" is as follows: Wednesdays - Sundays at 7:30 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. Flex passes to the Solo Celebration! series, which offers admissions to five plays at a discounted rate, are now on sale. Single tickets, which range in price from $32 - 48, will go on sale at a future date. Flex passes and tickets can be purchased by contacting the box office at
773-404-7336 or by visiting
greenhousetheater.org.
About Solo Celebration!
"MotherStruck!" is one of 12 plays featured in Greenhouse's "Solo Celebration!," which will include ten full productions and two limited engagements running June 2016 through July 2017. Among the other directors connected to solo series are
Goodman Theatre Producer and Artistic Collective Member
Steve Scott, Writer's Theatre Resident Director
Kimberly Senior, Directors Lab Chicago Artistic Director
Elizabeth Margolius and Remy Bumppo Artistic Associate
Linda Gillum. Some of the performers confirmed to star in solo works include Jeff Award-winner
Kate Buddeke, acclaimed British actor
Simon Slater,
Karen Rodriguez and Carin Silkaitis. Most productions will be produced in their entirety by Greenhouse, while other plays will be stated with co-producers including Sideshow Theatre Company and
The Other Theatre Company.
The 12 plays included in this series are as follows:
"MotherStruck!" Chicago Premiere of the Off-Broadway Hit
Written and Performed by
Staceyann Chin; Originally Directed by
Cynthia Nixon
Originally produced in New York by Rosie O'Donnell,
Robert Dragotta and
Culture Project
June 11 - July 17
Told through Chin's uniquely poetic lens, her magnetic performance takes audiences on a bullet train adventure as she reflects on how the process changed her life and making peace with what she learned along the way.
"The Way She Spoke: A Docu-mythologia"' World Premiere
Written by Isaac Gomez; Directed by
Laura Baker; Starring
Karen Rodriguez
June 10 - July 10
When an actress enters an empty warehouse to read a new play about the missing and murdered women of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, she embarks on an expedition through the broken roads of a city offering far more questions than answers. With thousands of women disappearing every year, who is responsible for these crimes? "The Way She Spoke: A Docu-mythologia" is a daring solo-performance piece pulling from hundreds of interviews collected down a rabbit hole of drug cartels, ex-convicts, unsavory reporters and resilient women; asking audiences, "what lies in the shadows of telling a story that isn't yours?"
"The Portrait" World Premiere
Written and Directed by Susan Padveen
Co-Production with The Neapolitans
July 15 - August 14
Gustav Klimt, the famous Viennese painter of The Kiss, crafted a multitude of beloved and enigmatic works while struggling to support his family in a world that did not yet recognize his genius. This provocative new play renders a portrait of the artist as he tries to win an attractive young woman's interest and a sizable commission, all the while wrestling with a decision that could alter the trajectory of his life. Torn between duty and defiance, how will Klimt navigate the tumultuous decisions ahead?
"Bloodshot" U.S. Premiere of the London Hit
Written by
Douglas Post; Directed by Patrick Sandford; Starring
Simon Slater
August 10 - September 10
Taut and suspenseful, "Bloodshot" is a one-man murder mystery following photographer Derek Eveleigh, as he is hired by an anonymous benefactor to pursue a showgirl through the streets of 1957 London. After witnessing the young woman's murder by an unknown assailant, he embarks on an investigation to find her killer that takes him through the bowels and backstreets of London to find the young woman's killer. Along the way he meets hustlers, musicians and magicians and begins to find himself falling in love with a dead woman that he's never met.
"Rose" Chicago Premiere of the Off-Broadway Hit
Written by best-selling author Laurence Leamer; Directed by
Steve Scott
August 19 - September 25
"There will be great presidents again, but there will never be another Camelot."
In this intimate portrait of Camelot's queen-mother, we meet a stalwart 79-year old Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy just after the tragedy at Chappaquiddick, which led to the accidental death of Mary Jo Kopechne at the hands Senator Edward M. Kennedy. Alone with her invalid husband in the house in Hyannis Port, Rose attempts to retrace the rise and fall of this great family that traversed continents, shaped history and inspired a generation of people. The Kennedy's story is the story of our nation, as it implores audiences to access the costs of creating a political dynasty.
"I Do Today" World Premiere
Co-Production with The Other Theater Company
Written by Sarah Myers; Directed by Jacob Harvey; Starring Carin Silkaitis
September 2-October 9, 2016
Failed relationships, former lovers and half-eaten wedding cake clutter the mind of one Jewish woman determined to track the trajectory of love and loss in her life. "I Do Today" builds a constantly confounding and quickly changing family tree of many marriages (and even more divorces), posing questions about how modern marriage fits into old ideals. Bisexuality, kabbalah and baby teeth dangle from the branches of this thoughtful play exploring how we might use our inheritances to re-imagine what's possible.
"The Happiest Place on Earth" World Premiere
Co-Production with Sideshow Theatre Company
Written and Performed by
Philip Dawkins; Directed by Jonathan L. Green
September 17-October 23
Once upon a time in an Anaheim, California orange grove, a magical kingdom was built and dedicated to America's history, dreams and wildest hopes. Eight years later, one family's American prince died on live television while delivering the Albuquerque sports scores, leaving his four daughters and their mother behind. Left reeling from the loss of their patriarch, the family underwent a quest to reach the magical kingdom and seek solace and recovery. Now, more than fifty years after their journey, acclaimed playwright and storyteller
Philip Dawkins retraces and illustrates the true story of the women in his family, exploring their history and asking if there really is a place where the dream that we wish can come true.
"Uncle Philip's Coat" Chicago Premiere
Written by
Matty Selman; Directed by
Elizabeth Margolius
November 27 - December 31, 2016
When Matty, an unemployed actor, inherits an old, decrepit coat from his recently deceased great-uncle Philip, he is unsure whether he has been given an heirloom or a heap of rags. Through his attempts to find the answer he travels across time, territories and tragedies in an effort to uncover the history of an unfaltering dreamer. "Uncle Philip's Coat" takes Matty on a journey of self-discovery that poses larger questions of family, mythology and the inheritance of a Jewish son. How did a man who made it to the land of opportunity become a homeless wanderer, and what can he teach us about the stories that we tell to surround ourselves and keep away the cold?
"Miss America" World Premiere
Written by
Brett Neveu; Directed by
Linda Gillum; Starring
Kate Buddeke
January 6-February 12, 2017
The Midwest sits, still and silent, between two oceans in the center of a continent, and beneath we find "Miss America" in a cold and cluttered basement. Written for award-winning actress
Kate Buddeke, Brett Nuveu's stark and entrancing sketch of an ordinary woman will leave you shaken and unsure, as she uncovers the artifacts of her youth and comes to terms with the forces that have made her who she is today.
"Circumference of a Squirrel" Chicago Premiere
Written by John Walch; Directed by Jacob Harvey
January 13 - February 12, 2017
An inner-tube, a bagel, a donut, a lifesaver, a holiday wreath, a tire-swing, a cycle of abuse: circles. And at the center of them all sits an enigmatic squirrel. Orbiting that squirrel is Chester, a self-described "rodentophobe" who spins the outlandish, funny, and bruising tale of growing up with a father who developed a rabid hatred for squirrels that eventually infected every aspect of his life. Pursued by memories of his father's intolerant legacy, Chester is pulled into the black hole at the center of his own life, unsure of how he will break free from the darkness that encircles him in this savagely comic one-man show.
Limited Engagments
"Squeeze My Cans" Chicago Premiere
Written and performed by
Cathy Schenkelberg
Directed by Shirley Anderson
July 14-July 24
Limited Engagement
Have you ever wondered if Bozo was a suppressive person? Have you ever considered what it might be like to audition to be
Tom Cruise's girlfriend? What do you do if the "carrot of spiritual freedom" was dangled in front of you, waiting to be seized? Writer performer
Cathy Schenkelberg decided to chase it and what she found was Scientology, America's foremost intergalactic theology. After studying and searching to become "more herself" she found herself blowing alien life forms off her body and moving farther from than ever from who the person she had hoped to be. Now she is sharing the story in this no holds barred cautionary tale of how she survived the pseudoscience.
*"Squeeze My Cans" received its first developmental workshop production at Lifeline's Filet of Solo Festival.
"Mother (and me)" Chicago Premiere of FringeNYC Award-Winner
Written and performed by
Melinda Buckley
As originally directed by
Kimberly Senior
August 4 - 14
Limited Engagement
A larger-than-life Hungarian "Mama Rose" is slowing slipping into dementia as her Broadway baby, Melinda slips into "de'middle age." A brilliantly funny and touching story of two women who are losing everything they've ever been-in very different ways-as they lose each other. This one-woman tour-de-force by Broadway performer and comedian
Melinda Buckley was an award-winner at the 2014 New York International Fringe Festival. The play asks "Who's it harder for? The one who can't remember? Or the one who can't forget?"
Performance Schedule and Ticket Information
The performance schedule for each play will be announced at a future date. Most plays will be performed Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings and Saturday and Sunday matinees. The press opening dates will be announced at a future date. All performances will take place at one of the venues within the Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln Ave.
Flex passes are on sale now. Flex passes provide guests with admissions to five different full-production plays at a cost of $160 (or $32 per performance). Flex pass-holders may also purchase tickets for additional plays for $32, and may purchase tickets for limited engagement productions for $20 (a 33% savings). Flex passes can be obtained by visiting or calling the Greenhouse Theater box office at
773-404-7336 or by visiting
greenhousetheater.org.
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