Chicago Broadcasting Network

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By: Chicago Broadcasting Network

An eclectic Chicago oriented podcast covering performing arts, neighborhood news, movies, books and business showcasing multicultural and age diverse people. We want to give you an idea of what we enjoy, and what we experience living in "The Windy City." 

The Color Purple is splendid - Theater Review
#25
Yesterday at 5:17 PM

Tragic, hilarious, loud, energetic, fun and heartwarming, The Color Purple on stage at Goodman Theatre in Chicago is nearly three hours of nonstop entertainment featuring an outrageously talented cast featuring Brittney Mack as Celie directed by Lili-Anne Brown with choreography by Breon Arzell.


Tom & Eliza Theater Review Chicago
#24
06/30/2025

Tom & Eliza is a fairly brilliant example of absurdist theater written by Celine Song, expertly directed by Aileen Wen McGroddy and beautifully performed by Clifton Frei as Tom and Seoyoung Park as Eliza.

Reminiscent of Ionesco and Albee, Tom & Eliza focuses on ideas of existentialism, exploring the psychology of aging, marriage and sexual relationships with an attitude of absurd surrealism.

Tom & Eliza at Tuta Theatre Chicago is a challenging and thought-provoking presentation that may not appeal to a wide audience but the entire production is an example of elegant stage craft achieved through...


Dead Singers Give Lively Performance
#23
06/22/2025

Podcast review of FOREVER PLAID by Reno Lovison. Presented by MadKap Productions at Skokie Theater, the performance is reminiscent of a nightclub act from the fifties channeling the sounds of singing groups like the Four Freshmen, Four Aces or The Crew Cuts. Limited engagement through June 29, 2025.


You Will Get Sick at Steppenwolf - Theater Review Chicago
#22
06/20/2025

Chicago's  Steppenwolf Theatre Company, concludes its 49th Season with Noah Diaz's whimsical, wild, unpredictable and deeply moving Chicago premiere of You Will Get Sick, directed by Artistic Director Audrey Francis through July 13, 2025.
Podcast theater review by Kimzyn Campbell for Chicago Broadcasting Network.


Conquering Nations Can Be A Riot - Iraq, but funny
#21
06/10/2025

A laugh-out-loud comical attack of geopolitical humor invades Lookingglass Theater in “Iraq but Funny.”  Playwright / performer Astra Asdou recalls the history of the Assyrian people through this semi-autobiographical story of five generations of the women in her family.


Generational Destiny Blues - Theater Review - Chicago
#20
06/09/2025

Feeling controlled by outside forces, two people on the opposite ends of life are each trying to manage their own destiny in the Chicago Premiere of Charles Smith’s “Golden Leaf Ragtime Blues” at American Blues Theater - Chicago.

Podcast review by Reno Lovison


Curiosity leads to suspicion of new neighbor
#19
05/31/2025

The world premiere of “Neighborhood Watch” written by Rehana Lew Mirza and directed by Kaiser Ahmed at Jackalope Theatre is a humorous look at what can happen when curiosity leads to suspicion. Recommended. "There is a lot to enjoy in this sitcom style production that relies heavily on broad humor and predictable stereotypes." Podcast theater review by Reno Lovison includes some insightful historical information about the interesting Edgewater venue.


Robots Revolt in Edgewater - Chicago - Theater Review
#18
05/13/2025

If robots take over the world what would be their relationship to humans? Would it be a carefree utopia with happy automatons cheerfully laboring away while people enjoy a life of leisure or will the robots develop ideas and aspirations of their own, eventually viewing their human creators as archaic inferior predecessors, in-fact outdated models?
This is the concept behind Bo List’s R.U.R. a world premiere production, freely adapted from the play Rossum’s Universal Robots by Karel Capek playing now at City Lit Theatre, directed by Brian Pastor.


Galileo finds trouble declaring the Earth revolves around the Sun in play by Bertolt Brecht
#17
05/12/2025

Chicago's Trap Door Theatre presentation of “Galileo,” stays close to the heart of Bertolt Brecht’s script but is a revised challenging and thought-provoking interpretation. Fragments of the original dialogue featuring translation by Charles Laughton are there but the production has been reshaped and reimagined by director Max Truax into a postmodern avant-garde effort.

This theater review by Reno Lovison includes information about the play, the performance, where to eat nearby and some information about the neighborhood.


DA POPE | A podcast look at Pope Leo XIV Chicago Background
#16
05/09/2025

Pope Leo XIV, formerly known as Cardinal Robert Prevost provides Chicago with a direct line to the Vatican, and we’re exploring how his roots in the Windy City shaped his journey to the papacy.


Friendship can be an art - Theater Review of Art at Wit Chicago
#15
05/07/2025

Long term friendships can be complicated and messy. Honesty can be dangerous and revealing.  A fourteen-year friendship between three friends explodes over the purchase of an expensive modernist painting in ART, presented by Remy Bumppo at Wit Theatre in Chicago.

Theater review podcast by Reno Lovison


Time Traveling Through Berlin - Podcast Theater Review - Chicago
#14
04/30/2025

Berlin is a case study of how things can go wrong when a country has suffered losses and trauma. As its citizens and leaders slowly turn away from collaborative solutions and towards stark divisions in power and a dark fascist vision, slow motion disaster unfolds. Everyone can sense it but no one person has the power to prevent it.

Based on the three volume graphic novel Berlin written by Jason Lutes it covers the time period between WWI and WWII  focusing on the conditions needed for fascism to arise. This new theatrical adaptation by Mickle Maher, directed b...


Five Women Wearing the Same Dress - Theater Review - Chicago
#13
04/27/2025

A group of bridesmaids find reasons to bond in “Five Women Wearing the Same Dress” produced by St. Sebastian Players.
The bonding ritual begins with the common agreement that the dress chosen by the bride is perfectly ridiculous. The bond is further forged by the realization that they don’t even really like the bride that much. As each woman reveals something of herself they traverse a range of emotions; infuriated, anxious, remorseful, exasperated, frantic, exhausted, flirtatious, but overall hilarious. Highly Recommended. 


Tale of Two Cities - Shattered Globe Chicago | Theater Review
#12
04/25/2025

Charles Dickens’ expose of the French Revolution is cleverly performed and seems a little too close to home in today’s political climate. I would highly recommend this anyone unfamiliar with "A Tale of Two Cities" by DIckens, anyone unfamiliar with the history of the French Revolution and anyone interested in how a political movement run amok can affect the lives of every person involved resulting in unfathomable horrors perpetrated in the name of justice.



Mastering Life: The Inspiring Journey of a Golf Legend - Film Review Podcast
#11
04/22/2025

MASTERING LIFE. This is a podcast film review of "Rise Above : The Carl Jackson Story. A powerful new documentary by Chicago filmmaker Maryilene Blondell.  Whether you're a golf enthusiast or not, listen to learn what happens when a boy from a segregated Southern neighborhood in Georgia grows up to make golf history—and a woman from Chicago decides it’s time the world knew his name 


Dysfunctional Not-for-Profit Humor
#10
04/15/2025

Podcast theater review of "The Whole Seamus Thing" at Bramble lofts in Chicago. 


Kinks Sunny Afternoon | Theater Review
#9
04/05/2025

Following on the heels of the success of The Beatles and Rolling Stones, another group of four working-class lads from the outskirts of London called The Kinks made their mark on the history of Rock and Roll. Their first big splash on both sides of the pond was “You Really Got Me” featuring an iconic, fuzzy, five chord guitar riff. This energetic jukebox musical, “Sunny Afternoon,” enjoying its North American premiere here in Chicago, is based on the story of the Kinks as told by lead singer and songster Ray Davies, filtered through the adept hand of playwright Joe Penhall...


The Winter's Tale | Review and Synopsis
#8
03/19/2025

A story of reproach, remorse and reconciliation. The Winter’s Tale has something for everyone. This Shakespeare play performed by Invictus Theatre Company in Chicago has something for everyone. It is both tragedy and romantic comedy with sorrow, absurdity, mirth and fantasy.


Overview of GeNarrations Writing & Storytelling Program at Goodman Theatre Chicago
#7
03/19/2025

Goodman Theatre’s GeNarrations program is a FREE storytelling program that engages adults aged 55 and over in writing and performance workshops that nurture the creative spirit.  Genarrations participants were then encouraged to write their own stories based on themes of lies and betrayal.

This podcast is base on a recent reading of participants from the Wille Whyte Park location on the 1600 block of Howard Street in Rogers Park.



La Bohème at Lyric Opera of Chicago - Podcast Review with plot synopsis
#6
03/17/2025

Puccini’s popular opera La Bohème at Lyric Opera of Chicago is a story of youth, passion, love and loss where idealism comes face-to-face with life’s realities such as poverty, illness and death. Yes, this is the opera where the young lady with the bad cough dies at the end.  Listen to our synopsis and podcast review.


Guys and Dolls - Podcast Theater Review - Music Theater Works
#5
03/10/2025

Music Theater Works production of “Guys and Dolls” at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie is good old fashioned mid-century style musical theater fun.  The story lampoons the idea of middle class morality, lambasting both the good guys and bad guys for taking themselves so seriously.

Guys and Dolls has been performed by numerous companies over the past fifty-plus years but still seems to resonate with both young and more mature audiences because the music is memorable and the show is fun.



Romeo and Bernadette - Podcast Theater Review - Skokie Theater
#4
02/23/2025

In this hilarious musical riff on Romeo and Juliet at the Skokie Theater, Romeo has awakened from a 400-year slumber to find his beloved Juliet long turned to dust. Instead, he finds a teenaged American tourist Bernadette Penza whose mother Camille has brought the family to Italy to get in touch with her Veronese roots. Camille is a descendent of Juliet’s family and Bernadette the very image of Romeo’s lost love. In a desperate attempt to be reunited with her, Romeo follows the family back to Brooklyn finding himself embroiled in a gangland feud.


Hedda Gabler is a story of morality, manipulation and despair - Theater Review - Chicago
#3
02/22/2025

Hedda Gabler is the self-absorbed, only daughter of a military officer who has an overblown grandiose sense of her own importance, and a lack of empathy for others. She feels trapped in a world of bourgeois values full of expectations she cannot control. It is her perception that the men around her seem to enjoy much more freedom to pursue their own public and private interests with less scrutiny and fewer consequences.

Ibsen's well-crafted story reveals the inadvertent dangers of social pressure and a lifetime of pain that comes to a logical conclusion through events taking place...


Fool for Love - Theater Review - Steppenwolf Chicago
#2
02/15/2025

A sparsely furnished motel room dominates the stage. Along the perimeter an empty swimming pool, an imposing neon MOTEL sign, a massive telephone pole and bits of scrub grass suggest this is essentially the bottom of the barrel in the middle of nowhere somewhere at the end of the line. The massive sky in the background adds to the fact that this is a story of two people stuck in a small room focused on their problems while there is a whole big world outside, that like me, really doesn’t care.


Love can be fragile and often transparent
#1
01/26/2025

“Glassheart” is a modern-day reimagining of the well-known tale of Beauty and the Beast playing through February 23rd 2025 at CityLit Theater on Chicago’s northside near Bryn Mawr and Sheridan Road. 

What are you willing to sacrifice to be the light in someone else’s life? Are you able to look past the superficial and artificial barriers that cause us to disregard and reject those who may be deserving of affection?

Review by Reno Lovison


Long Christmas Dinner at TUTA Chicago - Podcast Review and Comments by Reno Lovison
#35
12/05/2024

Holidays have a unique way of punctuating our lives. Through this activity we assess alliances, trade information, and mark the passage of time.

In The Long Christmas Dinner written by Thorton Wilder, presented by TUTA Theatre in Chicago we join an affluent Midwestern family, sometime in the not-too-distant past, at their Christmas table.  

What is unusual is that, this is not just one dinner, it is a sequence of similar dinners seamlessly stitched together in a linear fashion, showing a progression of events that affect this family over multiple generations. 

...


Hey! Djou See Royko?
#34
11/16/2024

Mike Royko was an outspoken Chicago journalist, who in the 1960s through 1990s railed against the political machine and championed the cause of the underdog with the same zeal he displayed toward his beloved Chicago Cubbies.

Mitchell Bisschop’s roughly two-hour performance as Royko serves as a reminiscence for those of a certain age, and as an entertaining summary of our recent history for those of a younger generation who might not have first-hand familiarity with events related to the quickly fading recent past.




Time Passages – Documentary Film Review
#33
10/31/2024

Reno Lovison, Executive Producer at ChicagoBroadcastingNetwork.com comments on the documentary Time Passages by Chicago filmmaker Kyle Henry who tenderly reviews his relationship between himself and his mother, whose memory is slowly slipping away due to dementia.

Looking at other people’s lives is always interesting. We can’t help but to compare our experiences to theirs perhaps in a quest to see if we ourselves are “normal.” - -  Are they the outliers, or are we? 

“Time Passages” recently screened at the 60th Annual Chicago Film Festival.



BTW Meet Vera Stark Theater Review
#32
10/29/2024

An aspiring African American actress, Vera Stark (Ashayla Calvin) works as a personal maid to fading 1930s movie star Gloria Mitchell (Caitlin Jemison), once known as “America’s Little Sweetie-Pie.” The two have a close relationship and have a shared struggle to find success. However, due to race barriers and prejudices it is clearly more difficult for Stark than it is for Mitchell.

Playing at the Den Theatre in Chicago. Review by Reno Lovison



Artist Richard Hunt's Monument to Ida B. Wells | Film Review
#31
10/26/2024

This is a film review of "The Light of Truth: Richard Hunt's Monument to Ida B. Wells follows the Chicago artist's creation of a monument to the civil right champion and woman’s suffrage leader. The film that premiered at the 60th Annual Chicago International Film Festival in 2024 follows his process as an opportunity to showcase each of their contributions to society while doing so within the greater context of the history of the African American experience. 


Dear Elizabeth | Podcast Theater Review
#30
10/24/2024

Letter writing is more akin to internal dialogue and can have a kind of naked intimacy that is difficult to achieve in the flesh.
Dear Elizabeth is smart biographical drama providing a glimpse into the lives and thoughts of two interesting people who through their own words, demonstrate to us the value of friendship and human connectedness.


Inherit the Wind Revives Fundamental Conflicts
#29
10/03/2024

The Goodman Theatre reminds us that the more things change the more they remain the same in this production of the classic courtroom drama, “Inherit the Wind.”

Small town school teacher Bertram Cates (Christopher Llewyn Ramirez) is on trial for breaking a state law that prohibits the teaching of evolution.


Beethoven’s uplifting story of Fidelio speaks to a modern audience
#28
10/01/2024

Lyric Opera of Chicago expounds on Beethoven's message of freedom of expression in this captivating contemporary production of Fidelio. It's interesting to see how easily this 18th Century music transforms to modern times. It is and story of good triumphing over evil and most importantly a story of hope combined with the courage to speak truth to power and taking action to stand up to tyranny and oppression in order to right a wrong. Twenty-first century audiences will appreciate the portrayal of a strong female hero and the allusions to political oppression that continues to be perpetrated throughout the...


"Noises Off" Podcast Theater Review - Steppenwolf - Chicago
#27
09/27/2024

Kicking off this popular Chicago ensemble theater company’s 49th season, an incompetent troupe of actors are expertly portrayed by a considerably expert cast, in Steppenwolf’s revival of the classic screwball comedy “Noises Off,” directed by Anna D. Shapiro. 


South Pacific - Podcast Review - Skokie Theatre
#26
09/11/2024

A timeless classic that deserves to be seen and heard. Whether you are experiencing it the first time or you are coming from a place of nostalgia, the musical South Pacific includes some of the best and most recognizable tunes by the composing team of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.

Based on a novel by James Michener and adapted by Hammerstein and Josh Logan, the 1949 play boldly addressed the notion of learned prejudices, and confronted changing post-war attitudes about interracial marriage and mixed raced children.

An enchanting evening.


Georgia O'Keeffe: My New Yorks - Exhibit at Art Institute of Chicago
#24
08/10/2024

If you think you know something about Georgia O’Keeffe, be prepared to be pleasantly surprised.  Her styles at this time seems to have generally drifted away from her previous more colorful works and amorphous forms, and instead varied from monochromatic abstracts to more realistic sepia toned cityscapes reminiscent of Stieglitz’ photos.  Georgia O’Keeffe: “My New Yorks” is at the Art Institute of Chicago through September 22, 2024.  For details visit  The Art Institute of Chicago (artic.edu)
Podcast review by Reno Lovison.



Wells and Welles - Theater Review Chicago Premiere 2024
#23
07/29/2024

In 1938 twenty-five-year-old Orson Welles became famous after his radio play based on the novel "A War of the Worlds" shook the airwaves, purportedly nearly causing national panic. The book’s seventy-five-year-old author H.G. Wells was not amused at how his intellectual property was in his mind misused without permission.  Written by Amy Crider the play is inspired by an actual encounter in 1940 while the two men, “Wells and Welles” both happened to be on lecture tours, finding each other in San Antonio, Texas on the same rainy night. Podcast review by Reno Lovison ChicagoBroadcastingNetwork.com



Midnight in the Garden of Good & Evil - The Musical Premiere Review
#22
07/22/2024

“Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil” is the best musical I have seen in years.  Opening night was one to remember. John Berendt, the author of the best-selling book, was on hand for the curtain call and to see this new musical version written by Taylor Mac come to life. The excitement of the evening spilled out into the street as people chattered about what a great time this was.

At the Goodman Theatre, 70 N Dearborn St, Chicago, through August 11, 2024.

For tickets and information visit https://www.goodmantheatre.org 



ENGLISH at Goodman speaks eloquently of culture and identity
#21
05/22/2024

When you cannot adequately express yourself with the nuance and clarity of a native speaker, people do not know that you are actually smart, funny, and kind. Instead, they only hear your imperfect pronunciation and limited vocabulary. You may be easily assumed to be inferior with little or nothing to offer.

PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING PLAY BY SANAZ TOOSSI EXTENDED BY POPULAR DEMAND.


9 to 5 the musical - Podcast Theater Review - Metropolis Performing Arts Center 2024
#20
05/07/2024

“9 to 5: The Musical” playing at the Metropolis Theater in downtown Arlington Heights is a kind of women’s lib version of “How to Succeed in Business.” 

While his wife is away on a four week cruise a trio of women manage to hog tie and subdue their boss in his home. Signing his name to numerous memos they commence making much appreciated changes and improvements to staff morale and office productivity.

It may be difficult for some younger people today to consider that the glass ceiling for women was very real.

In some level this...