Life Time:
After much wailing and gnashing of teeth over Ira Glass‘s move to New York, Chicagoans will see This American Life première on Showtime March 22nd. We gave three fans of the radio show a screener of the early episodes. Pros: “Seeing is believing-some stories go better with pictures.” “The Chris Ware cartoon in the third episode is genius.” CONS: “Ira seems disconnected.” “[Half-hour] episodes are too short.” “No continuity, no reason to tune in again.” VERDICT: “It’s good. This means I have to get Showtime.”
Map Quest: |
Booked: |
Makeup Maven: Just in time for her big 5-0, Wilmette native Bobbi Brown is releasing Bobbi Brown Living Beauty (Springboard Press, $29.99), which focuses on graceful aging for women over 40. Her secret: moisturize. In a pinch, she says, even olive oil will do. “I was flying first class. I took the unused olive oil from my dinner and rubbed it on my face.” |
Almost Famous: |
On a String:
Once the domain of children’s TV and lame horror flicks, puppetry is landing on Chicago stages. In March, two very literary-minded theatres get into the act. Chicago Shakespeare premières Marionette Macbeth, created with Italy’s classical Compagnia Marionettistica Carlo Colla e Figli (March 13th through 25th). Meanwhile, Evanston artist Michael Montenegro and Writers’ Theatre in Glencoe unveil The Puppetmaster of Lodz, in which local actor Larry Neumann Jr. plays an Auschwitz survivor who has only his puppets for company (March 14th through July 8th). Why puppets, not people? “It’s not often you see Macbeth with 200 actors,” says Chicago Shakespeare’s executive director, Criss Henderson. “You have an amazing ability to tell a story in a way that you couldn’t with live actors on the stage.”
Illustration: John Ueland (Ira Glass by Douglas Barnes/Showtime) Photography: Ballis by Maia Rosenfeld, Swanberg Courtesy of Kris