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Chicago Blackhawks: Would they ever trade Toews or Kane?on March 27, 2020 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Blackhawks: Would they ever trade Toews or Kane?on March 27, 2020 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears NFL Draft: Second-round interior OL optionson March 27, 2020 at 1:00 pm

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Chicago Bears NFL Draft: Second-round interior OL optionson March 27, 2020 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Stuart Gordon, legend of off-Loop theater and horror films, dies at 72on March 26, 2020 at 7:30 pm

When current mystery novelist and former Reader theater critic Lenny Kleinfeld (aka Bury St. Edmund) first met Stuart Gordon in 1968, it was at a rehearsal for Gordon’s student production of Peter Pan at the University of Wisconsin. But instead of trafficking in J.M. Barrie’s Victorian sentimentality, Gordon’s version reflected the upheavals that had ripped through Madison and the rest of the country in the late 60s.



In a 2013 entry for the crime writers’ blog “Murder Is Everywhere,” Kleinfeld described the production thusly: “Peter Pan was now a free-spirited hippie dude. His sidekick, Tinkerbell, was a hairy guy in a fringed leather shirt who dealt acid–I mean dispensed fairy dust, which sent Wendy and her brothers on a trip to Neverland, where the Lost Boys were a commune of semi-feral teens, the Indians were African-American Black Power radicals, and Captain Hook wasn’t a pirate, he was a cop, as were his men, who wore leather jackets, helmets and aviator shades.” Kleinfeld was also in the cast “despite the fact I’m one of the worst actors in the English-speaking world. Stuart, no fool, cast me in the role of a dialog-free spear-carrier. More precisely, a gun-, baton-, and tear-gas-carrying riot cop.”

The show also featured six naked women dancing. When one of Kleinfeld’s college pals, a student photographer who was also a stringer for the wire services, sent out photos of the women au naturel, the subsequent uproar ended up shutting down the show and getting Gordon arrested on obscenity charges (later dropped).

Gordon, who died Tuesday at 72 of multiple organ failure, brought that same countercultural aesthetic and tongue-in-cheek love of blood, guts, and sex to Chicago’s nascent off-Loop theater scene. After founding Madison’s Broom Street Theater, the Lane Tech grad returned to his hometown in the early 1970s and established the groundbreaking Organic Theater Company along with his wife, Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, who had been one of the dancing sextet in Peter Pan. Among the many notable productions in the company’s history was the comic-book-inspired sci-fi epic serial Warp! Cowritten by Kleinfeld, it starred Andre De Shields, who won the Tony Award last year for his performance in Hadestown. (Warp! had a very brief–four days–Broadway run in 1973.)

The company also had hit productions of David Mamet’s Sexual Perversity in Chicago and Bleacher Bums, created by the ensemble from Joe Mantegna’s original concept about a bunch of long-suffering Cubs fans hanging out at Wrigley one afternoon, back when afternoon baseball games were the only ones in town on the north side. (A company with the Organic name still exists today, but the name is all it has in common with Gordon’s troupe.)

In his 2004 book, A Theater of Our Own: A History and a Memoir of 1,001 Nights in Chicago, former Tribune theater critic Richard Christiansen noted that a “joyous, zestful celebration of theater permeated all of the Organic’s best work.”

Most people outside Chicago probably know Gordon best from his film career. His 1985 inaugural feature, the H.P. Lovecraft-inspired Re-Animator, put him on the map as a cult filmmaker–even though Reader critic Dave Kehr dismissed it as “ludicrous and inept.”

Gordon’s long horror film resume includes 1986’s From Beyond and a 1991 adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Pit and the Pendulum. But like a lot of people who got their start in off-Loop theater, he retained a soft spot for those salad days. In addition to being active in Los Angeles theater, Gordon directed and produced the 2005 film version of Mamet’s 1982 play Edmond (which premiered at the Goodman), as well as the 1998 film version of Ray Bradbury’s The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit, a comedy about five Latino men that he had directed for Organic. It was, as Christiansen noted, “Organic’s one and only production of a script that it had not originated,” adding “Gordon brought it to the stage with a joyous sense of brotherly unity amid uproarious diversity.”



The company produced much of their work at the now-gone Leo Lerner Theatre of the Uptown Center of Hull House, which was originally under the aegis of Chicago off-Loop pioneer Bob Sickinger and, after Organic, became the longtime home of Black Ensemble Theater. When the building at 4520 N. Beacon was bought by a developer in 2013, Gordon led the fight to save it, enlisting other onetime Chicago theater vets on the west coast such as William Petersen, William H. Macy, Jim Belushi, Mantegna, and George Wendt. When he lost that battle, he sent a message to the supporters, reading in part “my sweet wife reminded me of something I used to say back in the old days: that a theater is not a building. A theater is people.”

For Chicago theater, Gordon remains one of the most influential people in putting the experimental off-Loop scene on the national map. In Mark Larson’s 2019 Ensemble: An Oral History of Chicago Theater, Goodman’s longtime artistic director Robert Falls notes, “Stuart Gordon was actually a major, major influence on me. Organic’s work was not rooted in realism and was a full-out, balls-to-the-wall, gonzo performance style. Not that anything in my work goes in that direction, but he was demonstrating to me what a Chicago theater company was, could be.” Blair Thomas, cofounder of the late spectacle-based Redmoon Theater, recalled to Larson, “Stuart Gordon had a maxim, ‘Put on the stage what you want to see on the stage.'”

For his part, Gordon told Larson, “We took a chance on the possibility of doing theater for a living. That was one of the basic ideas of the Organic: we wanted to be able to make enough money that we wouldn’t have to do other jobs, we wouldn’t have to be driving cabs or waiting tables. We’d be paying people enough to live on. And we were able to do that in Chicago.”

Gordon is survived by his wife, daughters Suzanna, Jillian, and Margaret Gordon; four grandchildren; and his brother, David George Gordon. v






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Stuart Gordon, legend of off-Loop theater and horror films, dies at 72on March 26, 2020 at 7:30 pm Read More »

Can Iton March 26, 2020 at 10:52 pm

Pantry to Plate

Can It

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Can Iton March 26, 2020 at 10:52 pm Read More »

Home with Your Toddler? What to Doon March 27, 2020 at 3:31 am

Parenting SOS

Home with Your Toddler? What to Do

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Home with Your Toddler? What to Doon March 27, 2020 at 3:31 am Read More »

Moving the Chains with . . . Omar Akil Solomon, EIU Admissionson March 27, 2020 at 10:30 am

Prairie State Pigskin

Moving the Chains with . . . Omar Akil Solomon, EIU Admissions

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Moving the Chains with . . . Omar Akil Solomon, EIU Admissionson March 27, 2020 at 10:30 am Read More »

1 dead, 1 hurt in Roseland apartment fireon March 27, 2020 at 7:02 am

One person was killed and another was injured in a fire Friday at an apartment complex in Roseland on the South Side.

The blaze was reported about 12:30 a.m. at a building with more than 100 units in the 900 block of East 104th Street, according to the Chicago Fire Department.

One adult was pronounced dead at the scene and another was taken to Trinity Hospital in fair-to-serious condition, fire officials said. Their exact ages and genders were not immediately known. They were found in separate apartments.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office has not released details about the fatality.

Firefighters and residents milled about behind the apartment complex, where heavy damage could be seen in a third-floor unit. Police wearing gloves and face masks led people out of the building in the direction of a CTA warming bus on Maryland Avenue, while other families sat in idling cars around the building to stay warm.

The fire was out by about 1:40 a.m., according to the fire department. It was not immediately clear how many people were displaced.

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1 dead, 1 hurt in Roseland apartment fireon March 27, 2020 at 7:02 am Read More »

Chicago postpunk trio Deeper tackle big questions about mental health on Auto-Painon March 26, 2020 at 8:40 pm

While Chicago postpunk four-piece Deeper was working on the follow-up to their 2018 self-titled debut, guitarist Michael Clawson quit the band. The remaining members–guitarist-vocalist Nic Gohl, bassist Drew McBride, and drummer Shiraz Bhatti–wrapped up the album as a trio. This past fall, after they’d finished, Clawson took his own life. Many of the songs on the new Auto-Pain (Fire Talk) became memorials, informed by the bandmates’ experience with a close friend who privately wrestled with depression. The members of Deeper recently spoke to Stereogum at length, sharing their memories of Clawson and explaining how their questions about mental health manifest themselves in the band’s alternately anxious and heartening music. On Auto-Pain, Deeper braid ice-cold guitar riffs with taut rhythms that sometimes leap from dry and barren to inflamed and euphoric within a single track–such as the furiously precise “4U.” On “Willing” and “Lake Song,” Gohl explores what it’s like to confront the uncertainties of your own mental health, his delivery wavering between hurried quasi-yelps and somber quavers in a way that augments the music’s emotional ambiguity. Though Auto-Pain doesn’t offer any easy answers, it pulses with the energy we need to face these issues and make a better tomorrow. v

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Chicago postpunk trio Deeper tackle big questions about mental health on Auto-Painon March 26, 2020 at 8:40 pm Read More »

Chicago rapper Sterling Hayes travels down his own unusual path on Flirting With Deathon March 26, 2020 at 9:02 pm

Four years ago, Save Money rapper Sterling Hayes dropped his debut mixtape, Antidepressant, which foreshadowed the wave of Soundcloud rappers who’ve peppered their rhymes with intimate disclosures of their struggles with mental health issues. But that’s not to say that Hayes has much in common with those MCs, or with any scene around town either. On his forthcoming album, Flirting With Death (Create Music Group), he unloads diaristic raps that sometimes thrash against the beat or refuse to conform to a discernible rhyme scheme–he bends every line to the vagaries of his emotions, which makes for some engrossing passages. Hayes punches up his tracks even further by enlisting some of his Chicago friends, including R&B singer the Mind, fellow Save Money MC Brian Fresco, and ace-in-the-hole rappers Vic Spencer and Tree. But when Hayes gives himself room to roam–he’s alone atop the unstable synth and minimal percussion of “Offspring,” with no guest vocalists–he proves he’s got the grit to flourish all by himself, on his own idiosyncratic path. v

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Chicago rapper Sterling Hayes travels down his own unusual path on Flirting With Deathon March 26, 2020 at 9:02 pm Read More »

Drama’s new Dance Without Me is for sad-but-sexy folks everywhereon March 26, 2020 at 10:49 pm

When the COVID-19 crisis subsides long enough for the concert circuit to start up again, you’ll want to see Chicago electro-R&B duo Drama live. But in the meantime, their new debut LP, Dance Without Me, might just be the record you need to get through your social isolation. An album for sad-but-sexy people everywhere, Dance Without Me continues the lush musical explorations of love and loss that the group began on the sultry, synth-driven 2016 EP Gallows, building urgency with the narratives in their lyrics as well as the tempos of their tracks. Gentle opener “7:04 AM” captures that eerily silent longing that comes on strong in the mornings when someone who’s always been there is suddenly gone. The house-influenced instrumentals of producer Na’el Shehade pulsate without overwhelming, while Via Rosa’s soulful, smoky vocals linger over every note, making heartbreak and bliss sound equally seductive. Drama balance pop-conscious melodies and deft, delicate layers of keys and strings against funky, grimy beat manipulation and bossa nova rhythms, bringing a vibrancy that’s distinctly theirs to “singing the blues.” Rosa’s candid declarations can stand alone, but listened to in succession, they build upon one another to tell a larger, more complex story. On “Lifetime” and the title track, she speaks to different elements of longing, and the latter ultimately drives home the message that self-love must come before love of another. The process of healing a broken heart is a journey from pain to joy, and on Dance Without Me Drama make a compelling case to hold space for it on the dance floor. v

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Drama’s new Dance Without Me is for sad-but-sexy folks everywhereon March 26, 2020 at 10:49 pm Read More »