Reviews

 

  • January 22, 2012read more

    by Lindsay Christians, 77 Square; How an artist changes the people around him, whether it's with a photograph, a compliment or a famous legacy, is at the core of Gwendolyn Rice's insightful play "A Thousand Words,"

     
  • November 28, 2011read more

    by Matthew Reddin, Third Coast Digest; "...Spencer, Mooney and Halverson flesh out their characters with details lesser actors might omit..."

     
  • November 28, 2011read more

    by Paul Kosidowski, Inside Milwaukee.com; ...But in Stoppard’s and Sibleyras’s hands, a kind of beautiful and comic chamber music unfolds.

     
  • November 26, 2011read more

    by Peggy Sue Dunigan, PostScript Performing Arts; "Halverson, Mooney and Spencer absolutely shine"

     
  • October 26, 2011read more

    by Russ Bickerstaff, Shepherd Express; In a way, human history could be described as a collection of stories of people being forced to meet each other.

     
  • October 21, 2011read more

    by Russ Bickerstaff, Shepherd Express blog; Seeing three shows a week, I often tend to forget the sheer joy of the most basic elements of theatre. C. Michael Wright hands you a tiny matchbox.

     
  • October 20, 2011read more

    by Damien Jaques, OnMilwaukee.com; Actress Ruth Schudson has had 65 opening nights with the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, the company she co-founded with Montgomery Davis in 1975. Along the way she became Milwaukee's Judi Dench.

     
  • October 17, 2011read more

    by Paul Kosidowski, Inside Milwaukee/Milwaukee Magazine; In the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre’s beautifully tender new production, the scenes flit by with a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it brevity – almost as if they were glimpsed through the window of Daisy Werthan’s passing car

     
  • August 13, 2011read more

    by Mike Fischer; Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ...But hard as she tries to be solemn, Lenny can't stop laughing. Neither could Milwaukee Chamber Theatre's Friday night audience, as they watched this bittersweet tale of three sisters trying to make lemonade - literally, at one point - from a lifetime's worth of awfully sour lemons...

     
  • August 13, 2011read more

    by Peggy Sue Dunigan, Postscript: Performing Arts; Milwaukee Chamber Theatre (MCT) opens their season by transforming "one very bad day" on the Cabot Stage into one thoroughly entertaining evening. This one chaotic day at the Broadway Theatre Center in the 1981 Pulitzer Prize production Crimes of the Heart presents the three McGrath sisters from Hazlehurst, Mississippi who attempt to make sense of their rural Southern dysfunction.

     

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