• Time Out New York
    • Time Out New York Kids
    • Time Out Worldwide
    • Travel
    • Book store
    • Subscribe to Time Out Chicago
    • Subscriber Services
  • Time Out Chicago
  • Ad Space
    (728 x 90)
  • Search
  •  
    • Home
    • Around Town
    • Art & Design
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Gay & Lesbian
    • Home & Living
    • Kids
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Gyms
    • Sports & Rec
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV
  • « BACK TO SEARCH
    • Essentials

      • Info & map
        • event:  Dead Man's Cell Phone


    • Tools

      • E-mail

        E-mail a friend





        • * Mandatory

        • View our privacy policy
      • Print
      • Report an error

        Report an error


        • View our privacy policy
      • Share this
        • Delicious
        • Digg
        • Facebook
        • reddit
        • StumbleUpon

  • TOC Blog

    • James Asmus wants to touch you one last time

    • 7/9/09


    More posts


    TOC Poll

    • We want to know what you think. Click here to answer this week's poll question.



  • Ad Space
    (120 x 240)

  • Student Guide

    • Essential advice for our scholastically minded citizens.



    Continuing Education

    • Never stop learning. There's no excuse not to go back to school.



    FREE Stuff

    • Win prizes and get discounts, event invites and more.



    TOC Staff

    • Who does what and why.



    TOC Free Flix

    • Get free tickets to hot new movie releases.



    Subscribe

    • Subscribe now

    • Give a gift

    • Subscriber services



  • Theater
    • Info & Map
    • Review
    •  
    •  
    • |
    •  
    • Critic's Rating

    Theater review

    Dead Man’s Cell Phone

    Steppenwolf Theatre Company. By Sarah Ruhl. Dir. Jessica Thebus. With Polly Noonan, Marc Grapey, Mary Beth Fisher, Molly Regan, Coburn Goss.

    CALL OF THE WILD Noonan answers the corpse’s cell.
    Photo: Michael Brosilow

    This is the Sarah Ruhl work that has finally made us ask, What will it take for the American theater to realize the playwright has no clothes? To be fair, Cell Phone is not as infuriating as, say, Ruhl’s Passion Play was at the Goodman last fall. But neither is Cell Phone trying so hard to have something to say. This play, in fact, doesn’t seem to be trying very hard to do anything at all. It feels like a toss-off, a writing exercise Ruhl might have worked on between real plays.

    Jean, an apparent social misfit, answers the incessantly ringing cell phone of a man who has quietly died at the café table next to hers; thanks to her impulse to comfort his loved ones, she insinuates herself into their lives. Incessantly quirky Ruhl seems to want to explore the ways that technology such as mobile phones makes us both more and less accessible. But while some parts of Thebus’s staging provoke—both Mary Beth Fisher and Molly Regan, as the dead man’s wife and mother, respectively, achieve stylized humanity—the endeavor is hampered by Polly Noonan’s performance as Jean. Where Thebus and the rest of her cast find something approaching heightened reality, Noonan (who played the village-idiot character in Passion Play) appears mentally incapacitated once again. If there’s anything to be enjoyed in Ruhl’s paper-thin, aggressive whimsy and wordplay, Noonan renders it in invisible ink.

    — Kris Vire

    Time Out Chicago / Issue 163 : Apr 10–16, 2008
    • del.icio.us
    • Digg
    • Facebook
    • MySpace
    • Google
    • Yahoo! Buzz
    • TwitThis
    • StumbleUpon
    No comments yet

    Leave a comment

    (will not appear on site)

    500 characters left

    View our privacy policy



      • Subscribe now and save 87%!
      • For just $19.99 a year, you'll get hundreds of listings and free events each week, plus our special issues and guides, including Cheap Eats, Great Spas, Fall Preview, Holiday Gift Guide and more!
      • Time Out Covers
      • Time Out Chicago respects your privacy. We will only use your e-mail address in order to contact you regarding to your subscription and to send you our weekly e-newsletter. We will not share this information with anyone.

  • Ad Space
    (320 x 53)

    Ad Space
    (300 x 250)

  • Most viewed in Theater

    • Articles
    • Venues
    • William Petersen interview
    • Ruby skipper
    • As Racine on TV
    • Up
    • Earth: TTFN?!
    • Boleros for the Disenchanted
    • Nude descending a copyright case
    • The Hollow Lands
    • The Tragedy of Doctor Faustus
    • Elephant Deal
    • Fausto's Italian Kitchen & Catering
    • First Folio Theatre, Mayslake Peabody Estate
    • Elmhurst Masonic Lodge
    • Chicago Cultural Center, Studio Theater
    • Gunder Mansion, North Lakeside Cultural Center
    • Meiley-Swallow Hall, North Central College
    • Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre
    • 16th Street Theater at Berwyn Cultural Center
    • Prop Thtr
    • Building Stage

  • Time Out Chicago Kids

    • 99 summer outings
    • 99 summer outings

    • Find things to do with the young ones and much more in our newest publication Time Out Chicago Kids. Available at Borders and Barnes & Noble locations.


    More kids

    Recent reviews

    • Poseidon! An Upside-Down Musical

    • Sodomites!!!

    • Romeo and Juliet

    • A Song for Coretta

    • Strauss at Midnight

    • Hope VI

    • Little Brother

    • The K of D: An Urban Legend

    • The Ride Down Mount Morgan

    • A Tribute to the Black Crooners



    Features

    More Chicago theater

    • Gary Houston
    • Gary Houston

    • The Uncle Vanya actor's four decades on the fringe.

    • About Face Theatre
    • About Face Theatre

    • New leaders Bonnie Metzgar and Rick Dildine put out a call for help.

    • New Leaf Theatre
    • New Leaf Theatre

    • The Lincoln Park company takes inspiration from its unique park district home.

    • The Neo-Futurists
    • The Neo-Futurists

    • The seminal performance group looks back on 20 years of Too Much Light.



  • Ad Space
    (160 x 600)

    Ad Space
    (160 x 600)

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit & Advertising
    • Get Listed
    • We're Hiring
    • Subscribe
    • Subscriber Services
    • Site Map
    • Home
    • Around Town
    • Art & Design
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Gay & Lesbian
    • Home & Living
    • Kids
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Gyms
    • Sports & Rec
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV
    • Visit our sister sites:
    • Time Out New York
    • Time Out New York Kids
    • Time Out London
    • Time Out Worldwide
    Copyright © 2000–2009 Time Out Chicago