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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Chicago Reader published by this site and its partners.

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    Jan 4, 2011 |Story| AP Broadcast
  1. Ebert's new show names Vishnevetsky as co-host

    NEW YORK (AP) — Chicago-based film critic Ignatiy Vishnevetsky is joining Roger Ebert's upcoming movie review show. Vishnevetsky is replacing the previously announced Elvis Mitchell, the show announced Tuesday. No explanation was given for...

    Tags: Television Industry, Roger Ebert, Entertainment, Movies, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky

  2. May 7, 2013 | Chicago Tribune
  3. 'Shame that Tune' = my shame, Levitan's tune

    Change of Subject
    I'll be a contestant on "Shame That Tune" Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the Hideout. Per the event's website, the "musical comedy game show" -- features three locally famous contestants telling embarrassing stories, being interviewed by (Chicago Reader...
  4. May 9, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  5. Robert Sickinger, pioneer of Chicago theater, dies at 86

    Robert Sickinger, a pivotal figure in the development of Chicago's off-Loop theater scene, died Thursday morning at his home in Delray Beach, Fla. Sickinger was 86. His daughter, Erika, said her father died from natural causes.
    Robert Sickinger, a pivotal figure in the development of Chicago's off-Loop theater scene, died Thursday morning at his home in Delray Beach, Fla. Sickinger was 86. His daughter, Erika, said her father died from natural causes. To the extent that...

    Tags: Delray Beach, Hull House, Chicago Loop, Obituaries, Arts and Culture

  6. May 9, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Classical sounds, unusual spaces

    The players lift their bows with the customary this-is-the-end flourish, finishing a movement of a Shostakovich string quartet, and the audience claps. A few "Whoo!" yells escape from the back of the room. Some people whistle.
    The players lift their bows with the customary this-is-the-end flourish, finishing a movement of a Shostakovich string quartet, and the audience claps. A few "Whoo!" yells escape from the back of the room. Some people whistle. As the quartet launches...

    Tags: Entertainment Events, Architecture, Music Theater, Customs and Tradition, Mayne Stage

  8. May 1, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  9. Coming to terms with the reality of our city

    In Theodore Dreiser's "Sister Carrie," a prosperous Chicago businessman, George Hurstwood, takes up with the young, gorgeous Carrie Meeber, chucks family and home, and runs away with Carrie to Montreal. They find their way to New York, where their tales separate and their fortunes move in radically different directions. Carrie becomes a successful stage performer and social diva. George is reduced to driving a streetcar, and ultimately, alone in a flophouse, commits suicide.
    In Theodore Dreiser's "Sister Carrie," a prosperous Chicago businessman, George Hurstwood, takes up with the young, gorgeous Carrie Meeber, chucks family and home, and runs away with Carrie to Montreal. They find their way to New York, where their tales...

    Tags: The New York Times, Austin (Chicago, Illinois), West Englewood, Englewood, Reviews

  10. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. Authors A-C

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} 826CHI 826CHI is a nonprofit writing and tutoring center dedicated to supporting students ages 6-18 with their creative and expository writing skills, and to helping teachers inspire their students....

    Tags: Politics, Chicago Public Library, Authors, New York City, Crime, Law and Justice

  12. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  13. Authors H-L

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} Susan Hahn Susan Hahn was editor of TriQuarterly for 14 years. She is author of a recent novel, “The Six Granddaughters of Cecil Slaughter”; nine books of poetry, including “Self/Pity&...

    Tags: Television Industry, Architecture, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Richard M. Daley, Crime, Law and Justice

  14. Apr 26, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. Let's review: Rachel Shteir and poor Chicago

    And they said the gentle art of literary criticism was dead, confined to irrelevance. Not this week, gentle reader. Not in Chicago. Not in the heat of L'affaire de Shteir. What book review in the history of Chicago literature — heck, what recent book review, period — has enjoyed the attention afforded to Rachel Shteir's review in the last Sunday's New York Times?
    Tribune critic
    And they said the gentle art of literary criticism was dead, confined to irrelevance. Not this week, gentle reader. Not in Chicago. Not in the heat of L'affaire de Shteir. What book review in the history of Chicago literature — heck, what recent...

    Tags: The New York Times, Human Interest, Executive Branch, Politics, WTTW

  16. Apr 4, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  17. Movie secrets are there, in the script!

    You know what "Star Wars" is about? I mean, <em>really</em> about? Vietnam. It's a critical allegory of the war: The Rebels are the scrappy Viet Cong, hastily assembled, devoted and relentless; the Empire is the American military, tripped up by an enemy using guerrilla tactics and inferior weaponry. Oh, there's more here, but...
    You know what "Star Wars" is about? I mean, really about? Vietnam. It's a critical allegory of the war: The Rebels are the scrappy Viet Cong, hastily assembled, devoted and relentless; the Empire is the American military, tripped up by an enemy using...

    Tags: Jaws (movie), Paul Verhoeven, Columbia College Chicago, The Shining (movie), Star Wars (movie)

  18. Mar 26, 2013 | Chicago Tribune
  19. Cultural 'crisis' -- one man's explanation

    Change of Subject
    It's not consumerism that makes millions of people turn away from their churches. It's not relativism. Or narcissism. Or secularism. It's common sense. These churches ask their worshippers to believe in things that are ridiculous. The acid burning through...
  20. Mar 14, 2013 | Chicago Tribune
  21. Eschew on this: The grand marshal of world-weariness says it’s OK to hate parades and stay home

    Change of Subject
    Friday's print column Chicago’s annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade will step off at noon Saturday from the intersection of Balbo and Columbus Drives in Grant Park and head north about half a mile to Monroe Drive. You couldn’t pay me......
  22. Mar 15, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. 'Ramblers': A tale of hoops and history

    It was a thrill for me whenever the Michael Lenehan byline appeared above a story &mdash; usually a very lengthy story &mdash; in The Atlantic from the early 1980s to early 1990s. Occasionally he would write for his home publication, the Chicago Reader, where he served as chief editorial executive, but those Atlantic pieces were special.
    It was a thrill for me whenever the Michael Lenehan byline appeared above a story — usually a very lengthy story — in The Atlantic from the early 1980s to early 1990s. Occasionally he would write for his home publication, the Chicago Reader,...

    Tags: Chicago Tribune, Sports, Steinway Concert Grand Piano, Mississippi State Bulldogs, NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament

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