the
GOODMAN THEATRE
170
N.
Dearborn Street
(312)
443-3800

Pictured in
Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, directed by William Brown is Larry
Yando (Ebenezer Scrooge). A Christmas Carol begins performances on
November 20 (Opening Night is November 29) and
runs through December 31 in the Goodman's Albert Theatre. For ticket
information, visit GoodmanTheatre.org or call 312.443.3800.
Photo by Liz Lauren.
LARRY
YANDO STARS AS SCROOGE IN A CHRISTMAS CAROL, CHICAGO'S PREMIER
HOLIDAY TRADITION AT GOODMAN THEATRE, NOVEMBER 20 – DECEMBER 31
review
by Ed Vincent
I am not sure how many years that I have
been seeing the Christmas Carol at the Goodman. It is definitely
something that complements or rather completes the festive holiday
season. This year's show was a treat, more musical numbers
featuring a stage full of singers doing standard Christmas songs and
folk tunes of the season.
Larry Yando is a thrill in his metamorphosis from curmudgeon to gleeful
redeemed philanthropist. There are a few major cast changes and
some additional younger folks helping with their talents on the stage.
The singing seemed to bring a more peaceful theme to the production in
this time of two wars that we are engaged in.
It is fun to note the little additions to the script seen here and
there as the nephew of Scrooge as more and more coals to the fire
warming up the temper of his miserly elder.
The intimate size of the Goodman show is an event worth seeing each and
every year. You become involved in the well known story and small
theater makes it feel like a family event, where you are member of the
cast.
I am not sure what might change for next year's production, but this
year is glorious event and well worth seeing.
Highly recommended.
LARRY
YANDO STARS AS SCROOGE IN A CHRISTMAS CAROL, CHICAGO'S PREMIER
HOLIDAY TRADITION AT GOODMAN THEATRE, NOVEMBER 20 – DECEMBER 31
***WILLIAM BROWN
DIRECTS THE 32ND ANNUAL PRODUCTION WITH A CAST OF 27, INCLUDING TWELVE
NEW TALENTS***
(Chicago, IL) Acclaimed Chicago actor Larry
Yando commands the stage as Scrooge in A Christmas Carol, "Goodman
Theatre's annual Christmas gift to Chicago"
(Daily Herald) for
over three decades. In his 17th year with
A Christmas Carol,
Chicago actor/director William Brown stages the production hailed as "a
joyous present for the entire family" (Chicago Sun-Times) and "ideal
family fare, both heartwarming and spectacular in its familiar tale"
(Chicago Tribune). The 2009 production will feature a new hand-painted
backdrop designed by Olivier- and Tony Award-winning set designer Todd
Rosenthal, in addition to twelve newcomers to the production. A
Christmas Carol runs November 20 – December 31, 2009 in the Goodman's
Albert Theatre. Tickets are $25 – $74 and can be purchased online at
www.GoodmanTheatre.org, at the box office (170 North Dearborn) or by
phone at 312.443.3800. Production sponsors for A Christmas Carol
include Major Corporate Sponsor Harris Bank and Corporate Sponsor
Partners Aon Corporation, AT&T and Chapman and Cutler LLP.
"As the annual holiday tradition for
thousands of families, as well as the entry point to theater for a
legion of young people, A Christmas Carol at the Goodman has made an
astonishing impact on Chicago," said Executive Director Roche Schulfer,
who was instrumental in originating the production at Goodman Theatre
32 years ago. "We are proud to consistently deliver the definitive
holiday theatrical offering in our region—a first-rate, glorious
production that has touched the lives of over a million theatergoers."

(l to r) John Babbo
(Tiny Tim), Lauren Patten (Martha Cratchit),
Ron Rains (Bob
Cratchit), Nathan Sabo ( Peter Cratchit),
Mackenzie Wilkin (Belinda
Cratchit), Caroline Heffernan (Emily Cratchit) and Christine Sherrill
(Mrs. Cratchit.
Photo by Liz
Lauren.
New talents to this
year's production include John Babbo (River Forest) as Tiny Tim; Susan
Felder (Chicago) as Mrs. Fezziwig; Jessie Mueller (Evanston) as Belle;
Christine Sherrill (St. Charles) as Mrs. Cratchit; Behzad Dabu
(Chicago) as Dick Wilkins; Matt Gold (Deerfield) as Turkey Boy; Lauren
Patten (Downers Grove) as Martha Cratchit; Michael Perez (Chicago) as
Mr. Ortle; Nathan Sabo (Darien) as Peter Cratchit and Scrooge as a Boy;
Alex Weisman (Evanston) as Ghost of Christmas Past; Mackenzie Wilkin
(Wilmette) as Belinda Cratchit and Fan; Andy Truschinski (Chicago) as
Young Scrooge and Ghost of Christmas Future.
Veteran Chicago
actors returning to the production include Tim Gittings as Topper;
Caroline Heffernan as Emily Cratchit; Katie Jeep as Abby; Anish
Jethmalani as Ghost of Jacob Marley; Anne Joseph as Mrs. Crumb; Adam
Poss as Percy, Ron Rains as Bob Cratchit; Matt Schwader as Fred; Brett
Tuomi as Mr. Fezziwig; and Penelope Walker as Ghost of Christmas
Present. Also returning to the production are musicians Justin Amolsch,
Greg Hirte, Bethany Jorgensen and Malcolm Ruhl (Highland Park).
Based on Charles
Dickens' 1843 novella, A Christmas Carol is the tale of the miserly
Ebenezer Scrooge, who is opposed to holiday cheer and indifferent to
the sufferings of the poor in Victorian London. Scrooge is visited by
four ghosts who offer him the opportunity to sympathize with his fellow
man. Dickens' famous characters include Scrooge's kind-hearted clerk,
Bob Cratchit, and his family, including Tiny Tim; the Ghosts of
Christmas Past, Present and Future; the merry-making Fezziwig couple;
and the Ghost of Jacob Marley. Throughout its history at the Goodman,
over 1 million people have experienced A Christmas Carol and the
production has hosted six directors, seven Scrooges, 27 Tiny Tims, and
nearly 20,000 "Bah, Humbug!"s.
(l to r) Larry Yando (Ebenezer
Scrooge) and Andy Truschinski
(Ghost of
Christmas Future).
Photo
by Liz Lauren.
Bio information for the company and Todd
Rosenthal (Set Designer), Heidi Sue McMath (Costume Designer), Robert
Christen (Lighting Designer), Cecil Averett (Sound Designer), Susan
Hart (Choreographer) and Andy Hansen (Composer/Music Director) is
available through Goodman Theatre's Publicity Office.
About the Director
William Brown
returns for his fourth year as director of A Christmas Carol at the
Goodman, where he was last seen as Ebenezer Scrooge. He recently
directed the world premiere of Brett Neveu's Old Glory at Writers'
Theatre where he also directed As You Like It, Another Part of The
Forest, Our Town, Arms and the Man, Rocket to the Moon, Misalliance,
The Glass Menagerie and Incident at Vichy. At American Players Theatre
in Spring Green, Wisconsin, he directed last summer's Comedy of Errors
and Hay Fever and, previously, productions of A Midsummer Night's
Dream, Night of the Iguana, The Matchmaker, Twelfth Night, The Cherry
Orchard, Antony and Cleopatra, All's Well That Ends Well and Shaw's You
Never Can Tell. At Northlight Theatre he directed Lady Windermere's
Fan, The Chalk Garden and his own musical adaptation of She Stoops to
Conquer. He recently directed the Midwest premiere of Curtains for
Drury Lane Oakbrook. For TimeLine Theatre Company in Chicago, he
directed Steven Dietz's Halcyon Days and Paragon Springs and Tennessee
Williams' Not About Nightingales. Brown is the Associate Artistic
Director of Montana Shakespeare in the Parks where he most recently
directed Romeo and Juliet and Heartbreak House. He received a Jeff
Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Henry Kissinger in Nixon's
Nixon.
(top to bottom) John Babbo (Tiny
Tim) and Larry Yando
(Ebenezer
Scrooge).
Photo
by Liz Lauren.
Larry Yando
(Ebenezer Scrooge) returns to the Goodman, where he has appeared as
Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol for the last two years. He
currently appears in Fake at Steppenwolf. Other leading Chicago roles
include Titus Andronicus at Defiant Theatre; The Two Noble Kinsmen,
Cymbeline, The Tempest, Timon of Athens, All's Well That Ends Well,
King Lear, Henry IV Parts I and II, Antony and Cleopatra and Two
Gentlemen of Verona at Chicago Shakespeare Theater; Fake, Travesties,
An Ideal Husband, Ghosts, Electra, Measure for Measure, The Importance
of Being Earnest and Travels with My Aunt at Court Theatre; Mother
Courage at Steppenwolf Theatre Company; Bach at Leipzig, As You Like
It, Nixon's Nixon and Rocket to the Moon at Writers' Theatre; The
Birthday Party and Eastern Standard at Apple Tree Theatre; and I Hate
Hamlet and Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris at Royal
George Theatre. His regional credits include Angels in America, Arcadia
and Amadeus at Milwaukee Repertory Theater; Glengarry Glen Ross, Cloud
Nine, Betrayal, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Six Characters in Search of
an Author at Indiana Repertory Theatre; and Burn This, I Hate Hamlet
and Private Lives at Madison Repertory Theatre. Yando also performed as
Scar in the national tour of The Lion King for three years. He was
honored as Chicago magazine's Best Actor in Chicago and received DePaul
University's prestigious Excellence in the Arts Award. Yando has taught
advanced acting classes at The Theatre School at DePaul University,
Northwestern University, Columbia College, Chicago Shakespeare
Theater's Classical Training Program and Act One Studio's Conservatory
Program. He also serves as a verse/text coach at Chicago Shakespeare
Theater.
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