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We've just gone to press with our October issue, which is organized around the emotion of Fear. We'll share more details soon, but you can see the cover and pre-order the issue here or, better yet, sign up for a subscription by Friday night and you'll save forty percent off the cover price per issue, and Fear will be your first.
 

Brian Hieggelke

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A24 just turned ten; it was founded in August 2012 by David Fenkel, Daniel Katz and John Hodges to release the kind of independent features that were cool yet commonplace at the turn of the century. The plan was to move beyond the mistakes that crashed earlier distributors they worked with. And they have made a mark in the past decade, at festivals and in theaters. This year's theatrical releases so far include "After Yang," "X," "Men," "Marcel The Shell With Shoes On," "Bodies Bodies Bodies" and the colossal and unexpected returns on the uplifting Michelle Yeoh-starring, tax-averse metaverse hallucination "Everything Everywhere All At Once." (Ray Pride)

 

"The cast is led by Larry Yando as Poirot. Yando's Poirot is well-rounded; exacting yet uncertain, charming but blunt, a credit to Yando's many years in Chicago theater. There are even moments in which Poirot is nearly darling; his joy in the puzzle he's stumbled into, infectious, despite the macabre circumstances." (Christine Trevino)
 


"In 1946, medical professionals in the UK established the Common Cold Unit. Its goal was to discover practical treatments for the familiar viral infection known as the cold. Over the next forty-three years, until it was shut down, the agency produced just one useful innovation: zinc gluconate lozenges." (Rob Brezsny)
 


Cultural News

 

 

ART
 

Annual Recycled Art Sale And Benefit Returns To Highland Park

The annual Recycled Art Sale and Benefit returns to Highland Park October 13-22 for its twenty-third year. Hosted by The Art Center Highland Park, the event offers a collection of artwork including posters, jewelry, artifacts and curios, as well as deeply discounted works by artists such as Salvador Dali, LeRoy Neiman and Chicago-based outsider artist Lee Godie. Details here.
 

The OI Welcomes Museum Associate Director And Chief Curator

Marc Maillot, director of the French Archaeological Unit in Khartoum, Sudan, has accepted the position of OI Museum associate director and chief curator, the museum relays in a release. Maillot, who received his PhD from the Sorbonne, has held the position of Director of the French Archaeological Unit on behalf of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Marc has been director of excavations at the site of Damboya in Sudan as well as involved in the organization of exhibitions and in cultural heritage preservation efforts. He considers this appointment "a motivating challenge to bring a long-term vision to one of the best collections in my discipline." (More.)
 

 

DESIGN
 

Alphawood Foundation Wins Award For "Reconstructing the Garrick: Adler & Sullivan's Lost Masterpiece"

The Alphawood Foundation Chicago has won the 2022 Alice Award for "Reconstructing the Garrick: Adler & Sullivan's Lost Masterpiece," its illustrated, 352-page book edited by John Vinci with Tim Samuelson, Eric Nordstrom and Chris Ware, and designed by Chris Ware. The Alice Award, created in 2013, is administered by the New York-based Furthermore, and is given to a book that represents excellence in all aspects of the work—from idea to design to quality of production. (More.)
 

Navy Pier Neighborhood Artisan Market Continues

Navy Pier continues to provide access for entrepreneurs to sell their products through the Neighborhood Artisan Market, which showcases creative talent found across Chicago and its neighborhoods. Visitors can experience upcoming neighborhood Artisan Markets during normal Navy Pier operating hours, including Friday, September 23 through Sunday, September 25 (Greater Grand Crossing Community). Visitors can meet local Chicago artists, see crafts and learn stories. The market is planned in conjunction with local neighborhood business groups and the City of Chicago Department of Business Affairs. (More.)
 

Data Centers Boom In Illinois

A $2.5 billion data center is planned for the former United Airlines headquarters, reports the Trib. The site will host a 1.5 million-square-foot campus. "Hyperscale data centers typically house hundreds of thousands of computer servers in each building to meet the data storage needs of the world's largest companies… The development is the eighth new data center project to launch in the past year in ComEd's service territory… ComEd will build a new substation at the site to support CloudHQ's operations."
 

City Council Committee Approves Delivery Robots

"Robotic personal delivery devices described as 'beverage coolers on wheels' will soon be delivering more restaurant meals and groceries in and around the campus of the University of Illinois Chicago," reports the Sun-Times. "The Chicago City Council's Committee on License and Consumer Protection approved an ordinance championed by Mayor Lori Lightfoot expanding a year-old, pandemic-inspired pilot that had been confined to just a portion of the UIC campus."
 

 

DINING & DRINKING
 

Staffing Shortages Persist For Chicago Eateries

Some restaurateurs believe that immigration restrictions imposed under the Trump administration, as well as the pandemic, are hitting establishments harder than ever, reports WTTW. Robert Gomez, owner of Subterranean and Beat Kitchen, suggests that "policy-makers should come together and discuss how to legalize migrants, otherwise, the restaurant industry 'will not bounce back.'"
 

Pops for Champagne Sabers Fortieth Anniversary 

Pops for Champagne is celebrating its fortieth anniversary this September. One of the nation's most noted champagne bars, Pops has served almost a million bottles of champagne since opening in 1982. To celebrate their anniversary, they're serving a rotating $40 pour of unique champagne, not typically served by the glass. They've also expanded their menu, adding new offerings weekly, aiming to represent smaller producers from the Champagne region of France. (More.)
 

Chicago Gourmet Presents Prost! In the Park

Chicago Gourmet, one of the nation's largest food festivals, has added Prost! In the Park, a beer and spirits festival with brews, bites and "boozie bevs" from popular and soon-to-be-discovered producers. Chef Sarah Grueneberg (Monteverde Restaurant & Pastificio) will host. Guests "will enjoy chef takes on classic German delights, oom-pah bands, fun cocktails, and of course, plenty of frosty pints." (More.)
 

 

FILM & TELEVISION
 

Chicago International Film Festival Announces Full Schedule

The fifty-eighth edition of North America's longest-running film festival will open with Steve James' "Compassionate Spy," feature "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery" as its centerpiece and close with Noah Baumbach's "White Noise," and will run from October 12-23. Screenings are set across the city, including at River East, the Music Box, Siskel and the Chicago History Museum as well as virtually and with pop-up screenings at Austin Town Hall and the Hamilton Park Cultural Center in Englewood. The ChiFilmFest Opening Night Block Party will take place on Southport near the Music Box, 5-10pm, featuring vendors, music, photo ops and food trucks. The program includes ninety-two features and fifty-six shorts, two world-premieres, fourteen North American premieres and twenty-two U.S. premieres. (More.)
 

Yes, Your "Ferris" Day Is Possible At Breakneck Speed

The old question washes up, this time at the Washington Post: could Ferris Bueller do all that shit in a single day? Leigh Giangreco, of the Thompson Center Sbarro's beat, tries John Hughes' itinerary on for size: "As an adopted Chicagoan and longtime John Hughes devotee, I've always wondered whether it's possible to do everything Ferris accomplished as he dodges school in the 1986 film. He knocks out a trip to the top of the Sears Tower, the Chicago Board of Trade, a fancy French lunch, a Cubs game, the Art Institute, the Von Steuben Day parade and the beach, then races on foot through his North Shore suburb to get home by 6pm. Even with the help of movie magic, it seems like a stretch…" (More.)
 

 

LIT
 

Sant Jordi USA Festival of Books Launches In Chicago

"Chicago is home to an extraordinarily diverse set of writers, but it's also home to literary translators who work from dozens of minority, underrepresented or straight-up endangered languages to bring the literature of the world into English," Sant Jordi USA says in a release. "Translation is as much a political, cultural and migratory statement as it is a literary one." With support from Chicago's DCASE, the group is launching the inaugural Sant Jordi USA Festival of Books in Chicago, an international cousin of the Sant Jordi Festival of Books, Roses & the Arts begun nearly a century ago in Catalonia. (More.)
 

"The Divided States of America" In Crystal Lake

Author, speaker and cultural anthropologist Rich Benjamin will join the Raue Center for the Arts on October 14 for "The Divided States of America: Big National Transformations, Small Towns," a presentation and moderated Q&A discussing the writer's personal experiences engaging with communities in small-town America and his observations of modern society, culture and politics. (More.)
 

 

MEDIA
 

Remembering Genevieve Buck, Columnist, Editor And Fashion Reporter

"Genevieve Buck entered the newspaper business when it was still a raucous, male-dominated world in which women were considered secondary," writes Rick Kogan in a remembrance at the Tribune. "But over the next decades Buck would prove to be an influential and internationally admired fashion reporter and editor, business reporter and columnist, and feature story writer. She did so with a memorably deft touch. And she was as stylish in person as in print…" (More.)
 

Invisible Institute Founder Reflects On Robbery At Gunpoint

Invisible Institute founder Jamie Kalven compares the "Lakeview Scream" attack ad to the experience of he and his wife with gunpoint robbery in a column at the Trib. The experience "left us with the knotty conundrum of how to understand and manage the presence of fear in our lives."
 

 

MUSIC
 

Illinois Philharmonic Will Crown Composer-In-Residence

"As part of Maestro Stilian Kirov's vision to encourage the development of new musical voices, Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra is proud to host our fourth annual composer competition, IPO Classical Evolve, aimed at expanding the canon of classical music for current and future generations," the group relays in a release. "In an innovative and artistically fulfilling process, three finalists will have their new, original seven-to-ten-minute score workshopped and performed live to IPO audiences on Thursday, September 22. The winning composer will be named IPO Composer-in-Residence" and have the opportunity to compose three orchestral works during the 2023-24 season. The event will be held at the Marg Kallemeyn Theatre on the Trinity Christian College campus. More here.
 

Symphony Ball On Opening CSOA Weekend

The Women's Board of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association (CSOA) will present Symphony Ball, a festive part of the opening weekend of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's season that includes red-carpet arrivals and a preconcert champagne toast throughout Symphony Center for all concertgoers. The gala evening will also honor Riccardo Muti for his artistic partnership with the CSO as music director. Symphony Ball is chaired by CSOA Women's Board member Dora Aalbregtse and her husband John Aalbregtse, a CSOA Trustee. (More.)
 

 

STAGE
 

"Good Night, Oscar" Heading To Broadway

"The smash hit Goodman Theatre production of 'Good Night, Oscar' is headed to Broadway in the spring with most of its original Chicago cast, including its acclaimed star, Sean Hayes," reports Chris Jones at the Trib. "Doug Wright's play with music, an exploration of the pianist, actor and raconteur Oscar Levant, is slated to begin performances at the Belasco Theatre on Broadway on April 7, 2023, with an opening night of April 24."
 

Deeply Rooted Performs At Navy Pier

Deeply Rooted Dance Theater performs free at Navy Pier on September 25, launching its fall roster of Dance Education programs. Deeply Rooted joins an impressive group of the city's top musical, theatrical, dance and cultural organizations for the Chicago Live! weekend at Navy Pier September 24-25. The company performs "Parallel Lives," choreographed by associate artistic director Gary Abbott, and "Heaven," choreographed by Abbott and creative-executive director Kevin Iega Jeff, on Sunday, September 25 at 4pm at East End Plaza. More here.
 

Steppenwolf For Young Adults Presents "1919"

Steppenwolf Theatre Company will present the Steppenwolf for Young Adults' (SYA) world premiere of "1919," adapted by J. Nicole Brooks from Eve L. Ewing's collection of poems about the killing of Black teenager Eugene Williams in 1919 off the segregated Chicago lakeshore, and how this tragedy reverberates today. "1919" runs October 4-29 as the second-ever production in Steppenwolf's new in-the-round Ensemble Theater. (More.)
 

 

ARTS & CULTURE & ETC.
 

Cultural Center Announces Programming For Cooler Seasons

The City of Chicago and the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) have announced the fall and winter lineup of free film, music and art programming, as well as tours and lectures throughout the Chicago Cultural Center. In addition to ongoing, yearlong programming, the season includes a new immersive exhibition, "Exact Dutch Yellow" by Luftwerk, a Chicago-based collaborative, that plays on color theory and will transform the fourth floor exhibit hall into a chromatic experience; an "Under the Dome" concert lineup that features performances by prominent artists KAINA and Mick Jenkins; and holiday gifts and programming at the Buddy store, including a special holiday ornament show and one-of-a-kind gifts from Chicago. More here.
 

Fall Fest Returns To Lincoln Park Zoo

Lincoln Park Zoo's free Fall Fest kicks off September 30. In addition to autumn-themed animal features and musical entertainment, the zoo's fall pop-up bar, Patch's Pumpkin Bar & Grill, returns to offer seasonal food, drinks, décor, and views of Pepper Family Wildlife Center. Visitors can pick a pumpkin at the zoo's pumpkin patch and "can marvel at the masterpieces created by professional pumpkin carvers and attend a drag story time." Fall Fest features ticketed experiences, including a Pumpkin Walk at Pritzker Family Children's Zoo, with live professional pumpkin carvers on Saturdays and Sundays, a Harvest Maze, rides (including a sixty-five-foot Ferris wheel, fun slide and "Pirate's Revenge"), Lionel Train Adventure, and the AT&T Endangered Species Carousel. (More.)
 

Circus Auction To Include Retired Museum Of Science And Industry Exhibit

"The circus exhibit seen by thousands of children has been on display, in one form or another, since the early 1970s," reports the Sun-Times. "For many it was magical, for others, like a nightmare scene from a bad horror" movie. "The remaining two dozen or so items—including ten hand-made dioramas with mechanical moving figures—were removed earlier this month to make way for a new exhibit." (More.)
 

PETA Petitions Museum Of Science And Industry About Live Chick Display

PETA's humane education division has sent a letter to the president and CEO of the Museum of Science and Industry, Chevy Humphrey, calling on her to end the museum's live-chick display and cow-eye dissection. "With these exhibits, the institution is sending a harmful message to children that animals are mere objects to be used and is supporting industries in which animals endure bloody, violent deaths," the group says in a release. (More.)

 

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