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Lookingglass Theatre Company is a non-profit theater company located in Chicago, Illinois.
Lookingglass was founded in 1988 by David Schwimmer, David Catlin, Eva Barr, Thom Cox, Lawrence DiStasi, Joy Gregory, David Kersnar, and Andy White. [1] The company's first production, Through the Lookingglass, was directed by David Kersnar and was produced at the Great Room in Jones Residential College on the Northwestern University campus.
The company has since produced more than 60 world premiere plays, including Mary Zimmerman's Metamorphoses, as well as her adaptations of The Arabian Nights and The Odyssey. The company also premiered and toured creator David Catlin's circus-driven re-imaginings of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland in Lookingglass Alice [2] [3] and Herman Melville's Moby Dick. [4] Other productions have included David Schwimmer's adaptations of Upton Sinclair's The Jungle and Studs Terkel's Race: How Blacks and Whites Think and Feel About the American Obsession.
Recent productions include Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, adapted by David Kersnar and Althos Low; [5] Plantation!, a play about reparations, written by Ensemble Member Kevin Douglas and directed by Ensemble Member David Schwimmer; [6] Beyond Caring, [7] created by British author and director Alexander Zeldin. [8]
Lookingglass is led by Artistic Director Heidi Stillman, [9] and Executive Director, Rachel Fink. [10] Fink was preceded by Rachel Kraft, who served as Executive Director for 12 seasons. Kraft's tenure saw the company receive the 2011 Regional Theatre Tony Award, a 2016 $1 million MacArthur Award for Creative and Effecting Institutions, and the 2017 League of Chicago Theaters Artistic Achievement Award. [11]
The Lookingglass Company is made up of cross-disciplinary artists: 24 Ensemble Members and 23 Artistic Associates.
The ensemble includes David Schwimmer, Joey Slotnick and Mary Zimmerman. Artistic associates include Deanna Dunagan.
Lookingglass won the 2011 Regional Theatre Tony Award and has won over 45 Joseph Jefferson Awards in its 30 Seasons.[ citation needed ]
Glassworks is Lookingglass' New Play Development program. The company has produced 66 World Premieres.
Lookingglass, sponsors in-school residencies and student matinee programs for students in Chicago Public Schools. The company also offers classes and artistic summer camps for youth. [14] In 2006, Lookingglass founded The Young Ensemble, where children devise and produce their own work.
Lookingglass participates in a Reflect Series, a series of Sunday post-show panel discussions featuring local experts.
In 2003, Lookingglass moved inside the Chicago Water Tower Water Works building in Near North Side, Chicago.
The main stage is in the black-box style, meaning the seating can be rearranged for each production. Lookingglass artists can reconfigure the stage and seating arrangements to meet the design needs for specific productions. The theatre has a maximum capacity of 240 persons, including 60 possible seats on the removable balcony level. There is also a multi-purpose studio space, used for education programs, special events, and rehearsals. [15]
Designed by Morris Architects Planners, the space is a converted landmark. It houses the Lookingglass performance space, lobbies, dressing rooms, and concession areas, as well as a Chicago Public Library. [16] Additionally, the station continues to pump 125 million gallons of water to Chicago's north side every day. [17]
An itinerant theater company for years, Lookingglass moved into a permanent home on June 14, 2003, with a new theater in the renovated Water Tower Water Works on Chicago's Magnificent Mile.
Its first production in the new space was an adaptation of Studs Terkel's Race, adapted and directed by David Schwimmer. [18]
David Lawrence Schwimmer is an American actor, director, comedian, and producer. He gained worldwide recognition for portraying Ross Geller in the sitcom Friends, for which he received a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in 1995. While still acting in Friends, his first leading film role was in The Pallbearer (1996), followed by roles in Kissing a Fool;Six Days, Seven Nights;Apt Pupil ; and Picking Up the Pieces (2000). He was then cast in the miniseries Band of Brothers (2001) as Herbert Sobel.
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