Theatre In Chicago    
Your Source For What's On Stage In Chicago

   Quick Search
OR
Search by date:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Play Details

A Memory of Two Mondays

The Greenhouse Theater Center
2257 N Lincoln Avenue Chicago

Set in a 1930s Brooklyn automobile parts warehouse with a strong cast of richly detailed characters, Miller draws on his own personal experience to explore the monotonous struggle to make a living and the dreams of a young man yearning for a college education in the midst of people stumbling through life in a haze of hopelessness and despondency.

Thru - Oct 17, 2010

Fri, Sep 10: 7:30pm
Sat, Sep 11: 7:30pm
Sun, Sep 12: 2:30pm
Thu, Sep 16: 7:30pm
Fri, Sep 17: 7:30pm
Sat, Sep 18: 7:30pm
Sun, Sep 19: 2:30pm
Thu, Sep 23: 7:30pm
Fri, Sep 24: 7:30pm
Sat, Sep 25: 7:30pm
Sun, Sep 26: 2:30pm
Thu, Sep 30: 7:30pm
Fri, Oct 1: 7:30pm
Sat, Oct 2: 7:30pm
Sun, Oct 3: 2:30pm
Thu, Oct 7: 7:30pm
Fri, Oct 8: 7:30pm
Sat, Oct 9: 7:30pm
Sun, Oct 10: 2:30pm
Thu, Oct 14: 7:30pm
Fri, Oct 15: 7:30pm
Sat, Oct 16: 7:30pm
Sun, Oct 17: 2:30pm


Price:$25

Show Type: Drama

Box Office: 773-404-7336

www.greenhousetheater.org


Special Offer Alert: Click Here for Half-Price Tickets to This Show


The Greenhouse Theater Center Seating Charts


Nearby Restaurants

  Review Round-Up

Chicago Tribune - Highly Recommended

"...thanks to the intimacy and truth of Steven Fedoruk's forceful production for Eclipse Theatre, 'A Memory of Two Mondays' packs one heck of an emotional punch at the Greenhouse Theater Center. Fedoruk clearly understands that this is a fundamentally existential play about the difficulty of coming to work 'every morning and every morning, no end in sight.'"
Read Full Review

Chris Jones


Chicago Reader - Highly Recommended

"...Though Miller's 75-minute script is weak--a collection of character sketches in search of a plot--it's worth seeing for the beautiful acting by Steven Fedoruk's 14-member ensemble, each of whom gives a pitch-perfect performance. Mike Winkelman's set and the lighting by Chris Corwin and Nathaniel Swift enhance the production's evocative atmosphere."
Read Full Review

Albert Williams


Copley News Service - Highly Recommended

"...        The scene stealer in the production is Vincent L. Lonergan for his flamboyant Gus. Brandon Ruiter is excellent as Bert, the innocent young man who stands outside the daily life of the warehouse and might be the only one to escape the web of futility that snares the rest of the characters. Malcolm Callan is outstanding as a catatonic drunk who has reformed by the end of the play into a moralizing bore. Joshua Venditti perfectly captures the dead-end futility of a man hanging on by his economic fingernails, trying to support a family and finally yielding his dream of owning a nice automobile. Kevin Scott is perhaps the one tragic figure in the play, the young Irishman finally defeated by the tawdriness of his life."

Dan Zeff


ShowBizChicago - Somewhat Recommended

"...Though “Two Mondays” suffers from some uneven pacing, the one-act play simmers consistently from a slow beginning to a rewarding end, and—unlike the careers of its characters—is worth the pay-out in the end."
Read Full Review

Dan Jakes


Chicago Theater Blog - Recommended

"...One could write off each and every one of these characters as losers but Miller won’t allow it. A Memory of Two Mondays is not a great Miller work. It’s a one-act trying to do too much in a small space of time with recurrent Miller themes. It carries potent echoes of Death of a Salesman. “I don’t get it,” mourns Bert, on the verge of leaving for college, “How is it me that gets out? There ought to be a statue in the park. To all the ones that stayed.” Attention must be paid."
Read Full Review

Paige Listerud


Steadstyle Chicago - Highly Recommended

"...A triumph of well-honed ensemble work, Steven Fedoruk’s 75-minute staging, the final offering in the theater’s all-Miller season (which included the equally semi-autobiographical “Resurrection Blues” and “After the Fall”), is no insulated time capsule.  Vivid and true, it surges with richly-textured life.  Wide-eyed Brandon Ruiter fares well as the wide-eyed, open-hearted Bert and Vincent L. Longeran's Gus pursues his doomed escape with forlorn abandon."
Read Full Review

Lawrence Bommer


Around The Town Chicago - Highly Recommended

"...To complete its year of Arthur Miller plays, Eclipse Theatre Company has chosen one of Miller’s  seldom  produced plays, “A Memory of Two Mondays”. It is also probably one of his shortest as well with a running time of 75 minutes. Miller always had a lot to say in his plays, but for some reason, he was able to get to his point in the normal time for one act of a regular Miller piece. It may be possible that when he began this story, he thought he had more to say, and when he saw that he reached his point, he just ended it. I for one feel that this story, which takes place in the 30′s is quite relevant today. The theme of this story is the rat race we live in, a sort of rat race on a treadmill, where even though we keep running towards our goal, we seem to stay exactly where we are."
Read Full Review

Alan Bresloff


   This show has been Jeff Recommended*

*The designation of "Jeff Recommended" is given to a production when at least ONE ELEMENT of the show was deemed outstanding by the opening night judges of The Joseph Jefferson Awards Committee. The entire production is then eligible for nomination for awards at the end of the season.

Save This Play to del.icio.us Digg This Play! Stumble It!

Follow Us On Twitter