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Aristophanes
Birds
Adapted by Hurt McDermott
Directed by Zeljko Djukic
March 31 - April 30th, 2005
Viaduct Theatre Main Stage
3111 N. Western
Chicago, IL
Set Natasha Djukic and Ann Davis | Costumes Natasha Djukic | Lighting Keith Parham | Composer Natasha Bogojevich | Stage Manager Helen Lattyak | Wig and Hair Catie Martin
The Silent Language | The Dumb Waiter | Fulton Street Sessions | The Wedding (remount) | baal | The Wedding | Uncle Vanya | Maria's Field | The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet | Uncle Vanya | It's Only the End of the World | Tracks | Tracks | Huddersfield | Still Life in Color | Birds | Rules for Good Manners in the Modern World | The Sweet Little Prince | Mozart and Salieri | Alice | The Hour We Knew Nothing Of Each Other | Quartet | The Wedding/The Chalk Cross/The Beggar
". . . Offering a glimpse into a unique, vibrant corner of world theater." -Chicago Reader
"TUTA has produced a diverse repertory of Eastern and Western European plays in its twelve year existence, attracting a small but passionately devoted audience and garnering a critical reputation for productions that combine the highest caliber artistic achievement with cogent social and cultural critique. - Cheryl Black in Slavic and East European Performance 27, no. 1 (Winter 2007)
"Unlike anything else in Chicago, and in this town, that means a lot." - Chicago Tribune
". . . With his own company, The Utopian Theatre Asylum, Djukic has brought to Chicago audiences a rarified and often exquisite series of visions by way of a variety of literature." -Chicago Tribune
"Most tantalizing of all (new plays of 2006), were the two Serbian plays given their American premieres by TUTA, Ugljesa Sajtinac's Huddersfield and Milena Markovic's Tracks, both of which brutally examined the wrecked lives of twentysomethings in the wake of the Balkan wars. . . In two dangerous, fearlessly acted productions, TUTA proved that serious plays and young people don't have to be oil and water." -TimeOut
©2002-2013 TUTA is proud member of The League of Chicago Theatres. TUTA is partially supported by the Albert Pick Jr. Fund, Arts Work Fund for Organizational Development, Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation, The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, City Arts I and The City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and The Illinois Arts Council, a state agency, and Promet Source. Send comments and questions to info@tutato.com.



