Latest news with #neo-American


Eater
08-07-2025
- Business
- Eater
Inside Wrigleyville's New Brewery Serving Up Taters Spliced With Bulgolgi
It's been seven years since Hotel Zachary opened across the street from Wrigley Field, and the building's tall shadow has led to a transformation surrounding the Friendly Confines. Wrigleyville is no stranger to turnover among its bars and restaurants, but as icons like John Barleycorn, and yes — the original Taco Bell — met their demise, it's left an opening for a different type of nightlife to emerge along Clark Street. In the middle of this chaos, beer consumption has changed in America. And that's why Pilot Project Brewing isn't banking on hops alone. The Wrigleyville location should soon debut at 3473 N. Clark Street; ownership is waiting for its liquor license, according to a rep. It's the second Pilot Project to open in Chicago, following the original brewery in Logan Square. There's also a Milwaukee location. Pilot Project serves as an incubator of small brewers, leasing out its space and equipment to jump-start businesses and offering beers from different brands inside its taproom. The Wrigley location takes that a step further with a new food menu. Earlier, ownership peculiarly described the menu as 'neo-American street food' without teasing any specific items. It turns out that means dishes like Italian won tons, soup dumplings in a bath of pozole, and loaded tater tots with pieces of bulgogi. It's more or less food made by third culture kids, combining the food their immigrant parents grew up eating with food commonly found in American homes. It's a version of New American tweaked for the bar. Beyond the souped-up menu, Pilot Project is also serving glasses of wine and canned cocktails from its own brand, Devious. Tour through the 3,000-square-foot space — which includes patios on the roof and ground floor — in the photos below. Pilot Project Wrigleyville, 3473 N. Clark Street, opening soon Eater Chicago All your essential food and restaurant intel delivered to you Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. The ground-floor patio provides an escape from busy Clark Street. The rooftop patio is more chill. A view of Clark Street from the rooftop patio. This brewery will also serve glasses of wine. Donna's Pickle Beer is one of Pilot Project's success stories thanks to a tart taste that's great on hot days. Black Manhattan


Los Angeles Times
28-01-2025
- Entertainment
- Los Angeles Times
Review: Will Arbery's ‘Evanston Salt Costs Climbing' combines despair with tender absurdity at Rogue Machine
Will Arbery has a knack for coming up with unmemorable play titles. 'Heroes of the Fourth Turning,' his award-winning drama produced by Rogue Machine Theatre in 2023, has the misleading ring of a generically violent video game. 'Evanston Salt Costs Climbing,' his 2018 drama now receiving its Southern California premiere in a Rogue Machine production at the Matrix Theatre, could be a bullet point in a comptroller's budgetary report. The play, which isn't at all dryly bureaucratic, began as an exercise when Arbery was studying playwriting at Northwestern University. The assignment was to write a short play based on a news article, and Arbery challenged himself to write on the most boring item he could find. 'Evanston Salt Costs Climbing' evolved over many years, but the original newspaper headline stuck. The play, which revolves around two salt truck drivers and an administrator at the city's public works department, is indeed concerned with the rising cost of salt used to de-ice the roads in an Illinois community accustomed to brutal winters. But it's a most delectably weird play, experimental in form and frenetically playful in language. Arbery seems to be inspired by Mac Wellman and the line of neo-American absurdists that followed him. But there's a tender vulnerability to his characters, and the daffy empathy that suffuses the writing is unique to Arbery. 'Evanston Salt Costs Climbing' has little in common with 'Heroes of the Fourth Turning.' For those who appreciated the unusual political vantage point of 'Heroes,' of being eavesdroppers on the private quarrels of young religious conservatives, 'Evanston' will seem like a visit to Mars. The trip is worth it, even if you leave confused. It's OK to be occasionally bewildered in the theater. A temporary cessation in interpretive control can open new cognitive portals. 'Evanston' may be too indulgently idiosyncratic to be considered a major work, but the play's offbeat appeal has a way of creating community out of thin air — or perhaps I should say out of a shared sensibility for wayward human comedy. Arbery's characters can't help betraying their ache for connection, even as they work steadfastly to cover up their need. Guillermo Cienfuegos, who directed Rogue Machine's superb production of 'Heroes of the Fourth Turning,' leans into the strangeness of 'Evanston' without losing sight of the delicate amiability that marks the characters' twisted behavior. Hugo Armstrong plays Basil and Michael Redfield plays Peter, the two salt truck drivers who are struggling to survive the frigid cold of their job and the emptiness of their lives. Both come to know loss, Basil as perpetrator and Peter as victim. But their bond, the way they help anchor each other, helps them face the desolation that seems to rise up from the very roads they clear. Mark Mendelson's scenic design, enhanced by Michelle Hanzelova-Bierbauer's projections, creates a wintry landscape in the middle of Los Angeles. A salt dome, a break room at the depot, the inside cab of one of the trucks and an Evanston living room make up this chilly theatrical cosmos. Basil and Peter's topsy-turvy banter has some of the hallmarks of an old-school comedy duo. Armstrong, who pilots the production with his barreling theatrical energy, adopts an accent that I initially took to be Russian or Eastern European but turns out to be Greek. The far-fetched nature of the persona — Armstrong's Basil might be mistaken for a religious cult leader — doesn't at all undermine the authenticity of the characterization. Basil reveals himself not through his biography but through his concern for others and his basic decency. He doesn't want anyone to succumb to the sadness that's always threatening to pull him under. Redfield's Peter is a blue-collar schlub fighting suicidal despair. His marriage has outrun its emotional validity. When his wife dies in a car accident on an icy road that he and Basil had salted, he's too stunned to feel much of anything, except perhaps guilt that his murderous fantasies had somehow come true. He's not a monster, though monstrous thoughts percolate within him. He cares for his young daughter as best he's able to, even if it means Domino's Pizza several nights a week. When Basil shares with him one of his wacky short stories, Peter always finds something nice to say, no matter how trivial. When Basil worries that his ideas are too out there, Peter reassures him that people are all weird. Lesley Fera, in the production's most endearing performance, plays Jane Maiworm, the public works administrator. Maiworm, as she's called on the job, is unfailingly friendly with Basil and Peter. (It turns out she's having an affair with Basil, but her Midwestern niceness is just part of who she is.) She comes up with a plan to modernize snow-clearing in Evanston, advocating for a new de-icing technology that would render salt trucks a thing of the past. She doesn't want to put Basil and Peter out of work, but the environmental case is too pressing to ignore. A widow, Maiworm is raising her adult stepdaughter, Jane Jr. (Kaia Gerber), whose emotional unsteadiness is a source of great consternation. As a mother, Maiworm has the best intentions, but work dominates her life. When problems arise, her habit is to seek administrative solutions rather than involve herself more personally. Gerber gives quirky life to Jane Jr.'s neurotic sensitivity. As self-dramatizing as she is self-effacing, the character is ill-equipped for everyday life. But her compassion gives her a remarkable lucidity about other people's struggles. Surreal figures crop up in 'Evanston,' including Jane Jacobs, the author of 'The Death and Life of Great American Cities.' Maiworm worships Jacobs' civic example, but Jacobs (played in burlesque fashion by Armstrong) suggests her acolyte doesn't really understand the lesson of her books, which is that neighborhoods get their vitality from the connections of people, not through best bureaucratic practices. Maiworm is an administrator who truly cares. But like everyone else in the play, she has trouble revealing the jumble of fears and longings locked inside her. Don't let the forbiddingly bureaucratic title fool you. The humanity of 'Evanston Salt Costs Climbing' will warm your heart.