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Filed by heathergross on Feb 19, 2008 01:05 AM

MEDILL NEWS SERVICE

They've been blue for a long time.

Blue Man Group has been performing at Briar Street Theatre on the North Side since 1997. And although the three drumming, comedic mimes perform about 500 times each year, the show still regularly sells out.

The show has become an asset to Chicago tourism, as well as to Lakeview.

"Chicago theater drives tourism dollars into the neighborhoods," said Lyle Allen, managing director of the League of Chicago Theatres. "We sell Blue Man tickets through [the box office] Hot Tix. I can tell you that Blue Man is certainly a tourist-driven theater production."

Although many in the audience are first-time visitors to the 634-seat theater, the show thrives off of returning patrons.

There is a tradition that a Blue Man doesn't speak while donning the blue paint. However, one Blue Man broke character, speaking in the crowded lobby following a performance last week.

"Some people come 50 times," said a Blue Man with a British accent. "They come again and again."

So what is it that draws so many people to return? Is it the visual tricks the show plays on the audience? Or the catchy drumbeats a Blue Man plays on instruments made out of plastic pipes? Or perhaps the seats that vibrate each time someone hits a drum, making it seem as if the audience member is the one holding the drumsticks?

"I'm trying to speak from a place of humility, but I think that there's something in the show that appeals to everyone with all different sorts of situations," said Kori Prior, resident general manager of Blue Man Group.

She said that although the content of the show rarely changes, each show is different, thanks to audience participation. Throughout the show, the blue men interact with members of the audience, and they base their performance off of the audience members' actions.

"The character reacts differently all the time, but the Blue Man always reacts in a specific way," Prior said. "The actors are making choices within the confines of the character, but that can be a million different permutations. So there's a lot of it that's improvised."

People appreciate the show on different levels, Prior said. Some enjoy the surface entertainment, while others appreciate it as performance art.

"I really like the visual aspect," said Cory Barnes, who went to the show for the second time this weekend. She said the special visual effects are what lured her back.

Blue Man Group attracts a wider audience than most Chicago theater productions, company manager Laurie Viets said.

"It's people who come for theater," she said. "They want to see the shows that are off Broadway. Then there are the people who see it more like a rock concert. We get a lot of people who would never go to see another theater production."

Filed by Shawna Ohm on Feb 19, 2008 01:05 AM

MEDILL NEWS SERVICE

Andrea Rogers spent the beginning of this cold Chicago winter without any heat in her three-bedroom apartment.

Her building, at 5839 W. Washington Blvd., has changed management multiple times, and for the last two and a half years management has been "pretty bad" according to Rogers.

Work orders she's submitted are still pending two years later and up until Dec. 7 nine apartments in the 12-unit building, including hers, didn't have heat.

The problem may be symptomatic of growing landlord abuses. According to Shannon Weiss at the Center for Renters' Rights in Chicago, landlord misconduct, including unfair evictions, "has gotten so much worse in the last eight years."

According to Malik Wornum with the Metropolitan Tenants Organization, which provides free advice to tenants regarding their rights, a tenant in the building called him about the heating problem. Wornum was able to arrange a meeting and brief the tenants on their rights.

Once organized, the group found out that the three units that were getting heat were re-routing the gas from other people's cooking gas. The heat was finally turned on after the tenants organized with the help of the Lawyer's Committee for Better Housing, which partners with the Metropolitan Tenants Organization.

Wornum said that often tenants won't stand up for their rights because they fear eviction or other retaliation from their landlords, even though such acts are illegal. Organizing groups of tenants within a building helps as well.

"Last year we identified 71 buildings [with landlord violations] and we organized 45 of them," Warner said. "Organizing is always a successful tool because there's strength in numbers."

Legal representation also helps management to take complains more seriously. "If you call them you will get an answering service or their operator which can only take a message, and they won't return your calls," said Rogers.

The firm identified as managing the buildingcould not immediately be reached for comment. In fact, the management connection was disconnected, as was the line for the general information contact on the company's website.

Rogers said even though the heat is on she still has several pressing plumbing issues including "a big bubble in the ceiling [that looks] its about to fall in and it's molding." Although she said her landlord said he would fix it in September, but no progress has been made.

Are landlords just blatantly disregarding their responsibilities? "Tt's even more complicated now than it used to be because of the economy. They're not going to care [as much] right now; there's enough on their plates, that's the big problem" Weiss said.

Why doesn't Rogers move in the face of such unfair treatment? "I can't just up and leave and move," she said. Rogers's rent is subsidized under Section 8 by the Chicago Trust Fund. Her contact at the trust fund advises her to move, but Rogers doesn't want to. "I like my apartment, the area and everything," she said.

Unfortunately for Rogers, the teamwork that helped the tenants get the building's heat turned on hasn't helped get the plumbing fixed. "It's like they [management] don't care anymore," she said.

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