The League of Chicago Theatres is proud to serve a membership of more than 200 theaters, a rich and varied theater community ranging from storefront, non-union theaters with budgets under $10,000 to major cultural centers with multi-million dollar shows. No other theater service organization in the country has such a diverse theater membership. Whether you call yourself a Chicagoan or are just visiting for the weekend, the League of Chicago Theatres is your source for Chicago theater.
League of Chicago Theatres 17 N. Wabash, Suite #520 Chicago, IL 60602 312-554-9800
Ways to Participate
Explore the Chicago theatre scene, interact with fellow theatre-goers, follow your favorite theatre company, and recommend that amazing show you saw last weekend. Free and open to anyone - be part of the Chicagoplays community!
LIKE A SHOW Seen a good show? Let us know by finding the show and selecting "Like."
SET REMINDERS Receive notifications when your favorite shows open or close.
FAVORITE THEATRES Choose your favorite companies and keep up to date with their information.
Theatre Thursday events give an inside look at the creative process behind world premiere productions happening on Chicago stages.
Upcoming Theatre Thursday event To Catch A Fish Thursday. May 10 | 7:30 PM | Tickets: $0.00 | More Info
QUICK LINKS
August Wilson Monologue Competition
Open to Chicago area high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors, the competition gives students an opportunity to explore and share the richness of August Wilson’s Century Cycle.
Annual League Gala
Our Annual Gala will take place on Monday, May 21, 2018 to support the League in our mission to sustain a thriving theatre industry.
1376 W. Grand Avenue, Chicago, IL, 60642 | directions 866-811-4111
From:
by Paula Vogel directed by The Artistic Home’s Associate Artistic Director Kayla Adams Featuring Elizabeth Birnkrant, John Mossman, Reid Coker, Kelley Holcomb and Jenna Steege
With frankness, humor and hope, Paula Vogel's 1997 Pulitzer-Prize winning drama How I Learned to Drive unashamedly places a woman in the driver's seat, allowing her to tell her own story of familial love, abuse, devastation and redemption.