Broadway in Chicago is on a roll with the musical Hell's Kitchen for three weeks at the James M. Nederlander Theatre, 24 W. Randolph Street. While one role threatened to spoil the recipe, the majority of the performers rose to the occasion.
The title of Hell's Kitchen describes the New York neighborhood in Manhattan Plaza, not to be confused with Gordon Ramsay's competition series. It's a semi-autobiographical story cooked up by Chicago's Teatro Vista playwright Kristoffer Diaz and conveyed with singer Alicia Keys' catalogue of work. With just a dash of salt, the story is shoehorned in with Alicia's Grammy Award-winning songs and obstacles from living in that region of the world. Keys was born in Hell's Kitchen and was classically trained on the piano like the main character in the show.
Ali is a young person living in a concrete jungle with a mother named Jersey who is separated from Ali's father, Davis. Ali discovers a teacher named Miss Liza Jane practicing in the Ellington Room rehearsal studio and eventually becomes Jane's main protege.