
Amy Morton is back on stage in ‘You Will Get Sick' at Steppenwolf Theatre. What took her so long?
Few actors in Chicago theater history command the respect afforded to Amy Morton. Her history goes back to the long-defunct Remains Theatre but is dominated by her decades of work with the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, including playing Nurse Ratched in 2000 in Chicago and then on Broadway in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' opposite Gary Sinise; the lead role of Barbara in Tracy Letts' 'August: Osage County,' which played from 2007 to 2009 in Chicago, London, Sydney and on Broadway; and a stunning performances as Martha in a revival of Edward Albee's 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' in Chicago and on Broadway between 2010 and 2013.
But for more than a decade, Morton, 66, has mostly been found behind a desk on the long-running Dick Wolf TV show 'Chicago P.D.,' playing desk sergeant Trudy Platt. Morton spoke this week at the Steppenwolf Theatre, where she returns to the stage in 'You Will Get Sick' by Noah Diaz, a play about a young man and his caretaker, opening Sunday night in a production directed by Audrey Francis. Our conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
Q: How long has it been?
'Hir' was the last one. I don't do years very well but it has been at least eight years.
Q: Why has it taken so long to return?
Being on the TV show, our hiatus allows only one little space of time to do a play. So it has to be something I really want to do. I read this and was very intrigued by it, and with Audrey directing, it was a no-brainer.
Q: You've been on 'Chicago P.D.' for 11 years. But a lot of people reading this story, with all due respect, perhaps don't watch that show.
I understand.
Q: So where does that fit in the Amy Morton career arc at this point?
It came along at such a fortuitous moment. I had done 'August' and 'Virginia Woolf' back to back. The whole odyssey started in 2007 and I wasn't finished until 2014. Both of the characters I was playing walked onto the stage in bad place and it just got worse. For three acts. And by the end of 'Virginia Woolf,' I said, I can't go back on stage. Living that. What it does to the psyche and the soul. I just couldn't do it anymore. So I did not know what I was going to do and then I got this job. I was, and still am, so incredibly grateful that this happened. There was no way I could have gone back on stage. It was just broken. It was just broken for a while.
Q: The break came from doing two such devastating plays?
Yes. Back to back. It was too much.
Q: But if someone had said after that, 'Play this beautifully affirming character in this beautifully affirming play'?
I couldn't do eight shows a week. It all felt too brutal. My body, my everything was just done for a while. So getting this job was the best thing that could have happened to me. I love the crew and the cast. I have had a job for this long in my home town that has allowed me not to worry about money. I feel like the luckiest person in the world and I can understand why anyone would hate me.
Q: But you're a remarkable artist. I understand you needed a break. But has Sgt. Platt been able to sustain your artistic soul?
Not necessarily. But I've been able to do some movies on the side and be a guest artist on 'The Bear.' But also, understand that I'm older now. I don't have the same ambition. I really don't. I remember in my younger days when actors would talk about retiring, I'd say that's insane, actors don't retire. But I don't believe that anymore. I could see myself retiring. And I really don't need to constantly be pursuing a different character all the time. And the great thing for me is that this character on the TV show from the beginning has been very interesting to play.
Q: How so?
For the first four years, she was such a smartass, it was so much fun. You couldn't tell if she was evil or not and then the show got more serious and she went into a more serious vein and you see a bit less of me. Which is fine. Remember I am working with people who are appearing in every episode, , running after people with a . I am hardly ever outside. I wear the same costume. It's manna from heaven. When other actors are asked which role they wished they could play, they all want to be Platt. I am loath to use the words 'mama bear,' because it is so misogynistic, but she holds the front desk together and is constantly bolstering the team and has inside info into the lead characters.
Q: And you like the writing?
Yes. I've never had to do anything embarrassing. A lot of people on TV have to do embarrassing things. Not me.
Q: So let's get to this play. Why come back with this?
Firstly, it's really funny. That was the first thing that peaked my interest.
Q: Because you are known for that.
I'm not going to be headed back into 'Virginia Woolf' land anytime soon. Also, it's alarmingly moving and very beautiful and I love working with Audrey. She's a really fine director and I was excited to be able to do this with her. She was once was a student of mine and I love that she now is my boss.
Q: I have to go back to what you said earlier. What if someone made the argument that an actor should be able to leave those characters at the office? Is there something in you that did not permit you to do that?
Your body doesn't know you are lying. So your entire body becomes a giant carpal tunnel. Yes, I could leave it the office, but you hit two in the afternoon or so and your entire being starts to prepare yourself, even without your knowing. To do this job well, in my opinion, there are places that you need to go with those characters that are not fun. It doesn't mean that I stayed in them all night. But those runs were so (expletive) long and plays have a shelf life for a reason.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Vogue
4 days ago
- Vogue
An Ode to Carrie Bradshaw's Laptop, My Favorite Sex and the City Character
Over the years, Carrie at her laptop—mostly typing some version of the phrase 'And I couldn't help but wonder…'—has become such an enduring image that it is, at this point, a widely shared meme. In And Just Like That, she does slightly less wondering—she's a wannabe fiction writer now, as opposed to a sex columnist—but the typing is no less prominent. These days, however, there are even more intriguing elements to her famed laptop bashing, such as the fact she uses Pages over Google Docs (she has apparently learned nothing since the classic SATC Season 4 episode 'My Motherboard, My Self' in which she loses all her work after her computer crashes) and also the fact that she clings onto such an old piece of technology. But anyway, I digress. Writing as a practice has been romanticized for a long time. But when we think of classic images of 'writing,' we generally don't think of having our faces inches from a laptop screen while at a desk or cross-legged in bed. Instead, we think of Joan Didion surrounded by books beside her typewriter, or Patti Smith scrawling in a leather-bound notebook, or Virginia Woolf writing letters to Vita Sackville-West in her spidery slanted script. But Carrie Bradshaw? Though fictional, Carrie was possibly the first—and only—person to make laptop writing look cool and semi-glamorous, and for that I can only thank her (with my tired fingers). I will probably never feel chic while hunched over a laptop on a deadline while it's sunny outside. And there's nothing glam about firing off emails at 5 p.m., regardless of who they're to. Still, during those Friday nights in which I'm thwacking a keyboard instead of enjoying my social life like a regular person, or those times in which I'm practically glued to the screen all day as if my laptop is another limb, I can't help but think (or wonder) of Carrie Bradshaw and feel marginally better about having not picked up an actual pen in months.


Chicago Tribune
4 days ago
- Chicago Tribune
Review: ‘You Will Get Sick' at Steppenwolf is a slow reveal that's worth the wait
In a graduation speech I heard this May, the physician-writer Abraham Verghese talked about his experience as a small-town doctor during the AIDS era and how he found, to his amazement, that rural emergency rooms had filled up with AIDS patients even as everyone assumed the crisis was restricted to large cities. But many of these mostly young gay men had chosen, Verghese said, to come home from New York or Chicago to the likes of rural Tennessee to die. And for the most part, he observed in another stereotype-busting comment, he found they were treated by their families with compassion and love. The word AIDS is not mentioned in 'You Will Get Sick,' a rather unusual play by Noah Diaz that opened Sunday night at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company with Amy Morton (making a long-overdue return to Steppenwolf) and Namir Smallwood in the two leading roles. All we know is that the central character, known only in the script as #1, has been given a diagnosis of imminent death from an affliction that is never described. But Verghese's speech did come floating back into my head, because this is a play about how we handle not just death itself, but the period of our lives in chronological proximity to our inevitable exit. To understand the incontrovertible truth behind show's title — not exactly a box office seduction — you have to put the emphasis on the . Moreover, there are powerful themes here of working towards acceptance, of finding the courage to tell loved ones you are leaving. Diaz draws imagery from, believe it or not, 'The Wizard of Oz,' but Dorothy takes a long time to reveal herself, and nothing is solved by any clicking of heels. Here is the initial setup. Smallwood's sick character, #1, is having such difficulty communicating about his fatal illness that he chooses to hire someone to do the job for him. He puts out an advertisement to that effect and gets an answer from a woman, Morton's #2, a matter-of-fact opportunist who negotiates hard for piecemeal rates as she sets about her weird job, some of which involves her client's self-involved sister (Sadieh Rifai). Amy Morton is back on stage in 'You Will Get Sick' at Steppenwolf Theatre. What took her so long?That all might sound straightforward but Diaz freights the play with a much heavier symbolic load, including an amplifed, off-stage narrator who voices the things that #1 cannot bring himself to say, stepping pretty much on top of his lines. That takes a good while to understand and for it to become in any way comfortable as a theatrical experience. Meanwhile, #2 has her own eccentricities; she's a sometime actor who turns this truly bizarre assignment into fodder for her actor's studio and perpetual auditioning for her local community theater production. Other people show up (the cast also includes Cliff Chamberlain and Jordan Arredondo), but the less you know about them in advance, the better. Both Morton and Smallwood are superb here, not least because they are two Chicago actors of different generations who share an obsessive interest in finding the humanity in unusual people and then listening not just to what their character is saying to them, but also to others with whom they share the stage. They're both a real pleasure to watch. I think the play's symbols and metaphors get a bit too dense and oblique in places and this is one of those shows (it recalls the work of Noah Haidle) where you need a lot of patience before it becomes clear what the playwright wants to achieve. It's the kind of show that actors easily understand, being so suffused with the iconography of the theater, but it occasionally crosses the line of self-indulgence; I suspect some subset of the Steppenwolf audience might be a bit too baffled to care. Although sometimes moving, director Audrey Francis' production could have used some sharper edges and more of a forward thrust, especially in the studio scenes. But if you hang in there for just 85 minutes, not only are there twin beautifully crafted performances for you to enjoy but the surprise-filled last few minutes really pays off, not just in the writing but in set designer Andrew Boyce's visual landscape Certainly, you'll leave the theater thinking about what Diaz clearly wants his audience to think about. More specifically, it's hard not to watch this show and think not just about sickness but about how it is described and communicated. By a society at large. By oneself. After all, most of us won't be able to get home without having to tell someone where we are going. Perhaps the hardest cut of all. Chris Jones is a Tribune critic. cjones5@ Review: 'You Will Get Sick' (3.5 stars) When: Through July 20 Where: Steppenwolf Theatre, 1650 N. Halsted St. Running time: 1 hour, 25 minutes Tickets: $20-$136.50 at 312-335-1650 and


Los Angeles Times
13-06-2025
- Los Angeles Times
A new look at ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' plus the week's best movies in L.A.
Hello! I'm Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies. Among this week's new releases is 'Materialists,' a romantic dramedy starring Dakota Johnson, Chris Evans and Pedro Pascal, written and directed by Celine Song, whose debut, 'Past Lives,' was nominated for two Oscars, including best picture. Johnson's beguiling screen presence, her languidly charged charisma, is put to full use as a professional matchmaker in NYC who finds her own cold calculations challenged when she finds herself struggling to decide between a wealthy, perfect-on-paper finance guy (Pascal) and a perpetually struggling actor ex-boyfriend (Evans). I interviewed Song and Johnson together recently, talking to them about how the film is both a sleek and glossy modern take on the rom-com and also an interrogation of the form and what people want from romance. 'We're not just showing up here to be in love and beautiful and get to be in a rom-com,' says Song. 'We're also going to take this opportunity to talk about something. Because that's the power of the genre. Our favorite rom-coms are the ones where we get to start a conversation about something.' For her part, Johnson has turned down many rom-com roles in the past, but found something different in Song's screenplay. 'The complexities of all of the characters,' Johnson said of what made the project stand out. 'The paradox. Everyone being confused about what the f— they're supposed to do with their hearts. And what's the right move? I found that very honest and I found it just so relatable.' Amy Nicholson opens her review by focusing on the film's lead, writing, 'Dakota Johnson is my favorite seductress, a femme fatale of a flavor that didn't exist until she invented it. … Onscreen, she excels at playing skeptics who are privately amused by the shenanigans of attaching yourself to another person. She shrugs to conquer. Which makes Johnson the perfect avatar for a time when it's hard to commit or keep swiping right.' On Friday the Academy Museum will present the North American premiere of a new 4K restoration of Milos Forman's 1975 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.' The film won five Oscars, including best picture, director and actor, and the screening will include a conversation with editors Richard Chew and Lynzee Klingman, speaking with Larry Karaszewski. Based on the novel by Ken Kesey, the film tells the story of Randle McMurphy (Nicholson), who is committed to a mental institution instead of serving a prison sentence. McMurphy's rebellious, anti-authoritarian spirit upends the strict order of the facility maintained by Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher, who also won an Oscar for her performance), as he comes to connect with some of the other inmates, many of whom are there voluntarily. The Times' original review at the time said that the film 'is calculated to restore your faith in the discipline and the emotional effectiveness of inspired fine moviemaking.' A February 1976 profile of Forman by Fiona Lewis found the filmmaker, already a two-time Academy Award nominee for his films made in Czechoslovakia, in a rented house in the Hollywood Hills anxiously awaiting the impending Oscar nominations. 'All these events, like film festivals and Oscars — it's foolish to compare if this film is better than that film,' Forman said. 'But on the other hand, why not? It's like my child is the most beautiful in the world and the girl I love the best.' The Acropolis Cinema screening series begins a retrospective of the Italian-born, U.S.-based filmmaker Roberto Minervini Friday night with the Los Angeles premiere of his 2024 film 'The Damned' at 2220 Arts + Archives. The filmmaker will be there for a Q&A moderated by 'Eephus' director Carson Lund. Minervini won the directing prize in the Un Certain Regard section of the 2024 Cannes Film Festival for the movie, which follows a company of volunteer U.S. soldiers in the Civil War as they are sent to patrol a remote borderland. 'The Damned' will also open at the Laemmle Royal on the June 20. Minervini will be present for a screening at Brain Dead Studios on Saturday for the world premiere of a new restoration of his 2011 debut feature 'The Passage.' Critic Peter Debruge will moderate the Q&A. Then on Sunday, Minervini will be present for a Q&A moderated by critic Tim Grierson following a 10th anniversary screening of 'The Other Side' at 2220 Arts + Archive. On June 23, there will also be a screening of Minervini's 2018 film 'What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?' back at Brain Dead Studios. 'Bring It On' 25th anniversary in 35mm Following the recent screening of Sofia Coppola's 'The Virgin Suicides,' the Academy Museum will present another pivotal film in the career of Kirsten Dunst: a 25th anniversary 35mm screening of Peyton Reed's 'Bring It On.' Actors Jesse Bradford and Brandi Williams will be present for the event as well. Displaying Dunst's range, she stars as Torrance Shipman, the new captain of the cheerleading squad at her affluent suburban California high school. Torrance discovers that their championship routines have been stolen from the squad of a less privileged all-Black school. Reed, who went on to direct 'Down With Love,' 'The Break-Up' and Marvel's 'Ant-Man' movies, deftly balances teen comedy, emotional nuance and social satire with a spirited energy. After calling it 'a smart and sassy high school movie that's fun for all ages' in his original review, Kevin Thomas noted how the film 'has a light satirical touch, works up lots of laughter, but is not heavy-handed about Torrance and her squad taking cheerleading so seriously. Rather than lament how winning a cheerleading trophy seems vastly more important to the squad members than getting the grades that will get them into college, [screenwriter Jessica] Bendinger and Reed instead show us the likable Torrance and her pals receiving some unexpected life lessons.' 'Christiane F.' 4K restoration On Friday, the American Cinematheque will launch a limited run of the new 4K restoration of Uli Edel's 1981 'Christiane F.' Based on a nonfiction book, the story depicts a teenage girl, Christiane (Natja Brunkhorst), in West Berlin who falls in with a crowd of kids who introduce her to using hard drugs and she soon becomes a heroin addict, living a hardscrabble life on the streets. Featuring music by David Bowie, the film also includes a live performance by Bowie of the song 'Station to Station.' In a February 1982 review, Kevin Thomas wrote, 'The makers of 'Christiane F.' apparently feel that it is sufficient to dramatize this hellish odyssey with the utmost realism, sparing us nothing, not the sickness, the brutality, the pain or the sheer sleaziness of their existence. But it isn't, because they don't reveal anything that many adults and teens don't know well. … [The filmmakers] go for an unremitting grittiness so as not to seem unduly sensational or exploitative in the telling of Christiane's story.' 'Cobra Woman' in 35mm On Saturday afternoon at the Los Feliz 3, the American Cinematheque will present a 35mm screening of Robert Siodmak's 1944 beloved cult object 'Cobra Woman,' starring Maria Montez, Jon Hall and Sabu in a tale of twin sisters, kidnapping and a remote island paradise. Author Alonso Duralde will be on hand to introduce the film and do a signing for his new book 'Hollywood Pride: A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Representation and Perseverance in Film.' In a program note for the screening, Duralde noted Susan Sontag's influential essay 'Notes on Camp,' adding 'for a look at 'pure camp,' there's no better place to start than the 1944 Maria Montez vehicle 'Cobra Woman,' a deliciously over-the-top exercise in exotica, colonial fetishization and general absurdity. (The trailer calls it 'A Pagan Sensation!') Montez stars as twin princesses — one good, one evil, both in love with strapping Jon Hall — in a tale that incorporates volcanoes, blowguns, Sabu, a forbidden dance of the snakes and a valuable stone that Montez memorably calls the 'Cobra jool.'' The film was also said to be the favorite of filmmaker Kenneth Anger. A February 1944 Los Angeles Times column by Hedda Hopper explored how Montez pursued stardom with shrewdly calculated verve, writing, 'Outstanding among today's feminine stars who have projected their personalities — and persons — to fullest advantage is Maria Montez. Two years ago this Latin-American bundle of nerve and determination struck Hollywood like a one-woman avalanche, announcing to Universal that she would be satisfied with nothing short of top-flight stardom and swamping the studio's production office with demands for starring roles.' 'Naked Lunch' with Peter Weller On Monday, Vidiots will show David Cronenberg's 1991 adaptation of William S. Burroughs' 'Naked Lunch' in 4K with star Peter Weller in attendance to sign his new book 'Leon Battista Alberti in Exile.' Rather than strictly adapt the book itself, Cronenberg used fragments and shards of its story and Burroughs' own biography to craft a phantasmagorical take on the novel's own creation: An exterminator, Bill Lee (Weller), flees New York for the Interzone after he accidentally shoots his wife (Judy Davis) and sets himself to writing. In a review from December 1991, Peter Rainer wrote, 'There are enough references to the novel, enough episodes and characters, to provide a glancing resemblance to the original. But mostly, Cronenberg jacks up his own career-long obsessions with glop and grunge and decay to fever pitch. It's a movie for people who really dig Cronenberg's mulchy fixations — and probably for no one else. … The ambi-sexual atmosphere carries a demonic charge that approximates Burroughs but, for the most part, Cronenberg was a lot closer to the Burroughs ethos in a film like 'Videodrome' than he is here.' In a June 1992 profile of Cronenberg by Gene Seymour, the filmmaker, then 47, spoke about how he approached adapting a book many assumed to be unadaptable. 'I do think it's paradoxical but true that, in order to be faithful to the book, you have to throw the book away,' said Cronenberg. 'You have to betray it in order to re-create it for the screen. All the attempts I've seen of trying to be literally faithful to the book have been dismal failures and the reason is only that the two media are totally, totally different. Maybe it's because I'm really ruthless. And totally arrogant.' In a statement, Burroughs himself said, 'I felt, and still feel, that David's script is very true to his own Muse as a filmmaker, very consistent with the high level of artistry for which he is known.'