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Steppenwolf Theatre Company

Steppenwolf Theatre Company is a Chicago theater company founded in 1974 by Terry Kinney, Jeff Perry, and Gary Sinise in the Immaculate Conception grade school in Highland Park, Illinois[1] and is now located in Chicago's Lincoln Park neighborhood on Halsted Street. The theatre's name comes from Hermann Hesse's novel Steppenwolf, which original member Rick Argosh was reading during the company's inaugural production of Paul Zindel's play, And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little, in 1974.[2] After occupying several theatres in Chicago, in 1991, it moved into its own purpose-built complex with three performing spaces, the largest seating 550.[3][4]

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A recipient of the Regional Tony Award,[5] several of its productions have transferred to Broadway.

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by Lisa D'Amour

Airline Highway

by Edward Albee (Starring Tracy Letts and Amy Morton)

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

by Bruce Norris

Clybourne Park

by Tracy Letts

August: Osage County

by Sam Shepard

True West

Lydie Breeze directed by H.E. Baccus

[28]

by Lanford Wilson, directed by John Malkovich[29]

Balm in Gilead

by C. P. Taylor

And a Nightingale Sang

by Lyle Kessler

Orphans

Coyote Ugly[31][32] (1985) by Lynn Seifert,[33][34][35] directed by John Malkovich[36]

[30]

by Lanford Wilson

Burn This

adapted by company member Frank Galati

The Grapes of Wrath

by company member Rajiv Joseph

King James

Theater in Chicago

List of museums and cultural institutions in Chicago