Chicago's Goodman Theatre artistic director Robert Falls stepping down after 35 years

CHICAGO ā€” After a 35-year run leading Chicagoā€™s most prestigious theater company, Goodman Theatre artistic director Robert Falls is to resign, effective at the end of the current season in August 2022.

ā€œIt feels right,ā€ Falls said in an interview. ā€œIā€™ve had the greatest job. I feel like Iā€™ve accomplished everything at the theater I wanted to accomplish. And I feel like the luckiest person in the world to have been able to work at this theater, with these artists, at this time, in this city.ā€

Fallsā€™ longtime partner, Goodman executive director Roche Schulfer, is to remain at the theater, at least through the transition to a new leader. In an interview, Schulfer praised Falls as ā€œone of the great directors in the worldā€ and said the theater is starting to interview search firms with a goal to find the next artistic director by next summer, if not before.

Given the timing and the exigencies of the pandemic, Schulfer said, Falls will plan most, if not all, of the 2022-23 season and will direct during the season, even after giving up the artistic management of the theater.

Fallsā€™ decision, which he said was not made under any kind of internal or outside pressure, brings the exit of Chicago theaterā€™s premier auteurist director, an unusually eclectic artist known throughout the world of theater for the expansiveness of his ambition, the boldness of his risk-taking and the richness of his conceptual productions.

It also is part of an extraordinary, pandemic-era exodus of artistic leaders in the city, including the recent departure of Anna D. Shapiro at Steppenwolf Theatre. Both major Chicago theaters, along with several others, now will have to find their way under new leadership.

Falls, 68, has been a signature player, arguably the single most significant artistic individual, in the rise of Chicago theater over the past 50 years from obscurity to international prominence.

In a city known for its actors, Falls forced the international theater community to pay attention to directors emerging from the Midwest capital. And he made the point that some artistic visions to be found in Chicago are too massive to be contained in a storefront theater.

ā€œBob is on the forefront of the Chicago theater revolution,ā€ said longtime actor and Northlight Theatre artistic director B.J. Jones. ā€œHis resignation is a transformational moment.ā€

Indeed, Falls, an outsized personality who has directed scores of shows at the Goodman, has been the rare director capable of both extraordinary individual achievement and uncommonly generous collaborations, as reflected in the Goodmanā€™s 1992 Tony Award for excellence in regional theater.