- Tickets
- Memberships & Season
- Engage & Learn
- Your Visit
- Support
- Artists
- About
- Accountability
- Ticket Donation Requests
- Financials
- Rentals at the Goodman
- Our History
- Staff & Leadership
- Join the Goodman
- Press Room
- 2024-2025 Season
- 2023 – 2024 Season
- 2022 – 2023 Season
- 2021 – 2022 Season
- 2019 – 2020 Season
- Hershey Felder as Irving Berlin
- Goodman Gala
- A Paris Love Story
- Bernhardt Hamlet
- The Santaland Diaries
- American Mariachi
- School Girls; Or, The African Mean Girls Play
- Molly Sweeney
- graveyard shift
- Roe
- 42nd Annual Production of A Christmas Carol
- Dana H
- Daughter of a Cuban Revolutionary
- New Stages Festival 2019
- 2018 – 2019 Season
- 2017 – 2018 Season
- 2016 – 2017 Season
- 2015 – 2016 Season
- 2014 – 2015 Season
- About the Goodman
October 12 & 13, 2015 in Goodman's Albert Theatre
90 minutes
Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous
“We found an entire lost world; a window on a moment of major evolutionary change.”—Nizar Ibrahim
Meet Spinosaurus, the largest predatory dinosaur yet discovered—larger than T. rex—and hear the incredible story of how this prehistoric giant was almost lost to science, before being brought back to light with the help of a remarkable young paleontologist.
Discovered more than half a century ago in Morocco by the great German paleontologist Hans Stromer, Spinosaurus’ fossil remains were lost in the Allied bombing of Germany during World War II. With the help of recent fossil discoveries in the desert, and Stromer’s own data and drawings, contemporary scientists including German/Moroccan paleontologist and National Geographic Emerging Explorer Nizar Ibrahim have reconstructed a full skeletal model of Spinosaurus, which has been featured on the National Geographic Channel and presented in the National Geographic Museum.
With amazing video recreating the lost world of the Cretaceous Era Sahara, Ibrahim will tell the story of Spinosaurus’ discovery, loss, and rediscovery, and explain what—other than its size—makes this ancient monster unique.