True Colors

Colleagues meet virtually during the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic and their true colors show.

Colleagues meet virtually during the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic and their true colors show.

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True Colors

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  • Rachel Feeny-Williams: True Colors

    Theatre Zoom meetings have very much become part of our lives over the past two years and Julie has captured that brilliantly. It got me thinking almost nostalgically about the start of the pandemic when the panic buying was all over the news. The dialogue is great as you get to watch the characters go back and forth, each chiming their two cents worth in about the pandemic and what to do. The dialogue then whisks through an escalation of tense argument before nestling into a lovely ending. I think this would make a piece to watch and reflect on.

    Theatre Zoom meetings have very much become part of our lives over the past two years and Julie has captured that brilliantly. It got me thinking almost nostalgically about the start of the pandemic when the panic buying was all over the news. The dialogue is great as you get to watch the characters go back and forth, each chiming their two cents worth in about the pandemic and what to do. The dialogue then whisks through an escalation of tense argument before nestling into a lovely ending. I think this would make a piece to watch and reflect on.

  • Marguerite Louise Scott: True Colors

    TRUE COLORS indeed. Julie's play takes us on a ride, in the early days of the Pandemic when so much was uncertain but hoarding was a certain kind of reality. The journey this play takes the characters and the reader is one that resonates deeply for me, and what the author has to say at the end via the actions of Morgan makes me love this ten-minute gem of a play.

    TRUE COLORS indeed. Julie's play takes us on a ride, in the early days of the Pandemic when so much was uncertain but hoarding was a certain kind of reality. The journey this play takes the characters and the reader is one that resonates deeply for me, and what the author has to say at the end via the actions of Morgan makes me love this ten-minute gem of a play.

  • Rachael Carnes: True Colors

    A perfect encapsulation of the razors edge we've all walked at "work" this year, between crushing banality and morbid dread. What does it mean when we actually start to miss offices? Zaffarano populates this early-pandemic farce with delightful characters, finding humor in human foibles and trapping in amber the fleeting weirdness of it all. I hope it's something we'll look back on one day? Maybe sooner than later? Asking for a friend... A wry piece of Zoom theatre or an in-person slice of history, when theatres reopen.

    A perfect encapsulation of the razors edge we've all walked at "work" this year, between crushing banality and morbid dread. What does it mean when we actually start to miss offices? Zaffarano populates this early-pandemic farce with delightful characters, finding humor in human foibles and trapping in amber the fleeting weirdness of it all. I hope it's something we'll look back on one day? Maybe sooner than later? Asking for a friend... A wry piece of Zoom theatre or an in-person slice of history, when theatres reopen.

View all 8 recommendations
Bryn. Any adult age. Any gender identification.
Izzy. Any adult age. Any gender identification.
Skye. Any adult age (mother is still living). Any gender identification.
Morgan. Any adult age. Any gender identification.
Tea. Any adult age. Any gender identification.