Secret Hour

Married couple Kate and Ben have such a difficult time communicating about difficult topics that they’ve come up with a game—“secret hour”—in which they must tell each other the truth, no matter what. Even so, as they struggle to have a baby, Kate doesn’t know how to tell Ben that she doesn’t want to be a mother—so much so that she’s secretly had an IUD for two years.

To make things even more complicated...

Married couple Kate and Ben have such a difficult time communicating about difficult topics that they’ve come up with a game—“secret hour”—in which they must tell each other the truth, no matter what. Even so, as they struggle to have a baby, Kate doesn’t know how to tell Ben that she doesn’t want to be a mother—so much so that she’s secretly had an IUD for two years.

To make things even more complicated, Kate is an ethics professor. The play is interwoven with her often-humorous lectures to her students, where she asks them (and the audience) to weigh the ideologies of Confucius and Nietzsche and answer the question, “Is your greatest ethical responsibility to yourself, or to others?”

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Secret Hour

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  • Maximillian Gill: Secret Hour

    So much is packed into this tightly written piece. I can't recall another work of fiction that has so deftly explicated and integrated philosophy in such a meaningful and amusing way. Kate's lectures are a true delight that anchor her progression as a character. Both she and Ben are sharply rendered and their relationship real and sensitively examined. However, Leaf is the true stand-out character. He dominates this play in the best way, commenting and motivating the others with a sprightly wit. I'm truly dazzled by Stafford's assured grasp on these characters, dialogue, and the emotional arcs...

    So much is packed into this tightly written piece. I can't recall another work of fiction that has so deftly explicated and integrated philosophy in such a meaningful and amusing way. Kate's lectures are a true delight that anchor her progression as a character. Both she and Ben are sharply rendered and their relationship real and sensitively examined. However, Leaf is the true stand-out character. He dominates this play in the best way, commenting and motivating the others with a sprightly wit. I'm truly dazzled by Stafford's assured grasp on these characters, dialogue, and the emotional arcs in this piece.

  • Nick Malakhow: Secret Hour

    This manages to be both VERY funny and VERY profound. Stafford does so much. She explores the relative importance of responsibility to self vs responsibility to others as a central ethical question and connects it elegantly with social expectations and gender roles. Secondly, she examines a very real and finely rendered relationship between two people who love each other, but whose priority shifts, communication failures, and waning abilities to be deeply honest with one another have shaped their marriage undeniably. The laughs flow quickly (and Leaf is a priceless character). The end is so...

    This manages to be both VERY funny and VERY profound. Stafford does so much. She explores the relative importance of responsibility to self vs responsibility to others as a central ethical question and connects it elegantly with social expectations and gender roles. Secondly, she examines a very real and finely rendered relationship between two people who love each other, but whose priority shifts, communication failures, and waning abilities to be deeply honest with one another have shaped their marriage undeniably. The laughs flow quickly (and Leaf is a priceless character). The end is so poignant, well-earned, and deeply-felt.

  • Cheryl Bear: Secret Hour

    A thought provoking examination of the dilemma we face even when ethics is our priority. Well done.

    A thought provoking examination of the dilemma we face even when ethics is our priority. Well done.

View all 5 recommendations
KATE (F, 35) An Ethics professor at a university. Funny, intelligent, tense, insecure.
BEN (M, 35) Kate’s husband. Likable, funny. Something about him that seems a little dark, or “off.”
LEAF (M, 40) A handyman. A stoner vibe, very go-with-the-flow, ethereal.

Development History

  • Type Residency, Organization Capital Repertory Theatre , Year 2022
  • Type Workshop, Organization Prologue Theatre, Year 2020
  • Type Workshop, Organization And Toto Too, Year 2020
  • Type Reading, Organization Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company, Year 2019
  • Type Reading, Organization And Toto Too, Year 2019
  • Type Residency, Organization National Winter Playwrights Retreat, HBMG Foundation, Year 2019

Production History

  • Type Professional, Organization Ensemble Actors Studio, PA, Year 2024
  • Type Professional, Organization The Public Theatre (ME), Year 2024
  • Type Professional, Organization Capital Repertory Theatre, Year 2023

Awards

  • Susan Smith Blackburn Prize
    Nomination
    2022
  • New Works Festival Winner
    Capital Repertory Theatre
    Winner
    2021
  • PlayPenn Developmental Lab
    Finalist
    2020