The Wild Turducken

10-Minute. Amy wants to keep a Thanksgiving tradition alive with her teenage children, an easygoing son and a politically anxious daughter. By the way, it's 2016. And we're in Pennsylvania. [Written as part of the 2025 Playwrights Thriving Secret Santa Title Swap]

10-Minute. Amy wants to keep a Thanksgiving tradition alive with her teenage children, an easygoing son and a politically anxious daughter. By the way, it's 2016. And we're in Pennsylvania. [Written as part of the 2025 Playwrights Thriving Secret Santa Title Swap]

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The Wild Turducken

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  • Jack Bathke: The Wild Turducken

    I've been on a bit of kick of late. Reading ten minute plays because frankly I haven't yet figured out how to write a decent 10 minute play that is sincere and thought-provoking. Fenton manages, in a taut piece of work, to capture not only the need to maintain our childlike innocence for as long as a possible but also what happens when our parents--and those we love-begin to change because of our social and political environment.

    I've been on a bit of kick of late. Reading ten minute plays because frankly I haven't yet figured out how to write a decent 10 minute play that is sincere and thought-provoking. Fenton manages, in a taut piece of work, to capture not only the need to maintain our childlike innocence for as long as a possible but also what happens when our parents--and those we love-begin to change because of our social and political environment.

  • Aly Kantor: The Wild Turducken

    We all know the feeling of dread as we sit down at the holiday table, knowing there's a silent agreement that we're not going to talk about THAT - and knowing just as well that someone is going to ignore the silent agreement and ruin the charade. It's a holiday tradition as absurd as, well... hunting a wild turducken in the woods. This play is a smart reminder that you have a choice in what traditions you uphold. It has a fantastic premise and is packed with snappy, funny dialogue. A great play!

    We all know the feeling of dread as we sit down at the holiday table, knowing there's a silent agreement that we're not going to talk about THAT - and knowing just as well that someone is going to ignore the silent agreement and ruin the charade. It's a holiday tradition as absurd as, well... hunting a wild turducken in the woods. This play is a smart reminder that you have a choice in what traditions you uphold. It has a fantastic premise and is packed with snappy, funny dialogue. A great play!

  • Matthew Weaver: The Wild Turducken

    It would be interesting to sit in an audience during a production of WILD TURDUCKEN and watch as families grow more and more uncomfortable as they recognize more and more of themselves in Fenton's timely holiday story. The shared history, the long-standing traditions that don't quite make sense, but that's all right, they don't need to. And then the lingering questions about right and wrong and why people believe what they believe, and the aftermath they leave in their terrible wake.

    It would be interesting to sit in an audience during a production of WILD TURDUCKEN and watch as families grow more and more uncomfortable as they recognize more and more of themselves in Fenton's timely holiday story. The shared history, the long-standing traditions that don't quite make sense, but that's all right, they don't need to. And then the lingering questions about right and wrong and why people believe what they believe, and the aftermath they leave in their terrible wake.

View all 23 recommendations
AMY - 40s/F, Mother
HALLIE - 14-17/F, Daughter
COOPER - 14-17/M, Son
Race never comes up in the script, but this family is probably white.