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Recommendations

Recommendations

  • Jacquelyn Floyd-Priskorn:
    26 Apr. 2022
    Whoa! Did not see that coming! This is a great psychological piece, but played super real and very engaging. The monologue about grief is so touching and relatable. This is a short piece, but you will be begging for more!
  • Seth Milton Jones:
    15 Apr. 2022
    This was a fun time! Seeing how a relationship can progress in the most isolated situation provides those funny bits along with points that will make you think. Thinking about our life above bunkers and how we could actually function in one after we bring down our baggage.
  • Tim Bryant:
    24 Jun. 2021
    This is a fun and mysterious play about finding love in a very unusual situation. Just when you think you know what's going to happen, you don't. Lots of surprises here. It's a little Samuel Beckett, and a little Twilight Zone, with a big helping of Brokeback Mountain. Awesome!
  • Cheryl Bear:
    23 Jul. 2020
    A fantastic exploration of a bromance and we don't know where it'll go, the end is just fantastic! Well done.
  • Aleks Merilo:
    22 Feb. 2019
    Erie, ambiguous, and sweet is not a description I've used before, but then again, LGBTQ and post-apocalyptic is not common territory to be explored on stage. Bravoso has created a moment in an unknown time and place that somehow manages to be compassionate and relatable. In this unique setting, inhibitions are shed and characters develop into richly unique individuals. Unanswered questions and just enough exposition give the audience plenty to discuss in the afterglow.
  • Emily Hageman:
    3 Sep. 2018
    Talk about a roller coaster of a play. Just when you think you know what's going on, Bavoso yanks the rug out from under your feet. It's real, it's genuine, it's sweet--and then it's something else entirely. There is so much going on in this play--relationships between men, grieving, isolation, the longing for something gret that seems unattainable. A true retelling of the Adam and Eve story, only instead of a red apple, there's a red button. A pretty brilliant short play that gets more done in ten pages than some plays do in fifty.
  • John Crawford:
    2 Jan. 2017
    I liked it. Nice flow. Humor good. On page 8 I took a few minutes to go to a precognitive state for your ending and btw liked yours better than mine.