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Recommendations

Recommendations

  • Jan Probst:
    13 Jul. 2021
    Infusing a common local setting with a strong universal message, Greg Romero brings home a very real, sometimes terrifying message. The audience participation is so organic, you feel as if you’re part of the story. Because you are.
  • Tamar Shai Bolkvadze:
    10 Aug. 2019
    This is a bitterly funny play, and a great opportunity to involve the audience. It immediately made me think of Flint, Michigan and those in power treating community members like pawns. This is a powerful play, and offers a lot of ways to tailor the production. It could be done a million different ways, and still retain its heartbreaking wit.
  • Rand Higbee:
    24 Jun. 2019
    One could almost call this "audience immersion" as we seem to be part of a city council meeting happily tell us all that eminent domain is going to ruin all of our lives. But don't worry; be happy! Funny yet scary, because it all seems a bit too real.
  • Tom Moran:
    19 Jun. 2019
    A wonderfully witty combination of the mundane (a neighborhood meeting), the despicable (runaway eminent domain), and the unexpected (just what the hell is that wolf doing there?). Romero has crafted a dark, funny-sad play that, delightfully, also happens to rely on heavy audience involvement. So if you want to give your audience members a chance to stand up and fight City Hall, or at least to cuss it out, "Bulldozers" is the play for you.
  • Philip Middleton Williams:
    14 Jun. 2019
    With tongue firmly planted in cheek, Greg Romero shows us what is being done in one community to solve the budget crisis. The dry wit and dead-on depiction of the banal cruelty of well-meaning governance is both funny and terrifying.