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Recommendations

Recommendations

  • Brent Alles:
    1 Aug. 2023
    Our theater group had the pleasure and privelege of performing this play recently. It is terrifically sharp and funny and has some surprising poignancy as well. The main characters play off each other well, and the relationship between them is totally believable. Some great quips about the entertainment industry as well, not surprising considering Ken's backgroundin writing for TV. Highly recommend this for consideration for your theater group as well... it's great!
  • John Morogiello:
    21 Aug. 2022
    I love this play. Ken Levine is a fantastic writer: the characters, the jokes, the transitions and revelations, it's all there. This script needs to be produced more.
  • Lisa Dellagiarino Feriend:
    19 Apr. 2021
    This play is charming and offers two amazing roles for older actors (which, as Susan points out in the play, are few and far between for women as they age.) It was a quick, enjoyable read, and I'm sure this play goes over great with an audience.
  • Christine Foster:
    21 Feb. 2021
    Delightfully funny and witty, this play gleefully mines all the nakedly honest and painful
    experiences of two once-successful middle-aged actors' hilariously inaccurate memories
    and equally hilariously accurate insecurities.
    Great dialogue, great characters, great lines, lots of satisfying and honest twists and turns. Loved it.
  • Cheryl Bear:
    12 Jan. 2021
    Can the show go o for a once loved couple as they prepare for a reunion? They have a mountain things to work through, but it's done with charm and humor. Well done.
  • John Levine:
    29 Nov. 2020
    This is a solid, funny two-hander (all right, a two-and-a-half-hander) with just the right amount of character-driven comedy, and a good measure of heart. I could see this play being a real crowd-pleaser. It's not surprising that this playwright has an extensive background in TV comedy-writing.
  • Sam Mercury:
    15 Nov. 2020
    This play reads like a lot of my favourite sitcom episodes. Never too dark to make you depressed, but never too light to skirt over some real issues. It says a lot about getting older and managing your dreams and aspirations, as they never go away just because you've hit sixty (okay, fifty-nine).