• Recommend
  • Download
  • Save to Reading List

Recommendations

Recommendations

  • Lisa Dellagiarino Feriend:
    12 Dec. 2021
    Ooooh this play! It deals with trauma and healing and touch and family and water - which can be both comforting and destructive. I love how each character is complex and sympathetic in their own way, and watching the dynamics as they interact. Just fantastic.
  • Bethany Dickens Assaf:
    17 Jul. 2021
    From the opening page, I was completely drawn in to the beautiful language and imagery of this play. Harlowe's world, perspective, and grief are introduced with great delicacy and care, and Reese's struggle to find herself beyond her sister is deeply authentic. Lane's adeptness with metaphors of healing and rebirth enrich the narrative, and turn a compelling family drama into a near-transcendent meditation on the physical cost of being alive. Cannot recommend highly enough!
  • Cheryl Bear:
    1 Mar. 2021
    A powerful story of pain, feeling and healing trauma. Beautifully done.
  • Peter Murphy:
    12 Nov. 2018
    An absolutely beautiful piece written by an obscenely talented playwright. It punches you in the gut, heals the pain with a few laughs, then drowns you in a pool.
  • Bill Arnold:
    1 Oct. 2018
    Harlowe is a stunning piece of theatre. Somewhat reminiscent of Scott Kegler's "Champagne and Licorice" in that we see a young woman struggling, but we only learn of the nature of her struggles throughout the course of the play and her relationships with family and lovers. The water theme runs deep in this play (pun intended) and there are so many ways to go with that theme. Highly recommended reading for anyone looking for a really well-crafted play portraying emotional anguish played against physical reaction.
  • Scott Sickles:
    24 Jan. 2016
    Harlowe is a bit of a theatrical miracle. We start out with a heavy, dark, poetic monologue from a woman (Harlowe) in a bathtub. This woman is in pain, real pain, pain she is aware of and can no longer feel. Then she is interrupted and suddenly Harlowe and the audience are thrust into a real world that's as hilarious as it is complex. Moving seamlessly in and out of her protagonist's thoughts and fears, Jenny Lane has written a beautiful latticework of familial need and insecurity as Harlowe and her brood verge ever closer to healing.
  • Lee Liebeskind:
    9 Mar. 2015
    A beautiful heart wrenching play that explores how one deals with both physical and emotional trauma. The way Jenny creates images that infect your mind is one of the many reasons this show needs to be produced.
  • Stephen Spotswood:
    12 Feb. 2015
    At its heart, a great examination of the vulnerability and self-imposed isolation that can develop after physical & emotional trauma. But wrapped in a funny/sad family drama. I really want to see this show produced.