• Recommend
  • Download
  • Save to Reading List

Recommendations

Recommendations

  • Logan Rodgers:
    16 Jul. 2020
    This piece chokes me, beautifully and horribly. The anguish of surviving combat, trauma, and cultural repression cause such a volatile crock pot, that Rosendorf approaches with incredible emotional intelligence and grace. While the world we live in gets progressively efficient at violence, without being rote shows like this bring healing and space for that complex world of heightened pain and lost time enforced by that systemic trauma conditioning of Military culture.
  • Asher Wyndham:
    20 Mar. 2020
    Rosendorf is a rare playwright that knows how to create a play with time transitions. Jarring, quick, sometimes fluid transitions from past to present from the perspective of soldier Kyle will create an unforgettable spectacle for your audience. A spectacle that's a minefield of explosive emotions. Rosendorf achieves that while exploring subjects of masculinity, male body, gay sexuality, trauma, and war.
    This is one of those plays where total design - media, lighting, sound and set - could achieve something spectacular. What a challenge for designers!
  • Nick Malakhow:
    3 Mar. 2020
    Wow! What an extraordinarily tender and complex examination of several queer men each with unique relationships to masculinity, war, and how those things intersect with their identities. Kyle is such a powerful protagonist, a bundle of nerves waiting to be exposed. I loved how this play moved along at a contemplative pace, while propelling itself intently to a suitably wrenching, sweet, and inspiring climax. Rosendorf transitions from scene to scene with boldly theatrical "cinematic" insta-cuts. Scenes bleeding into the next only serve to underscore Kyle's attempts to make sense of his fragmented life. I must see this!
  • John Bavoso:
    2 Sep. 2019
    Andrew is so, so good at weaving visual tapestries and striking images out of words—but it’s the real, complex characters at the center of these visuals that give his work such power. There are so many elements of this play that could easily have meandered into cliche, but instead we get a grounded, authentic exploration of trauma, homophobia, familial and romantic love, and identity. Everyone should be reading (and producing) Andrew's work!
  • Dave Osmundsen:
    14 May. 2018
    A powerful play about a gay soldier returning home from Afghanistan having lost parts of himself both literally and figuratively. Explores PTSD and identity with brutal and violent theatricality. It’s also a tender love story between two men who have been through the worst together and individually struggle to readjust to civilian life. By the end, I was left devastated and touched by its story and characters, as well as its message: Don’t be afraid to be vulnerable with the ones who love and know you the deepest.
  • Andrew Kramer:
    21 Mar. 2018
    The power of this play - it's been some time since I've sat down with it, but I find my mind returning to it often. It's tender and violent and compassionate and complicated in the ways humans are, in the ways sexuality and war and loss and bodies are.
  • Eugene O'Neill Theater Center:
    1 May. 2017
    It is the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center's pleasure to recommend Andrew Rosendorf and their play Paper Cut as a finalist for our 2017 National Playwrights Conference. The play rose through a competitive, anonymous, multileveled selection process that took nearly nine months to execute. As one of 55 finalists out of more than 1,300 submissions, the strength of its writing has allowed this work to prosper in such a competitive selection process. Our readers were struck by the play’s unique interrogation of culturally received ideas about masculinity and its urgently conceived, intersectional exploration of identity.
  • Nan Barnett:
    23 Aug. 2016
    Timely and touching,this play is a must read if you are looking for a solid work that speaks to the aftermath of war and the US policies surrounding gender identity in the military. Plus its a damn good story. Have a look!