Recommendations of My Body

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: My Body

    Defamiliarization at its very BEST! Thank you Ms. Bublitz for writing this brilliant play! Perfect is too small a word. I absolutely enjoyed this down to the smile and the final comment at the end. Every moment of this play spread a gleam of joy through my being and for those ten minutes of reading bliss Jupiter aligned with Mars. . .

    Defamiliarization at its very BEST! Thank you Ms. Bublitz for writing this brilliant play! Perfect is too small a word. I absolutely enjoyed this down to the smile and the final comment at the end. Every moment of this play spread a gleam of joy through my being and for those ten minutes of reading bliss Jupiter aligned with Mars. . .

  • Benjamin Gonzales: My Body

    “My Body” is a brilliant play highlighting our hypocrisies. Rachel captures the irony within the satire of the words, that the inequality exposed within its 10 pages starkly demonstrates who we are as a society. 10/10 easily. Thank you, Rachel. Your work makes me want to be a better man.

    “My Body” is a brilliant play highlighting our hypocrisies. Rachel captures the irony within the satire of the words, that the inequality exposed within its 10 pages starkly demonstrates who we are as a society. 10/10 easily. Thank you, Rachel. Your work makes me want to be a better man.

  • Jeanette Farr: My Body

    It's no surprise this has received a lot of attention in the past - but it becomes even more relevant today with echos of all too familiar treatment of gender and discussions of how it can get better. Turning the tables in this futuristic (yet timely) subject is both a satisfying, yet cautionary tale that will surely create discussion with audiences afterwords.

    It's no surprise this has received a lot of attention in the past - but it becomes even more relevant today with echos of all too familiar treatment of gender and discussions of how it can get better. Turning the tables in this futuristic (yet timely) subject is both a satisfying, yet cautionary tale that will surely create discussion with audiences afterwords.

  • Lindsay Partain: My Body

    The tables have been turned in this tight 10-minute play where women make the rules. A relevant piece that is charming, unsettling, and has great roles for two actors up to the challenge. MY BODY gives a glimpse at an ideal world-- but for whom and at what cost?

    The tables have been turned in this tight 10-minute play where women make the rules. A relevant piece that is charming, unsettling, and has great roles for two actors up to the challenge. MY BODY gives a glimpse at an ideal world-- but for whom and at what cost?

  • Shaun Leisher: My Body

    A tight ten minute play that has so much relevance to our current society. Rachel Bublitz in a short amount of time has created a dystopian future in a play that's perfect blend of horror and satire.

    A tight ten minute play that has so much relevance to our current society. Rachel Bublitz in a short amount of time has created a dystopian future in a play that's perfect blend of horror and satire.

  • Steven Hayet: My Body

    This play had its first reading in 2012, but it as still as topical as ever. An incredibly smart and pointed satire. Bublitz takes today's society, flips it, and holds it up for us to see. With incredibly real and relatable characters, Bublitz creates a world that makes us question our own. I hope, over time, this play becomes less relevant, but right now the world needs it.

    This play had its first reading in 2012, but it as still as topical as ever. An incredibly smart and pointed satire. Bublitz takes today's society, flips it, and holds it up for us to see. With incredibly real and relatable characters, Bublitz creates a world that makes us question our own. I hope, over time, this play becomes less relevant, but right now the world needs it.

  • Arthur M Jolly: My Body

    Clever, pointed - more relevant today than ever, this is a smartly written little gem of a play that should be considered by any theatre looking to explore the #MeToo movement on stage - and the wider implications around it. It does what theatre does best, creating a world with a distinctive view that forces us to question or own world and our own world-view, while never becoming preachy or obvious.

    Clever, pointed - more relevant today than ever, this is a smartly written little gem of a play that should be considered by any theatre looking to explore the #MeToo movement on stage - and the wider implications around it. It does what theatre does best, creating a world with a distinctive view that forces us to question or own world and our own world-view, while never becoming preachy or obvious.

  • Asher Wyndham: My Body

    A spot-on, hee-larious satire that smartly critiques patriarchal Western/American society. In a real matriarchy everyone is equal, obviously, but in this play matriarchy appropriates the violence, cruelty and language of patriarchy. I laughed for most of the play and then I stopped because the 'collar' that is worn by the male character was a powerful symbol that references that invisible collar that many women wear in suppressive societies across the globe.

    A spot-on, hee-larious satire that smartly critiques patriarchal Western/American society. In a real matriarchy everyone is equal, obviously, but in this play matriarchy appropriates the violence, cruelty and language of patriarchy. I laughed for most of the play and then I stopped because the 'collar' that is worn by the male character was a powerful symbol that references that invisible collar that many women wear in suppressive societies across the globe.